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Rocky II
List Price: $14.98 Our Price: $9.99
DVD - 08 February, 2005 MGM (Video & DVD)
PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Director: Sylvester Stallone
Number of Media: 1
Features: - AC-3
- Closed-captioned
- Color
- Dolby
- Dubbed
- DVD-Video
- Subtitled
- Widescreen
- NTSC
Related Areas: Action, Action / Adventure, Adult Language, Adventure, Boxers, Color, Cynical, Drama, Earnest, English, Feature, Feature Film Action Adventure, Feature Film-action/Adventure, Gritty, Moody, Movie, Questionable for Children, Rousing, Sports Drama, Stirring |
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| DVD Description Beginning precisely where Rocky left off, the surprisingly effective 1979 sequel takes the saga of Rocky Balboa to its logical next step, as the palooka turned public idol and media darling returns to his "normal" life in Philadelphia with his newlywed bride Adrian (Talia Shire) and some degree of material comfort. He needs to find a job, but boxing champ Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) is challenging Rocky to a lucrative rematch, and despite his doctor's warning against future boxing, Rocky can't resist. Defying the odds that most sequels can't live up to their originals, Rocky II doesn't pack all the punch that Rocky did, but it takes us further into the lives of its now-familiar and beloved characters, and Stallone (as director and star) gives us another rousing finale in the ring. Do you really need to know who wins? --Jeff Shannon |
| Customer Reviews
ROCKY'S BACK (FIRST BUT NOT LAST COMEBACK) 1979. Written and directed by Sylvester Stallone. For once, a sequel which is almost as good as the original movie. Even the scenes in the church and the hospital are touching in their naivete. For you and your children.
Yo Adrian! I did it! ROCKY II opens just where ROCKY leaves off. Rocky, having lost his title match with Apollo, is back on the streets of Philadelphia. He's had some success, but doesn't want to pursue the fighting lifestyle for the sake of Adrian, and so tries to make his way in this world with regular jobs. Adrian and he get married, and even have a son in the course of the movie.
Meanwhile, Apollo is itching for a rematch, because, even though Rocky lost, he put up an amazing fight, and Apollo feels his credibility is on the line as a fighter if he doesn't put Rocky away once and for all. Rocky doesn't want to fight because of Adrian, but agrees to do a fight. He starts training, but only half-heartedly, and Mick takes him to the ringer for the way he is training, since he is so hung up over Adrian and her attitude toward his fighting. She ultimately falls into a coma due to complications with delivery of their son, at which Rocky stops all training and won't leave her side.
She comes out of the coma with those memorable lines "Rocky, I want you to do one thing for me. Win!" And Mick yells in the background "What are we waiting for" and so begins the training montage and the fight. The fight is much more brutal than in the first ROCKY, and it's only literally within the last few seconds of the last round we find out who wins the match (and it shouldn't be that hard to ascertain who the victory is this time around).
There's a pretty accurate summary. As far as the five sequels go, this is the most like the original film. All the characters from the first film are in this one. Rocky hasn't become as successful as he has in ROCKY III, and he is still struggling to get buy. The film really explores the bond that Rocky and Adrian have together, and it is only thru Adrian's blessing that Rocky is able to really break loose and give the fight his all.
The training montage is one of my favorites in the Rocky franchise, though admittedly somewhat cheesy. Rocky runs along the streets of Philadelphia, and all these kids start following up, and they run up the stairs of the art museum with the famous Rocky theme playing, and Rocky jumps up and down victoriously. Cheesy, but somehow it works, and you can tell that this is one of the points in Rocky's story where the city of Philadelphia really pulls together to support their favorite local hero.
The fight is much more realistic and brutal than the first film. At the end of the fight, Stallone looks extremely roughed up. It's probably the worst Rocky looks in all the films.
Like most sequels, the film doesn't quite capture the genius of the ROCKY, but it is the most similar in vein and atmosphere of all five sequels to the first. While the other movies got further and further away from Rocky's original life, this movie is easily closest in tone and atmosphere to the original, and it really does feel like a rematch, or an extension, of the original film, as opposed to ROCKY III, IV, V, and BALBOA, which feel like wholly separate, yet connected, entities.
ROCKY II simply takes us more into Rocky's world, and how that world has changed in light of the events in ROCKY. There are a lot of good lines and scenes in the film, and while it doesn't quite capture the success of the original, the film is just as sincere and just as big-hearted as its predecessor processor. The endorsement scenes in the beginning are worth the price of admission alone.
And of course, it has the immortal line "Yo Adrian! I did it!"
Rocky has become an American icon, and for those wanting to know why, this is a good movie to watch, even if the first is better.
The Greatest Champ of All Time Wow, what a time to remember, everything was so different in those days...the days of the greatest underdog of all time; "The Italian Stallion" Rocky Balboa....The story you know it already, this is the redemption of the true champ that emerged that night at Philadelphia...finally The Stallion embraced what was already his.
The picture is spectacular, the color, photography, everything is so refreshed even the dialogue; definitely one of history's all time great boxing movies.
Get it and relive the dream of an already american icon. |
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