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Grace Quigley (1984)

User reviews

Grace Quigley

19 reviews
6/10

Surprisingly pointed, surprisingly funny black comedy...

Katharine Hepburn in a Cannon production? Yes, and though the color process on the photography is typically brackish and the technical aspects of "Grace Quigley" seem slapdash, this turns out to be a quirky, exceptionally funny piece about a hit-man's friendship with an elderly woman in New York. Reportedly, Hepburn and Nick Nolte clashed during filming, but you'd never suspect that from the finished returns (they have an easy rapport). The crux of the plot (that aged folks would rather die mercifully at the hands of a hired killer then live in loneliness or pain) was controversial in 1984--and still smacks of bad taste--yet director Anthony Harvey keeps the whole thing bubbling like the most genial of comedies. As for Kate, she's feisty as usual, but also delightfully daffy and loose; she's a team player. **1/2 from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • Apr 30, 2009
  • Permalink
6/10

A Hit-man With Issues

The third time was not the charm for the acting/directing team of Katharine Hepburn and Anthony Harvey. The two had been responsible for Kate's Oscar winning performance in The Lion In Winter and an acclaimed television version of The Glass Menagerie.

But gold went to brass in this black comedy, Grace Quigley about an old woman who sees a professional hit-man off her landlord. Truth be told the landlord was not the nicest guy in the world and there's no shock for the audience see the murder from Kate's point of view.

But Hepburn in the title role sees Nick Nolte as the hit-man as the solution to all her problems. She hasn't much reason to hang around this mortal coil with no family and friends taking the big trip, more it seems all the time. She blackmails Nolte into doing a hit on her, and maybe a few interested friends. And things get complicated there.

Kate also manages to pick a hit-man with issues. Nolte is in analysis and this new complication in his life is of interest to his doctor, Chip Zien. And Nolte who never had a family so to speak and the little old lady form one unusual bond that even Nolte's girl friend Kit Lefever can't break nor does she really want to.

This rather ordinary material is made much better by the sheer presence of Katharine Hepburn. She seems to be taking her Madwoman Of Chaillot character and Americanizing it in Grace Quigley. I doubt if a lesser actress could have made this palatable.

Grace Quigley marked the final performance of Walter Abel whose career stretched all the way back to World War I. Abel is one of the old folks just dying for Nolte's services.

Grace Quigley is primarily for Katharine Hepburn fans, I don't think it has too much appeal beyond that. Then again Kate has one big legion of fans.
  • bkoganbing
  • Sep 22, 2009
  • Permalink
7/10

Right up there with the great "dark comedies" ...........

Great "black comedies" have one thing in common, great acting. Bud Cort and Ruth Gordon in "Harold and Maude", Paul Bartel and Mary Woronov in "Eating Raoul", George Segal and Ruth Gordon in "Where's Poppa?", Frances Fuller in "Homebodies", and definitely right up there is Katherine Hepburn and Nick Nolte in "Grace Quigley." The deadpan planning of "helping" the elderly move on" is played perfectly, and Nolte finds Grace's business plan to be quite profitable. In order for "dark comedy" to work it cannot be mean spirited, and "Grace" handles all the arrangements in a very dignified manner. Also, this is the only movie on the Planet that has a car chase with four hearses. Recommended for sure. - MERK
  • merklekranz
  • Sep 21, 2019
  • Permalink

Kate Hepburn's Last Movie by Producers on Their Last Legs!

Golan-Globus, something like that, and Cannon films: Ancient film producers from the early eighties when videocassettes were starting to change the nature of the American Movie Biz. Films had begun to boom!

Enter two extraordinary actors: Katherine Hepburn and Nick Nolte.

Nolte had been appearing in commercial Hollywood productions for years, but he is a real actor and wanted to appear in quality productions.

The prospect of appearing with Great Katherine must have seduced him into working with these hopelessly exploitive producers and Cannon films. Kate looks great, her Parkinson disease notwithstanding, in the last theater movie she ever made. It appeared in 1984, when she was still in her seventies, her etched cheekbones intact, and her teeth still movie star white.

Here's the plot: Kate Hepburn watches as Hit-man Nick Nolte, just barely in his forties, kills her noxious landlord. Impressed, Kate who has been thinking of checking out herself decides to hire Nick to off her. Before long, complications ensue. The whole gerontological

group that Kate knows, including most of the unemployed aging actors in New York, want to leave the stage, as it were, themselves. They want to join Kate in that great actors home in the sky.

