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IMDbPro

Glória

Título original: Gloria
  • 1980
  • PG
  • 2 h 1 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
13 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Gena Rowlands and John Adames in Glória (1980)
When a young boy's family is killed by the mob, their tough neighbor Gloria becomes his reluctant guardian. In possession of a book that the gangsters want, the pair go on the run in New York.
Reproduzir trailer2:57
2 vídeos
52 fotos
GangsterCrimeDramaThriller

Quando a máfia mata a família de um menino, sua vizinha Gloria se torna sua guardiã relutante. Com um livro que os gângsteres querem, a dupla vai para a fuga em Nova York.Quando a máfia mata a família de um menino, sua vizinha Gloria se torna sua guardiã relutante. Com um livro que os gângsteres querem, a dupla vai para a fuga em Nova York.Quando a máfia mata a família de um menino, sua vizinha Gloria se torna sua guardiã relutante. Com um livro que os gângsteres querem, a dupla vai para a fuga em Nova York.

  • Direção
    • John Cassavetes
  • Roteirista
    • John Cassavetes
  • Artistas
    • Gena Rowlands
    • Buck Henry
    • Julie Carmen
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,1/10
    13 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • John Cassavetes
    • Roteirista
      • John Cassavetes
    • Artistas
      • Gena Rowlands
      • Buck Henry
      • Julie Carmen
    • 84Avaliações de usuários
    • 36Avaliações da crítica
    • 68Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 4 vitórias e 5 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:57
    Official Trailer
    Gloria: What Kind Of Man
    Clip 1:02
    Gloria: What Kind Of Man
    Gloria: What Kind Of Man
    Clip 1:02
    Gloria: What Kind Of Man

    Fotos52

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    + 47
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    Elenco principal61

    Editar
    Gena Rowlands
    Gena Rowlands
    • Gloria Swenson
    Buck Henry
    Buck Henry
    • Jack Dawn
    Julie Carmen
    Julie Carmen
    • Jeri Dawn
    Tony Knesich
    • 1st Man…
    Gregory Cleghorne
    • Kid in Elevator
    John Adames
    John Adames
    • Phil Dawn
    Lupe Garnica
    • Margarita Vargas
    Jessica Castillo
    • Joan Dawn
    Tom Noonan
    Tom Noonan
    • 2nd Man…
    Ronald Maccone
    • 3rd Man…
    George Yudzevich
    • Heavy Set Man
    Gary Howard Klar
    Gary Howard Klar
    • Irish Cop
    • (as Gary Klar)
    William E. Rice
    • TV Newscaster
    Frank Belgiorno
    • Riverside Drive Man #5
    J.C. Quinn
    J.C. Quinn
    • Riverside Drive Man #4
    Alex Stevens
    Alex Stevens
    • Riverside Drive Man #7
    Sonny Landham
    Sonny Landham
    • Riverside Drive Man #8
    Harry Madsen
    Harry Madsen
    • Riverside Drive Man #6
    • Direção
      • John Cassavetes
    • Roteirista
      • John Cassavetes
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários84

    7,112.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8Krustallos

    Flawed But Brilliant

    I caught this on TV once and was blown away by its energy and spontaneity. Gena Rowlands is as good in it as everyone says, with some real surprises. The point about the kid coming out with "grown up" mock-heroic phrases at some points is that he's picked all that stuff up from the movies and listening to his parents' gangster friends. It's supposed to be funny - he keeps shouting "I'm the Man" when he patently isn't.

    The movie takes action/gangster movie genre conventions by the scruff of the neck and shakes them till interesting stuff falls out. The editing and cinematography are great. New York looks gritty but beautiful.

    True the film is kind of rough round the edges, I guess down to Cassavetes' improvisatory style, however it's a lot more accessible than most of his work and you should see it if you get the chance.
    8jzappa

    A Realist Perspective on a Conventional Formula

    You start with flinty, streetsmart gangster types, cross their paths with a little kid, put them in urban peril, and then you squeeze how things stack up for sentimentality, suspense and humor. It's a charming idea, and perhaps that's why this could be considered John Cassavetes's most conventional film. It tells the story of a gangster's girlfriend who goes on the run with a young boy who is being pursued by the mob for information he doesn't even know he might have. But he wants to tell the story his own way, obstructing every convention we would normally expect, instilling a realist perspective in how we follow the movie, making the pay-off that much more worthwhile. Cassavetes didn't intend to direct his script. He just wanted to sell the story to Columbia Pictures. But once his wife Gena Rowlands was asked to play Gloria, she obliged Cassavetes to direct it.

