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.
Michael York
Stone Alexander
Michael Biehn
David Alexander
Diane Venora
Gabriella Francini
R. Lee Ermey
President Richard Benson
Udo Kier
The Guardian
Franco Nero
Gen. Francini
Chad Michael Murray
David Alexander - Age 16
Guy Siner
British Leader
Michael Chinyamurindi
African Leader
John DeMita
Chuck Farrell
Oleg Stefan
Russian Leader
Noah Huntley
Young Stone
Jim Metzler
Michael Paul Chan
Elisa Scialpi
Forbes Riley
Gil Colon
Tony Amendola
David Hedison
Mr. Alexander
Gavin Fink
Greg Ellis
Eduardo Yáñez
Director
Brian Trenchard-Smith
Director
Paul J. Lombardi
Writer
John Fasano
Writer
Stephan Blinn
October 9, 2024
5
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.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$22,000,000.00
Revenue:
$6,047,691.00