Oh, God!

    Oh, God!
    1977

    Synopsis

    When God appears to an assistant grocery manager as a good natured old man, the Almighty selects him as his messenger for the modern world.

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    Cast

    • John DenverJerry Landers
    • George BurnsGod
    • Teri GarrBobbie Landers
    • Donald PleasenceDoctor Harmon
    • Ralph BellamySam Raven
    • William DanielsGeorge Summers
    • Barnard HughesJudge Baker
    • Paul SorvinoReverend Willie Williams
    • Barry SullivanBishop Reardon
    • Dinah ShoreHerself

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Variety

      Oh, God! is a hilarious film which benefits from the brilliant teaming of George Burns, as the Almighty in human form, and John Denver, sensational in his screen debut as a supermarket assistant manager who finds himself a suburban Moses.
    • 88

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Oh, God! is lighthearted, satirical, and humorous and (that rarest of qualities) in good taste.
    • 70

      Time Out

      So here we have God's views on most things from TV to avocados, all enunciated in Burns' inimitably crisp'n'dry manner. Fun ultimately falters with some routine satire, but when the Devil's having such a time at the box-office, this comes as a welcome comic riposte from the other side.
    • 60

      Washington Post

      A light inoffensive satire that brings God back to earth as crusty, caring George Burns to tell mankind to stop mucking up the river-fouling the air, killing each other off, preaching exclusive paths to heaven and to get back to the business of loving. [14 Oct 1977, p.11]
    • 50

      TV Guide Magazine

      Reiner does one of his best directing jobs and never resorts to some of the silliness he's demonstrated in other films. Denver is very affable and could have had a good movie career given the right material.
    • 50

      The New Yorker

      The picture is so cautious about not offending anyone that it doesn't rise to the level of satire, or even spoof.
    • 50

      Newsweek

      Coming from director Carl Reiner, whose Where' poppa? had flashes of real comic fire, one expects more than Hallmark platitudes wrapped in Vegas banter. [24 Oct 1977, p.126]
    • 50

      Chicago Reader

      The gags are slighted in favor of John Denver-style homilies, mouthed by John Denver, while the film collapses under the weight of missed narrative connections, the apparent victim of excessive recutting.