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Escroc malgré lui

Original title: Dear God
  • 1996
  • PG
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
Greg Kinnear in Escroc malgré lui (1996)
Theatrical Trailer
Play trailer2:30
1 Video
33 Photos
Comedy

When letters written to God start getting results, and replies, people everywhere are amazed. The post office, however, is annoyed.When letters written to God start getting results, and replies, people everywhere are amazed. The post office, however, is annoyed.When letters written to God start getting results, and replies, people everywhere are amazed. The post office, however, is annoyed.

  • Director
    • Garry Marshall
  • Writers
    • Warren Leight
    • Ed Kaplan
  • Stars
    • Greg Kinnear
    • Laurie Metcalf
    • Maria Pitillo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    4.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Garry Marshall
    • Writers
      • Warren Leight
      • Ed Kaplan
    • Stars
      • Greg Kinnear
      • Laurie Metcalf
      • Maria Pitillo
    • 43User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Dear God
    Trailer 2:30
    Dear God

    Photos33

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    Top cast99

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    Greg Kinnear
    Greg Kinnear
    • Tom Turner
    Laurie Metcalf
    Laurie Metcalf
    • Rebecca Frazen
    Maria Pitillo
    Maria Pitillo
    • Gloria McKinney
    Tim Conway
    Tim Conway
    • Herman Dooly
    Hector Elizondo
    Hector Elizondo
    • Vladek Vidov
    Jon Seda
    Jon Seda
    • Handsome
    Roscoe Lee Browne
    Roscoe Lee Browne
    • Idris Abraham
    Anna Maria Horsford
    Anna Maria Horsford
    • Lucille Barnett
    Kathleen Marshall
    Kathleen Marshall
    • Whispering Wendy
    Isadora O'Boto
    Isadora O'Boto
    • Hot Mary
    Felix Pire
    Felix Pire
    • Ramon
    • (as Felix A. Pire)
    Donal Logue
    Donal Logue
    • Webster
    Sam McMurray
    Sam McMurray
    • Federal Prosecutor
    Nancy Marchand
    Nancy Marchand
    • Judge Kits Van Heynigan
    Larry Miller
    Larry Miller
    • State Judge
    Rue McClanahan
    Rue McClanahan
    • Mom Turner
    Jack Sheldon
    Jack Sheldon
    • Homeless Trumpeter
    Coolio
    Coolio
    • Gerard
    • Director
      • Garry Marshall
    • Writers
      • Warren Leight
      • Ed Kaplan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    5.54.3K
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    Featured reviews

    5rkhen

    Watch Tim Conway.

    Everyone's already hit the main points in the other reviews. I wanted to add that this is a movie with a lot of heart and high ambitions, that it doesn't quite achieve. Although it has likable characters and the zaniness is fun, the premises are trite and the script stretches credibility to the breaking point. In the end I decided to receive it on the "dumb but fun" channel, rather than turn it off, and made it through.

    Someone else here said, "I didn't hate it, I just didn't like it." That about sums up my feelings, too.

    But I wanted to leave a review to draw attention to Tim Conway's incredible performance. I'm not a giant fan of Conway's trademark burlesque, which worked wonders on Carol Burnett but is out of place in anything that's not an ensemble variety show (i.e., vaudeville). But here he's absolutely brilliant, playing a comedy archetype that is not however over the top. He sold the character with complexity and palpable sincerity and proved that he could in fact act, in the full sense of the word.

    Watch this movie for him. I'm glad I did. I wish we could have seen him in many other such roles. Such a missed opportunity.
    5Vance-11

    Starts awfully, then improves measurably

    "Dear God" is the rare example of a movie that starts abysmally but slowly gains its stride. Most films these days are the opposite. They grab you right off, then run out of steam. To be fair, "Dear God" never fully grabs you or has much steam. But it gets to the point where it becomes worth watching, eliciting several pleased chuckles, while still falling far short of out-and-out funny.

    Greg Kinnear plays a two-bit hustler whose honest face and convincing stories allow him to con working joes out of their money. He has a gambling debt to repay to Junior, an overweight thug who teaches him a lesson or two about horses and stables at a disastrous visit to the track. Kinnear's Tom Turner is arrested while trying to scam two undercover cops disguised as foreign sight-seers, and in a ridiculous plot convenience, is sentenced to find a paying job for one year. Most criminals should be so lucky. But of course, Turner has that honest face.

    Anyway, he ends up at the post office, where he's assigned to a dead letter office filled with whacko postal cast-offs, played with sufficient nuttiness by Laurie Metcalf, Jon Seda and Tim Conway, among others. Conway's character once memorized the entire layout of the city of L.A., but was demoted when he lost it and bit a dog. Metcalf plays a former lawyer who needed a "less stressful" job. You get the idea.

    Through a series of accidents, this motley crew begins answering letters to God, and, through their limited means, they begin making minor miracles happen throughout L.A. The press picks up on it, which draws the attention of the U.S. Postmaster General (played with his usual rabid energy by the director, Garry Marshall), and brings heat on the do-gooder crew, whose activities are technically illegal. (Opening the mail is a federal offense). Meanwhile, Kinnear's Turner remains on the run from the gangsters and tries to woo a single mother played by the adorable Maria Pitillo, whose character has no function in this film other than as a weak romantic interest.

    Extraordinarily lame-brained from the get-go, "Dear God" actually gets on course, as the relative uniqueness of its storyline manifests itself in some sweet, quiet moments, and as the ensemble group of veteran actors really begins to relish their roles. Metcalf is always funny, although she's a little over the top here, and Kinnear is notable for his ability to play a likeable everyman. Conway has a very-funny apology scene with a dog and is otherwise likeable in his eccentricity.

