SLY ALL OVER ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Entertainment Weekly’s February 22, 2002 issue contains two articles which Sly fans will want to check out.

“25 Years Ago” by Steve Wolf presents an overview of the ceremonies held on March 28, 1977 when “Rocky” and “Network” duked it out at the 1976 Oscars…”

Here’s a Stallone-related excerpt:

Cindefella

On his way into the Oscars, Sylvester Stallone told the crowd outside, ” My pumpkin is waiting. I’ll see you later. ” With his nominations for Best Actor and screenplay, though, Sly had already written himself a happy ending. The only two men to pull off that qyuiniela in the same year were Charlie Chaplin ( 1940, The Great Dictator) and Orson Welles ( 1941, Citizen Kane ).

There is also mention of Ali’s surprise appearance when Sly was announcing Best Supporting Actress.

“I may not win anything here in the form of an Oscar, ” said the actor, ” but I really feel it’s a privilege to be standing next to a living legend, and it’s something I’ll always treasure for the rest of my life .”
“The Right Hook,” by Chris Nashawaty is a five and one-half page article (with seven pictures) about “Rocky”: “the only Cinderella story more rousing than ‘Rocky’ is the tale of its unlikely route to Best Picture.

– Craig Zablo (February 17, 2002)

SMILIN’ JACK RUBY LOOKS AT “DOLAN’S CADILLAC”

Smilin’ Jack Ruby (gotta love that name!) posted a very positive review of the script for “Dolan’s Cadillac” over at Fandom.com. Jack had some very interesting things to say…

  • “I had the opportunity to read the script and not being ABKing (SZ regular Andrew! – Craig Zablo), I am skeptical of all things Sly Stallone. Well, this role is tailor-made for him.”
  • “He’s the ultimate heavy, the kingpin of Las Vegas organized crime and the guy who runs the Mandarin Casino, which rises high over the strip.”
  • “I have read the script and it’s pretty interesting. You wouldn’t think it, but it actually combines some elements of The Shawshank Redemption into a revenge thriller, though this story never tries to get to that level. It’s a revenge pic, pure and simple.”
  • “If you read the short story, you’ll find out what this big revenge thing is. Needless to say, it is something incredibly cinematic that makes me really, REALLY want to see this movie.”
  • “Kevin Bacon as Tom is perfect casting…”
  • “I’m sure this will turn into a project with a lot of good actors as the parts are well written.”
  • “I have to hand it to Sandy Title and Jonathan Penner, this is an adaptation I want to see…”
  • “It is well-cast, well-written… really keeps the tone of Stephen King intact in the script.”

To read the complete review, click |HERE|. – Craig Zablo (February 18, 2001)

SLY IN UK’S HOTDOG MAGAZINE

Ernest “Jazzman” Resendes sent in the following:

I found this in the current issue of HOTDOG ( UK edition, volume3 number 2 ). It includes a piece that reads…

WHY MISS DIAZ… YOU’RE HIDEOUS
They’re Hollywood’s sexiest stars, but here they’re king of funny lookin.’ More than most passport pictures even…
STORY: Mark Wyatt

…It highlights actor’s who have transformed themselves for various roles. Among those featured are Sly StalloneTom CruiseBrad Pitt, Robert Deniro, ect…

Thanks to Ernest “Jazzman” Resendes for sending in the info!

– Craig Zablo (February 17, 2002)

EMPIRE PRAISES “D-TOX”

The March 2002 issue of Empire magazine has the following review:

D-Tox

Some three years after filming began, D-Tox is finally here. That delay, coupled with the presence of former box office heavyweight, Stallone, means that it must be crap, right? Well, actually no, it is better than crap. In fact it is surprisingly watchable. Which for a film delayed longer than Toen & Country, is saying something.

It’s a hybrid of Seven, The Thing, and Scottish helmer Gilliespie’s I Know What You Did Last Summer [right down to the killer’s fur-lined parka and ability to be in two different places at the same time]. But thanks to an ominous mood and some surprises – an attempted suicide is all the more shocking for its sheer matter-of-factness – the blend works.

However when Stallone arrives at the detox center, Gilliespie surrenders to cliche, wasting [literally] a pantheon of good actors in distressingly similar fashion. Sly, though, is on impressive, if not career-resuscitating form – at least until convention dictates that he run around dark corridors waving a gun.
Chris Hewit

Any Good?
D-Tox is probably best enjoyed on video. But that a serviceable thriller like this struggles to get a release, when certain nameless dross gets rushed into cinemas is, frankly, bewildering.
***

“Sly, though, is on impressive, if not career-resuscitating form…” Music to my ears!
Thanks to Ernest “Jazzman” Resendes for sending in the info!

