Oh, God! You Devil
Oh, God! You Devil

Oh, God! You Devil (1984)

5.6 ? Nov 07, 1984 1h 37m

Overview

George Burns is back as God, but oops, here he is as Satan, too. A young rock star is ready to sell his soul to Satan, and Satan is all too happy to oblige. Oops! Seems the fellow was watched over by God as a baby, so now the almighty and his nemesis have to duke it out over the soul.

Genres

Comedy Fantasy

Release Date

November 07, 1984

Rating

5.6 /10

Runtime

1h 37m

Official Trailer from YouTube

George Burns

George Burns

God / Harry O. Tophet

Ted Wass

Ted Wass

Bobby Shelton

Roxanne Hart

Roxanne Hart

Wendy Shelton

Ron Silver

Ron Silver

Gary Frantz

James Cromwell

James Cromwell

Priest

Eugene Roche

Eugene Roche

Charlie Gray

Janet Brandt

Janet Brandt

Mrs. K

Robert Desiderio

Robert Desiderio

Billy Wayne

John Doolittle

John Doolittle

Arthur Shelton

Julie Lloyd

Bea Shelton

Ian Giatti

Ian Giatti

Young Bobby

Belita Moreno

Mrs. Vega

Dan Ponce

Dan Ponce

Joey Vega

Jason Wingreen

Jason Wingreen

Hotel Manager

Danny Mora

Danny Mora

Bellhop

Wuchak avatar

Wuchak

7.0/10

Dec 10, 2020

_**Burns plays both satan and God in this amusing commentary on ‘success’**_ A piano player in Los Angeles (Ted Wass) wants to make it big and so the devil (George Burns) offers to turn him from a Barry Manilow wannabe into a stud-ly Rick Springfield rock star. Will he stay with his wife (Roxanne Hart) and simple life as a struggling musician or give into temptation and the ‘success’ he craves? “Oh, God! You Devil” (1984) was the third and final “Oh, God!” film. It’s superior to the sitcomy precursor from 1980 while the first half is just as good as the original 1977 film. Shortly after the midway point, though, it starts to lose its mojo and becomes a little tedious, but things perk up when ‘God’ (Burns) appears for a showdown with the devil. If you ignore the paranormal elements, it’s reminiscent of “The Rose” in ways (1979). Lovely Roxanne Hart is a highlight in her brief role. Too bad it wasn’t bigger. Meanwhile Wass is surprisingly convincing as the Rick Springfield-like rocker. The film cost $5,560,001 and made $21,538,850 in the USA alone in late 1984, which means it was a modest box office hit. Roger Ebert & Gene Siskel gave it a positive review, calling it "charming" and "delightful" "with a wicked sense of humor.” The movie runs 1 hour, 37 minutes and was shot in Los Angeles, with some scenes done in Las Vegas. GRADE: B

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