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Rocky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1976 film by John G. Avildsen
This article is about the 1976 film. For the franchise, seeRocky (franchise). For the title character, seeRocky Balboa. For other uses, seeRocky (disambiguation).

Rocky
In a black-and-white poster, Rocky in his boxing outfit is holding hands with another person. The tagline above the film's title reads "His whole life was a million-to-one shot." The film's credits are printed below the poster.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn G. Avildsen
Written bySylvester Stallone
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJames Crabe
Edited by
Music byBill Conti
Production
company
Chartoff-Winkler Productions
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release dates
  • November 20, 1976 (1976-11-20) (New York City)
  • December 3, 1976 (1976-12-03) (United States)
Running time
119 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.1 million
Box office$225 million[2]

Rocky is a 1976 Americanindependent[3]sports drama film directed byJohn G. Avildsen, written by and starringSylvester Stallone. It is the first installment in theRocky franchise and also starsTalia Shire,Burt Young,Carl Weathers, andBurgess Meredith. In the film,Rocky Balboa (Stallone), a poor small-timeclub fighter andloanshark debt collector fromPhiladelphia, gets an unlikely once in a lifetime shot at the world heavyweight championship held byApollo Creed (Weathers).

Rocky entered development in March 1975, after Stallone wrote the screenplay in three days. It entered a complicated production process after Stallone refused to allow the film to be made without him in the lead role;United Artists eventually agreed to cast Stallone after he rejected a six figure deal for thefilm rights.Principal photography began in January 1976, with filming primarily held inPhiladelphia; several locations featured in the film, such as theRocky Steps, are now considered cultural landmarks.[4] With an estimated production budget of under $1 million,Rocky popularized therags to riches andAmerican Dream themes of sports dramas which preceded the film.

Rocky had its premiere in New York City on November 20, 1976, and was released in the United States on December 3, 1976.Rocky became thehighest-grossing film of 1976, earning approximately $225 million worldwide. The film received critical acclaim for Stallone's writing, as well as the film's performances, direction, musical score, cinematography and editing; among other accolades, it received tenAcademy Award nominations and won three, includingBest Picture. It has been ranked by numerous publications asone of the greatest films of all time, as well as one of themost iconic sports films ever.

Rocky and its theme song have become apop-cultural phenomenon and an important part of1970s American popular culture. In 2006, theLibrary of Congress selectedRocky for preservation in the United StatesNational Film Registry as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant".[5][6] The first sequel in the series,Rocky II, was released in 1979.

Plot

[edit]

To mark the upcomingUnited States Bicentennial,heavyweightboxing world championApollo Creed plans to hold atitle bout inPhiladelphia. However, he is informed five weeks from the fight date that his scheduled opponent is unable to compete due to an injured hand, and that all other potential replacements are either booked up or unable to get into shape in time. Having already invested heavily into the fight, Creed decides instead to give a local contender a chance to challenge him.

Creed selectsRocky Balboa, anItalian-Americanjourneymansouthpaw boxer whofights primarily in small gyms and works as a collector for aMafialoan shark, on the basis of his nickname, "The Italian Stallion". Rocky fights in a local Philadelphia fight club, and he won his last fight with Spider Rico. He meets withpromoter George Jergens, who tells him Creed has selected Rocky to fight him for the World Heavyweight Championship. Reluctant at first, Rocky eventually agrees to the fight, which will pay him $150,000. Rocky undergoes several weeks of unorthodox training, such as using sides ofbeef aspunching bags.

Rocky is later approached by Mickey Goldmill, a formerbantamweight fighter-turned-trainer whose gym Rocky frequents, about further training. Rocky is not willing initially, as Mickey has not shown much interest in helping him before and saw him as a wasted talent, but eventually Rocky accepts the offer.

Rocky begins to build a romantic relationship with Adrianna "Adrian" Pennino, a shy woman who is working part-time at the J&M Tropical Fishpet store. Adrian's brother and Rocky's best friend, Paulie, helps Rocky get a date with his sister and offers to work as acornerman with him for the fight, an offer Rocky turns down. Paulie becomes jealous of Rocky's success, but Rocky placates him by agreeing to advertise themeat packing business where Paulie works for sponsorship as part of the upcoming fight, and both of them reconcile. Rocky trains extensively for the championship fight, while Apollo is unconcerned about the match and puts more effort into promotion than training. The night before the match, Rocky visits theSpectrum and begins to lose confidence. He confesses to Adrian that he does not believe he can win, but strives togo the distance against Creed, which no other fighter has done, to prove himself to everyone.

