
A widow discovers after her husband's suicide that he has mortgaged everything they own and the banks are ready to foreclose. Faced with impending doom and little working knowledge except her ability to grow plants, she struggles to save her home. Enter her gardener, who is struggling to make a few marijuana plants grow in a hidden location and suggests that she use her green house to help grow the plants and sell them to make the money both need. He is wanting to get married... (Full plot summary below)
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A widow discovers after her husband's suicide that he has mortgaged everything they own and the banks are ready to foreclose. Faced with impending doom and little working knowledge except her ability to grow plants, she struggles to save her home. Enter her gardener, who is struggling to make a few marijuana plants grow in a hidden location and suggests that she use her green house to help grow the plants and sell them to make the money both need. He is wanting to get married, but needs capital. What he doesn't know is that his girl friend is pregnant and thus fears that they will be busted for growing marijuana. While supposedly working, the whole village is well aware of the endeavor and is hoping for their success. When the plants come in, Grace takes the crop to London and tries to sell it to a ruthless, but charming drug dealer. Everything busts loose from there.
Leave your thoughts about Saving Grace.
| Ozus' World Movie ReviewsDennis SchwartzToo absurd to consider as anything but sitcom fluff. |
| One Guy's OpinionFrank SwietekA pleasant little comedy with the soul of one of those old, much loved Ealing pictures of the forties and fifties but overlayed with a coating of Hollywood glitz. |
| New York PostLou LumenickA real high in a season filled with unfunny comedies. |
| Milwaukee Journal SentinelDuane DudekYou can save yourself from this desperately amiable and harmlessly dull Britcom ... if you just say no. |
| Philadelphia InquirerDesmond RyanA comedy of the old school. Depending on your view of the current state of screen humor, that's either a promise or a warning. |
| CompuserveHarvey S. KartenWe revel in the gentle fun the story makes at the expense of village people, some of whom turn out to be not as dumb as they appear. |
| Film.comPeter BrunetteHas a charm that keeps you involved throughout. |
| Salon.comStephanie ZacharekIt's a breezy and entertaining little charmer. |
| L.A. WeeklyF. X. FeeneyIt's a fresh installment in what appears to be a self-perpetuating sitcom of British life. |
| Los Angeles TimesJan StuartIt makes you giggle. That's the dark, dirty secret. You giggle. You giggle again. |