The Prophecy II

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Lua error in Module:Infobox at line 235: malformed pattern (missing ']'). The Prophecy II is a fantasy horrorthriller film and the second motion picture (of five) in The Prophecy series. Christopher Walken reprises his role as the Archangel Gabriel. It was directed by Greg Spence and written by Spence and Matthew Greenberg. It was released direct-to-video and was followed by two more sequels.

Plot

A mysterious robed figure brings Gabriel back from hell to Earth. His new mission is to prevent the birth of a child, a nephilim, the offspring of an angel and a human. The coming of this child, said to precede reconciliation between the warring factions in heaven, has been prophesied by Thomas Daggett, now a monk. The child's conception takes place when Valerie, a nurse, is seduced by an attractive stranger (the angel Danyael) whom she hit with her car. She finds a few days later that she is pregnant.

Gabriel attempts to find the whereabouts of the child from Daggett, but kills him when he refuses to help. When Danyael kills members of Gabriel's army of angels, Gabriel instead employs the assistance of a teenage girl (Izzy) who has just committed suicide. Gabriel keeps her alive to help him in his search for Valerie (despite his powers as an angel, he is completely naive about technology, and is unable to drive a car or work a computer and has her use her computer skills to find her and drive him around).

Gabriel's war against Danyael and the other angels climaxes in a battle in Eden, now an industrial wasteland. Danyael and Izzy are killed, but Valerie defeats Gabriel by seizing him and jumping from a building, confident that God will protect her as He told her He would (she reveals that Gabriel is unable to hear His voice as he simply does not listen); she is indeed unharmed, but Gabriel is impaled on a spike. As punishment, Gabriel is turned into a human by Michael. Valerie raises the child by herself, accepting the risk that the angels may come for her. The film ends with Gabriel as a derelict; a face in the sky and ominous clouds show that the war in heaven is not over.

Cast

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 33% of six surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 4.7/10.[1] In 1998, the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films rated the film as "The Year's Most Suspenseful Thriller",[this quote needs a citation] and Cinefantastique praised the film for being "Intense…Action Packed! Walken Steals the Show!"[this quote needs a citation] TV Guide rated it 1/5 stars and called it "a dull and cheap-looking direct-to-video sequel".[2] Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club wrote, "While at times amusing, and far from unwatchable, The Prophecy II's quirky strengths can't compensate for the fact that it's about as frightening as your average episode of Psi Factor."[3] Robert Sellers of the Radio Times rated it 2/5 stars and wrote, "But where the original boasted some good, offbeat ideas, this quickly degenerates into just another dumb chase movie."[4] Witney Seibold of CraveOnline wrote that the sequel suffers from overfamiliarity and thus becomes "a pretty rote action thriller".[5] Nicholas Sylvain of DVD Verdict wrote, "If you aren't a Walken fan, then you have my sympathies, because there's not much else here for you."[6]

Sequels

The film follows The Prophecy (1995). The film is followed by The Prophecy 3: The Ascent, The Prophecy: Uprising (2005), and The Prophecy: Forsaken (2005).

Home video

Several of the The Prophecy sequel films including this film have been released direct-to-DVD.

Soundtrack

The film score by David C. Williams was released on Perseverance Records September 19, 2006.

References

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External links

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