OnNew Year's Day, the fight is held with Creed making a dramatic entrance dressed asGeorge Washington and thenUncle Sam. Taking advantage of his overconfidence, Rocky knocks him down in the first round—the first time that Creed has ever been knocked down. Humbled and worried, Creed takes Rocky more seriously for the rest of the fight, though his ego never fully fades. The fight goes on for the full fifteen rounds, with both combatants sustaining various injuries: Rocky, with hits to the head and swollen eyes, requires his right eyelid to be cut to restore his vision, while Apollo, with internal bleeding and a broken rib, struggles to breathe. As the fight concludes, Creed's superior skill is countered by Rocky's incredible stamina,toughness and an unbreakable will to fight on. As the final bell sounds, both fighters promise each other there will be no rematch.

As the ring is flooded with reporters and excited fans, Rocky calls out repeatedly for Adrian, who runs down as Paulie distracts security, helping her get into the ring. As Jergens declares Creed the winner by virtue of asplit decision, Rocky and Adrian embrace and profess their love for each other, unconcerned with the outcome of the fight.

Cast

[edit]
Sylvester Stallone in 1977
See also:List ofRocky characters

Production

[edit]

Development and writing

[edit]

Sylvester Stallone wrote the screenplay forRocky in three and a half days, shortly after watching thechampionship match betweenMuhammad Ali andChuck Wepner that took place atRichfield Coliseum inRichfield, Ohio, on March 24, 1975. Wepner wasTKO'd in the 15th round of the match by Ali, with few expecting him to last as long as he did. Despite the match motivating Stallone to begin work onRocky,[7] he has denied Wepner provided any inspiration for the script.[8][9][10] Other inspiration for the film may have included characteristics of real-life boxersRocky Marciano andJoe Frazier,[11][12] as well asRocky Graziano's autobiographySomebody Up There Likes Me andthe movie of the same name. Wepner sued Stallone, and eventually settled for an undisclosed amount.[9]

Henry Winkler, Stallone's co-star inThe Lords of Flatbush who then broke out asArthur Fonzarelli onABC'sHappy Days, said he had taken the script to executives at the network. They expressed interest in turning it into a made-for-television movie and actually bought the script but insisted that someone else rewrite it. Upon hearing the news, Stallone begged Winkler not to let ABC change writers, so Winkler went back to the executives and offered to return the money in exchange for the rights. While ABC refused at first, Winkler said he was able to use his status as one of its biggest stars at the time to convince them to sell the rights back.[13]

At the time, Film Artists Management Enterprises (FAME), a joint venture between Hollywood talent agents Craig T. Rumar and Larry Kubik, represented Stallone. He submitted his script to Rumar and Kubik, who immediately saw the potential for it to be made into a motion picture. They shopped the script to various producers and studios in Hollywood but were repeatedly rejected because Stallone insisted that he be cast in the lead role. Eventually, they secured a meeting with Winkler-Chartoff productions (no relation to Henry Winkler). After repeated negotiations with Rumar and Kubik, Winkler-Chartoff agreed to a contract for Stallone to be the writer and also star in the lead role forRocky.[14] Stallone offered the script toRalph Bakshi to direct, because he loved Bakshi's 1973 filmHeavy Traffic, but Bakshi turned it down because he didn't want to leave animation, andJohn G. Avildsen signed on to direct instead.[15]

United Artists liked Stallone's script and viewed it as a vehicle for a well-established star likeRobert Redford,Ryan O'Neal,Burt Reynolds, orJames Caan.[16] United Artist initially thought the project was going to be a disaster.[17] Stallone's agents insisted that Stallone portray the title character, to the point of issuing an ultimatum. Stallone later said that he would never have forgiven himself had the film become a success with somebody else in the lead.[18][19] He also knew that producersIrwin Winkler andRobert Chartoff's contract with the studio enabled them to "greenlight" a project if the budget was kept low enough. The producers also collateralized any possible losses with their big-budget entry,New York, New York (whose eventual losses were covered byRocky's success).[20][21] The film's production budget ended up being $1,075,000, with a further $100,000 spent on producers' fees and $4.2 million on advertising costs.[22]

