8 Most Inspirational Sports Movies of All Time

On October 26, 2014, WhoSay created their list of the 8 Most Inspirational Sports Movies of All Time.  Rocky  made the list (but not #1?).   Here’s what they said…

It’s impossible to think about boxing, or hear the song “Eye of The Tiger” for that matter, without remembering of the iconic film, Rocky. The Oscar-winning film made Sylvester Stallone‘s Rocky Balboa a household name, and the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art a cultural landmark.

Well, since they list Rocky but talk about Eye of the Tiger (Rocky III) it’s an easy jump to their confusion in not listing Rocky  in first place.  ; )   – Craig

Peterik, Sly and “Eye of the Tiger”

Jim Peterik of Survivor, recently spoke to Dan Weiss about his career and working with Sly to create Eye of the Tiger.   Here’s a taste…

Were you a big fan of the prior Rocky movies or boxing before Stallone approached you?

Huge fan of Rocky I, and II was good, too, my wife and I were really into it. So when I got home that fateful day in early 1982, I had a message on my answering machine that went: “Jim, nice answering machine you got there, give me a call, it’s Sylvester Stallone.” So I thought, yeah, right, c’mon. Stallone would have a handler or an agent…it’s not every day you get a message from Stallone. So I thought somebody was pranking me. I called my buddy Sal who did an imitation of him: “Come on, don’t do this to me.” He’s like “Do what?” So I called him back and Stallone answers, “Yo.” And I said, “Is this Sylvester Stallone?” And he goes [affects Stallone voice], “Yeah, call me Sly.” So I go, “Hi Sly, how you doing?” And he goes, “Yeah, I like the sound of your band. I want that sound for my new movie, can you help me out?” And I said, “Is the pope Catholic?” I knew this was the chance of a lifetime.

He sent us a rough cut of the movie, the first three and a half minutes of a montage. So me and [Survivor guitarist] Frankie Sullivan just watch this thing, and he’s got a Les Paul and starts playing the “chugga, chugga, chugga” thing. I see the punches, you know, Mr. T knocking the daylights out of Stallone, and I go “bom…bom bom bom.” Literally syncing the guitar part to the punches we see onscreen. So we had a really good start, and then we begged Stallone to send us the whole movie, which he finally did the next day. Begrudgingly, because he wasn’t supposed to. But that’s when everything took shape, because that’s when we see Burgess Meredith‘s character going “Roc, you’re losing the eye of the tiger!” And we go, “There’s our song.”

The Peterik interview is a good one.  His first hit was Vehicle  which he wrote for Ides of March.  The song appears in Sly’s movie Lock Up.   Check out the full interview here.

Mike Torrance – Lock Up

Mike Torrance aka The Krayola Kidd is back and he’s brought Frank Leone with him!

Over the coming weeks/months I’ll be posting more of Mike’s sketch card commissions.  My goal is to eventually get a card for every character Sly has played.  We’re well on our way!

You can see more of Mike’s art at his Deviant Art siteMike is available for commissions and his prices are very reasonable.

 

Rocky 1 -5 Makes the List

Rocky and Adrian by Aykut Aydoğdu.

On October 24, 2014, SciFighting posted the Top Ten Most Memorable Boxing Movies by Marcus Hogan.  Rocky [II, III, IV and V] came in at #1.  What?  Rocky Balboa didn’t make it?

Here’s what they had to say…

1.) Rocky (II, III, IV, V)

Rocky was the highest-grossing film in 1976, making $225 million worldwide on a $1 million budget. The film was shot in only 28 days, but won 3 Oscars including Best Picture. It is the rags to riches story of Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) who is a loan shark by day and boxer by night. Although this film is not considered non-fiction, former heavyweight boxer Charles “Chuck” Wepner claims that this and all the proceeding Rocky films where based on his life.

Sly’s “Judge Dredd” Makes the List

On October 23, 2014,  Comic Book Movie.com posted their choices for the Top Ten Comic Book Movie Trailers.  Sly’s Judge Dredd made the list.  Here’s what they said followed by the trailer – click over to see the other films that made the top ten. – Craig

JUDGE DREDD (1995)

The movie? Ehh. The trailer, however, kicks so much ass, thanks to legendary composer Jerry Goldsmith‘s music. That and the classic 90s, Sylvester Stallone one liners. “Court’s adjourned”.Armand Assante was gold in Judge Dredd and the trailer gives glimpses of that. Yeah, he’s way over the top but that’s what the film called for. And, yes, that is a young Diane Lane – you’re welcome.

Sly is a Hollywood Double Threat

On October 26, 2014, Wall Street Cheat Sheet posted 7 Hollywood Double Threats Who Can Act and Write by Kristen Klahn.  Here’s what was said about Sly…

Stallone is probably most well-known for his roles in the Rocky films. Interestingly, he didn’t just play the part of a boxer — he also wrote the scripts, starting with the 1976 film Rocky. According to an excerpt from The Official Rocky Scrapbook, Stallone was inspired to write the script after attending the Muhammad Ali/Chuck Wepner fight. Wepner was supposed to lose quickly, but instead the fight went 15 rounds, and he was able to establish himself as “one of the few men who had ever gone the distance with Muhammad Ali, and he can hold his head up high forever no matter what happens,” Stallone wrote.

What do you think?

In The Official Rocky Scrapbook, Stallone states: “That night I went home and I had the beginning of my character. I had him now. I was going to make a creation called Rocky Balboa, a man from the streets, a walking cliché of sorts, the all-American tragedy, a man who didn’t have much mentality but had incredible emotion and patriotism and spirituality and good nature even though nature had not been good to him.”

What do you think?

Stallone went on to write the screenwrites for the remaining Rocky films, in addition to many others, including Paradise Alley, Staying Alive, Over the Top, and Cliffhanger. He also wrote the screenplay for Rambo: Last Blood, which is in pre-production, and has two more writing projects in the works: Rambo: The TV Series and Creed.