    The movie ultimately only reaches the level of so-so -- but I guess the fact that I felt compelled to write about it means that it made some impact on me, and that I can marginally recommend it. 5 out 10.
    8inkblot11

    Dear God, thanks for this funny and uplifting movie!

    Tom (Greg Kinnear) is a petty conman who poses as a burn victim (among other things) to elicit money from innocent bystanders. He has quite a reputation around town so law enforcement goes to some length to catch him in the act. Brought in front of a judge, she decrees that he will get a real job or end up in the pokey. So, a job it is for him. Tom has his eye on a pretty lady named Gloria, anyway, so it might help his image with her, too. Strings are pulled to get him into the postal service's dead letter office. Once there, surrounded by kind and interesting people, he begins to turn his life around. He even reads some of the letters addressed to God and performs random acts of kindness. What could be wrong with that? This movie leaves the viewer with feelings of great joy. Kinnear is a charmer, in every way, and with cast members such as Maria Pitillo, Tim Conway, Roscoe Lee Browne, and Hector Elizondo, he is in great company. The script has a buoyant message to give about helping others, only to receive kindness back in return. How nice the settings and costumes are, too. A love story develops quietly for any viewer who longs for comedies with romance. This film is recommended for individuals or families who need their faith restored in humanity, but who also enjoy laughter and nonsense along the way.
    MovieAddict2016

    "Dear God" had a good premise with promising potential, but due to a half-baked, sentimentally-controlling script, unlikable characters and an awful sense of humor, this film fails miserably at wha

    "Dear God" is so painstakingly boring, manipulative and predictable it's hard to watch despite some decent yet watered down performances by those onboard the project.

    Greg Kinnear plays a young slacker who is innocently arrested and sentenced to finding a job--yes, finding a job--by the bad guy from "Total Recall," who doesn't look like he's having a very good time making this movie. Kinnear takes a job at a local post office and gets a spot in the Dead Letter Department, where all the letters to Santa Claus, The Easter Bunny, The Tooth Fairy, and God are sorted and thrown out.

    But as Kinnear avoids his odd co-workers, he finds himself wanting to respond to the "Dear God" letters, hence the title of the film--big surprise--"Dear God."

    Kinnear's character is extremely obnoxious and annoying. At times the filmmakers want us to feel sorry for the Innocent Young Man Going Through Turbulent Times, but then the character does things that are inexcusibly ignorant and unbiased. For example, take a scene where Kinnear is on trial. We're supposed to feel sorry for him. But the next moment he's up in the judge's face making wise cracks and disobeying all courtroom procedures. This is supposed to amuse the audience. Yeah, right.

    The film's jokes are about as tired as every other average comedy out there. Too many scenes do not expand to their full potential, and instead we get scenes like the "Stand behind the yellow line" gag that not only goes on WAYYY too long, but has been done a million times before in a million different films.

    The characters are not only weak, but one-dimensional and totally distant: We can't feel for any of them one way or another.

    The characters' dialogue is about as stiff and stereotypical as it can get: You feel like the writers were trying to think of corny dialogue. And boy, if that's what they were looking for, they got it right.

    "Dear God" had a good premise with promising potential, but due to a half-baked, sentimentally-controlling script, unlikable characters and an awful sense of humor, this film fails miserably at what it promises us.

    1.5/5 stars -

    John Ulmer
    7Sylviastel

    One of the best Christmas movies in recent years!

    I just love this movie. It is funny and heartwarming. It has a happy ending. Laurie Metcalf is unforgettable along with a stellar cast. It may not be the best movie but it is fun to watch and enjoy. Tim Conway is unbelievable as a burned out postman. Laurie Metcalf as a burned out lawyer. Greg Kinnear who joins this zany group of people who are ordinary and do something to make themselves extraordinary people. It gives you a warm feeling by the end of the movie. Please rent or buy this movie. It's fun for the whole family. I love watching Rue McClanahan and Jack Klugman. The story might be flawed but it's always worth watching especially around the holidays when you need a little cheering up to do. Greg Kinnear is a good actor who is working at being a good film actor.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Garry Marshall first met Greg Kinnear when he guested on Later with Greg Kinnear (1994). He was impressed by Kinnear's charisma, but did not know if he was an actor. Kinnear's performance in Sabrina (1995) finally convinced Marshall of his skill as an actor, and he earned his first lead role.
    • Goofs
      When Tom first reads Marguerite's letter to God, it's says she lives in apartment 2-F at the Normandie Arms. But then when Tom addresses the envelope to Marguerite, he addresses it to apartment 22-F. When Tom arrives at the Normandie Arms to get his money back, Marguerite is speaking to the other renters, she says she lives in 2-A.
    • Quotes

      Bodacious TV Anchor: ...this may be the first time that a serial killer has used poison cereal to kill his victims...

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Larger Than Life/Unhook the Stars/Romeo+Juliet/Dear God/Vertigo (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Straighten Up and Fly Right
      Written by Nat 'King' Cole (as Nat King Cole) & Irving Mills

      Performed by Lyle Lovett

      Produced by Lyle Lovett & Billy Williams

      Lyle Lovett performs courtesy of Curb/MCA Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 1996 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Querido Dios:
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Monica Beach, Santa Monica, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Rysher Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $22,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,138,523
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,213,045
      • Nov 3, 1996
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,138,523
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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