The Plot thread is helped when Kate invites a friend to join her by arranging a package deal to have them both killed by Nick. But Nick turns out to be a sensitive hit-man, not willing to go along with all of Kate's murderous fantasies. The plot eventually spirals out of control. Nick offs few of the older set, but becomes very popular with this group. After all, if this Golan-Globus (they're the producers) hadn't put together these two stars, Walter Abel probably would have died before he worked in another film. The same goes for many of the other actors in this film.

Toward the end, a cabbie keeps Kate's shoe as ransom for a cab fare she can't pay. Kate wants Nick to off the cabbie. But this black comedy has wandered to too many side alleys. Nick's psychiatrist warns him that Kate has unearthed his sensitive side, and he had better change his ways.

In the end, there is no plot-driven denouement to this tale. Nick and Kate spot an enormous throng of old folks looking for a way to end it all near her apartment, and decide to escape these growing responsibilities by lighting out for what passes for the territories in Manhattan.

So who's driving the cab they hail on the street? You guessed it, the cabbie who stole Kate's shoe. The hack looks at her surprised, looks even more apprehensively at Nick, and turns around to drive his fares where they want to go.

Nick and Kate have apparently won some sort of battle by getting the last laugh on the cabbie, and so the film ends with both of them alive and smiling in the back of the cab, all their problems solved. Its not a great ending, but a fair compromise to finish this wildly out-of-hand scenario.
  • mike-925
  • Jul 20, 2002
  • Permalink
7/10

Bizarre black comedy has its moments

This film has an offbeat premise, and many offbeat characters. The last theatrical release of Kate's career is neither a fitting nor typical valedictory -- and in that way, perhaps it is a fitting testimonial to Hepburn's career --- unconventional and poignant while always entertaining. Although the laughs are uneven and the subject matter may offend some, I found it entertaining and interesting.
  • aromatic-2
  • Mar 31, 2000
  • Permalink
6/10

"Coming Mr Flint!"

The coming together of such disparate talents as Katherine Hepburn, director Anthony Harvey and the dreaded team of Cannon supremos Golan & Globus yields certainly the most idiosyncratic treatment of assisted suicide since Edward G. Robinson went to meet his maker in 'Soylent Green' in this project long nurtured by Miss Hepburn which heats up the old chestnut about a citizen hiring a professional hitman to provide his services.

Miss Hepburn and Nick Nolte certainly make strange bedfellows as the client and her employee with quirky contributions from Walter Abel, Kip Le Fever, William Duell and Elizabeth Wilson.
  • richardchatten
  • Jun 5, 2023
  • Permalink
4/10

Good....but..... Not Good Enough .

  • happipuppi13
  • Jan 13, 2005
  • Permalink
6/10

gallows humor

Grace Quigley (Katharine Hepburn) is a struggling senior living in New York City. She witnesses a professional hit performed by hitman Seymour Flint (Nick Nolte). She hides in his car. She had tried to commit suicide and sees him as a solution. She comes up with the idea to 'help' other suicidal seniors.

This is supposed to be a black comedy. It's in here somewhere. The characters are definitely oddballs coming out of left field. It's not actually funny and I don't know if it's actually fun. It has the underlying layer of sadness. I'm just not sure if this dark premise is a fun one.
  • SnoopyStyle
  • Feb 5, 2022
  • Permalink
4/10

Katherine's scored a hit....which turned out to be a flop....

  • mark.waltz
  • Aug 19, 2014
  • Permalink
6/10

The version I watched of Grace Quigley was okay since it was pretty uneven

After a couple of decades of only knowing about this film, I finally saw this from a DVD I borrowed from the library. Katharine Hepburn stars in the title role as an elderly woman who witnesses a murder and makes a deal with hitman Nick Nolte to do the same for some of her friends who are lonely and depressed. I'll just now say there are some funny parts and some good dramatic ones but it's uneven especially when it gets to the end. I know there's an alternate version that might be better but this one was for the most part pretty okay...
  • tavm
  • Dec 18, 2019
  • Permalink
3/10

Grace Quigley

  • BandSAboutMovies
  • Mar 13, 2022
  • Permalink
9/10

A delightful black comedy about assisted suicide.

