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[[Category:Fictional diplomats|Thorn, Damien]]
[[Category:Fictional diplomats|Thorn, Damien]]
[[Category:The Omen (film series)|Thorn, Damien]]
[[Category:The Omen (film series)|Thorn, Damien]]
[[Category:Fictional child murderers]]


[[fi:Damien Thorn]]
[[fi:Damien Thorn]]

Revision as of 16:52, 29 July 2008

Damien Thorn
Damien Thorn
Gender: Male
Race Caucasian
Appears in The Omen series
Location Fulham, England
Weapons of Choice: Satanic Powers
Family Satan (father)
Maria Avedici Santoya (mother; deceased)
Kathy Thorn (step-mother; deceased)
Robert Thorn (step-father; deceased)
Richard Thorn (step-uncle; deceased)
Ann Thorn (step-aunt; deceased)
Mark Thorn (step-cousin; deceased)
Delia York (daughter)
Alexander York (son)
Enemies Robert Thorn
All pure souls
Portrayed by: Harvey Stephens (The Omen)
Jonathan Scott-Taylor (Damien: Omen II)
Sam Neill (Omen III: The Final Conflict)
Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick (The Omen: 666)

Damien Thorn is the main fictional character in The Omen series (The Omen, Omen II, Omen III, The Omen: 666). He is the Antichrist and the son of the Devil.

He has been portrayed by Harvey Stephens, Jonathan Scott-Taylor, Sam Neill and most recently, Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick. All previous actors to play Damien Thorn had their hair dyed jet black for the role.

Name etymology

The name "Damien" sounds vaguely like the English "demon," but is not at all etymologically related[1]. It is interesting that since the original Omen movie came out, Damien has become a name with powerful evil connotations, despite the fact that historically it is associated with many saintly figures. Damien is the French form of the English name Damian (Latin Damianus), popular as the name of a martyred Christian saint of the third century (see Saints Cosmas and Damian). Another prominent Damien was Father Damien of Hawaii, who died while establishing leper colonies there. Damien is also the first name of Father Karras in The Exorcist.

Character

In the original film, Damien was born in Rome at 6:00 a.m. on June 6, 1966 (2006 in the most recent remake). Supposedly his birthday (the sixth hour of the sixth day of the sixth month) constitutes the number 666. The number also appears on his body as a birthmark, and it is discovered in the novelization of the first film that he has no fingerprints. Though he is originally unaware of his parentage, he gradually comes to understand and accept his identity as the Antichrist as he grows older.

Biography

Beginning

In the first film, Damien is adopted by American ambassador to Britain Robert Thorn and wife Katherine at their hospital after they lose their new son in what Robert believes is stillbirth, while his wife Katherine is unaware of the replacement. At the age of five, Damien's nanny is hypnotized by a demonic dog and mysteriously hangs herself at his birthday party, claiming to have done it for him.

A priest from Italy, Father Brennan, who was at Damien's birth, warns Robert about his son and quotes an old prophecy about the Antichrist that Damien allegedly fills, but Robert will have none of it. Damien's new nanny Ms. Baylock, a servant of the devil, helps to guard him. Soon, things begin to come together; Damien begins to tremble with terror when his parents attempt to take him to a wedding in a church.

As Katherine is pregnant with another child, Damien knocks her off a balcony with his tricycle and the unborn baby is killed. Katherine and her husband are now aware of what their son may be; with the help of photojournalist Keith Jennings, who is eventually killed in a freak accident, Robert investigates Brennan's own mysterious death and accepts that Damien is the Antichrist, born from a jackal and placed in his care so that he would rise up through the world of politics. An exorcist in Megiddo named Carl Bugenhagen gives Robert some ancient daggers he had inherited that could kill the Antichrist; Thorn brings Damien to a church to lower his influence, but police ambush him and he's killed before Damien is harmed. Damien's enemies are dead and he's left in the company of the President.

Rise to power

In the second film, set in 1978, seven years after the first movie, Damien is now thirteen and living with his uncle Richard Thorn (a wealthy industrialist), his uncle's second wife Ann, and Richard's son from his first marriage, Mark.

