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IMDbPro

Looking for Grace

  • 2015
  • PG-13
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
419
YOUR RATING
Looking for Grace (2015)
When rebellious 16-year-old Grace (rising star Odessa Young) takes off on her own, her exasperated parents (Radha Mitchell and Richard Roxburgh) enlist the help of a close-to-retirement detective, and begin the long drive from Perth to the West Australian Wheatbelt to try to find her. Looking for Grace is about how we make sense of the mess of our lives and what it all means.  It is a wry drama about lies, secrets, small and large griefs and, of course, love.
Play trailer2:08
1 Video
14 Photos
Drama

After a teenage girl named Grace goes missing, her parents along with the help of an investigator seek to find her, while also juggling their own secrets and stories between them.After a teenage girl named Grace goes missing, her parents along with the help of an investigator seek to find her, while also juggling their own secrets and stories between them.After a teenage girl named Grace goes missing, her parents along with the help of an investigator seek to find her, while also juggling their own secrets and stories between them.

  • Director
    • Sue Brooks
  • Writer
    • Sue Brooks
  • Stars
    • Radha Mitchell
    • Richard Roxburgh
    • Odessa Young
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    419
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sue Brooks
    • Writer
      • Sue Brooks
    • Stars
      • Radha Mitchell
      • Richard Roxburgh
      • Odessa Young
    • 10User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos1

    Looking for Grace Trailer
    Trailer 2:08
    Looking for Grace Trailer

    Photos13

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Radha Mitchell
    Radha Mitchell
    • Denise
    Richard Roxburgh
    Richard Roxburgh
    • Dan
    Odessa Young
    Odessa Young
    • Grace
    Kenya Pearson
    • Sappho
    Harry Richardson
    Harry Richardson
    • Jamie
    Andrea Gibbs
    • Beth
    Vito de Francesco
    Vito de Francesco
    • Ted
    • (as Vito De Francesco)
    Gemma Willing
    Gemma Willing
    • Anne
    Terry Norris
    Terry Norris
    • Norris
    Myles Pollard
    Myles Pollard
    • Bruce
    River Lockwood
    • Phillip
    Andy King
    • Gary
    Julia Blake
    Julia Blake
    • Nell
    Peter Rowsthorn
    • Steve
    Geoff Miethe
    • Marty
    Kelton Pell
    • Detective
    Holly Jones
    • Julie
    Amanda Woodhams
    • Susie
    • Director
      • Sue Brooks
    • Writer
      • Sue Brooks
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.3419
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    Featured reviews

    8wen-79275

    A bold and insightful film both clever and thought provoking.

    Sue Brooks films are always refreshing, stylish, and unmistakably Australian. Looking for Grace does justice to Brooks fine understanding of the complexities of the human condition and the struggles and subsequent lessons encountered within family life. This is a bold and insightful film, paced in Brooks unique style. I found this film immensely satisfying despite the fact that the interweaving of the characters personal stories confused me a little at times this technique did not detract from the films overall intrigue. The all Australian cast was well chosen and the cinematography captured the desolate emptiness of the desert landscape and added strength to the metaphor of distance within this small family's relationships. This is a great film!
    7CineMuseFilms

    Minor reservations aside, this is an engaging tale told in the finest Aussie tradition.

    One of the classic tropes of Australian film is the random and ever-present potential for destruction that is represented cinematically by the vastness and untamed beauty of our unique landscapes. It is sometimes shown, for example, as mystical power (eg: Picnic at Hanging Rock), dystopian violence (The Rover), terror (Wolf Creek), images of deadly bushfires or road-kill scattered over lonely country roads. Looking for Grace builds on this tradition and explores random destruction in a novel way by taking a simple plot line and splitting into separate narratives that converge with deadly force.

    Five stories unfold in parallel as sign-posted chapters, each telling the same story but from a different viewpoint. The narrative arc turns on rebellious 16 year-old Grace who empties her father's safe and hops on a coach for a heavy metal concert a few days from home. While chance plays a part, meeting a boy, losing her virginity, and being robbed is a predictable tale for many run-aways. What is not predictable is how the four other stories overlap hers. The unfaithful father seems more concerned about the cash than his daughter and the over-controlling mother is pathetically funny keeping up appearances in the midst of a missing person investigation. The doddery old private detective hired to find Grace (and the money) worries about the whiteness of his false teeth and says the most obvious things in funny ways. And there is the seemingly disconnected story about the road-train driver who bookends the film and ties five random tales into a single Aussie yarn.

