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Saving Grace: The Final Season |  | Actor: Holly Hunter Studio: 20th Century Fox Category: DVD
List Price: $49.98 Buy Used: $20.50 as of 9/10/2010 01:48 CDT details You Save: $29.48 (59%)
New (36) Used (15) from $20.50
Seller: mnmsales Rating: 19 reviews Sales Rank: 1218
Format: AC-3, Box set, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Discs: 5 Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1 Running Time: 836 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 024543660040 UPC: 024543660040 EAN: 0024543660040 ASIN: B003FSTG1I
Release Date: July 13, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Not much seems to have changed as Saving Grace begins its third and final season. Star (and executive producer) Holly Hunter's Grace Hanadarko is still the tough-talking, hard-drinking, truth-abusing, rule-defying Oklahoma City police detective we've come to know; in fact, in the very first episode, she and her boyfriend, fellow cop Ham Dewey (Kenny Johnson), are caught on film committing a drunken and very public prank. But this time there's more to it. Ever since the pilot episode, Grace has received regular if unpredictable visitations from a folksy, avuncular "last chance angel" named Earl (Leon Rippy), who has offered her a chance at redemption, telling her that "God is using you for great things." And now, at last, Grace somehow realizes that her time is coming. Not that she's exactly serene about it; on the contrary, she remains defiant and skeptical. But she also has a growing sense of the inevitable, and these 19 episodes (about half again as many as the previous seasons) gradually lead her, and us, to a resolution that's neither pat nor pretty. Along the way, Grace and her colleagues, who by now have developed an appealingly casual but caring camaraderie, deal with various quotidian police matters, with stand-alone stories involving the specter of domestic terrorism (an especially touchy subject in OKC, still reeling from the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, in which Grace's own sister was killed), an AA-like program for alcoholics, Hasidic Jews and kosher beef, Muslim attitudes toward homosexuality, ranchers battling over water, and so on. But it's Grace's personal journey that predominates. Over the course of the season, she tries to help a troubled young woman who also has a relationship with Earl, thinking this might be what God has in store for her; she also confronts a sinister stranger named Hut Flanders (Gordon MacDonald, Hunter's real-life boyfriend), who, like Earl, is not of this world. Of course, Grace isn't someone who channels her emotions very positively. And by the final few episodes, she's deep into a downward spiral, self-inflicted and otherwise, that makes her earlier self look tame: she's involved in a fatal car accident; her house is burned down; she smokes crack, turns tricks, and rejects friends and loved ones alike. It's hard to believe that all this turmoil is part of "great things," but if there's one thing series creator Nancy Miller has emphasized throughout Saving Grace's run, it's that God works in mysterious ways. --Sam Graham
Product Description An Oklahoma City police detective is offered a chance to redeem her life by an angel.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 19
The all-time shark-jumping champion September 9, 2010 A. K. Moore (Santa Cruz, CA USA) This show has many of my favorite actors, including Hunter herself and three alumni of The Shield - even a guest appearance from F. Murray Abraham. The first season was promising; the second went downhill; but the third was just shockingly bad writing. The Neely storyline was all over the map and never made any sense, building in ridiculousness until she happens to inexplicably show up dead in a dumpster in the same wacked out Mexican town that Holly is stumbling around in. The police procedural B-plots - previously decent - were also almost uniformly absurd - leaping to ridiculous denouements that come out of nowhere, with the culprit confessing instantly and right on cue. The final episode wasn't quite as bad as the rest of the season - or maybe I was just relieved that it was over.
To sum up season 3, I picture God the Dog's goofy quizzical face - as if to say "who WROTE this mess?"
The role made for Holly Hunter comes to a close September 7, 2010 Haunted Flower (Indianapolis) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
19 Episodes on 5 Discs
Having never watched "Saving Grace" before, I didn't know what to really expect from this series. Academy Award winner Holly Hunter heads up the cast as Grace, a detective who happens to have a guardian angel named Earl. A show like this could easily get preachy and turn certain people off, but I was surprised to find it presented in such an even matter that most people could stick with it.
Grace herself is a flawed character and no angel. Grace isn't sure what she believes and doesn't pray. Not being perfect and having lots of issues as well as a tough job facing homicides, bombings, and a near-death experience makes her someone to root for. Holly Hunter is a down-home kind of girl with a very distinctive accent that clearly dictates she does not believe she is better than anyone else. The short version is that she is the opposite of every stereotype naysayers might expect and she is very easy to relate to since she doesn't have all the answers.
Holly Hunter's wit, enthusiasm, and sense of humor when things are going down around her are very attractive and charismatic qualities. She pulls out serious acting chops of emotion whenever she needs to as in one case where Grace needs to convince an alcoholic that she is one too and trick her into breaking her three year sobriety to get answers. Hunter never shies away from a challenge and always manages to bring the mood back to a light place full of laughs eventually.
A great deal of this season revolves around a girl who falls into a coma that Earl claims Grace needs to help. A series of challenges are put in front of her in her work life, her family, her relationships, and her friends. Eventually her own spirituality and faith are questioned, but only in retrospect to bigger issues taking place in the plot.
There is a love interest component, a best friend angle, and lots of crime drama to solve and all this helps keep it a more rounded story.
Bonus Features: None
don't go Grace August 27, 2010 T. Werner (D.C area) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This was a great season for Grace.Excepet for a hokey ending It made you wonder why they couldn't keep it going another season.But that is generally true of any good show.You get used to the characters and you react to their lives as if
they were real people.I won't go into detail but each episode had it's strong points.You just can't help wonder what will happen next.
Excellent show August 24, 2010 M. Annetts (London, UK) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Damn fine show that could easily have run for a few more seasons. Bravura performance from Holly Hunter as the star of the show. Shame it all had to end, but then all things do eventually.
Grace goes out with a bang! August 20, 2010 M. Mueller-crockford (Zurich, Switzerland) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Sadly this series is over. Grace certainly went out in style! Very moving entertainment until the end. Chapeau to Holly Hunter!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19
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