The young Damien doesn't understand his true potential, but others begin to suspect that he is not the sweet young boy that he appears to be. Within his life there are many people working to help him ascend to his rightful place as the Antichrist, but at the same time, lone journalists, doctors, scientists and friends all try to stop him and warn his foster parents. Mark sees (and hears) things he shouldn't, and although Damien has fond feelings for his cousin, nothing can stand in his way, so he kills him.

After this, Richard starts to believe the warnings about Damien and tries to kill him with the Daggers of Meggido, but Ann refuses to let harm come to him, instead killing Richard with them before Damien sets both of them on fire.

The Final Conflict

In the third film, Damien is appointed Ambassador to the Court of St. James's, the same position his adoptive father held in the first film. Unlike the two incarnations of Damien portrayed in previous Omen films, the adult Damien is entirely aware of his unholy lineage, and his destiny.

An alignment of the stars in the Cassiopeia region of the night sky (the traditional location of the stellar signal of the Second Coming) causes the creation of a super "star", described in the film as a second Star of Bethlehem. Damien realizes it is a sign of the Second Coming of Christ and he orders all male children in England born on the morning of March 24, (the morning when, in the story, the Cassiopeia alignment occurred) to be killed in order to prevent the Christ-child's return to power, as predicted in the Book of Revelation (see Massacre of the Innocents).

Thorn has also become involved with journalist Kate Reynolds, who interviews him for the BBC. In the interview, Damien's personal brilliance is backed when it is revealed that Damien attended Yale University, and was a Rhodes Scholar, captaining the Oxford Polo and Rugby teams—a complex relationship which undermines his plans to dominate the world. Damien also focuses his attention on her pre-teenaged son Peter whom he takes as a disciple. Ultimately, the relationship is his undoing.

Meanwhile, Father DeCarlo and six other priests armed with the ancient daggers, hunt Thorn in the hope of killing him before he can destroy the "Christ child." However, one by one all the priests die until only DeCarlo survives.

Finally, in spite of Thorn's efforts, DeCarlo informs Reynolds that the Christ-child is "out of his reach" but that nonetheless, the task still remains to destroy Damien. In a final act of evil, Damien uses Reynold's son—now slavishly devoted to Damien—as a human shield against DeCarlo's dagger. As Peter lies dying, Damien tries to strangle Father DeCarlo to death. In a desperate bid to salvage his waning power, Damien calls out for Christ to appear before him. As he does this, Kate Reynolds sneaks behind Damien, stabbing him in the back with the dagger. Christ appears in a flash before a dying Damien and peace reigns over the Earth. Damien's last words were, "Nazarene.. you have won... nothing..."

Legacy

Damien has a daughter who appeared in Omen IV: The Awakening.

The Omen remake

A remake was made in 2006 starring Julia Stiles, Liev Schreiber and Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick.

In other media

  • "Damien" is a song written by the American metal band Iced Earth off of their 2001 Horror Show album. The lyrics of the song include references and direct quotations from the Omen series.
  • Black metal band Mercyful Fate's 1996 album "Into the Unknown" features "The Uninvited Guest", which tells the story of an old man who was seen by a person outside of his house. The person invites him in, where the man introduces himself as Damien, and says that he used to live in this house. After he leaves, the man never returns and the person is confused when he later learns that the old man had been dead for a year.
  • The popular British sitcom Only Fools & Horses features a recurring joke in which Rodney Trotter fears that his nephew is the Antichrist (because he is 'Son of Del'). The boy's name is Damian, and Omen-like music (usually "O Fortuna" from Orff's Carmina Burana) often plays whenever Rodney sees him.
  • Rapper DMX has a song titled "Damien" on his debut album It's Dark and Hell is Hot. On his second album Flesh of my Flesh, Blood of my Blood he has a track titled "The Omen" which features the controversial artist Marilyn Manson. The final in the series of songs is on his album "The Great Depression" with the song titled Damien III.
  • Domnul Damian (Mr. Damian) is the mysterious character in Ion Minulescu's novel De vorba cu necuratul ("Chatting with the Unholy One"). This novel is written between WWI and WWII and tells about an encounter with a strange character (Domnul Damian) who has supernatural powers and the ability to control people. Domnul Damian turns out to be the devil himself.

External links