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Season two picks up exactly where things ended last season. With their ex-hubbies now married to each other and their clans more integrated than ever, Grace and Frankie continue to struggle to make sense of the brave new world that is their lives. Frankie copes by getting more involved in Brianna's business.
For a story about two women who've been betrayed, abandoned, and forced to rebuild their whole lives in their 70s, Grace and Frankie is a remarkably Zen show -- and, not coincidentally, a remarkably dull one.
Grace and Frankie has become, therefore, a show about letting go of grudges, being more accepting, and enjoying life -- all very good sentiments that surface rarely in most other current sitcoms.
Grace and Frankie has its flaws, but it remains unlike anything else on television. It knows there are limits and ends to everything, and it's making the most of the time it has.
Still slow-moving and unsurprising, Grace and Frankie's writing and humor ages better in a second season that feels more like a fully realized - and deeper-cutting - dramedy than its initial debut.