Pre-production

[edit]

Although Chartoff and Irwin Winkler were enthusiastic about the script and the idea of Stallone playing the lead character, they were hesitant about having an unknown headline the film. The producers also had trouble casting other major characters in the story, with Apollo Creed and Adrian cast unusually late by the production standards.[citation needed] Real-life boxerKen Norton was initially sought for the role ofApollo Creed, but he pulled out and the role was ultimately given toCarl Weathers.[23] Norton, upon whom Creed was loosely based, fought Muhammad Ali three times. According toThe Rocky Scrapbook,Carrie Snodgress was originally chosen to play Adrian, but a money dispute forced the producers to look elsewhere.Susan Sarandon andCher auditioned for the role but Sarandon was deemed too pretty for the character and Cher too expensive. AfterTalia Shire's ensuing audition, Chartoff and Winkler, and director John Avildsen,[4] insisted that she play the part.[citation needed]

Philadelphia-based boxerJoe Frazier has acameo appearance in the film. Outspoken boxerMuhammad Ali, who fought Frazier three times, influenced the character of Apollo Creed. During the49th Academy Awards ceremony in 1977, Ali and Stallone staged a brief comic confrontation to show the film did not offend Ali. Frazier has claimed that some of the plot's most memorable moments—Rocky's carcass-punching scenes and Rocky running up the steps of thePhiladelphia Museum of Art as part of his training regimen—are taken without credit from his own real-life exploits.[24]

Because of the film's comparatively low budget, members of Stallone's family played minor roles. His father rings the bell to signal the start and end of a round; his brotherFrank plays a street corner singer, and his first wife, Sasha, wasstills photographer.[25] Other cameos include former Philadelphia and then Los Angeles televisionsportscasterStu Nahan playing himself, alongside radio and TV broadcaster Bill Baldwin; andLloyd Kaufman, founder of the independent film companyTroma, appearing as a drunk. Diana Lewis, then a news anchor in Los Angeles and later in Detroit, has a minor scene as a TV news reporter.Tony Burton appears as Apollo Creed's trainer,Tony "Duke" Evers, a role he would reprise throughout the entireRocky series, though the character is not named untilRocky II.Michael Dorn, who would later gain fame as theKlingonWorf inStar Trek: The Next Generation andStar Trek: Deep Space Nine, made his acting debut, albeit uncredited, as Creed's bodyguard.[26]

Filming

[edit]

Principal photography forRocky began on January 9, 1976.[27] Filming took place primarily throughout Philadelphia, with a few scenes shot in Los Angeles. Rocky's house was located at 1818 East Tusculum Street in the Kensington neighborhood of North Philadelphia.[28] InventorGarrett Brown's newSteadicam was used to accomplish smooth photography while running alongside Rocky during the film's Philadelphia street training sequences and the run up the Art Museum's flight of stairs, now colloquially known as theRocky Steps.[29] It was also used for some shots in the fight scenes and can be seen at the ringside during some wide shots of the final fight.Rocky is often erroneously cited as the first film to use the Steadicam, although it was actually the third, afterBound for Glory andMarathon Man.[30]

Certain elements of the story were altered during filming. The original script had a darker tone: Mickey was portrayed asracist, and the script ended with Rocky throwing the fight after realizing he did not want to be part of theprofessional boxing world after all.[20]

Both Stallone and Weathers suffered injuries during the shooting of the final fight; Stallone suffered bruised ribs and Weathers suffered a damaged nose, the opposite injuries of what their characters had.[31]

The first date between Rocky and Adrian, in which Rocky bribes a janitor to allow them to skate after closing hours on a deserted ice skating rink, was shot that way due to budgetaryconcerns— the scene was originally scheduled to be shot in a public skating rink during regular business hours, but the producers decided they could not afford the hundreds of extras that would have been required.[32]