    The cinematography is superb and it carries the film. From lovingly long panoramic landscapes, to backlit gum trees, golden sunrises, the sharp detail of a furtive glance in shallow depth of field, the camera-work is beautifully crafted and quintessentially Australian. Acting is excellent although based more on good casting than fine performance – there is little room for character development in a film cut five ways. It is also deliberately slow in parts; rather than looking like parents in crisis we see dad's clumsy preoccupation with his own guilt, mum's growing anxiety about her marriage and looking good in gym wear, and Grace just takes her time like any teenager. Minor reservations aside, this is an engaging tale told in the finest Aussie tradition.
    9angie-46171

    Quintessential Brooks Storytelling

    Being a fan of previous works from Sue Brooks and Alison Tilson I attended the Melbourne premiere of Looking For Grace with a solid expectation of enjoying their uniquely real approach to story telling. I was not disappointed. The film skillfully took me on a journey to explore the wonderful Western Australian landscape and unravel each characters story...their whereabouts,actions and emotions leading up to and during the time of Grace's disappearance. I was challenged to fit each of these life stories together - a bit like a jigsaw puzzle - but they all fitted perfectly - in the end. I really enjoyed this unfolding real life drama with great acting, laughs and very painful surprises.
    6david-rector-85092

    Well photographed but pretty pointless

    Another disappointment for me, from the local film industry for 2016. After an awe-inspiring 2015, I guess the next year could never live up to it, but so far there doesn't seem to have been either a runaway hit nor an impressive Australian movie to cheer for. 'Looking For Grace' is sadly looking for a purpose, as it seems to be very caught up in its conceit, but not really making any great insights or character development during its healthy 100 minute duration.

    I've enjoyed some of Sue Brooks' earlier work; especially 'Road to Nihill' but this one just fell flat and felt overdone and without credulity. Why Radha Mitchell's lead character was allowed to cultivate such an over the top accent; escapes me. It made her seem a caricature and the serious storyline reduced to whimsy or light comedy. Lkewise thespian for many decades,Richard Roxburgh was painfully broad and faux comedic, where a more grounded and considered performance would have worked so much better. As with 'The Daughter' (another disappointing and forced dramatic work), Odessa Young really saves this movie too. With a naturalistic style and interesting presence, the actress really gives 'Looking for Grace' its saving grace, as the protagonist to this very choppy and muddy narrative. At the other end of the age spectrum, veteran Terry Norris brings real warmth and character to the film; but again the plot inserts him but doesn't really explain how he is there and how he is able to help the main characters. Ultimately, the plot and the film really don't hang together, and combined with some woeful over- acting, it is hard to get too excited about this movie.

    Per capita, Australia must have more skilled cinematographers than any country in the world, and 'Looking for Grace' thankfully has a terrific eye in Katie Milwright who gives the film a terrific sense of place and scope. I only wish that the screenplay had provided everybody something more coherent and meaningful to work with.
    5rmsccbm

    An over enthusiastically confusing film

    As I sat there at the Melbourne premier of Looking for Grace, I sat in confusion for the first 25 minutes as I struggled to see what kind of movie was being played out. The film did gradually slow into a good pace, but the first 25-35 minutes were unbearable. The camera-work and visual aspects of the film were all very well done, mostly due to the location of Western Australia. The interweaving stories worked well however there wasn't much detail or substance to much of it, to make it more easy to follow. But in some parts it was hard to say that it wasn't a missed opportunity. The acting wasn't great, especially for serious scenes, this very much so affected the tone as a serious scene was set up but came across as comedic. Odessa Young was passable. Her performance didn't excel in any scene and for a film with her name making up half the title, you expect that. To conclude, the film did get the story on track with the help of a very surprising moment near the end which was very well set up. But other than that, it came across as dull and confusing. 5/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The scene set in an outback bar in the wheat fields of WA contains two extras at the bar. The extras were not in fact Australian, but two British holiday makers passing by during filming.
    • Goofs
      At the end of the movie they are heading home, but they are heading west into the sunset, with the pipeline still on the right hand side, which is the same direction they were heading out towards Ceduna when they were trying to find Grace.
    • Connections
      Featured in Looking for Grace: Behind the Scenes (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Dead of Light
      Written by Jordie Lane and Clare Reynolds

      Performed by Jordie Lane

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Looking for Grace?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 26, 2016 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • Distributor
      • Unicorn Films (Australia)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Buscant la Grace
    • Filming locations
      • Western Australia, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Gecko Films Pty. Ltd.
      • Unicorn Films
      • Taylor Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $147,164
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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