Megiddo: The Omega Code 2
Megiddo: The Omega Code 2

Megiddo: The Omega Code 2 (2001)

4.5 ? Sep 07, 2001 1h 44m

Overview

Stone (the Antichrist) becomes President of the European Union and uses his seat of power to dissolve the United Nations and create a one world government called the World Union. Megiddo is a supernatural ride into a world teetering on the edge of the Apocalypse. It follows the rise of a Machiavellian leader bent on amassing the armies of the world for the battle of Armageddon while calamities of Biblical proportions pummel the Earth.

Genres

Action Thriller Horror Fantasy

Release Date

September 07, 2001

Rating

4.5 /10

Runtime

1h 44m

Michael York

Michael York

Stone Alexander

Michael Biehn

Michael Biehn

David Alexander

Diane Venora

Diane Venora

Gabriella Francini

Udo Kier

Udo Kier

The Guardian

R. Lee Ermey

R. Lee Ermey

President Richard Benson

Franco Nero

Franco Nero

General Francini

Jim Metzler

Jim Metzler

Secretary of State Breckenridge

Noah Huntley

Noah Huntley

Stone Alexander (Age 21)

David Hedison

David Hedison

Daniel Alexander

Chad Michael Murray

Chad Michael Murray

David Alexander (Age 16)

Elisa Scialpi

Gabriella Francini (Age 18)

Michael Paul Chan

Michael Paul Chan

Chinese Premier

Gil Colon

Colonel Rick Howard

Eduardo Yáñez

Mexican General García

Tony Amendola

Tony Amendola

Father Tirmaco

Oleg Stefan

Oleg Stefan

Russian President Kachitsky

Guy Siner

Guy Siner

British Prime Minister

Forbes Riley

Forbes Riley

Dana Kincaid

John DeMita

John DeMita

Chuck Farrell

Gavin Fink

Stone Alexander (Age 6)

Y

Yohan Yukiya Sese Cuneta 사요한

5.0/10

Oct 09, 2024

This "part 2" is neither a sequel or a prequel. It's a completely different reinterpretation with a different focus. It didn't even mention the "Bible Code" that was the basis for "part 1". Without checking the cast list, the only one that was in "part 1" was the anti-christ Stone Alexander. It also lacked emotional impact. The scenes, you'll just have a logical reaction to it, "oh, that was bad", "ahh, humanity is easily tricked", and so on. For example, during the Megiddo war, there were scenes shown where a soldier's leg was blown, but it lacked emotional impact. They spent minutes upon minutes showing scenes of the war, soldiers dying, humanity divided between good and evil, but it all lacked any emotional impact. It was totally like watching a slide while listening to someone do their presentation. The idea (logic) is there. What they want to portray. But that's about it. In literature fiction, they didn't follow the golden rule: show don't tell. If anything, stick to "part 1", it's more than enough. And if you are truly curious about the eschatology (the study of end-times), for whatever reason, dive into it directly, you'll get a more complete overall picture of what could be.

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