The poster seen above the ring before Rocky fights Apollo Creed shows Rocky wearing red shorts with a white stripe when he actually wears white shorts with a red stripe. When Rocky points this out, promoter George Jergens tells him that it "doesn't really matter, does it?".[33] Avildsen said this was an actual mistake made by the props department that they could not afford to rectify, so the brief scene was written to ensure the audience did not see it as a goof.[34] Conversely, Stallone has said he was indeed supposed to wear red shorts with a white stripe as Rocky, but changed to the opposite colors "at the last moment".[35] Similarly, when Rocky's robe arrived far too baggy on the day it was needed for filming, Stallone wrote in dialogue where Rocky points this out.[36]

Music

[edit]

Soundtrack

[edit]
Main article:Rocky (soundtrack)

Bill Conti composed themusical score forRocky. He had composed a score for director John G. Avildsen'sW.W. and the Dixie Dancekings (1975) that the studio ultimately rejected.[37]David Shire (then-husband of Talia Shire) was the first to be offered the chance to compose the music forRocky but had to turn it down because of prior commitments.[38] Avildsen reached out to Conti without any studio help because of the film's relatively low budget. Avildsen said, "The budget for the music was 25 grand. And that was for everything: The composer's fee, that was to pay the musicians, that was to rent the studio, that was to buy the tape that it was going to be recorded on."[39]

The maintheme song, "Gonna Fly Now", made it to number one onBillboard magazine'sHot 100 list for one week (from July 2 to July 8, 1977) and theAmerican Film Institute placed it 58th on itsAFI's 100 Years...100 Songs.[40][41]United Artists Records released the soundtrack album on November 12, 1976.[42]EMI re-released the album onCD andcassette.[43]

Frank Stallone's song "Take You Back" is also on the soundtrack, and he also sings the song in the movie with other friends around a trash can fire.

Release

[edit]

Theatrical

[edit]

The movie began with two premieres in New York, starting with the world premiere for Rocky, which would take place atParamount Theatre in New York City on Saturday, November 20, 1976, by United Artists and the other on the day after Sunday, November 21, 1976, by United Artists at Cinema II in New York City. The Los Angeles premiere took place at the Plaza in Westwood Village on December 1, 1976. This was then followed by a full official release on December 3, 1976, all throughout North America in the United States and Canada.[44]

Home media

[edit]
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  • 1980 UK video release by IntervisionBetamax,VHS (Rental Only)
  • 1982 –CED Videodisc,Betamax andVHS; VHS release is rental only;20th Century Fox Video release,Warner Home Video has rest of the World rights
  • October 27, 1990 (VHS andLaserDisc)
  • April 16, 1996 (VHS and LaserDisc)
  • March 24, 1997 (DVD)
  • April 24, 2001 (DVD, also packed with the Five-Disc Boxed Set)
  • 2001 (VHS, 25th anniversary edition)
  • December 14, 2004 (DVD, also packed with the Rocky Anthology box set)
  • February 8, 2005 (DVD, also packed with the Rocky Anthology box set)
  • December 5, 2006 (DVD andBlu-ray Disc – 2-Disc Collector's Edition, the DVD was the first version released by Fox and was also packed with theRocky Anthology box set and the Blu-ray was the first version released by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment)
  • December 4, 2007 (DVD box set –Rocky The Complete Saga. This new set contains the newRocky Balboa, but does not include the recent 2 discRocky. There are still no special features forRocky II throughRocky V, althoughRocky Balboa's DVD special features are all intact.)
  • November 3, 2009 (Blu-ray box set –Rocky The Undisputed Collection. This release included six films in a box set. Previously, only the first film andRocky Balboa were available on the format. Those two discs are identical to their individual releases, and the set also contains a disc of bonus material, new and old alike.[45])
  • May 6, 2014 - Blu-ray re-release with an all new 4K remaster and the previous special features of the old release.[46]
  • October 13, 2015 – Blu-ray box set,Rocky Heavyweight Collection 40th Anniversary Edition. All six films plus over three hours of bonus material, including the 4K remaster of the first film.[47]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

Rocky grossed $5,488 on its opening day at Cinema II, a house record.[44] When it was released nationally, it grossed $5 million during its first wide weekend and consistently performed well for eight months[48] and eventually reached $117 million at the North American box office.[49] Adjusted for inflation in 2018, the film earned over $500 million in North America alone.[50] Overseas,Rocky grossed $107 million, for a worldwide box office total of $225 million.[51] With its production budget of just under $1 million,Rocky is notable for its worldwidepercentage return of over 11,000 percent.[52] It was thehighest-grossing film released in 1976 in the United States and Canada[53] and the second highest-grossing film of 1977, behindStar Wars.[54]

