A Girl Like Grace
A Girl Like Grace
PG-13 | 12 June 2015 (USA)
A Girl Like Grace Trailers

Raised by a single mother, a bullied 17 year-old girl seeks guidance from her best friend and the girl's older sister.

Reviews
SpuffyWeb

Sadly Over-hyped

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Platicsco

Good story, Not enough for a whole film

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Ceticultsot

Beautiful, moving film.

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ShangLuda

Admirable film.

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raquellashell

This movie worked my nerves at times because it was too slow. It finally started moving along when I decided to watch something else. Besides having to watch actors clearly in their 30's and I know two of the mean girls were pushing 40 or flip over it playing teenagers, it was an okay movie.

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Michael Ledo

This is a coming of age story for Grace (Ryan Destiny) raised by a single Haitian mother (Garcelle Beauvais) with outward beauty, but dubious morals. Grace is smart and doesn't want to be like her mother, yet is drawn down the same path. Grace turns inward after her best friend (Paige Hurd) kills herself, the circumstances we get to know in flashbacks. Grace is coaxed out of her shell with many negative results, much of her own doing. Meagan Good plays Grace's new BFF and mentor for better and worse.This is a well acted film, although I thought parts were over done. It touches on bulling and finding your true self.Guide: F-word, sex, and rape.

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brokenmirror-06813

It's OK. I liked the way it was filmed and it had a lot of promise, but it feels like the movie was edited for time and kind of skipped around leaving out important details. I wouldn't even call this a coming of age tale. I would call it more a chic turning a 360, random tale. One scene she loses her virginity and likes this guy and literally the next evening she's out hitting on other men at the club with no explanation on why she dropped the other guy. Then when she gets raped and her and Cher show back up, she doesn't shoot the dudes or do anything. She just runs away and lets her friend take the fall. At the end of the movie you almost no longer feel sorry for her, but instead start to resent her.

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Avril Somerville

I rate movies based on their ability to leave me with new questions. I left wanting to understand more about the mother (played by Garcelle Beauvais) - to deconstruct her if you will - from the fear she had about her daughter's sexual identity (what exactly was her underlying fear? why wasn't she more afraid of the fate her daughter would meet at the hands of sexual predators and/or men who might otherwise exploit her?); to the lack of what I'd like to call a maternal muscle; and, to her own inherited broken cycles of what love looks and feels like. I wanted to know more about how class and culture affected her capacity to render the kind of nurture and compassion that her daughter (played by Ryan Destiny) so desperately needed. Ultimately, this was a movie about identity and beauty; how we see ourselves and the way we think the rest of the world sees us and/or the ones we love is absolutely critical to who we ultimately become.

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