So, you made it through Who Can Kill a Child?, Dumplings and À l'intérieur? You can take female body horror centered around pregnancy? Well, Paul Solet’s Grace aims to take the Little Shop of Horrors (or the more recent Blood Car) concept very seriously, viscerally, and bloody. You can take the positive word from where the film debuted at Sundance, or you can watch the redband trailer after the jump to prove it. Not quite NSFW, but you will get funny looks from the person in the next cubicle.
Eight months pregnant, and preoccupied with both a natural childbirth and a pure-body lifestyle, Madeline Matheson, played with merciless compassion by Jordan Ladd, deflects her demanding mother-in-law's insistent pressure for standard hospital treatment, instead opting for the peaceful companionship of a trusted midwife. Though reluctantly compliant, her husband remains supportive of her choices until a sudden tragic accident leaves her unborn baby lifeless inside of her. Madeline remains determined to carry the stillborn baby to term, where she miraculously wills the delivered corpse into life. But it is not too long before the increasingly isolated mother realizes that something is not right with baby Grace, and she must make horrible sacrifices to keep her living.

Strong stuff indeed - the most unsettling image for me was the flies.
Wow! Looks amazing!
Very satisfying trailer. Really anything horror with babies has the possibility of being good. Though Grace is obviously a very different case I am reminded of Ray Bradbury's short story The Small Assassin.
Saw this in February at Frightfest in Glasgow and walked away pretty disappointed. Grace would make a pretty good short film but feels stretched out and repetitive at feature length. Though there was a number of walk outs at the screening this seemed more a result of boredom than anyone unable to handle the subject matter. The birth scene is intense and handled well but there is a minimal amount of gore and only two real "Ewww!" moments. Other than that it is a mystery how two grown men are supposed to have fainted at the Sundance screening! Not a patch on Inside or even It's Alive.
Saw this film at the Imagine festival in Amsterdam and will be writing a full review soon. It's well made on a technical level and several scenes have a strong punch (agreeing with Short Time above) but I had SERIOUS issues with the whole setup.