Starring the
inimitable John Saxon, who offers one of his most appealing performances, The Glove is a tonic for schlock-cinema
addicts who are tired of mean-spirited exploitation flicks. The Glove is not gentle, per se, but it
avoids the familiar traps of objectifying women and sanctifying pointless
violence. Additionally, the picture overflows with lively character development
and whimsical dialogue, sometimes to the detriment of the storyline, and the use
of hard-boiled voiceover gives the piece a pleasing flow. So while The Glove is mostly a dud as an action
picture, it’s pleasant to watch as a character piece involving an amiable
bounty hunter and an even more amiable escaped convict. You may find yourself
perplexed as to whom this picture was meant to satisfy, since the poster
suggests a brutal urban thriller, but if you’ve spent too much time aiming your
retinas at ugly stories about ugly people doing ugly things, the goofy humanism of The Glove offers a refreshing
alternative.
Saxon stars as Sam Kellogg, a Los Angeles-based bounty hunter with
money problems. His ex-wife is after him for overdue alimony payments, so his
treasured visitations with his young daughter are in danger of being revoked.
The filmmakers present layer after layer of detail about Sam, so we learn that
he gambles recklessly, gives bribes to former police-force colleagues for help tracking down hoodlums, and sometimes cuts breaks for hard-luck cases. Motivated by
the promise of a $20,000 bounty, Sam spends most of the movie chasing Victor Hale (Rosey Grier), who seems terrifying the first time we
encounter him. Having acquired a full suit of police riot gear, including a
five-pound, lead-lined monstrosity known as a riot glove, Victor demolishes a
car before pummeling one of the vehicle’s occupants nearly to death. However, subsequent scenes portray Victor as a gentle giant, entertaining local children by playing blues songs on guitar while hanging out in a
tenement apartment. When Victor learns that Sam is after him, he calls the bounty hunter and says to
back off, instead of, say, ambushing Sam with the glove.
Although the filmmakers never
reconcile the dark and light aspects of Victor’s portrayal, it’s enjoyable to watch
a picture of this type that strives to make characters dimensional. The Glove also benefits from a cast
stocked with familiar professionals: Joanna Cassidy, Joan Blondell, Michael
Pataki, Aldo Ray, Keenan Wynn. In the end, is The Glove a jumble of contradictory intentions? Sure. But it’s hard
not to appreciate elements including the pithy voiceover (“I felt like somebody had kicked me in the stomach and left
their shoe there”) and the stunningly overwrought theme song, which must be heard to be believed.
The Glove: FUNKY
John Saxon meets Rosey Grier? I'm sold!
ReplyDeleteActually, I think Saxon has always been undervalued. He's very good in the (imo) overlooked Clint title 'Joe Kidd'.
The site Cool Ass Cinema is okay with it and notes in passing "Gratuitous scene of some very attractive ladies seen in the film for no other reason to be [sic] a gratuitous scene of some very attractive ladies."
ReplyDeleteNever heard of this one before. I always liked Saxon after I saw him star as a cop in an episode of Police Story.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of which, Shout Factory is finally releasing season 2 on dvd July 25th. Figured I'd throw that out there in case any 1970's Police Story fans were unaware.
Well, it only took me over 6 years, but I finally watched The Glove. Such a cool movie that surpassed my expectations. On paper the movie sounds ridiculous and should be horrible. Instead, just like you wrote in your review, it strives and succeeds at being more then your typical grindhouse fare.
ReplyDeleteI don't know where Grier got his acting chops for this movie. He convincingly portrays a gentle giant that pushed too far, has developed mental problems. The movie doesn't lack for tawdry exploitation elements either. The scene where Saxon has a fight the two gays guys that spills into a pool wouldn't be made now. The ending beating death was shocking and came out of nowhere. I'll be revisiting this one again soon. Watching this made me wish Saxon had more leading man roles