Glory Alley
Glory Alley
Main page

Glory Alley

logo
Community Hub0 subscribers
What are your thoughts?
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Glory Alley

Glory Alley is a 1952 American musical drama film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Ralph Meeker, Leslie Caron and Gilbert Roland.

New Orleans newspaper columnist Gabe Jordan, nearing retirement, tells the story of boxer Socks Barbarossa.

One night, just before a championship bout, Socks abruptly flees the ring and runs to the locker room. He angrily announces to his manager Peppi Donato and his girlfriend's blind father Gus "Judge" Evans that he will not fight again, but he refuses to provide a reason. When Socks' opponent later confronts him in the empty arena, Socks knocks him unconscious.

Socks visits his girlfriend Angie Evans, a dancer and singer, at the nightclub where she works. She is upset about the manner in which Socks quit the ring and wonders what has happened to him. He tries to explain to the Judge, who expresses his disappointment and anger, calling Socks a weak quitter.

Socks turns to a life of heavy drinking and is soon destitute. Peppi saves him, giving Socks a job as a bartender in his nightclub. Socks is drafted and sees brutal combat in the Korean War. He is awarded the Medal of Honor after risking his life in battle and returns to New Orleans as a hero, but the Judge remains upset with him. Socks proposes marriage to Angie, but she is hesitant because she needs to care for her blind father. After a tour to sell war bonds, Socks becomes embittered upon returning to normal life, mistreating Angie and nearly returning his medal to the president.

Dr. Robert Ardley approaches the Judge about an operation to restore his eyesight, but the Judge learns that Socks arranged it, hoping to marry Angie. The Judge is furious and proclaims that he would rather remain blind, but Angie accuses him of fearing the operation because he might lose her as well as the sympathy that he receives. He agrees to undergo the operation.

Ardley describes to the Judge how Socks was the son of a deadbeat criminal who inflicted severe physical abuse on him as a child that left him with a serious head injury. Socks tells Angie of how he endured teasing because of his scars and thought that he had heard similar remarks before the championship bout, which was the reason why he had run from the ring.

The operation fails to restore the Judge's eyesight, but he declares that it was a success because his heart has been opened.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.