The Last Coming Niphilim is saved, but the prophecy is still in effect, and the war in heaven is gaining momentum. Daniel, the son of an angel and an earthly woman, must stop the coming of a new God who plans to destroy the Earth. Will he be able to end the war, or will a new Apocalypse begin?
If the first part was a great representative of a mystical thriller with religious overtones, and the second part is more dynamic, but lost the charm of the original, then the third, as if, takes the shortcomings of the first two films and brings them together. Although it is worth giving credit here - the creators tried hard to return the atmosphere of the first film, focusing on the confrontation between the young Niphilim and the rebellious Archangel, but it turned out that they had everything too long, or in some places too crumpled.
In fact, 90 percent of the film is the escape of the main character from the ubiquitous Zofael (an analogue of Gabriel from the first or two parts, but more pathetic), but even in the second part, the same running looked more cheerful, dynamic, and here too fresh, and in some places predictable. Plus, there are almost no interesting moments, unexpected turns here, except that the final fight and a powerful finale, a kind of fat point in the film trilogy, are shot more beautifully.
Another plus of the third part is that references to the first part of the film (in particular, the characters) slip in it every now and then, which serves as a kind of loop in the general plot. Unless Gabriel (played by Walken) was left here, but the problem is that he is not as happy as before - he does not have the same charisma, charm that was in the first two parts, and without them the character is empty (in fact, the sense of him here is almost zero). It's a shame.
The third part is worth watching just to see if the same prophecy as all three parts of the book will come true. The finale of the triquel was closed, positive, clear, which is a rarity in current films of this genre. And at the same time it turns out one whole story, which should be reviewed every now and then.
5 out of 10