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Rocky II

 
Movies:

Rocky II

  • Director: Sylvester Stallone
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Sports Drama
  • Themes: Boxers, Underdogs, In Training
  • Main Cast: Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burt Young, Carl Weathers, Burgess Meredith
  • Release Year: 1979
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 119 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

By concentrating on character development with this first of several sequels to his Oscar-winning smash Rocky (1976), writer/director Sylvester Stallone earned critical praise that would desert him with the boxing saga's shallower subsequent chapters. Stallone returns as Rocky Balboa, a Philadelphia prize fighter enjoying his brief fame after nearly defeating world heavyweight champion Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers). When Rocky is offered lucrative product endorsement opportunities, his limited education and lack of sophistication quickly become an impediment to his future success, causing him embarrassment and his pregnant wife, Adrian (Talia Shire), a great deal of financial concern. Meanwhile, Creed is brooding over his near loss to a fighter he considers an amateur far beneath him and decides to goad a reluctant Rocky into a high-profile rematch. With the family resources dwindling and his pride wounded, Rocky decides that fighting is all he knows and makes the fateful decision to climb back into the ring once more with Creed to vie for the championship belt, despite assurances from all concerned that he will blind himself irreparably. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Review

Released in 1979, Rocky II arguably represents the beginning of '80s film. The original Rocky was a welcome turn from the nihilistic storylines that dominated early and mid-'70s American films. Sure, Rocky does not have such a fairy tale life that he wins the title, but he does accomplish his dream to go the distance with the champ, and he gets the woman of his (realistically modest) dreams. The film's first sequel represents Stallone's abandonment of personal cinema and his acceptance of what would become '80s rah-rah, boom-boom blockbuster cinema. While the first two thirds of the film expand on the characters of Rocky and Apollo, recognizable human emotions disappear during the hyper-dramatic final fight. It is in the character of Adrian that one can see the death of Stallone the artist and the birth of Stallone the superstar. Adrian's love for Rocky proves to be selfless. Only when she believes in him without reservation does he find the fortitude to defeat Apollo. This is exactly the relationship Stallone wanted with his audience. He wanted to be more than a standup guy with some talent; he wanted to be a larger-than-life hero who is adored for being a courageous warrior. Rocky was about a man who lived up to his potential. Rocky II is about an idealized hero. For good or ill, Stallone stopped being one of the common men and became an icon. He would never fully shed that screen persona. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Tony Burton - Apollo's Trainer; Joe Spinell - Gazzo; Leonard Gaines - Agent; Sylvia Meals - Mary Anne Creed; Frank McRae - Meat Foreman; Al Silvani - Cutman; John Pleshette - Director; Stu Nahan - Announcer; Bill Baldwin - Commentator; Jerry Ziesmer - Salesman; Paul Micale - Father Carmine; Taurean Blacque - Lawyer; James J. Casino - Chink's Manager; Charles "Honi" Coles - Singer; Michael Dorn - Bit; Roberto Duran - Fighter; Lou Filippo - Referee; Grainger Hines - Emergency Room Aide; Ava Lazar - White Hunter; Eddie Lopez - Fighter; Paul McCrane - Young Patient; Sonny Melendrez - Reporter; Jane Marla Robbins - Gloria; Stuart K. Robinson; Hank Rolike - Cornerman; Fran Ryan - Adrian's Nurse; Whitney Rydbeck - Sound Man; Shepherd Sanders - Employment Manager; Jeff Temkin - Ring Announcer; Allan Warnick - Makeup Man; Tony Munafo - Boxer; Frank Stallone - Singer; Charles Winkler - Camera Assistant; Shaka Cumbuka - Cornerman; Earl Montgomery, Jr.; Herb Nanas - Employment Manager; Rene LeVant - Young Lugger; Allison Caine

Credit

Richard G. Berger - Art Director, Arthur Chobanian - Associate Producer, Michael McLean - Casting, Joy Todd - Casting, Al Silvani - Consultant/advisor, Tom Bronson - Costume Designer, Sandra Berke - Costume Designer, Sylvester Stallone - Director, Stanford C. Allen - Editor, Danford B. Greene - Editor, Janice Hampton - Editor, James R. Symons - Editor, Michael S. Glick - Executive Producer, Sylvester Stallone - Fights Choreographer, Bill Conti - Composer (Music Score), Frank Stallone - Composer (Music Score), Frank Stallone - Songwriter, Michael Westmore - Makeup, Bill Butler - Cinematographer, Robert Chartoff - Producer, Irwin Winkler - Producer, Ed Baer - Set Designer, Sylvester Stallone - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

The Champ; Over the Top; Requiem for a Heavyweight; Against the Ropes
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Rocky II

