Showing posts with label rocky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rocky. Show all posts

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Rocky: The Complete Saga (1990) Review

Rocky: The Complete Saga (1990)
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The stars which are used to rate this product are for the technical specs of the product itself, not a rating on the merits of the films. I am a huge Rocky fan, so the films would get five stars, no matter how they were packaged. Ok, now that I've cleared that up:
From The Digital Bits news today: "In other release news, MGM has just set a Rocky: The Complete Saga DVD box set for release on 12/4 (SRP $59.98). The set will include Rocky, Rocky II, Rocky III, Rocky IV, Rocky V and yes... the recent Rocky Balboa. Unfortunately, according to the studio's press release, the only extras on the set are a pair of trailers (one for Rocky and one for Rocky V). Yo, Adrian! Where's the beef?" If that is true--and it probably is since The Digital Bits is the most reliable site for DVD news--why bother releasing this set?
Here's the DVD history of Rocky: MGM originally released individual standard DVDs of the Rocky movies many years ago as the DVD format became more popular. The DVDs were, to put it charitably, poorly produced. Subsequently, MGM released a Rocky I-V box set back in 2001 to commemorate the 25th Anniversary of Rocky. Although the packaging was nice, there wasn't much improvement to the DVDs themselves as far as audio and video transfers; the most significant detail of the set was the addition of interviews and other special features to the first Rocky disc. A few years later, the set was re-released with different packaging, with some improved audio and video transfers on some of the movies (Rocky V was notably left untouched). And last year, to coincide with the release of Rocky Balboa, the set was re-released again, this time with the cheap, thin DVD cases now being used in tv season DVD packages as the only difference from the previous release. Inexplicably, rather than being included in the re-re-released box set, the first Rocky movie was also separately re-released on DVD in a 2 disc 30th Anniversary special edition (Well, I guess greed would explain it...). So, if you bought any of the box sets, you still had to purchase the 30th Anniversary edition of Rocky to be a true completist.
With Rocky Balboa having been available on DVD for over six months, MGM has now chosen to release the complete set of films in a new box set. But what a missed opportunity this represents to include special features which have been omitted from previous releases. I do not know if there are cut scenes from Rocky IV in the MGM vaults, but I know for a fact that there is massive material for Rocky V, as a bootleg "uncut" version of the film has been circulating online for years. Also, why not finally upgrade the video transfer of Rocky V? Perhaps the most egregious omission will be special features for Rocky Balboa. Listening to Stallone's commentary on the DVD, he repeatedly refers to a "director's cut" which he would like to release at some point. This would have been the perfect time.

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Disc 1: Rocky I WS Disc 2: Rocky II WS Disc 3: Rocky III WS Disc 4: Rocky IV WS Disc 5: Rocky V WS Disc 6: Rocky Balboa WS (SONY)

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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Rocky Anthology (Rocky / Rocky II / Rocky III / Rocky IV / Rocky V) (1990) Review

Rocky Anthology (Rocky / Rocky II / Rocky III / Rocky IV / Rocky V) (1990)
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When I saw that the Rocky Anthology - which originally came out in 2004 (look it up on Amazon, it is still available for order) - was being re-released, I was excited because I figured it would finally include special features for all the films. You see, this is the THIRD time they have packaged the entire series together - first in 2000 when the original Special Edition of the first film came out, then again in 2004 when the entire series was re-released with hi-def picture, and now again.
But guess what? There are no special features on the discs.
Which wouldn't bother me on the sequels - but when ROCKY: SPECIAL EDITION has just come out (with two discs and a free ticket to see Rocky Balboa), I consider it a major rip-off to find out the box set doesn't include any of the bonus material from this two-disc edition. They both came out on the same day, yet this Anthology was created without the inclusion of any of the other edition's extra features.
Essentially this is the EXACT same box set as the one from 2004, with identical artwork (the tagline on the back of the box is even the same), only this newer 2006 edition has smaller cases inside (those new, tacky, plastic snap-cases that TV shows are often issued with).
So, if you bought the last Anthology box set, skip this and just buy the Special Edition of the first film, which is also available now and has far better packaging and bonus features.
If you don't own the anthology already, I'd still recommend waiting for the price to drop and just get the Special Edition of Rocky.

