Indie-cinema godhead John Cassavetes
initially earned fame as an actor in mainstream films, and he spent most of his
life parachuting back into Hollywood for paycheck acting gigs even as his
pursued his real passion, writing and directing esoteric films exploring dark
corners of the human psyche. The two parts of Cassavetes’ cinematic identity
converged in Gloria, the most
commercially oriented movie that Cassavetes directed, with the exception of two
studio pictures he made in the ’60s before finding his arthouse groove with Faces (1968) and Husbands (1970). Starring Cassavetes’ wife and muse, Gena Rowlands,
Gloria is a straightforward crime
picture with a touch of Hollywood sentimentality—exactly the sort of formulaic
schmaltz that Cassavetes generally avoided. Even for
an iconoclast, the possibility of reaching a bigger audience (and scoring a
financial windfall) must have been impossible to resist. Nonetheless, it’s
significant to observe that after Gloria,
Cassavetes transitioned back to making art films until his death in 1989. Given
its mediocrity, Gloria could not have
been the most edifying of experiences.
The movie opens in the Bronx, where a
frantic Latina runs home to her apartment, realizing she’s being chased. Jeri
(Julie Carmen) is married to Jack (Buck Henry), a mob
accountant-turned-informant, so Jeri and Jack both realize hitmen are on the
way to wipe out the couple and their two kids. When Jeri’s friend and neighbor,
middle-aged former gang moll Gloria (Rowlands), stops by for a visit, Jeri
explains the situation and asks Gloria to hide the kids until after the
shooting stops. Gloria reluctantly agrees, but only preteen Phil (John Adames)
leaves with her, since his sister elects to die with her parents. Gloria takes
Phil to her apartment and listens in horror to gunfire down the hall, then
sneaks Phil out of the building and becomes a fugitive—because Jack entrusted
his young son with a book containing incriminating facts and figures. Before
long, Gloria finds herself yanking her life’s savings from a safe-deposit box
and escorting Phil around the country while she works connections with old mob
buddies in order to revoke the hit on Phil. The predictable contrivance of the movie is that the more time she
spends with Phil, the more she warms to the idea of being the boy’s surrogate
mother.
Because it sprawls across a fleshy 121 minutes and because costar
Adames’ performance is quite terrible, Gloria
doesn’t work as a zippy little thriller; instead, it’s a weird amalgam of pulp
trash and thoughtful storytelling. Some fine things occur along the way, and
Rowlands believably incarnates a seen-it-all broad surprised by the
emergence of long-suppressed compassion. (Rowlands earned Golden Globe
and Oscar nominations for her performance.) As for the movie around her, it’s perplexing. Cassavetes populates scenes with his customary mix of
grotesques and oddballs, employing improvisational techniques and nonactors to
increase the movie’s realism. Seeing as how the storyline is inherently
contrived, the imposition of these indie-cinema tropes feels awkward and
unnecessary. Moreover, there’s a disconnect between the meditative
nature of the movie and the oppressive noise of Bill Conti’s score. The Rocky composer, never known for his
subtlety, drenches action scenes with exciting themes and uses noodly jazz
riffs to energize sleepier stretches.
FYI, Sharon Stone stars in a lifeless 1999 remake, also titled Gloria. Inexplicably, Sidney Lumet directed.
FYI, Sharon Stone stars in a lifeless 1999 remake, also titled Gloria. Inexplicably, Sidney Lumet directed.
Gloria:
FUNKY
3 comments:
Another bummer from Cassavetes. The synopsis makes the movie *sound* like it'd be an exciting experience, but nope.
THE PROFESSIONAL owes alot to this movie. Its a gender opposite remake
For me it's worth it for Rowlands' schtick; for recalling the feeling of NYC at that time, when I was there a bit as a barely older kid; and for those interpolated more Cassavetes-ish elements you allude to ... Heck, if it didn't have those, it would have wound up as (gulp) "Curly Sue"!
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