Movie · 1980 · Crime, Drama, Thriller · 2h 2m · PG · English
Curator score: 7.1/10 (39.6K ratings)
She's tough… but she sides with the little guy. And she's out to beat the mob at their own game.
Overview
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.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.1/10
IMDb: 7.1/10
Letterboxd: 3.80/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 91%
Metacritic: 68
TMDB: 6.9/10
Director
John Cassavetes
Production
Columbia Pictures
Cast
Gena Rowlands, Buck Henry, Julie Carmen, John Adames, Tony Knesich, Gregory Cleghorne, Lupe Garnica, Jessica Castillo, Tom Noonan, Ronald Maccone, George Yudzevich, Gary Klar, William E. Rice, Frank Belgiorno, J.C. Quinn, Alex Stevens, Sonny Landham, Harry Madsen, Shanton Granger, John Pavelko
Curator Review
Verdict
A stylish, offbeat crime thriller with a hard-edged emotional core, Gloria works best as a showcase for Gena Rowlands’ magnetic, unsentimental toughness. It blends studio polish with Cassavetes’ raw, character-first instincts, creating a tense, funny, and oddly tender chase movie.
Best for
fans of gritty 1970s/early-1980s crime dramas
viewers who like strong female antiheroes
people interested in character-driven thrillers over plot mechanics
fans of New York street atmosphere and mob stories
viewers curious about Cassavetes in a more commercial mode
Skip if
you want a tightly plotted, high-action thriller
you dislike abrasive, emotionally messy characters
you prefer polished studio crime films with a conventional tone
you are looking for a warm or sentimental guardian-child story
Overview
Gloria is a rare hybrid: a studio crime thriller that still feels like it has a pulse and a temper. Cassavetes brings his fascination with damaged adults, awkward intimacy, and emotional friction, while the plot gives the film a propulsive chase structure. The result is less about procedural suspense than about watching a woman who refuses to be softened into a stereotype.
Worth noting
Gena Rowlands is the whole movie’s engine. She makes Gloria tough, funny, impatient, and unexpectedly vulnerable without ever turning her into a comforting maternal figure. The film keeps testing that tension, especially in the uneasy bond with the boy, and that refusal to smooth things over is what gives it bite.
Bottom line
It can feel uneven, even dislocated, because Cassavetes’ rawness is colliding with more conventional genre expectations. But that friction is part of the appeal. If you want a crime film with personality, attitude, and one of the great star performances of its era, this is absolutely worth the ride.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Aaron Michael (4.5★) · 864 likes
Sometimes all you need is Gena Rowland outrunning the mob in high heels and designer outfits for two hours to make the world seem a little less awful.
Muriel · 726 likes
cassavetes clearly made this film just to show off how much of a badass gena rowlands is
mia lee vicino (4★) · 624 likes
so strange when cassavetes does studio films! the conventional pressures of capitalism clashes with his raw emotional style, creating this dislocated reality that whips from cliched dialogue to a patented genius gena rowlands monologue and back again.
together, the ultimate film power couple unpacks the false myth that being a woman makes one inherently maternal — even when gloria is taking care of the boy she’s smoking cigarettes and gangsters in front of him or calling him stupid, lol. though film… more
siobhan (5★) · 538 likes
all because gloria ran out of coffee!
kailey (3★) · 279 likes
john cassavetes was always concerned with the realm of adults- his movies are about navigating complex emotions and relationships in the midst of booze and cigarettes and run-down buildings. his art ran on the emotional rather than the plot or the cause and the effect. gloria, a studio financed project, mashes together cassavetes signature style with the more traditional adherences we can expect of main-stream cinema.
it doesn't always... work. the film meanders just as much as it hits. one… more