– Craig Zablo (February 17, 2002)

SLY SUES OVER STOCK LOSSES

Stallone Sues Over Planet Hollywood Stock Losses
Fri Feb 15, 5:52 AM ET
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) – Actor Sylvester Stallone has filed a $17.3 million lawsuit against a business manager who urged him to hold onto Planet Hollywood stock as the share price spiraled downward and the theme-restaurant company plunged into bankruptcy.

Stallone, in a complaint filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, claimed that Kenneth Starr, a business manager with many celebrity clients, cost him more than $10 million by repeatedly advising Stallone to hang on to more than 3.9 million shares of Planet Hollywood International stock.

Stallone received the shares in exchange for promotional work for the movie-themed restaurant chain, which went public in 1996 with help from Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Bruce Willis. The shares peaked in September 1996 at $28.50, making Stallone’s stake worth more than $111 million.

Starr allegedly “had actual or constructive knowledge of the poor financial condition of Planet Hollywood” because he also represented Keith Barish, a member of the company’s board of directors and a large shareholder. Financial information about the company normally sent to Barish also went to Starr, the suit said.

When Stallone became a Starr client in 1997 at the suggestion of Barish, Planet Hollywood stock was trading at between $16 and $20, making Stallone’s investment worth $60 million to $80 million.

Starr, when asked by Stallone or his assistant about selling the stock, said he shouldn’t, that a sale would hurt the company by sending the wrong message to the stock market, and that the price of the stock could be expected to go much higher, the suit said.

Starr allegedly made similar statements over several years as the stock price continued to go down. The company filed for bankruptcy in October, 1999. Stallone eventually sold his shares in March, 2000 for less than ten cents apiece and netted $295,256.74, the suit said.

Starr allegedly told others that Planet Hollywood was heading for bankruptcy at a time when the stock was still trading at more than $5, the suit said.

Stallone also complained in the lawsuit that despite instructions to invest only in conservative, liquid investments, Starr lost some $7.3 million by putting the actor’s money in three high risk, illiquid mutual funds.

– Craig Zablo (February 17, 2002)

STALLONE VS GIBSON

The February 25 – March 4, 2002 issue of US Weekly contains an article in the “The Hot Stuff” section titled “Sly Vs. Mel”

Sylvester Stallone and Mel Gibson are calling a cop – the same cop. Sources say the two Hollywood heavyweights are trying to woo former New York police commissioner Bernard Kerik with lunches and meetings in an attempt to get the rights to his best-selling autobiography, The Lost Son: A Life in the Pursuit of Justice. “They’re really fighting each other over it,” says one insider. Also interested in the book rights, according to another source, is Robert DeNiro. The tables have turned since Kerik took Stallone to Ground Zero two months ago in an attempt to ingratiate himself with the actor. Now a competition has sprung up, and, says one source, “Kerik’s in the driver’s seat.”

– Craig Zablo (February 17, 2002)

SLY’S BEEN IN THE ENDZONE BEFORE…

In the February / March 2002 issue of Movieline, an article entitled, “You Can Leave Your Shirt On,” by Joe Queenan appears. The article discusses (with a humorous slant) several “older male” actors who regularly take off their shirts in movies. Pierce Brosnan, Harrison Ford, Robert Redford, Tommy Lee Jones, Arnold Swarzenegger and others are mentioned. The general consensus of the article is that the shirts should stay on… but here’s what Mr. Queenan says about Sly:

“No story about middle-aged vanity would be complete without mentioning Sylvester Stallone. Tellingly, the customarily vain Stallone does not take off his shirt in last year’s, “Driven,” generously forgoing a golden opportunity to upstage his costar Kip Pardue. However, Stallone does briefly appear in a sweaty athletic shirt in “Get Carter,” a woeful remake of Mike Hodge’s 1970 film noir classic. Having scrutinized 35 movies in which Sly’s contemporaries part with their shirts, I found it great to see a movie in which a guy showing off his shoulders finally had some shoulders worth showing off. Rippling, taut, enormous, those granite-like Rambo-era pecs and biceps still say it all. Built like the proverbial brick shithouse, Stallone doesn’t need to primp and preen in front of a mirror to get his message across. All he has to do is stand there and let the camera do its work. As a famous man once said, when you get into the end zone, act like you’ve been there before.”


– Craig Zablo (February 9, 2002)