
On July 29, 2014, Darrick Thomas at Zimbio posted The 50 Most Bad Ass Action Hero Names of All Time. Sly played or had a connection in creating 7 of them! – Craig
The #1 Sylvester Stallone Fan Site in the World!

On July 29, 2014, Darrick Thomas at Zimbio posted The 50 Most Bad Ass Action Hero Names of All Time. Sly played or had a connection in creating 7 of them! – Craig

Expendables 3 News for the Week…

Mike Torrance aka The Krayola Kidd is back and he’s brought Sly as Machine Gun Joe Viterbo from Death Race 2000 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 site. Mike is available for commissions and his prices are very reasonable.


On July 21, 2014, Den of Geek posted Analyzing the 1988 Rambo Children’s Annual by Wil Jones. This opening should give you an idea of the slant…
John Rambo was first introduced to cinema audiences in 1982’s First Blood, based on David Morrell’s novel of the same name. Sylvester Stallone starred as a Rambo, a mentally scared war veteran, clearly suffering from undiagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder. His fractured mental state, along with a spate of bad luck, leads him to ultimately commit acts of unacceptable violence.
It is a film with no real heroes, a deep mistrust of authority, and a supporting character who dies of cancer because of extended exposure to Agent Orange. It is not, what you would call, a barrel of laughs.
So of course, they made a kid’s cartoon of it.

Here’s your Expendables 3 News for the Week…

Mike Torrance aka The Krayola Kidd is back and he’s brought Sly as Robert Rath from Assassins 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 site. Mike is available for commissions and his prices are very reasonable.

Would you like to win tickets to see Sly in Manchester? There’s a contest to do just that. Liverpool Echo has all of the information needed!
Good luck, SZoners. – Craig

JoBlo.com recently had a Face-Off: Judge Dredd [1995] vs Dredd [2012]. Let’s take a look at which film won each category and I’ll throw in my two cents.
| Category | JoBlo | Craig |
| Actor: Stallone vs Urban | Dredd | Tie
Stallone is my favorite actor, but I am also a Karl Urban fan. The fact that the movie Dredd was closer to the Dredd expected keeps Stallone from winning. |
| Colleagues | Dredd | Judge Dredd
Rob Schneider was the only misstep in casting Judge Dredd. His character should have been deleted before filming started and a more serious take would have won over more fans. |
| Villains | Judge Dredd | Judge Dredd
Hands down this goes to “Judge Dredd”. |
| Costume | Dredd | Tie
If Stallone had keep the helmet and costume on throughout the movie this would have been a slamdunk. |
| Notoriety | Judge Dredd | Judge Dredd
Everyone knew and was afraid of Judge Dredd in “Judge Dredd.” |
| MegaCity One | Judge Dredd | Judge Dredd
Can you imagine how much better the effects would be now and it still wins in my opinion. |
| Director | Tie | Dredd
For this movie, Pete Travis had a better handle on the subject matter than Danny Cannon. |
| Box Office | Tie | Judge Dredd
25% return vs 9% return. How is that a tie, JoeBlo? |
| Dredd Depiction | Dredd | Dredd
“Dredd” was closer to the comic than “Judge Dredd.” |
| Verdict | Dredd [4-3-2] | Judge Dredd [5-2-2] |