Glengarry Glen Ross

A story for everyone who works for a living.

7.3
19921h 40m

Times are tough at Premiere Properties. Shelley "the machine" Levene and Dave Moss are veteran salesmen, but only Ricky Roma is on a hot streak. The new Glengarry sales leads could turn everything around, but the front office is holding them back until these "losers" prove themselves. Then someone decides to take matters into his own hands, stealing the Glengarry leads and leaving everyone wondering who did it.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: John Landis on GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS

John Landis on GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS

Thumbnail for video: Glengarry Glen Ross -- Original Theatrical Trailer

Glengarry Glen Ross -- Original Theatrical Trailer

Thumbnail for video: 'Glengarry Glen Ross' | Critics' Picks | The New York Times

'Glengarry Glen Ross' | Critics' Picks | The New York Times

Thumbnail for video: Glengarry Glen Ross Trailer

Glengarry Glen Ross Trailer

Cast

Photo of Al Pacino

Al Pacino

Ricky Roma

Photo of Jack Lemmon

Jack Lemmon

Shelley Levene

Photo of Alan Arkin

Alan Arkin

George Aaronow

Photo of Ed Harris

Ed Harris

Dave Moss

Photo of Kevin Spacey

Kevin Spacey

John Williamson

Photo of Jonathan Pryce

Jonathan Pryce

James Lingk

Photo of Bruce Altman

Bruce Altman

Larry Spannel

Photo of Paul Butler

Paul Butler

Policeman

Photo of Lori Tan Chinn

Lori Tan Chinn

Coat Check Girl

Photo of Neal Jones

Neal Jones

Man in Donut Shop

Photo of Leigh French

Leigh French

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of George Cheung

George Cheung

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Murphy Dunne

Murphy Dunne

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Dana Lee

Dana Lee

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Julie Payne

Julie Payne

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Gregory Snegoff

Gregory Snegoff

Additional Voices (voice)

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Reviews

T

Andres Gomez

7/10

Interesting adaptation of a theater play with a great cast for a choral movie. The script is not that interesting, from my POV, but this is a story for actors and the cast is great.

R

Renovatio

10/10

Incredibly realistic mood… It captures the environment of a sales team so well… The stress, the competition, the somewhat adversarial relationship between management and the front office…

The predatory, hunter-gatherer nature of it all

Such a great film…

J

JPV852

8/10

Good David Mamet written film, with the usual Mamet-style dialogue, that doesn't have a real plot and not quite a character study either, yet still engrossing even with characters who are real estate scammers. Seen this several times over the years and still mesmerized by Jack Lemmon's performance. Pacino was good but Lemmon deserved the nod over him. **4.0/5**

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

I wonder how many ostensibly peaceful office environments would react like this if they were given the same ultimatum! It's underperforming so the overbearing and supremely confident "Blake" (Alec Baldwin) announces to the team that at the end of the month, only the top two will have a job in their estate agency. This proves quite a shock to "Levene" (Jack Lemmon), "George" (Alan Arvin), "Dave" (Ed Harris) and "Ricky" (Al Pacino). They try, they claim, but the market just isn't there. Well "Blake" ain't buying any of that and so the ultimatum stands. What now ensues sees this workplace - under the rather weak management of the insipid "Williamson" (Kevin Spacey) go from amiable camaraderie to toxic back-stabbing. Essentially the battle comes down to "Ricky" vs. "Levene". The former a younger man full of zeal who has "Lingk" (Jonathan Price) about to buy and secure his top position; the latter has long lost his touch but not his need for a job. "Blake" has left one gift with their boss and that's a list of special "leads". These are clues to who might be seeking to buy and who might be looking to sell, and they are considered gold dust for this challenge but he isn't handing them out. Then the office suffers a break-in and those valuable documents are gone. Who took them? There are of no value at all to a common thief. That's the pivot conjoining an whole series of sharp practices, double standards and borderline criminality as the David Manet play shines quite an intense light on the dynamics of competitive human relationships, venality and trust. Lemmon manages to convey a palpable sense of desperation that's evenly matched by Pacino on good form as the man whom most of us could probably believe as a smarmy realtor. This smouldering toxicity and some pithy and ripe dialogue combines to increase and to maintain tension effectively throughout this short but intense drama that has the extra benefit of not being cluttered up by one single romantic interlude! I think it was pretty obvious who did the deed towards the end, but you're never quite sure and even then, do you feel pity, empathy, anger? Probably not since "12 Angry Men" (1957) have I seen such a powerfully delivered drama from an all male cast and it's worth a watch.

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