Box office The Omen was released following a successful $2.8 million marketing campaign inspired by the one from
Jaws one year prior, with two weeks of sneak previews, a
novelization by screenwriter David Seltzer, and the logo with "666" inside the film's title as the centerpiece of the advertisement. An early screening of the film took place in numerous U.S. cities on June 6, 1976. The film opened in the United States and Canada on June 25, 1976, in 516 theaters. A significant commercial success, it grossed $4,273,886 in its opening weekend (a then-record for Fox) and $60,922,980 in total (equivalent to $334,414,696 in 2024), generating
theatrical rentals of $28.5 million in the United States and Canada. Worldwide it earned rentals of $46.3 million from a budget of $2.8 million. In the United States, the film was the
sixth-highest-grossing movie of 1976. During its release in
South Africa under the
apartheid regime, the
Publication Approval Board cut the final scenes showing the killing of Robert Thorn and Damien's survival.
Variety praised Richard Donner's direction as "taut" and the performances as "strong", and noted that the script, "sometimes too expository, too predictable, too contrived, is nonetheless a good connective fibre."
Roger Ebert gave the film 2.5 stars out of 4.
Gene Siskel of the
Chicago Tribune also awarded 2.5 stars out of 4, lauding the "firepower sound track" and several "memorable" scenes, but finding the story "goofy".
Kevin Thomas of the
Los Angeles Times called it "an absolutely riveting, thoroughly scary experience, a triumph of sleek film craftsmanship that will inevitably but not necessarily unfavorably be compared to
The Exorcist."
Tom Shales of
The Washington Post declared, "It's probably the classiest
Exorcist copy yet, but as a summer thriller, it can hardly challenge the human appeal and exhilarating impact of last year's
Jaws ... Seltzer, busy justifying his baloney premise with Biblical quotations, forgets about narrative logic or empathetic characters."
Gene Shalit called the film "a piece of junk", and
Judith Crist said it "offers more laughs than the average comedy."
Jack Kroll of
Newsweek called it "a dumb and largely dull movie." Duncan Leigh Cooper of
Cinéaste wrote, "Despite its improbable story line and abundance of gratuitous violence,
The Omen does succeed in its attempt to frighten, terrorize, and just plain scare the pants off most of the audience. Impressive performances ... plus a chilling mock-religious score by Jerry Goldsmith and the skillful direction of Richard Donner, all contribute to the suspension of disbelief required to draw the audience into the film's web of terror." Richard Combs of
The Monthly Film Bulletin described the movie as "[a] matter-of-fact exercise in Satanic blood and thunder, both less grandiloquently and less pretentiously put together than
The Exorcist ... In fact, the narrative is so straightforward, and so mundanely concerned with developing ever more ingenious ways, at a rapidly increasing clip, of disposing of its starry cast, that the spiritual torment is skimped."
Retrospective In 1978, two years after its release,
The Omen was included in Harry Medved and Harry Dreyfuss's book
The Fifty Worst Films of All Time. It was the most recent movie featured. Retrospective reviews of the film have been more favorable. On
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, it has an
approval rating of 85% based on 53 reviews and an average rating of 7.20/10. The site's consensus reads: "
The Omen eschews an excess of gore in favor of ramping up the suspense—and creates an enduring, dread-soaked horror classic along the way". On
Metacritic, the film has a
weighted average score of 62 out of 100 based on 11 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
The Omen was ranked number 81 on the
American Film Institute's
100 Years... 100 Thrills, and the score by
Jerry Goldsmith was nominated for
AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores. The film was ranked #16 on
Bravo's
100 Scariest Movie Moments. Similarly, the
Chicago Film Critics' Association named it the 31st-scariest film ever made. It has also been ranked as one of the best horror films of 1976 by
Filmsite.org. The film was criticized by the
Catholic Church, which accused it of misrepresenting
Christian eschatology. On the other hand, some Protestant groups praised the film, and the
California Graduate School of Theology in
Glendale presented the filmmakers with a special award during its 1977 commencement ceremonies. A VHS reissue was released by Fox under their "Selection Series" in 2000. The same year, a special-edition
DVD was released by 20th Century Fox Home Video as a standalone release as well as in a four-film set that included its three sequels. A newly restored two-disc collector's edition DVD of the film was issued in 2006, coinciding with the release of the remake. The film had its debut on
Blu-ray in October 2008 as part of a four-film collection, featuring the first two sequels—
Damien – Omen II and
The Final Conflict—as well as the 2006 remake. The fourth sequel,
Omen: The Awakening, was not included in this set. The Scream Factory release features a new
4K restoration of the original film elements. == Franchise ==