    This underdog crime drama is particularly absorbing in its first hour, and ignites with a great beginning. We follow one character, it leads to another character, perspectives are interknit, the situation builds and Cassavetes has complete control over what we know and expect, all in spite of the all-too-familiar premise, which is then set for the rest of the movie, which is a cat-and-mouse hunt per the seedier locales of New York and New Jersey. He makes the threat so real that when the two key characters evade tangible danger, we still feel the tension whenever they round a corner, get in and out of cabs, and other such ordinary actions. He doesn't let on that unwanted company is present. It just happens. There is one scene that lasts for quite awhile before we realize, after Rowlands's title character does, that unwanted company has been there the entire time.

    In an Oscar-nominated performance, Rowlands is expectedly the beautiful lead actress, but she sports a kind of masculine quality, creating a much more dense dynamic when she, afraid of her maternal instincts, finds them overpowering her lifelong self-preservation, and begrudgingly protects the boy. As the film progresses, however, she becomes more sincere in her protection, and integrates her love with her seasoned familiarity with how to stay alive in this town. In one creative take on the Fine, I Don't Need You Anyway scene, she asks a bartender, "There's reasons I can't turn and just look, but is there a little kid headed in here or across the street or whatever?" She drives her role with such honest irritable liveliness. Yet the kid is also well cast. He was a conspicuous little boy named John Adames with dark hair, big eyes and a way of trucking his dialogue as if confronting you to adjust a single word. It all works because everything about his character, the way he dresses, talks, revolts and moves, serves the naive notion that he is older, smarter and cooler than he is.

    Cassavetes has a natural keenness for guilelessly unadorned location shooting in that he never plans, stages, waits on the weather or time of day, or hires extras or stunt drivers. Note how passers-by in the distance will often look on at the characters, whether Gloria has pulled a gun in a public place or not. Wherever the characters need to be, that place is in real time, as dirty, scuzzy and purely of the film's era as it would've normally been. There's a shabby flophouse where the clerk tells Gloria, "Just pick a room. They're all open." There are bus stations, back alleys, dimly lit hallways, and bars that open at dawn. And his occasional action scenes are so thrilling because of their surprise.

    For once, Cassavetes doesn't stage indefinitely extensive scenes of dialogue wherein the actors indulge in their own view of their characters' unraveling. But I miss that. As I've already said, I am very impressed with how tightly he mounts suspense from the very beginning, how Gloria and the kid zip from cab to bus to cab to street to hotel to cab and so on. But regardless of how doggedly realistic he is in his portrayal of a recycled movie plot, he still relies upon that plot rather than the impositions of his characters flexing their wings.
    nyc1223

    Super Movie!

    This is one of my favorite movies of all times. Gena Rowlands is a powerhouse actor in this gutsy film about survival, courage and compassion set in the fast-paced, gritty New York City of the 70s. The acting all-around is exceptional. The film is riveting from beginning to end. You get swept up in Gloria's dilemma right away. The scene where she has to decide whether to save herself and turn the kid over to his assassins is very believable as you can see and feel how desperate one would be in such a dire situation. Another great scene is at a Penn Station coffee shop where she confronts the stalking mobsters at a nearby table. You can hear a pin drop in that restaurant as she stands there saying, "I'm Gloria. My hand is on my gun in my purse!" Yet another great scene is the crowded subway where she literally throws punches with one of the mobsters who has caught up with her. Everyone in that graffiti-laden subway car presses against the walls trying to get away when Gloria pulls her gun. She says as she gets off: "Ya punk! Ya Punk. Ya let a sissy beat you, huh? You punk! Go ahead, punk!." Then the subway car closes and she and the kid get away yet again. So, get lots of popcorn, turn off the phones and curl up in bed with the lights off for this one!
    8dromasca

    classic and timeless

    Good movies are timeless. Or they feel so. Sometimes this is because their subject is universal and it does not really matter what epoch the action is set in. In some other cases the quality of the story and of the acting make the period irrelevant. A good example is 'Gloria', a film made in 1980 by director (and actor) John Cassavetes about whom I knew very little before seeing this film. And yet, 'Gloria' is a gangster movies that keeps the interest of viewers all over the two hours of screen time and looks new and fresh, despite having been filmed almost 40 years ago.