Grace Quigley (Katherine Hepburn), an elderly woman, witnesses a hit man, Seymour Flint (Nick Nolte), in action. She finds that he has dropped his wallet and learns his identity. She then blackmails him into killing her, since she is elderly and has no reason to live but lacks the courage to take her own life. However he quickly develops a fondness for her, as a surrogate mother and so can not kill her. Instead they start assisting in the suicides of friends of Grace who no longer wish to live. The film is black comedy at its best and is one of my favourite films. The characters are likable and, wierdly, we end up rooting for them to die. Nolte's role as a sentimental hit man and his relationship with Grace are particularly amusing. This film is not for those who have a strong repugnant feeling against suicide but if you enjoy the bizarre, then you may very well like this film. If you do, then you could also like Harold and Maude.
  • Tom Murray
  • Sep 25, 2002
  • Permalink
7/10

When is murder mercy?

Seven stars. And the only reason it's that high is that I'm such a fan of Katharine Hepburn's. I've been in the "I'll watch her in anything" camp since I first saw Guess Who's Coming to Dinner in the late 1960s. Her part is nuts, but she carries it anyway, because she was so good at showing emotional complexity. Her interactions with Nick Nolte are the essence of the film. And Nolte does a good job of keeping up with her. Nolte has never been a great actor, although he's become really solid in the last twenty years or so. Back in the early 80s, he was sort of a stiff, and was typecast into dumb hunk sorts of roles. Here he shows some subtlety, playing a sort of parody of Jack Cates. He's a hit-man who's in therapy, after all.

Past those two, I should also give nods to William Duell, Walter Abel, and Elizabeth Wilson for their work as some of Grace's first "customers". This was Abel's last role in a career that went back 66 years to 1918. Seeing him gave me one of those classic, "Who is THAT guy?" moments.

Hepburn was great at playing absolutely indomitable characters. Here her Grace hijacks Seymour's (Nolte) life for absolutely absurd reasons. But they both play it so straight that I was willing to buy into the crazy scheme. The problem is that the director kept pushing the concept until it jumped the shark with the car-chase bit at the end. It also seemed to fall into dream-scape surreality at that point. The point-to-point connection between scenes started to feel like something from a Terrence Malick film. The resolution was a funny little comic nugget that resolves Seymour's story, but doesn't really address Grace's. This is an amusing film, with a solid performance from a legend to lead the bill. If you are a fan of Hepburn's, or of Nolte's, you should watch this. Otherwise, not so much. 9 December 2024.
  • pauleskridge
  • Dec 8, 2024
  • Permalink
5/10

Some good scenes but overall a little bleak

The best two scenes in the film in my view are where Katherine Hepburn is standing up for herself in the face of scoundrels. The first, a mean spirited landlord and the second, a sneaky and avaricious taxi driver. These scenes have passion and spark. The rest of the film was a rather hum drum and occasionally bleak dark comedy/farce.

The concept has the bare bones of a very funny dark comedy, but the execution was not terribly successful here because the dialogue and action is not witty enough.

For a witty dark comedy that is not a million miles away in terms of its theme, I would suggest Throw Moma from the Train.

I read in one of the reviews that the two leads did not get on and that reviewer considered that this didn't show in the film. I think it did show, as the scenes with Hepburn and Nolte appeared rather forced to me.
  • calorne
  • Apr 18, 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

As one reviewer said, it has its moments.

"Grace Quigley" is a very, very dark comedy...so much so that I can guarantee it will offend some people. My problem with it wasn't the sick plot...more that the film seems to have needed a slight re-write as the film's mood and focus seemed inconsistent.

Grace (Katharine Hepburn) is a tired old woman...and, particularly, tired of life. So when she witnesses a hitman (Nick Nolte) killing her hateful landlord, instead of going to the police or ignoring it, she approaches the killer and offers him a business proposition. She wants him to kill her and her other elderly friends who, like her, are tired of living. Believe it or not, this IS a comedy.

I thought the setup for the film wasn't bad at all, but over time the movie seemed to lose its focus. Also a few times I thought the film could have done things better...either by making the film much more serious OR much less serious.

