Saving Grace | |
Director: | Robert M. Young |
Producer: | Herbert F. Solow |
Based On: | the Novel by Celia Gittelson |
Starring: | Tom Conti Fernando Rey Erland Josephson Giancarlo Giannini Donald Hewlett Patricia Mauceri Marta Zoffoli Edward James Olmos |
Music: | William Goldstein |
Cinematography: | Reynaldo Villalobos |
Editing: | Peter Zinner |
Studio: | Embassy Pictures |
Distributor: | Columbia Pictures |
Runtime: | 112 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $18,209 |
Saving Grace is a 1986 comedy-drama film directed by Robert M. Young, produced by Herbert F. Solow, and starring Tom Conti, Giancarlo Giannini and Edward James Olmos. It is based on a novel by Celia Gittelson with screenplay by Richard Kramer and David S. Ward under a different name.
It was the last film to be distributed by Embassy Pictures.
A year after his election, a youthful pope (Conti) longs to be involved in ordinary people's lives again, as he was when he was a priest. During an audience, the Pope communicates with a young deaf mute girl whose village has no priest. Accidentally locked out of the Vatican, the Pope travels to the small impoverished and demoralized village, his identity concealed by his beard growth. He realizes that the people need to rebuild a dilapidated aqueduct but, more importantly, that they must regain their community spirit and self-sufficiency. Without expertise and, initially, only the help of some street-wise orphans, he starts construction. All this is watched skeptically by a mysterious neighbour and opposed by local thugs led by Ciolino (Olmos) whose ill-gotten gains depend on the village remaining overly dependent on outsiders.
The movie was shot in Italy: in the cities of Rome, Mantua and the ghost town of Craco.[1]
Saving Grace premiered in the United States on May 2, 1986, and in the Philippines on April 11, 1987.[2]
Walter Goodman of The New York Times said, "There's no more engaging actor around than Tom Conti, but not even he, with the assistance of such notables of international moviedom as Giancarlo Giannini, Erland Josephson and Fernando Rey, can lift Saving Grace out of its slough of sentiment."[3]