Critical response

[edit]

Rocky received positive reviews at the time of its release.Roger Ebert of theChicago Sun-Times gave it 4 out of 4 stars and said that Stallone reminded him of "the youngMarlon Brando."[55]Box Office Magazine claimed audiences would be "touting Sylvester 'Sly' Stallone as a new star".[56][57]Frank Rich liked the film, calling it "almost 100 per centschmaltz", but favoring it over the cynicism that was prevalent in movies at that time, although he referred to the plot as "gimmicky" and the script "heavy-handed".[58] Several reviews, includingRichard Eder's (as well as Canby's negative review), compared the work to that ofFrank Capra.

The film did not escape criticism.Vincent Canby, ofThe New York Times, called it "pure '30s make believe" and dismissed both Stallone's acting and Avildsen's directing, calling the latter "none too decisive".[59]Andrew Sarris found the Capra comparisons disingenuous: "Capra's movies projected more despair deep down than a movie likeRocky could envisage, and most previous ring movies have been much more cynical about the fight scene"; commenting on Rocky's work for a loan shark, Sarris says the film "teeters on the edge of sentimentalizing gangsters". He found Meredith "oddly cast in the kind of part the lateJames Gleason used to pick his teeth".[60]

The film enjoys a reputation as a classic and still receives nearly universal praise. On thereview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 93% approval rating based on 75 reviews, with an average rating of 8.4/10. The site's critics consensus states: "This story of a down-on-his-luck boxer is thoroughly predictable, but Sylvester Stallone's script and stunning performance in the title role brush aside complaints."[61]Metacritic, which uses aweighted average, assigned the film a score of 70 out of 100, based on 14 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[62]

Accolades

[edit]
AwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
Academy AwardsBest PictureRobert Chartoff andIrwin WinklerWon[63]
Best DirectorJohn G. AvildsenWon
Best ActorSylvester StalloneNominated
Best ActressTalia ShireNominated
Best Supporting ActorBurgess MeredithNominated
Burt YoungNominated
Best Original ScreenplaySylvester StalloneNominated
Best Film EditingRichard Halsey and Scott ConradWon
Best Original Song"Gonna Fly Now"
Music byBill Conti;
Lyrics byCarol Connors andAyn Robbins
Nominated
Best SoundHarry Warren Tetrick,[a]William McCaughey,
Lyle J. Burbridge, andBud Alper
Nominated
British Academy Film AwardsBest FilmJohn G. AvildsenNominated[64]
Best DirectionNominated
Best Actor in a Leading RoleSylvester StalloneNominated
Best ScreenplayNominated
Best EditingRichard HalseyNominated
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – DramaWon[65]
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaSylvester StalloneNominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – DramaTalia ShireNominated
Best DirectorJohn G. AvildsenNominated
Best ScreenplaySylvester StalloneNominated
Best Original ScoreBill ContiNominated

Legacy

[edit]

TheDirectors Guild of America awardedRocky itsannual award for best film of the year in 1976. Additionally, the Directors Guild votedRocky as the 65th best-directed film of all time,[66] and in 2006, Sylvester Stallone's original screenplay for the film was selected by theWriters Guild of America as the 78th best screenplay of all time.[67] In a 2012 survey of members of theMotion Picture Editors Guild,Rocky was voted as one of the 75 best-edited films in all of cinema.[68]

In 2006, theLibrary of Congress selectedRocky for preservation in the United StatesNational Film Registry for being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant".[69][70]

In 1998, theAmerican Film Institute (AFI) rankedRocky as the78th best film in American cinema.[71] The film's ranking rose to #57 on AFI's10th anniversary edition of the list in 2007.[72] Additionally, in June 2008, AFI revealed its10 Top 10—the best ten films in ten "classic" American film genres—after polling over 1,500 people from the creative community.Rocky was acknowledged as the second-best film in the sports genre, afterRaging Bull.[73][74]

