The Green Glove backdrop
The Green Glove

The Green Glove

In This Deadly Game... He Could Lose Only Once!

6.2 / 1019521h 29m

Synopsis

In World War II France, American soldier Michael Blake captures, then loses Nazi-collaborator art thief Paul Rona, who leaves behind a gem studded gauntlet (a stolen religious relic). Years later, financial reverses lead Mike to return in search of the object. In Paris, he must dodge mysterious followers and a corpse that's hard to explain; so he and attractive tour guide Christine decamp on a cross-country pursuit that becomes love on the run...then takes yet another turn.

Genre: Crime, Mystery

Status: Released

Director: Rudolph Maté

Website:

Main Cast

Glenn Ford

Glenn Ford

Michael 'Mike' Blake

Geraldine Brooks

Geraldine Brooks

Christine 'Chris' Kenneth

Cedric Hardwicke

Cedric Hardwicke

Father Goron

George Macready

George Macready

Count Paul Rona

Gaby André

Gaby André

Gaby Saunders

Jany Holt

Jany Holt

The Countess

Roger Tréville

Roger Tréville

Police Insp. Faubert

Juliette Gréco

Juliette Gréco

Singer (scenes deleted)

Georges Tabet

Georges Tabet

Jacques Piotet

Meg Lemonnier

Meg Lemonnier

Madame Piotet

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

I can't help think that Glenn Ford was just the wrong man for the part here. He portrays "Mike" - a GI who returns to France after WWII to track down an artefact that he encountered at the end of the war - one that could reverse his rather meagre financial fortunes. When in Paris a corpse is found in his hotel room so he must flee the pursuing gendarmes and others on the look out for the eponymous, gem-laden, gauntlet. Luckily, he is helped by local tour guide "Christine" (Geraldine Brooks) and our adventure takes him deep into the French countryside. The story is quite good, but the execution is pretty lacklustre - Ford's heart just doesn't seem to be in it (though he isn't terrible). Brooks looks the part, but again doesn't really set any sparks flying and Sir Cedric Hardwicke's billing belies his almost cameo appearance as the Priest in the church where the glove is supposed to rest. George Macready is quite good as the nasty art dealer "Count Paul" but it's all just a bit flat. It may well have been better had it been made ten years earlier with a lesser-known star, but as it is, it is just a bit dull.