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Grace Hanadarko, a youthful police investigator, who experiences having a terrible life, as she addicts alcoholism, has an affair with a married criminologist, and does no good thing in her life, yet when she meets an angel, that spares her life from an auto crash, so as to allow her to rearrange her life, she starts to pure her transgressions. Another season starts with Grace makes her mind to revenge from Father Murphy.
It's not a bad show, but the mechanics of how they're going to abduct their latest target are far less engaging than how the team interacts with each other and how each member fights his or her compulsions.
This will be good news to people who enjoy watching train wrecks in which the engineer accelerates as the precipice nears, which is Grace's signature move.
Saving Grace is less about its procedural storytelling than it is about simply creating a venue to showcase Hunter's undeniable smallscreen star quality.
I'm still thrown by the "talking to angels" bit, and I think the level of pain in Grace's life rises to the level of overkill at times, but the show is unlike anything else on TV.