Rocky II movie poster
Directed by Sylvester Stallone
Produced by Robert Chartoff
Irwin Winkler
Written by Sylvester Stallone
Starring Sylvester Stallone
Talia Shire
Burt Young
Carl Weathers
Burgess Meredith
Tony Burton
Music by Bill Conti
Cinematography Bill Butler
Editing by Stanford C. Allen
Janice Hampton
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) June 15, 1979
Running time 120 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$ 1,900,000
Preceded by Rocky
Followed by Rocky III

Rocky II is the 1979 sequel to Rocky, a motion picture in which an unknown boxer had been given a chance to go the distance with the World Heavyweight Champion. Sylvester Stallone, Carl Weathers, Burgess Meredith, Burt Young and Talia Shire reprised their original roles. Although this film was released in 1979, the ring announcers say that it takes place ten months after Rocky's first fight with Apollo Creed, putting the Rocky II fight with Apollo in November 1976. The Ring Magazine heavyweight championship belt makes its first appearance in the series.

Contents

Plot

Rocky II begins with the 14th round of the Bicentennial fight from the first movie. The fight lasts the entire 15 rounds with each fighter suffering many devastating injuries. After the fight, Rocky calls out for Adrian, who runs down to the ring. As Creed is announced the winner by split decision, Adrian and Rocky embrace, and Rocky tells her that he loves her.

After their championship bout, Rocky and Apollo are taken by ambulance to Pennsylvania Hospital in Center City (a WCAU-TV Channel 10 news truck follows behind the ambulance), where they meet once again in the hospital lobby with a mob of reporters. Apollo Creed, who retained the championship on points, is furious at Rocky, the first man to go the distance with him, and starts clamoring for another chance to knock Rocky out. Rocky goes to Apollo's room that night and asks "Did you give me your best?" to which Apollo answers "Yeah." Rocky declines talk of a rematch and tells Apollo that he is quitting boxing. Rocky's decision to retire is strengthened when doctors tell him he needs surgery for a detached retina.

Following his hospital stay, Rocky proposes to Adrian in front of the tiger exhibit at the Philadelphia Zoo, and they later on get married. Rocky begins to enjoy the profits from his fight with Apollo. He buys his first brand new car which is a 1979 Pontiac Trans Am (even though it's still supposedly 1976), goes on a shopping spree (purchasing a black leather jacket with a tiger on the back, a fur coat for Adrian, and some watches, to name a few), and buys a two-story house. He also convinces his previous employer, Gazzo, to give Paulie his old collecting job. Rocky then opts to earn money by appearing in television commercials. His new career, however, is quickly derailed by his sub-par reading skills, which leads to a clash with the director of his first commercial.

Unable to find white-collar work due to his lack of education beyond the 8th grade, and after being laid off (because of cutbacks) from the meat packing plant where Paulie previously worked, he gets a job "helping out" at Mickey's gym. Adrian, now pregnant, returns to her old job at the pet store. He also hands over his new Trans Am to Paulie, who agrees to take over the payments.

Meanwhile, Apollo Creed has been receiving hate mail about his split-decision win over Rocky and is filled with anger and frustration: the letters alternately accuse him of deliberately carrying "that chump" (Rocky) the distance or state outright that he should have lost and has no business calling himself the champ. Determined to prove himself and win back the respect of his fans, Apollo elects to try and pressure Rocky into another fight, despite protests from his trainer, Tony "Duke" Evers, to find a new contender to fight against (when asked by Apollo what Tony is afraid of [regarding Rocky], Tony replies "He's all wrong for us. I saw you beat that man like I ain't never seen no man get beat before. And the man kept coming after you."). Rocky himself begins to have second thoughts about the fight, but because of the pressure applied by Apollo, Rocky decides to accept the challenge for a rematch against Apollo on Thanksgiving 1976 and begins training.

Mickey, initially unwilling to train Rocky due to his bad eye, decides he wants Rocky to learn to fight right-handed in order to better protect the eye, and to give him a surprise advantage by switching back to left-handed with the intention of throwing off Apollo's timing and confusing him. He also focuses on improving Rocky's speed by using an old training method from his own boxing days: he forces Rocky to chase a chicken around a vacant lot, stating, "If you can catch this thing you can catch greased lightning."

However, Adrian's opposition saps his resolve and his training suffers. When Paulie confronts Adrian about her opinion, her angry reaction creates a serious medical condition that breaks her water prematurely. During the birth of their son, Adrian falls into a coma, and as a result of the premature birth, their son is placed into an incubator. Rocky breaks away from training to spend every waking moment either at her side or in the hospital chapel with Mickey, not even seeing his newborn son until she recovers. When Adrian emerges from the coma, she tells Rocky to "win" and he restarts training in earnest with Mickey for the rematch with Apollo. His condition improves dramatically with increased strength and speed.

