|
Read all 40 Reviews
|
Write a Review
|
|
About the Author
Member: Brian Koller
Location: Plano, Texas
Reviews written: 873
Trusted by: 477 members
About Me: Conservative grades, but kinder and gentler reviews.
|
Rocky (1976)
Written: Sep 22 '99 (Updated Nov 12 '99)
Pros:characters, script, story, score
Cons:manipulative, stagey fight scenes
Has any actor gotten more mileage out of a single character than Sylvester Stallone with "Rocky"? He had made feature films before, small supporting roles in minor films. "Rocky" took him to the big time, where he remained despite the mediocrity of the movies that followed.
But give Stallone his due. He is much smarter than the dumb-dumb characters he has played. He seems to know his limitations as an actor, building a career playing characters that fit within his limited range. And, as "Rocky" showed, he can write a script. "Rocky" has crisp dialogue, characters with some depth and vulnerability, and a feel-good story destined for box office success. His smartest move of all was not selling the script until a studio met his demand: he gets the starring role. Although this may not have been for the best: had he sold the script, perhaps he would be writing good screenplays instead of starring in bad films.
"Rocky" tells the story of a humble boxer
(Stallone), living in a slummy neighborhood and
working as an enforcer for a loan shark. He
succeeds in a romance with local wallflower
Adrian (Talia Shire), who lives with her verbally
abusive brother Paulie (Burt Young). Rocky is
finally given a big break when heavyweight
champion Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) decides to
fight him. Rocky is trained by salty old-timer
Mickey (Burgess Meredith).
"Rocky" ends with the fight between Creed and
Rocky. While entertaining, these scenes are
somewhat bogus. Rocky's first punch floors the
Champ, while the broadcaster's voiceover says
that it is "the first time ever" Creed had been
knocked down. Rocky gets his nose broken in the
first round, then proceeds to set the world
record for absorbing punches flush to the face.
Neither boxer shows any defensive skills, and
they simply take turns dishing out punishment. At
the end of one round, the referee is unable to
separate the combatants. While the fight decision
is being announced, Rocky seems more interested
in finding his girlfriend in the crowd than in
learning whether he won.
"Rocky" won the Oscars for Best Picture and Best
Director (John Avildsen). Stallone was nominated
for Best Actor, and for Best Screenplay. Young
and Meredith were nominated for Best Supporting
Actor, and Shire was somehow nominated for Best
Supporting Actress (when it rains it pours). The
great theme song, "Gonna Fly Now", also pulled
down a nomination. (66/100)
Recommended: Yes
Read all 40 Reviews
|
Write a Review
|
|
|
|
| Where can I buy it? |
| Showing 1-4 of 9 deals |
|
Director John G. Avildsen's ROCKY is the stand-up-and-cheer saga of Rocky Balboa Sylvester Stallone an underdog boxer who gets his million-to-one shot...
|
|
|
|
Nominated for 10 Academy Awards(R) and winner for Best Picture, it's the film that inspired a nation! Audiences and critics alike cheered this America...
|
|
|
|
Director John G. Avildsen s ROCKY is the stand-up-and-cheer saga of Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone), an underdog boxer who gets his million-to-one s...
|
|
|
|
Nominated for 10 Academy Awards and winner for Best Picture, it s the film that inspired a nation! Audiences and critics alike cheered this American s...
|
|
|
|