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Miracle on 34th Street
Overlook Pick

Miracle on 34th Street

If you really believe, anything can happen.
68
User Score1,150 ratings
TMDB 6.816+19941h 54mEnglish
FantasyDramaFamily

Synopsis

Six-year-old Susan Walker has doubts about childhood's most enduring miracle—Santa Claus. Her mother told her the secret about Santa a long time ago, but, after meeting a special department store Santa who's convinced he's the real thing, Susan is given the most precious gift of all—something to believe in.

Director
Les MayfieldFrom TMDB credits
Studio
20th Century Fox2 production companies
Release
November 18, 1994Released
Box Office
$46M

Top Cast

8 of 35
Mara Wilson
Mara Wilson
Susan Walker
Richard Attenborough
Richard Attenborough
Kris Kringle
Dylan McDermott
Dylan McDermott
Bryan Bedford
Elizabeth Perkins
Elizabeth Perkins
Dorey Walker
J.T. Walsh
J.T. Walsh
Ed Collins
James Remar
James Remar
Jack Duff
Robert Prosky
Robert Prosky
Judge Henry Harper
Jack McGee
Jack McGee
Tony Falacchi

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 3, 2022

I'm not sure that this really needed reimagining, but Sir Richard Attenborough was probably the best man at giving it a go when it was remade. He is "Kris Kringle", recruited by a struggling toy store to take part in their Christmas parade when their regular fella hits the bottle once too often. He goes down a treat and is soon in their store chatting to all the children. He has an honest streak - he tells the parents where they can shop more cheaply and that's risky for his job! His bosses see a marketing opportunity in his altruism though, and the store's profits soar. He isn't popular with everyone, however, and after a street altercation with his walking stick a his predecessor's head, he finds himself in court. He isn't charged with assault: they are trying to certify him for claiming to be - well, whom he cannot possibly be. Or can he? It's a wee bit long, this, but Sir Richard enters into the spirit of things enthusiastically. Though his accent isn't as reliable as it might be, he brings a certain mischief to the role. He is well supported by the increasingly incredulous prosecutor "Collins" (JT Walsh) and by Robert Prosky in the judge's chair. It's a pleasing story, well told, with some gentle humour that takes a swipe at the bah-humbug society that has long since forgotten what Christmas really ought to be about. It hasn't the charm of the 1947 version, but it's still enjoyable enough to watch at this time of year.

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