Rocky Balboa Review
By Mitch Emerson
December 20, 2006 - 17:37
Starring: Sylvester Stallone, Burt Young, Milo Ventimiglia, Antonio Tarver and Geraldine Hughes
Directed By: Sylvester Stallone
Produced By: Irwin Winkler, Robert Chartoff and Sylvester Stallone
Genre: Action/Adventure, Drama, Sequel and Sports
Release Date: December 20th 2006
MPAA Rating: PG for boxing violence and some language
Distributors: MGM Distribution Company
Rocky Balboa is the final chapter in
the story of American icon, Rocky Balboa. Rocky (Sylvester Stallone)
is back for one final fight brought on by a CGI fantasy fight put on
by ESPN between a Rocky in his prime and current champ Mason “The
Line” Dixon. Rocky, with the help of his son, Rocky Jr. ( Milo
Ventimiglia), Paulie (Burt Young) and bartender Marie (Geraldine
Hughes) and her son Steps (James Francis Kelly III) steps into the
ring one final time for an exhibition bout between him and Mason
(Antonio Tarver).
Casting? Well, most of the regulars are
back. Those that haven't died, that is. Stallone plays a Rocky that
has lost most of what is good in his life and is walking a fine line
between living in the past and honoring it. He has two Oscar worthy
(let the bashing begin!) monologues that show that even though he
talks funny, he has one hell of a heart. In my opinion, if Will Smith
can get nominated for The Pursuit of Happyness, then Stallone should
get a nod for those monologues. Burt Young is just as full of piss
and vinegar as he has always been, if not more so. You can tell he
loves Rocko but at one point he has had enough of him living in the
past. Good memories for Rocky but not for Paulie and he calls him on
it. Side note: check out the painting he is working on in the meat
packing plant. Milo is neither here nor there for me in this. I don't
even like him in Heroes all that much but he performs
adequately enough in Rocky Balboa. He is trying to get out
from under his father's shadow but Milo just lacks oomph against
Stallone. One thing he does have going for him is that he actually
looks like Stallone. He even has that weird lip thing that Stallone
does. A new character, Marie (actress Geraldine Hughes), is
introduced for a female opinion, I guess. At times it seems she is
going to be a love interest but then it is stated flat out that
that's not gonna happen. So I'm not really sure what she is there
for. Her performance/character doesn't take anything away from the
movie, just seems a little superfluous. Spoiler Shmoiler, Adrian's
dead. If you didn't know that then you haven't read anything about
this movie. I chose to wait until the end to say anything about
Antonio Tarver as there isn't much character development here. He is
just the young champ that Rocky is going to fight. That's it.
All in all I enjoyed this movie. I may
not buy it but I will surely rent it on DVD. Even if you have never
seen a Rocky film in your life, you may enjoy this. (Wives and
girlfriends – I'm talking to you. If the guys took you to see The
Holiday, the least you can do is see Rocky Balboa). At the very least
the end credits are entertaining if not a bit strange. There's even a
cameo by Mike Tyson! Or, wait for the DVD and have a Rocky marathon,
but be sure to skip Rocky V. Trust me.
Until Uwe Boll can beat Rocky,
keep reading
Mitch E.
mitchemerson@hotmail.com