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After their husbands announce that they are in love with each other and plan to wed, two women with an already strained relationship try to cope with the circumstances together.
Inconsistent in tone and bereft of a real handling on its titular characters' trauma, Grace and Frankie still manages to entertain thanks to a refreshing sweetness and good ol' star power.
Perhaps one of Grace and Frankie's strongest moves, especially in early episodes, is not to dump a ton of backstory on the audience all at once, especially when it comes to the lives of the children.
Whatever the hook of the show is, it's working on me. I haven't laughed all that much yet, but that's O.K. Maybe Grace and Frankie is more a comedy in the classical sense: everyone's happy in the end, and then there's a wedding.
Grace and Frankie is not entirely worthy of them, which is disappointing, especially since its co-creator, alongside Howard J. Morris, is Marta Kauffman, a co-creator of Friends.