What I Liked: Jonathan Scott-Taylor who plays tween aged Damien does a damn good job. He puts on such an air of smugness you wanna strangle him. His bratty whinny assholic disposition is perfect for the antichrist at this stage in the process because he hasn’t learned yet that charm is an important and potent ingredient to getting supporters on your side. Scott-Taylor dances on what must’ve been a hard line to walk. He’s trying to understand who he really is, how to deal with being pure evil but he also genuinely loves his aunt, uncle and cousin who raised him since age five so he’s actually a tirade of emotion and not devoid of it. That was a nice decision. Plus since he’s been living in the states since the events of the previous film he has a half British half American accent. A good attention to detail that I wasn’t expecting.
What I Didn’t Like: There isn’t any mystery for us to
solve this time. It’s about Damien’s Uncle
Richard (William Holden (The Bridge on the River Kwai)), brother of
Gregory Peck’s character from the original, and others around him slowly
discovering who this kid really is. But
we, the audience, know he’s the devil or the devil’s son or whatever so it isn’t
that much fun for us. The plot becomes
mostly concerned with Damien and his henchmen (yes, multiple this round)
bumping off folks who either discover the secret or come close to discovering
it. That’s ok but not too thrilling.
This picture has the same issue as the first in that Damien
and his cohorts needlessly attract attention to themselves by stacking up
corpses. Anyone that gets in their way
boom, they’re dead. Again, this tactic
almost thwarts their plans for the apocalypse.
If they played it cooler and let more shit slide then Damien would come
off like less of a weirdo and they’d have smoother sailing.
Unfortunately there’s no satisfying ending. The build is soft where Uncle Richard takes a
long time to realize what’s happening around him and then suddenly leaps to
wanting to murder Damien. So when it
feels like things are finally starting to ramp up the movie just sorta
stops. The end point is logical on paper
and they do throw in one final twist but it isn’t very impactful in practice.
Overall Impressions: This is basically a worse version of the original. I mean it’s fine and watchable even if it is kinda sloppy in general. There’s nothing about it that annoys me or insults me but at the same time there isn’t anything that excites me either.
I have a sneaking suspicion that the worst aspect of this
entry is that it probably isn’t necessary.
We have two more sequels to explore in the series (along with the
remake) and doing a pitstop to check in on Damien at age twelve seems
redundant. Let’s skip to him as an adult
when he has much more autonomy over his life and decisions. How will he navigate society with his diabolical
powers and what path will he take to bring about the end of the world? I would rather see that than an obnoxious kid
showing up his teacher in history class by magically being able to rapid fire
name any date in history that anything happened. Funny scene but not exactly foreboding for
your antichrist movie.
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