Film scholar Steven J. Schneider includedRocky in his book1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, writing that the film is "often overlooked as schmaltz".[75]FilmSite.org, a subsidiary ofAmerican Movie Classics, included the film on their list of the 300 greatest films of all time.[76] Additionally, Films101.com ranked the film as the 228th best of all time.[77]

In 2006, British film magazineTotal Film rankedRocky at #71 on their list of the 100 greatest films of all time.[78] Based on their 2020 readers' poll, the film ranked #60 onRolling Stone Australia's "100 Greatest Movies of All Time".[79] Additionally,Rolling Stone magazine rankedRocky at #2 on their list of the 30 greatest sports films.[80]

In 2022,Esquire included the film on their list of "The 100 Best Movies of All Time".[81]Esquire also included bothRocky and itsspinoff sequelCreed on their list of "The 30 Best Sports Movies of All Time".[82] In 2023,Slashfilm includedRocky on their list of the "Top 100 Movies of All Time", as voted by a selection of their writers and editors.[83] In 2024, entertainment news siteComic Book Resources ranked the film #23 on their list of the "55 Best Movies of All Time",[84] whileParade magazine ranked the film #45 on their list of the "100 Best Movies of All Time".[85]

In 2014,Rocky was ranked #95 by British film magazineEmpire on their list of "The 301 Greatest Movies of All Time",[86] It was ranked #370 on their previous list of the 500 greatest films in 2008.[87] Conversely, in a 2005 poll byEmpire,Rocky was No. 9 on their list of "The Top 10 Worst Pictures to Win Best Picture Oscar".[88]

In June 2014,The Hollywood Reporter compiled a list of the 100 best movies ever made, polling film industry insiders on their favorite films of all time.[89]Rocky ranked #91.[89] The following yearThe Hollywood Reporter polled hundreds of Academy members, asking them to re-vote on past controversial decisions. Academy members indicated that, given a second chance, they would award the 1977 Oscar for Best Picture toAll the President's Men instead.[90]

Time Out rankedRocky #1 on their list of the "50 Best Sports Movies of All Time".[91] On their list of "The 50 Greatest Sports Movies of All Time",entertainment news websiteVulture rankedRocky at #3.[92] In 2015,Thrillist compiled a list of "The 1001 Best Movies of All Time" by weighing ratings fromIMDb,Rotten Tomatoes,Metacritic andLetterboxd.Rocky ranked #589.[93][94]

In 2021, the film ranked 2nd onESPN's "Top 20 Sports Movies of All-Time".[95] In 2024,Forbes magazine rankedRocky #1 on their list of "The 42 Greatest Sports Movies of All Time".[96]

British film siteCinemaBlend rankedRocky andCreed #1 and #17 respectively on their list of "The 25 Best Sports Movies".[97] On their list of "100 Best Movies of All Time", entertainment news websiteCollider rankedRocky #94,[98] and on their list of "The 30 Greatest Sports Movies of All Time",Collider ranked the film #2.[99] On their list of the "Top 25 Sports Movies of All Time", entertainmentnews websiteMovieWeb rankedRocky #4.[100]MovieWeb also ranked the film #3 on their list of the "20 Movies That Represent American Culture".[101]

On their list of "The 150 Best Sports Movies of All Time",Rotten Tomatoes rankedRocky #17 andCreed #2.[102]Men's Health includedRocky on their list of the "50 of the Absolute Best Sports Movies Ever Made".[103]British GQ ranked the film #1 on their list of "The 22 Best Sports Movies".[104]

Year-end lists

[edit]

Rocky has also appeared on several of theAmerican Film Institute's100 Years lists.

Franchise

[edit]

Sequels

[edit]
Main articles:Rocky II,Rocky III,Rocky IV,Rocky V, andRocky Balboa (film)
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The film's success led to eight sequels, beginning withRocky II in 1979, followed byRocky III in 1982,Rocky IV in 1985,Rocky V in 1990,Rocky Balboa in 2006.

Spin-off series

[edit]
Main articles:Creed (film),Creed II, andCreed III

Creed in 2015 andCreed II in 2018. Another sequel, titledCreed III, was released in 2023; however, Stallone did not appear in the film.