    The subject of the film will look familiar, as later movies like Luc Besson's 'Léon' have dealt with the theme of gangsters involved folks meeting and befriending kids, and melting to humanity in the course of the story. 'Gloria' however included from start a big twist. The lead adult hero is a woman, the ex-girlfriend of one of the mob chiefs, who witnesses the murder of the family of a six years old kid (her neighbor) who has nobody left to care about him and no place to go. Taking him under her protection means placing her in conflict with the mob (as the kid holds an accounting book with compromising mafia secrets) and with the law (she is believed to have kidnapped the kid). What follows is a few days of running from everybody and fighting for survival in the New York of 1980.

    The New York in the film is a city that looks so familiar: the streets (much dirtier and more dangerous), the buildings (combining modern and decrepit), the skyline (with the painful silhouettes of the twin towers), the people who look so much the same as the diverse human landscape of the big city we know. The only major thing that seems to have changed is the value of the dollar. It may be as difficult as 40 years ago to change a 100 dollars bill, but two dollars fifty cents would not be sufficient nowadays for any room in a city hotel, probably not even for a tip in any city hotel. The other ingredient that makes the film interesting is the excellent acting performance of Gena Rowlands who partners with the young John Adames, a kid actor who did not grow into an adult actor. She is vulnerable as a woman who does not like kids (her cat is collateral damage in the first minutes of the film) and has a troubled past, yet strong as she knows the language and manners of the crime world and how to survive it. The ending is a little disappointing, unexpectedly conventional for such a film that is so non-conventional from many points of view, but this does not spoil too much the good impression left by this fresh classic.
    silentgpaleo

    Gena Rowlands would kick Sharon Stone's butt

    I have not seen the remake of GLORIA yet, and needless to say, I'm not looking forward to it. Not to say that Sharon Stone can't play a tough female, who's self-imposed as a bodyguard for a kid running from mobsters. It is just that Gena Rowlands is so much more versatile, and her range so much wider, and I just KNOW that Stone won't be able to cut it. So, I will stop speculating, and get to the facts.

    GLORIA is a film that Cassavete's made as an antidote to brainless, violent action films. All of the violence has dramatic purpose, and nothing is pointless here. This may be off-putting to fans of the action genre, but Cassavetes' contempt for the genre is what makes GLORIA more interesting. There are several unexpected twists.

    When the film begins, Gloria is a street-smart woman who is kind of "married" to the mob. Gloria has a tomboyish quality that lends credibility to the fact that she has lived this long. She looks out for herself, first and foremost.

    This changes when a weasel, and friend,of Gloria's (Buck Henry) is murdered by her mobster friends. Henry and his wife are killed, leaving behind a scared child. The little boy is a witness to the murder, and the mobsters make chase.

    Gloria feels her maternal instincts begin to take over, and begrudgingly protects the boy. As the film progresses, however, she becomes more sincere in her protection, and she draws the line further for the mobsters. She has survived in the harsh city for this long, so it is easy to assume that she knows how to stay alive.

    GLORIA is by no means Cassavete best film. There are long stretches that test your patience, that can sometimes seem static. But, as much as I dislike this quality, I am familiar with several Cassavetes' films, and understand what he is trying to achieve. Cassavetes is a very emotional director. He doesn't focus on tragedy; he is more interested in survival and the baggage that that brings. GLORIA is a thinking-person's thriller, and if you prefer big explosions and high body-counts, go and see DIE HARD 2 again. But, if you want to see something different, check this one out.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Actress Gena Rowlands once said of her ex-gun moll character: "When I read the script, I knew I wanted a walk for her. I wanted something that, from the minute you saw me, you knew I could handle myself on the streets of New York. So I started thinking about when I lived in New York, how different I walked down the street when there was nobody but me. It was a walk that said, they'd better watch out."
    • Erros de gravação
      When Phil boards the train, the shot has been reversed, as evidenced by backwards lettering on the signs on the train and the platform.
    • Citações

      Phil Dawn: You're my mother. You're my father. You're my mother. You're my whole family. You're even my friend, Gloria. You're my girlfriend too.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Why Would I Lie?, Terror Train, Gloria, Private Benjamin (1980)

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes20

    • How long is Gloria?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Who's this Mr. Tanzini?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de março de 1981 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Gloria (1980) on Internet Archive
      • Sony Movie Channel (United States)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Espanhol
    • Também conhecido como
      • Gloria
    • Locações de filme
      • Trinity Church Cemetery - 770 Riverside Drive, Manhattan, Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA(ending scene at Pittsburgh cemetery)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 4.059.673
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 33.767
      • 5 de out. de 1980
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 4.062.212
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 1 minuto
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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