Reviewed by Nicholas J. Michalak
Rating: 10/10
I don't think I've seen a more purely evil, bad ass performance than
that of Christopher Walken as the Archangel Gabriel (the Angel of Death).
Performed with sadistic malice, a fine mix of humor, and overall electricfying
delivery. And this was only the first of three times we'd see it.
The Prophecy begins with a somber monologue by Simon (Eric Stoltz),
a redheaded angel. He speaks of his fear and sorrow that a second
war has broken out in Heaven. Simon has come to Earth to head off
the plans of 'the other side' who wish to claim the blackest human soul
on Earth to fight for them in Heaven. Our protagonist here is Thomas
Daggett (Elias Koteas). Once set to become an ordained priest in
the Catholic church, but a violent and bloody vision of Heaven, complete
with the sight of slain angels, tests his faith. A test which he
fails. He is now a police detective that has long lost his faith,
but has just met an angel. Simon to be exact. Simon tells Thomas
that he was in the church that day when he got his brief glimpse of a war
torn Heaven, and certainly leaves him with much to think about. Though,
when Simon returns to his rented out apartment, he is attacked by another
angel: Uziel (pronounced 'Oo-cie'), but Simon dispatches of him, leaving
quite a mess for the police to clean up with Daggett now on the case.
Unfortunately, for Simon, because Uziel is now dead, Gabriel (Christopher
Walken) soon comes to succeed where his underling failed.
Meanwhile, Daggett and coroner Joseph (Steve Hytner) examine Uziel's
corpse. Many bizarre revealations are discovered, but for Thomas,
it's the discovery of possibly the oldest Bible in existence which contains
extra chapters that shouldn't exist. They speak of the aforementioned
second war in Heaven, a war over us, Humans. As Gabriel arrives at
the empty crime scene, Simon has already found the aforementioned soul
within the recently deceased General Hawthorne in a small southwestern
town, and Gabriel is soon to follow after disposing of certain evidence.
In this small town, we meet school teacher Catherine (Virginia Madsen)
and a little Native American girl named Mary (Moriah Shining Dove Snyder).
Simon encounters them both while he attempts to hide this black soul from
Gabriel, but the Archangel is hot on his trail along with Thomas.
While Gabriel tracks down the soul and Simon himself, Thomas attempts to
unravel this mystery before him, and ultimately, discover what is 'faith'.
This is one must-see thriller! As I said, Walken OWNS this film.
He's so very perfect, and demonstrates many sides of his acting abilities
in many scenes. It's mesmerizing watching him work each and every
scene. How he can go from quite calm to vilely sadistic and evil,
even heated and angered. It's an intense portrayal that will gravitate
you towards watching this film many times over 'cause you just can't get
enough of it. It's all there, and it's juicy stuff. Elias Koteas
has always done fantastic work in the few roles I've seen him in.
From the guilty pleasure of Casey Jones in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
to his psychotic role as Edgar Reese, opposite Denzel Washington, in Fallen.
Elias does solid work no matter the character, and becomes very much a
chameleon as an actor. He continues that here as a man who has his
faith in God broken and tested throughout the film. On a journey
not only in hopes of restoring such faith, but understanding just what
is means to have faith. Eric Stoltz is an actor I really haven't
seen any other work from, but if this performance is any indication, he
does some fine work. He brings a simple warmth, heart, and charm
to Simon. You truly do care for him, and what he chooses to sacrafice
in order to protect that which HE believes in. Whether he's sharing
a scene with Koteas, Walken, or the little Moriah Snyder, his heart and
warmth remain strong. It's a truly human performance, especially
considering he's portraying an angel.
Virginia Madsen (Candyman) brings us another strong, consistent
performance here. She holds her ground, even when Walken pulls out
his truly dark side as Gabriel. Also, her character is well connected
to the Native Americans of the land, and conducts the church choir.
Her faith is intact, but as the true underlying theme here continues to
be the testing of one's faith, she confronts her own perceptions of it
all. Moriah Snyder is not one of those kids in a horror film that
gets on your nerves every second they're in a scene. She's very good,
and quite talented. There's much here for her to work with, more
than I'll elude to in this review, but trust in that she has a significant
role in this film that she handles quite well.
And then, you have two smaller, yet significant, and certainly memorable
roles. The first is Steve Hytner's (who appears in all three films).
Hytner portrays the coroner Joseph with a light-hearted charm, but with
a professional manner. It's just the sort of character to slightly
lighten the mood when Daggett is talking about wars in Heaven over human
souls, and dead angels sitting in Joseph's morgue. It's a quite needed
and welcomed character that Hytner plays perfectly. He doesn't go
remotely over-the-top with it, and keeps a nice balance between the mild
humor and the professional mind of the character. Glad to see him
in all three films. But the real juice comes with the appearance
of The Lord of the Rings' Viggo Mortensen as Lucifer. Viggo
portrays the Prince of Darkness himself with as much character as Walken
does with Gabriel. Mortensen brings a genuine disturbing and sadistic
sense that just oozes from his being. The role is small, but Viggo
makes it no less significant or prominent than that of any other main characters
here. He simply brings a casual, yet deathly serious evil manner
to the role. He speaks of the most vile and sadistic acts with the
casual manner of us talking about the weather. A chilling presence
that is felt the instant he enters the scene, and remains even after he
leaves. And when he & Walken do briefly meet, the two just eat
it up. It's devilishly delicious (no pun intended). The two
with their hot breath and cold blood just makes such a scene so rich with
character, and it's only a shame Viggo didn't return for The Prophecy
II when Lucifer makes a brief, shadowy appearance near the beginning.
All in all, this is one fantastic film that I strongly encourage everyone
to see. It's a gem of a thriller that touches on many different levels
with superb acting with a rock solid cast! This film comes from the
mind of the man who scripted Backdraft and the original Highlander
- Gregory Widen, and in his feature film directorial debut, he does a greatly
talented job. And props to the cinematographers. I don't know
how many times I noticed so many perfect "trailer" shots in this film.
Just fine, superb talent here in front of and behind the camera.
Just a beautiful and fantastically talented production! The Prophecy
brings you a great film on so many levels, and is a MUST for any Christopher
Walken fan. As I said at the start, Walken puts together a juicy
performance filled with versatility and intensity to spare. SEE THIS
FILM! A 10 out of 10 if there ever was one! |