I noticed someone said that this dark film is better than an equally dark movie, "Harold and Maude". Well, I'd never say that..."Harold and Maude" is a classic and bears re-watching. "Grace Quigley", on the other hand, is just okay and is a film I am glad I saw...once.
  • planktonrules
  • Oct 26, 2022
  • Permalink
10/10

One of the best dark comedies ever

I have watched Grace Quigley a couple of times (on VHS) and found myself laughing out loud each time. It really is one of the best dark comedies around. I've recommended it to several friends who never heard of the movie and after watching it have come back to thank me. I don't think it ever made it to DVD, which is too bad. I would happily buy the DVD if it becomes available. Nolte and Hepburn are terrific.

The final solution is the best part of the plot. Hepburn and Nolte meet up in the most unusual way. Hepburn plays the part of the old woman who is fed up with her difficult life and wants to end it all. Nolte is a 'hit man' and Hepburn tries to hire him to do herself in. Being such a lovable old lady causes a conflict and Nolte cannot bring himself to do it... The end result a booming business with the most unorthodox product for 'sale'.

If you are in the mood for a good laugh, this is one that you should not miss.
  • jhtreble
  • Mar 16, 2006
  • Permalink
8/10

Strange & somber defeatist comedy

This little unpolished gem from Cannon films almost defies definition with its frankly depressing premise and it's superannuated director and actors. It's no surprise it never found mainstream box office or even critical success at least in the mangled form it was largely released in. Talking Pictures TV ran the Ultimate Solution of... version - generally considered a good later screenplay fix. What can I say, it's one for movie nerds perhaps but with the spirited work of the great Nolte and Hepburn one can be assured it gets carried through safely, even over the several rough patches in a production that has the rather cheap and gaudy feel of 80s television, but don't let that disguise the fact this is a deadly serious drama about the futility of old age, with some jokes. There are just enough minor gags and sweet moments to prevent the viewer from sticking one's own head in the proverbial oven before the movie is out. Of course there's tongue in cheek elements and it's ultimately ambiguous morally, and even with Katherine's rather disturbing real-life Parkinson's on display, playing a desperate suicidal granny, one might forget she went on to live for two more golden decades, well after this film sort of had quietly died in its sleep with hardly a trace of collective memory. There's enough humour in the history of this much maligned film alone to give it a patient and respectful look. I admire it's quirkiness and subversive attitude, giving the polite finger to the whole entertainment film establishment in a way, an anti-epitaph for many of the crew, but done in such a humane and quietly charismatic way.
  • michaelberanek275
  • May 20, 2023
  • Permalink
10/10

Seymour! Mother!

Old Hollywood stars who were still working by the 1980's where usually appearing in films dealing with old age (On Golden Pond, Tough Guys, The Whales of August). Grace Quigley was one such film and would be Katharine Hepburn's last starring role in a theatrical film. The movie's alternative title is 'The Ultimate Solution of Grace Quigley' although I'm assuming that title is less commonly used since it echoes a certain 20th-century atrocity.

Starring alongside Nick Nolte, Grace Quigley has a Harold and Maude element of a young man and an old woman becoming an unlikely team but the Hal Ashby comparison doesn't end there as I've read several sources stating he was originally set to direct the project. The plot of the film involves retired widow Grace Quigley and hitman Seymour Flint getting together through a series of events (and eventfully he adorably starts calling her mom) and starting their own assisted suicide enterprise. Yes, that's the plot. Grace Quigley is one of my favourite dark comedies with much of the film's humour coming from the characters talking so casually about killing themselves as if it's something they do every day as well as the inclusion of possibly the happiest funeral ever.

The film has a pro-assisted suicide message with one scene involving Grace's neighbour played by William Duell telling Seymour about dying with dignity and her unwillingness to go to a retirement home as well as "dying in front of a TV set". In one of the more serious moments of the film, Grace takes Seymour to a retirement home to show him the horrors. I applaud the film for having the courage to make these unapologetic statements about one's right to take their own life and society's treatment of the elderly. As Grace Quigley was a pet project for Katharine Hepburn she must have strongly believed in the issues raised in the film (and a sequel was even planned!).

I also recommend looking up Grace Quigley's UK VHS cover art. The film I not actually that action-packed (although there is one brief car chase) but I still say it is the single greatest piece of home video artwork ever created.
  • mmallon4
  • Apr 3, 2015
  • Permalink

I watched the full-lenght version back in 1991. Here's what I remember.

  • DwightFry
  • Jan 10, 2023
  • Permalink

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