The Glove

1979 "A crazed, sadistic killer stalks the streets of a city gripped by terror...a gory trail of battered bodies leads to that last horrifying climax."
5.2| 1h32m| R| en| More Info
Released: 01 December 1979 Released
Producted By: Tommy J. Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

In this actioner, a bounty hunter is assigned to bring back an enormous and angry ex-convict who wears a deadly glove made of leather and steel. Rock'em sock'em mayhem ensues.

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Tommy J. Productions

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Reviews

FeistyUpper If you don't like this, we can't be friends.
Stevecorp Don't listen to the negative reviews
Reptileenbu Did you people see the same film I saw?
Griff Lees Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
zardoz-13 Actor & director Ross Hagen does not glamorize the travails of a modern day bounty hunter in his movie "The Glove" where John Saxon squares off against a rotund Roosevelt Grier. Later, Steve McQueen made "The Hunter" about a real-life bounty hunter. Hagen carefully establishes the characters of each individual and the irony implicit in the way that our hero triumphs in the end gives "The Glove" a sense of realism. A large African-American male dons a padded outfit and pulls on a glove. The glove weighs in at five pounds of lead and steel. They call it a 'riot glove.' He attacks a prison guard with his girlfriend as they are necking. He smashes the windshield and tears the doors off the Ford Pinto. Occasionally, when he is beating up the guard, Tiny (Aldo Ray of "The Green Beret"), the villain misses his victim and rips out a headlight. Meanwhile, the girlfriend screams in terror at this one-man army. The scene shifts to our bounty hunter hero, Sam Kellogg (John Saxon of "The Unforgiven") who provides us with a synopsis of his life and his careen. He was once a baseball shortstop before he became a bounty hunter. The person who means the most to him is his daughter. Several scenes show the depth of the bond between father and daughter. Probably the best is when Saxon is doing one-legged push-ups with his daughter on his back. We learn that our hero is divorced and has a hard time making ends meet. His ex-wife threatens to stop letting his daughter Lisa (one-time only actress Misty Bruce) visit him. A former policeman, Sam never wants to button himself in blue again. Instead, he takes the hard knocks as a bail bondsman. As a long-suffering hero, Sam wins our sympathy for his dire straits. He tangles with a couple of homosexuals in his first bust. Bill Schwartz (Keenan Wynn of "Laserblast") gives him jobs, but warns Sam to be careful. Sam learns from Bill that his old friend, Lieutenant Howard Kruger (Howard Honig of "Airplane 2, The Sequel"), has a lead for him. Kruger explains that Victor Hale has jumped bail. He is only worth peanuts. However, he reveals that this sometime-jazz musician has aroused the wrath of the Prison Guard Association and these fellows have put an unofficial $20-thousand on his capture. Kruger shows Sam an example of the riot glove. He briefs him (and us) about its notorious history. The protest riots in the early 1960s spawned it and it was later used in prison. Neither application worked, and the lawmakers outlawed the glove. According to Kruger, Hale stole the glove from his first victim. Sam poses as a journalist and interviews Victor's mother. She is an old lady who lives with her daughter. The daughter was slashed up by a pimp and Victor killed the pimp. Victor wound up in prison where the guard pummeled him with the glove. When we finally meet Victor, he is living in a rented apartment. Hagan elicits sympathy for him as a character because of his background and his vigilante justice in the case of his younger sister. Later, we see him teaching a black youngster how to play the guitar like a blues master. Forty seven minutes into the action, Victor calls Sam and suggests that he leave him alone. Sam explains that Victor represents a $20-thousand pay day. Victor assures him that he will be gone before Sam can locate his whereabouts. Sam keeps a tape recording of the telephone conversation. He tracks Victor down to a blues nightclub and barely misses him. As Sam is cruising away in his Cadelliac, he receives a phone call from Victor. Victor invites him over to his apartment house. Sam sneaks up the fire escape. Victor hands him the glove, but Sam is still no match--even with the glove--for the gigantic Victor. Earlier, Sam's old partner, Harry Iverson (Michael Pataki of "Death House"), was waiting for him to arrive home. Harry wants in on the Victor Hale deal. Meanwhile, Victor agrees to escort Sam downstairs so his friends in the apartment house won't hurt him. Harry surprises them as they enter the stairway and he shoots Victor four times. Victor's friends mob Harry and kill him. Sam ends up receiving the bounty and being reunited with his daughter.Clocking in at 90 solemn minutes, "The Glove" qualifies as an average thriller with strong performances by a sturdy cast.
kmcollins29 This movie is a classic example of 1970's unintentional hilarity. John Saxon plays bounty hunter Sam Kellogg. He is financially down on his luck and is trying to get custody of his young daughter from his estranged wife. Rosie Grier plays a recently released prison inmate who is beating up guards with a lead filled riot glove, hence the title: The Glove. Saxon's character provides an extremely cheesy narration throughout the entire film. It is good for a few chuckles. The scene in the slaughter house where Saxon and a baddie engage in a battle with two racks of raw lamb makes the film worth seeing alone. There is actually a scene where you can tell it was an obvious blooper but they just keep the camera rolling and used it in the final print. See if you can find it.
lazarillo I saw this awhile ago, but I thought of it again after watching the film "Death Walks at Midnight" which also features a giant metal glove used as the murder weapon. The titular glove in this one, however, is not spiked and is used entirely on male victims who really deserve it, and is wielded by ex-football player turned preacher Rosy Grier. Grier plays an innocent man sent to prison, who takes revenge on the men who sent him there using a stolen "high-tech weapon" (the glove). John Saxon, playing a cop for the thousandth time in his career, is the man who tries to stop him and recover the glove. Both characters are pretty sympathetic and as I recall the films ends happily. That's probably one of the reasons it wasn't very successful and remains pretty obscure today. It lacks any real exploitative elements--the violence is pretty tame and there's no sex or nudity. Even the blaxploitation elements aren't too strong here. But if you're not expecting too much, it's worth a look.
ihateeverymovieisee The premise for this film is what drew me to rent it. A hitman isafter a killer that uses a high tech riot glove to torture his victims.John Saxon stars in this heap of garbage and narrates throughoutthe ENTIRE movie. This feature is pretty cool at first, but after awhile you begin to get irrated with him explaining the obvious.About 45 minutes in, the movie loses any steam that it had (it hadnone to begin with), and things start making absolutely no senseat all. The theme music and soundtrack to this movie sounds likeit came from some Saturday morning cartoon, and the fightingscenes are poorly choreographed. I would not recommend thisfilm to anyone with a conscience.