SummaryBoth prequel and sequel to "The Omega Code," this is a supernatural ride into a world teetering on the edge of the Apocalypse. (8X Entertainment)
Directed By:Brian Trenchard-Smith
Written By:Stephan Blinn, Hollis Barton, John Fasano
Megiddo: The Omega Code 2
Metascore
Generally Unfavorable
35
User score
Mixed or Average
4.3
My Score
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Metascore
Generally Unfavorable
35
0% Positive
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
50% Mixed
3 Reviews
3 Reviews
50% Negative
3 Reviews
3 Reviews
60
The movie gets bogged down in dull dialogue, despite some truly impressive special effects and a hilariously silly CG devil who closely resembles his counterpart from the PlayStation game Tekken 2.
50
Ironically, for all the paranoia, York's Defiler and his henchman, an always game Udo Kier, are an oasis of wit in an otherwise parched, self-serious script.
40
What's wrong with Megiddo is not its good-versus-evil theme but the clunky, unpersuasive manner in which it has been expressed.
30
Barely even worthy of a straight-to-video release, as simplistic and silly as it is.
30
Apocalyptic gobbledygook.
20
Once the action starts to kick in, Megiddo morphs, minute by minute and scene by scene, into a Mystery Science Theater smorgasbord.
User score
Mixed or Average
4.3
25% Positive
1 Rating
1 Rating
25% Mixed
1 Rating
1 Rating
50% Negative
2 Ratings
2 Ratings
Sep 9, 2018
1
I remember watching this film when I was in my early 20s, and a devout Evangelical Christian. I thought this movie was amazing, and that we were sure to bring in thousands of souls to Jesus, that they would be overwhelmed by what was coming. Of course, looking at it outside of that lens, one sees its shortcomings: one, a ramshackle plot, a hackneyed script, cheesy and yet stilted acting, a mixture of cheap and polished special effects, and a blatantly uneventful conclusion. This film would make for great Mystery Science Theater 3000, but is otherwise a rather poor movie, and an even worse witness. If you don't want your "unsaved" friends to laugh, don't show them this film, because you'll just feel bad, and they won't hear the message you hoped they would. If you want them to see a nice film that gives them an idea of what you want them to see, I would recommend "Joshua" over this film. I mean, if you're going to have a film about faith, and salvation, might as well have the guy who's supposed to bring it all about in it, and with a minimum of violence.
Production Company:
- Code Productions
- Gener8Xion Entertainment
- Infinity Omnimedia
- Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN)
Release Date:Sep 21, 2001
Duration:1 h 44 m
Rating:PG-13
Tagline:In The Beginning, The End Had A Name.
Website:
Awards
Canadian Society of Cinematographers Awards
• 1 Nomination




























