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Dear God No!

Play trailer Poster for Dear God No! 2011 1h 22m Horror Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 2 Reviews 29% Popcornmeter 50+ Ratings
Survivors of a biker war encounter more horror in the northern Georgia mountains.
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Dear God No!

Critics Reviews

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Richard Propes TheIndependentCritic.com The kind of film you'd hit your local drive-in to watch in the 1970's. Rated: 2.5/4.0 Sep 5, 2020 Full Review Felix Vasquez Jr. Cinema Crazed Works as an ode to grindhouse and trash cinema but ultimately crumbles under the weight of critical thinking. Rated: 2.5/4 Jun 20, 2012 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member It sucked in that good ole grindhouse way. Gritty shitty and full of fucked up scenes and gore. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member A mess of a film, which is meant, I think, to be a homage to the exploitation films of the 70s, but comes off looking like a lot of ideas just thrown together with no real meat to them. Also, I would have expected a film of this nature to have some humour in it, but not one iota did I find. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member The first act is absolutely horribly edited, some of the worst professional work I've ever seen in that aspect. And it doesn't pick up massively afterwards. I'm glad Gridhouse Revival is a thing, but Dear God No! is not a great example of it. For the most part they embrace the deliberately terrible qualities and play the exploitation almost entirely for laughs (seriously there is a ten minute sequence with a trio of Nixon strippers) but there is a scene in the middle of pretty traumatising sexual violence, which is so drastically juxtaposed to the light-hearted attitude of the style that came before it and after that it's actually really uncomfortable. Not in an "Oh what a great movie, it made me feel something way." More of an "Ew I'm really not sure what inspired this choice stylistically, should I turn this off now?" way. But there's some humour, some bad gore and some Supernatural-Nazi jazz going on in there too, so if that's your sort of thing then I guess you could do worse than Dear God No! ...If you tried really hard. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review Audience Member Grindhouse effort with terrible production values and even worse acting, which really lets down the film, although the story is fairly simplistic too. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member Pretty gritty for a comedy horror Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review Audience Member (25%) A movie that on the one hand is a fair and honest homage to bad biker movies with their dire story telling, terrible writing, and woeful production values that in a parameter of sleazy trash cinema works as an actual throw-back, but on the other hand you cannot help but think that Quentin Tarrantino has a fair amount to answer for. It's clear this in its own way wants to be a bad film taken from within the boundaries of a low budget sleaze picture from the early to mid 70's, but is that achievement in itself worthy of actual merit? I'm not entirely sure. There are times when this does feel like the genuine article, but again is that worthy of merit? I'm somewhat split on this one. Yes, this is a really bad movie, and yes that was the whole point, but that doesn't mean this is 100% not worth a look for the cult fans out there. For those with zero interest in the old, hugely flawed films need not apply. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Dear God No!

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Survivors of a biker war encounter more horror in the northern Georgia mountains.
Director
James Anthony Bickert
Producer
Dusty Booze, Jett Bryant, Johnny Collins, Jonathan Hilton, Nick Hood, Olivia LaCroix, Bryan G. Malone, Michelle Mccall, Lisa Williams
Screenwriter
James Bickert
Genre
Horror
Original Language
English
Runtime
1h 22m
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