Rocky

His whole life was a million-to-one shot.

7.8
19762h

Rocky Balboa is a Philadelphia club fighter who seems to be going nowhere. But when a stroke of fate puts him in the ring with a world heavyweight champion, Rocky knows that it's his one shot at the big time — a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to go the distance and come out a winner!

Production

Logo for Winkler Films

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Carl Weathers on the Famous Fight Scene in Rocky

Carl Weathers on the Famous Fight Scene in Rocky

Thumbnail for video: You're Gonna Eat Lighting and You're Gonna Crap Thunder

You're Gonna Eat Lighting and You're Gonna Crap Thunder

Thumbnail for video: Rocky and Adrian's First Kiss

Rocky and Adrian's First Kiss

Thumbnail for video: Rocky's First Run Through Philly

Rocky's First Run Through Philly

Thumbnail for video: Rocky Visits Adrian

Rocky Visits Adrian

Thumbnail for video: Training Montage

Training Montage

Thumbnail for video: Rocky ≣ 1976 ≣ Trailer

Rocky ≣ 1976 ≣ Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Rocky's Fight With Mickey

Rocky's Fight With Mickey

Thumbnail for video: Rocky Balboa Trains In The Meat Locker

Rocky Balboa Trains In The Meat Locker

Cast

Photo of Sylvester Stallone

Sylvester Stallone

Robert 'Rocky' Balboa

Photo of Talia Shire

Talia Shire

Adrianna 'Adrian' Pennino

Photo of Burt Young

Burt Young

Paulie Pennino

Photo of Carl Weathers

Carl Weathers

Apollo Creed

Photo of Burgess Meredith

Burgess Meredith

Mickey Goldmill

Photo of Thayer David

Thayer David

George 'Miles' Jergens

Photo of Joe Spinell

Joe Spinell

Tony Gazzo

Photo of Bill Baldwin

Bill Baldwin

Fight Announcer

Photo of Al Silvani

Al Silvani

Cut Man

Photo of George Memmoli

George Memmoli

Ice Rink Attendant

Photo of Diana Lewis

Diana Lewis

TV Commentator

Photo of George O'Hanlon

George O'Hanlon

TV Commentator

Photo of Stan Shaw

Stan Shaw

Dipper

Photo of Don Sherman

Don Sherman

Bartender

Photo of Billy Sands

Billy Sands

Club Fight Announcer

Photo of Pedro Lovell

Pedro Lovell

Club Fighter

Photo of DeForest Covan

DeForest Covan

Apollo's Corner

Photo of Simmy Bow

Simmy Bow

Club Corner Man

Photo of Tony Burton

Tony Burton

Tony "Duke" Evers

More Like This

Reviews

G

GenerationofSwine

10/10

This was the ultimate Rocky story wasn't it?

It was inspiring with the training, it was inspiring with the fight, and it was about the characters and the characters are what makes a great story.

The down side was Creed, he was a little under-developed in this wasn't he? They make up for it in Rocky II, III, and IV, but in Rocky he felt like a faceless nemesis didn't he? He was Mohamed Ali without real depth in this and the story could have used to develop him a little more in the first one.

But... we got it in the sequels.

The biggest selling point was the love story... I know mushy, right? ... but they did a great job of making it awkward and at times intimidating as well as absolutely sweet and charming and it was completely realistic and believable.

You could sit down and watch it and understand how they fell for one another. You got a sense of who they were and that carried over into Rocky II... but kind of ended in III and we only caught a glimpse of it here and there until Balboa.

Still, it was the low budget movie that stole out hearts. And it was the inspiring story about the underdog, and Rocky movies are best when they inspire.

T

Nathan

10/10

Rocky is an inspiring story about an ordinary man who takes advantage of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

I do have to say, the movie has a rocky beginning, as the dialogue is pretty clunky and awkward at times. But after about twenty minutes, the movie really gets into its groove and had me locked in till the end. My favorite aspect of this film is the humanity it has; it takes a look at a big and intimidating fighter in Rocky and explores his emotions and insecurities. My favorite scene is when he lays in bed next to Adrian with the sudden realization that he cannot win this fight. It was an incredibly vulnerable moment for him and worked really well.

As I said before, the dialogue is very inconsistent, especially in the scene at Rocky's house with Adrian. It was very unsettling to watch because she is written as if she does not want to be there, but then the next second she is in love with him. It was very weird and creepy. On the other hand, in some scenes, the dialogue is written very well, which lends itself to boosting the actors' performances. But when it is off, the acting on display is negatively affected. Despite that, this movie gets a lot more right than it does wrong in the script department.

Technically, this film excels. The score is fantastic, with one of the most iconic songs in cinematic history. The cinematography is top-notch, with some incredible shots in the city and very creative angles used during the training sequences.

Overall, this film lived up to every ounce of hype it had behind it, and I thoroughly enjoyed every second spent with these characters.

Score: 98% |
Verdict: Masterpiece

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Sylvester Stallone is "Rocky", an enforcer for a small-time Philadelphia mobster who works out in Burgess Meredith's gym ("Mickey's") and is keen on the sister of his friend "Paulie" (Burt Young), the shy and retiring "Adrian" (Talia Shire). Meantime, World Heavyweight Champion "Apollo Creed" (Carl Weathers) finds his impeding tilte defence kybsoshed by an injured challenger. At this point serendipity takes a hand and "Creed" decides to pluck a challenger from obscurity - and he chooses the "Italian Stallion". What follows is a solid, engaging tale of grit and determination as the champion assumes it's all in the bag and together with his tight-knit team, the challenger is focussed and determined to, at least, go the distance. Sure, Stallone isn't an actor in any traditional sense - he is more of a character, he oozes the part rather then portrays it - and that is what makes this work. You are subsumed into his life, his love, his training and his ambition - almost as the then aspiring Stallone would have been whilst writing and making the film. The action scenes are first class, and the charisma offered by the star, and by trainer Meredith help this stand the test of time well. There are holes in the plot - but they are fairly easy to overlook if you allow the sentiment and strong performances to take and keep hold of your imagination. Great stuff.

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