As with the first fight, Rocky's training includes his famous brisk run throughout the city of Philadelphia. This time, however, he is greeted with the cheers and encouragement of onlookers as he runs through the streets of South Philadelphia, having become a local celebrity following his narrow loss to Apollo. Along the way, children and pre-teens begin to follow him, their numbers increasing dramatically block by block. By the time he reaches the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Center City, hundreds of young people have joined in. Ultimately, they follow Rocky to the top of the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, enthusiastically chanting his name as he lifts his arms in a victory pose.

Rocky and Apollo once again fight an intense battle in front of a standing-room-only crowd at the Philadelphia Spectrum. Unlike the first match, Apollo gets off to a fast start, flooring Rocky twice in the first two rounds and building a huge lead on the scorecards as the fight goes on. But throughout the fight, Rocky pounds away at Apollo on and off, turning the fight into a brutal battle. At the start of the fifteenth round, Apollo's trainer begs him not to try to go for a knockout, as he can win simply by avoiding Rocky. Apollo, desperately wanting to prove he can knock out Rocky and very frustrated that he keeps coming back, disregards the advice. Mickey tells Rocky to switch back to boxing left-handed now, and although Rocky initially refuses, he switches back, landing several crashing lefts. Rocky hits Apollo with a final punch that knocks him down, but from sheer exhaustion, Rocky also goes down to the canvas. The referee starts the final ten-count as the fighters struggle to their feet.

At the count of 9, Apollo collapses while reaching for the top rope, while Rocky picks himself up and is declared the WBA's new Heavyweight Champion of the World. In his post-match speech, he thanks Apollo for another hard-fought battle, Mickey for training him, and God. Rocky states "Except for my kid being born, this is the greatest night in the history of my life, and I just want to say one thing to my wife who's home: Yo, Adrian! I did it!"

Cast and crew

Production Notes

This was the last film until Rocky V and later Rocky Balboa to depict Rocky living in downtown Philadelphia.

Approximately 800 school children are estimated to have been used for the scene depicting Rocky's run through Philadelphia.[1]

This was the only Rocky movie to have mentioned that Rocky had gained a large Italian fan-base when Bill Baldwin states, "I've never seen so many Italians in one place", to which his partner Stu Nahan says, "You said that, not me".

Robert Balboa Jr. in the film is the real life son of Sylvester Stallone, Seargeoh Stallone.

This movie has the last camera appearance of the singers who live in Rocky's neighborhood, one of whom was Stallone's real life brother, Frank Stallone.

This is Rocky's friend Gazzo's last appearance in the films. One note from the previous film is that the driver of Gazzo's car tells Rocky after saying Adrian was mentally challenged to "take her to the zoo, I hear retards like the zoo", and after leaving the hospital in Rocky II, Rocky proposes at the Philadelphia Zoo. The Philadelphia Zoo tiger exhibit was the backdrop for the now-famous proposal scene. Even though the exhibit has been redesigned into the Zoo's Bank of America Big Cats Falls, the proposal spot in the current Amur tiger area will soon be marked with a sign forever commemorating the moment.

Although Rocky is left-handed, this film clearly shows Stallone is right-handed; when Rocky signs autographs and punches the heavybag.

While training for the film, Stallone tore his pectoral muscle requiring over 160 stitches.

Sylvester Stallone actually bought and drove a black and gold 1979 Pontiac Trans Am.

Soundtrack

Rocky II
Soundtrack by Bill Conti
Released 1979
Length 35:04
Label EMI Music

All music by Bill Conti.

  1. "Redemption" 2:34
  2. "Gonna Fly Now" 4:35
  3. "Conquest" 4:42
  4. "Vigil" 6:31
  5. "All of My Life" 3:56
  6. "Overture" 8:38
  7. "Two Kinds of Love" 2:37
  8. "All of my Life" 2:27
  • Bill Conti - piano (1)
  • Mike Lang - piano (8)
  • David Duke - Horn solo (4)
  • DeEtta Little, Nelson Pigford - vocals (5)

U.S. box office and critical reception

  • United States: US$85 million[2]
  • Worldwide: US$200 million[2]
  • Rocky II was met with mostly positive reviews from critics, and was considered a critical and financial success altogether.

Billboard's chart for the soundtrack

Date: 25/08/1979 - Run: 178-169-159-149-*147* (5 wks on Top 200)

This is the last time until Rocky Balboa that Rocky runs up the stairs to 'Gonna Fly Now'.

The song that is sung by the street singers, "Take You Back" is later used in Rocky III, as well as in the intro to Rocky Balboa.

References in popular culture

In the television series Freaks and Geeks, the character of gym teacher Ben Fredericks mentions that Rocky II is his favorite movie of all time because, "That Carl Weathers is ripped!"

References

External links


 
 

 

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