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Disc 1: **ROCKY 1976 Rating: PG Rating: Cdn: TBC / Que: G Run Time : 120 min Hi-Def Transfer Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1English Audio: 5.1 DTS Surround, 5.1 Dolby Surround, & Original Mono French Audio: 5.1 Surround Spanish Audio: Mono Subtitles: English, French & SpanishDisc 2: **ROCKY II 1979 Rating: PG Rating: Cdn: TBC / Que: G Run Time : 119 min Hi-Def Transfer Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1English Audio: 5.1 Dolby Surround French Audio: Mono Spanish Audio: Mono Subtitles: English, French & SpanishDisc 3: **ROCKY III 1982 Rating: PG Rating: Cdn: TBC / Que: G Run Time : 100 min Hi-Def Transfer Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1English Audio: 5.1 Dolby Surround French Audio: Mono Spanish Audio: Mono Subtitles: English, French & SpanishDisc 4: **ROCKY IV 1985 Rating: PG Rating: Cdn: TBC / Que: G Run Time : 91 min Hi-Def Transfer Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1English Audio: 5.1 Dolby Surround French Audio: Mono Spanish Audio: Mono Subtitles: English, French & SpanishDisc 5: **ROCKY V 1990 Rating: PG-13 Rating: Cdn: TBC / Que: G Run Time : 111 min Hi-Def Transfer Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1 English Audio: 5.1 Dolby Surround French Audio: Stereo Surround Spanish Audio: Mono Subtitles: English, French & Spanish

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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Rocky Balboa (2006) Review

Rocky Balboa (2006)
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If you liked the original "Rocky", you will really like this movie, as it is more about the character Rocky, his feelings, his life, and his future. Rocky 3, 4, and 5 are missing the vital heart and soul we loved in Rocky 1 and 2 so much - we fell in love with the Rocky character, his humanness, his gentleness (despite his hulking size and profession), his love of Adrian, Mick, and Paulie. In "Rocky Balboa", Sylvester Stallone has captured the essence of Rocky once again. The film will move you as it did me. I laughed out loud, I was inspired, I cheered, and I cried.
Rocky V was supposed to the last Rocky film, but the film was disappointing in that it had no real conclusion of the character of Rocky. Stallone was disappointed with it, and for years pestered the studios to allow him one more installment. With "Rocky Balboa, Stallone once again causes us to fall in love with Rocky, and he ends the film with a just and satisfying conclusion. I guarantee you will like this film if you liked the original "Rocky."
This final installment of the Rocky series, "Rocky Balboa", has much of the flavor of the original Rocky (1976) release. The emphasis is not on the fight, rather, it is on the character of Rocky, and how he is struggling to maintain himself after the unexpected and premature death of his beloved Adrian. Adrian has died and Rocky's life stopped when she died. He is stuck in the past, with no clear vision of his future without her at his side. Each morning, Rocky begins his day by sitting beside Adrian's grave in a wooden chair he stores in the crook of a nearby tree. He brings her fresh flowers and contemplates their past love together. He has a restaurant, called "Adrian's", where Rocky entertains his guests with stories of his past boxing glories. It so happens it is the 5-year anniversary of Adrian's death, and Rocky, as he has done each of the previous 5 years, goes back to the old neighborhood to relive his fond loving memories of Adrian, like the pet store, the skating rink, their apartment, and Mick's boxing gym. Rocky misses Adrian so much he cannot get over her. She is like a ghost who dominates his every waking moment.
Like the original "Rocky", this film devotes enjoyable time in developing the character of Rocky and his interactions with old and new characters. Th "old" characters are Paulie (Adrian's brother), Rocky's son (now a fledgling businessman, struggling to carve out a life outside his famous father's shadow), Spider Rico (a former opponent, and now Rocky's friend and confidant), and "Little Marie", (now a grown woman who works at the neighborhood bar) who Rocky walked home from a street corner in the original film (Marie was perhaps 12 years old then - she is pushing 40 years old in this film).
The new characters are Step, Marie's son, whom Rocky befriends like a father figure, and Mason "The Line" Dixon, the current heavyweight champion, who is stuck in his own life rut. Like art imitating real life, the heavyweight division is in the dumps with no real contenders for Dixon to fight. Dixon is booed by fans despite him easily winning his matches against all the pretender "contenders". The fans are in a state of unrest, because there is no boxer on the scene with the credentials to give Mason Dixon a real fight. And so, Dixon has doubts about himself. Is he really a champion when he has no viable competition? Does he have a fighter's heart? Can he go the distance with a real challenger? Can he get up and fight if he gets knocked down? It appears that Dixon will never find the answers to his questions until a computer fight with Rocky Balboa is generated. Much like the real-life computer fight between Rocky Marchiano and Muhummad Ali, the Dixon-Balboa fight ends with Rocky KO'ing the current champion. Dixon's manger and handlers use the computer fight to generate interest in a real fight with Rocky Balboa. Dixon needs the positive publicity the fight will bring him, and he needs to settle the issue of how he would do against a real champion like Balboa. At first, Dixon is incredulous that someone as old as Rocky could even step in the ring with him, as Rocky is in has mid to late fifties. The match is set as an exhibition, and Dixon tells Rocky he will carry him and not embarass him. Little does Dixon know, Rocky still feels he has something to prove, and he takes the fight seriously, giving Dixon the war he needs to prove his mettle.
Rocky accepts the challenge to fight despite the disapproval of his son and Paulie. They fear for the very life of Rocky. But Rocky eventually convinces them that he has to fight because he cannot go into eternity with a whisper. The Rock believes a man is always a man, and has the soul of a fighting man even when he ages. The fight for Rocky is a metaphor for the value of one's life at any age, and is also his personal battle to move forward in his own life. He was knocked down when Adrian died, and now this fight shows that he can pick himself off the mat and move forward once again.
The fight itself is anti-climactic to the character development of Rocky and where he goes after the fight. Thus, the fight with Mason Dixon has less drama than the previous Rocky opponents (such as Appolo, Drago, Clubber Lang, etc). Rocky always fought villianous characters in the previous films, but not in this one. (In fact, Clubber Lang and Ivan Drago from Rocky 3 and 4 were more comic book characters than real people). In "Rocky Balboa", Mason Dixon is not a villan. He is a real human being with human issues of his own to settle. Without revealing the ending, suffice to say that both fighters give it their all in the ring, and both achieve what they set out to do.
It is noteworthy to mention that Rocky does not even wait in the ring for the final decision, for he has exorcised his personal issues and settled them. In the final scene of the movie, Rocky revists Adrian's grave. The perceptive movie watcher will note that the chair is gone from the crook of the tree, indicating that Rocky has moved on with his life. Adrian will still be his beloved, but he can move on and not be stuck in the past. The Little Marie character, now a grown woman with a nearly grown son, helps Rocky realize he has more to live for than past memories. Their budding relationship gives the viewer assurance that new love can again blossom for Rocky, and fill the void he felt for Adrian.
For me "Rocky Balboa" is a very pleasing and satsifying, and I give it 4 of 5 stars. I dock it a star because I think it could have been a bit longer. The film only runs 1 hour and 42 minutes, relatively short by today's film standards. I would like to see further development of Rocky's trainer and their relationship, (the younger viewers will not know who the trainer is, or where he comes from. He is Apollo Creed's former trainer, and the man who helped Rocky train for Ivan Drago). I fondly recall Rocky and Mick's relationship in the first three Rocky movies, and I wish there was more dialogue between these two men to reveal their feelings for each other. Afterall, would a trainer seriously accept the task of preparing a 50-something old Rocky to fight the heavyweight champion? This premise could have been developed more. I also would have liked to see more development on Rocky's training. The training period is too brief in this film, and was always an emotional inspiration in previous films. It is hard to imagine a man in his fifties stepping into the ring with the champ. Rocky is incredibly ripped in his musculature, but I would have liked to see the same sequence that was done in the first film, showing how out of shape Rocky was, and what he had to go through to get into shape. This in my estimation is the most serious flaw in the film.
If you can accept the preposition of a man in his mid to late 50's fighting the current heavyweight boxing champion (a la George Foreman winning the title at age 45 and fighting until he was nearly fifty years old), then you will love this film. This to me is the only stumbling block in the film. If one can accept the age issue, and finds it credible that Rocky can really put up a fight, then the film works. If you can't accept that preposition, the film can still be enjoyed for the development of the Rocky character, and the hope he has in his future with his son, and Marie as a potential future love interest.
"Rocky Balboa" provides a fitting ending to the Rocky saga. It is a must-see for all the Rocky fans who have lived the saga for the past 30 years. Personally, and perhaps like many others, I have been deeply affected by Rocky in my life, as I can empathize with his struggles in life, and his struggle to make his life count for something - not content to be "just another bum from the neighborhood". "Rocky Balboa" shows with grace and dignity that all of us have these same issues, and the movie fittingly ends with Rocky's issues satisfactorily resolved. It was a great ride. Thank you Sylvester Stallone for revealing to us the person of Rocky. I like the guy, in fact I love him. My life is richer for it.
Jim "Konedog" Koenig.

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When he loses a highly publicized virtual boxing match to ex-champ Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone), reigning heavyweight titleholder Mason Dixon (Antonio Tarver) retaliates by challenging the Italian Stallion to a nationally televised, 10-round exhibition bout. To the surprise of his son (Milo Ventimiglia, TV's Heroes) and friends, Rocky agrees to come out of retirement and face an opponent who's faster, stronger and thirty years his junior. With the odds stacked firmly against him, Rocky takes on Dixon in what will become the greatest fight in boxing history, a hard-hitting, action-packed battle of the ages!

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