Saving Grace Movie Review
Saving Grace Review

"Saving Grace" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Nigel ColeProducer : Mark Crowdy
Screenwiter : Craig Ferguson,Mark Crowdy
Starring : Brenda Blethyn,Craig Ferguson,Martin Clunes,Tchéky Karyo,Jamie Foreman
There is comic potential in Saving Grace, but its two interesting main
characters and their unusual business arrangement are buried under a mound of
predictable, weathered material.
In the movie, a middle-aged English widow (Brenda Blethyn) is left with a stack
of debts after her philandering dope of a husband commits suicide. Her
Scottish gardener (Craig Ferguson of the irksome Drew Carey Show) needs help
growing hemp and Blethyn just happens to have a green thumb. With his
insistence, they soon grow tons of weed in her huge greenhouse, turning it into
a stoner’s wet dream.
Writers Mark Crowdy and Craig Ferguson (who also produced) don’t flesh out this
scenario, though. Blethyn does a fine job in the title role and makes the film
palatable. With her sing-songy delivery and matronly looks, there is a good
foundation for laughs. The scene of her dressed like Superfly’s aunt when she
looks for London drug buyers is a hoot.
But Blethyn, a two-time Academy Award-nominated actress, never gets a chance to
interpret or broaden the role. The film opts to throw in a bunch of drowsy,
sitcomish subplots that dwarf development on all fronts. Ferguson’s fisher
girlfriend is pregnant, but can’t tell him the happy news. Director Nigel Cole
should feel proud. That device has now officially been used more times than
penicillin. Blethyn meets, befriends and uses her husband’s mistress to get
connected with a drug dealer. The whole bizarre chain of events doesn’t get
played for laughs—a botched comic opportunity.
Ultimately, this all leads to Blethyn and Ferguson being chased by drug dealing
thugs and a corporate boss who wants his debt paid. Yes, by the end it’s
officially become the next Love Bug movie—Herbie Gets High.
The worst thing about Saving Grace is that the drug aspect isn’t used with any
flair, further highlighting the film’s bland, uncreative core. Every reefer
joke involves button-down people acting goofy—whether it be Blethyn laughing
uncontrollably when taking a hit of her own stash, or a garden party getting
funky when she burns her considerable cash crop.
Come on. Don’t Ferguson and Crowdy know the best drug jokes come from the
fried responses, but not people acting like Woodstock bozos? Remember Jack
Nicholson talking about aliens in Easy Rider? Or Rory Cochran describing
Martha and George Washington as America’s hemp harvesting pioneers in Dazed and
Confused?
Those were funny, unforgettable scenes. Saving Grace is so bent on thinking
that just getting high is a hoot, that Blethyn’s and Ferguson’s scheme comes
across as an opportunity to only showcase this stupid behavior. That’s not
good.
The bottom line is that Saving Grace doesn’t bother to try. It goes for the
easiest way out, the least amount of effort. It tries to float solely on the
notion of a spinster growing drugs, buoyed by recycled subplots.
Head shots.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto





