Grace

Grace

200984 min
5.4/10
HorrorThriller

Plot Summary

In the wake of a horrific car accident that kills her husband, Michael, expectant mother Madeline Matheson discovers that her daughter, Grace, has died in the womb. Ignoring her doctor's warnings that the fetus must be removed from her body, a grief-stricken Matheson demands to carry the child to term -- even if it endangers her own life to do so. Curiously, little Grace emerges undead -- and with a craving for human blood.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (8)

Jordan Ladd

Jordan Ladd

Madeline Matheson

Samantha Ferris

Samantha Ferris

Patricia Lang

Gabrielle Rose

Gabrielle Rose

Vivian Matheson

Stephen Park

Stephen Park

Michael Matheson

Serge Houde

Serge Houde

Henry Matheson

No Image

Kate Herriot

Shelly

No Image

Troy Skog

ER Doctor

Malcolm Stewart

Malcolm Stewart

Dr. Richard Sohn

🎬Crew

Director

Paul Solet

Writers

Paul Solet

Producers

Ingo Vollkammer, Kevin DeWalt, Cory Neal, Adam Green, Scott Einbinder

🖼️Gallery (3 images)

Grace backdrop 1
Grace backdrop 2
Grace backdrop 3

💬Reviews (1)

J

John Chard

10/22/2014

This childbirth thing is murder you know! Oh no, not another evil child horror film I hear you cry! Yet there’s something very fresh about Paul Solet’s movie, it’s deeply unsettling but emotionally complex, even gnawing away at our inner built capacities for empathy and sympathy. Jordan Ladd plays the mother of the piece, hit with personal tragedy time and time again, her will is tested to the limit when a car crash strips her of her husband and renders the baby she is carrying as being a sure case of still born. But she’s determined to carry it to term, and when she literally wills the dead child alive, it responds in kind and becomes Grace, the miracle baby… What follows is the disintegration of Ladd’s character and of the key characters around her. Meditations on grief are heavy but richly so, as is the nods to post-natal depression. The horror elements are strong, as baby Grace shows a thirst for something other than milk, and the slow-burn approach favoured by Solet pays off with a final quarter of heartbreaking devilment. Cast are dandy, especially a very committed Ladd, while other tech credits keep the film very much in the upper echelons of this sub-genre of horror. 8.5/10

Read full review →

Production Companies