Possible prequel

[edit]

In July 2019, Stallone said in an interview that there have been ongoing discussions about a prequel to the original film based on the life of a young Rocky Balboa.[110]

Other media

[edit]

Rocky Steps

[edit]
Main article:Rocky Steps
Rocky running up the front steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The scene became a cultural icon of the 1970s, with the steps becoming eponymously known as the "Rocky steps."

The famous scene of Rocky running up the steps of thePhiladelphia Museum of Art has become a cultural icon, with the steps acquiring the vernacular title of "Rocky Steps".[111] In 1982, a statue of Rocky, commissioned by Stallone forRocky III, was placed at the top of theRocky Steps. City Commerce DirectorDick Doran claimed that Stallone and Rocky had done more for the city's image than "anyone sinceBen Franklin".[112]

Differing opinions of the statue and its placement led to a relocation to the sidewalk outside the Spectrum Arena, although the statue was temporarily returned to the top of the steps in 1990 forRocky V, and again in 2006 for the 30th anniversary of the originalRocky (although this time it was placed at the bottom of the steps). Later that year, it was moved permanently to a spot next to the steps.[112]

The scene is frequently parodied in other media. In the 2008 movieYou Don't Mess with the Zohan, Zohan's nemesis, Phantom, goes through a parody training sequence finishing with him running up a desert dune and raising his hands in victory. In the fourth-season finale ofThe Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, as the credits roll at the end of the episode, Will is seen running up the steps at the Philadelphia Museum of Art; however, as he celebrates after finishing his climb, he passes out in exhaustion, and while he lies unconscious on the ground, a pickpocket steals his wallet and his wool hat. InThe Nutty Professor, there is a scene where Sherman Klump (Eddie Murphy) struggles to, and eventually succeeds at, running up a lengthy flight of steps on his college campus, victoriously throwing punches at the top.

In 2006,E! named the "Rocky Steps" scene number 13 on its 101 Most Awesome Moments in Entertainment list.[113]

During the1996 Summer Olympics torch relay, Philadelphia nativeDawn Staley was chosen to run up the museum steps. In2004, presidential candidateJohn Kerry ended his pre-convention campaign at the foot of the steps before going to Boston to accept his party's nomination for president.[114]

Novelization

[edit]

Upon the film's release, a paperbacknovelization of the screenplay written byRosalyn Drexler under thepseudonym Julia Sorel and published byBallantine Books was released.[115][116]

Video games

[edit]
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Severalvideo games have been produced based on the film.Rocky was released in 1987 for theMaster System.Rocky was released in 2002 for theGameCube,Game Boy Advance,PlayStation 2, andXbox, and a sequel,Rocky Legends, was released in 2004 for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox. In 2016,Tapinator released a mobile game namedROCKY for the iOS platform, with a planned 2017 release for Google Play and Amazon platforms.[117]

Musical

[edit]
See also:Rocky the Musical

A musical was written byStephen Flaherty andLynn Ahrens (lyrics and music), with the book byThomas Meehan, based on the film. The musical premiered inHamburg, Germany in October 2012. It began performances at theWinter Garden Theater onBroadway on February 11, 2014, and officially opened on March 13, 2014.[118][119][120]

Documentaries

[edit]

Rocky is featured in the 2017 documentaryJohn G. Avildsen: King of the Underdogs about Academy Award-winningRocky director John G. Avildsen, directed and produced byDerek Wayne Johnson.[121]

Stallone later hand-picked Johnson to direct and produce adocumentary on the making of the originalRocky, entitled40 Years of Rocky: The Birth of a Classic, which was released in 2020. The documentary features Stallone narrating behind-the-scenes footage from the making of the film.[122]

Parodies

[edit]

Rocky has been parodied a lot over the years, even getting a feature length spoof calledRicky 1 in 1988. In1986,Finnish directorAki Kaurismäki made an 8-minute spoof ofRocky IV calledRocky VI.

National Museum of American History

[edit]

The red satin robe and black hat worn by Stallone inRocky are featured in theNational Museum of American History. Likewise, the red gloves worn by Stallone inRocky II (1979), his white Nike boxing shoes, and striped boxing trunks fromRocky III (1981) are archived at the museum.[123] All items were on display for a temporary period following Stallone's donation in 2006, and have since been moved to the museum archives.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Posthumous nomination.

References

[edit]
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