Rocky V Filme wie Rocky V
Völlig verarmt zieht Rocky zurück nach Philadelphia. Dort gibt der Ex-Champ Trainingsstunden. In der Förderung des talentierten Tommy sieht er seine Zukunft. Doch Tommy verlässt Rocky, da er sich mehr von Promoter Duke verspricht. Tommy boxt sich. Rocky V ist ein US-amerikanisches Boxerdrama von Regisseur John G. Avildsen aus dem Jahr und eine direkte Fortsetzung der Rocky-Filmreihe. Der Film. Rocky Balboa (auch bekannt als Rocky VI) ist ein US-amerikanischer Boxerfilm von Regisseur und Schauspieler Sylvester Stallone aus dem Jahr und. Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) ist nach seinem Schaukampf-Sieg gegen den schlaggewaltigen Russen Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren) in Moskau körperlich. Rocky V: Sendetermine · Streams · DVDs · Cast & Crew. Nach dem folgenschweren Kampf gegen Ivan Drago in Rocky IV – Der Kampf des Jahrhunderts ist.
Rocky V Video
Bankrupt after Paulie had signed over power of attorney to a seedy accountant who has bled him dry whilst Rocky was training to avenge Apollo in Russia, all the material gains of his blood, sweat and tears are now gone.
Interestingly, this would be the first time that a real-life pugilist would take on a lead role in a Rocky film. Tommy Morrison was an up and coming heavyweight fighter at the time who would eventually go on to win a version of the Heavyweight Championship of the World WBO and share the ring for real with the likes of George Foreman and Lennox Lewis.
Sadly, like many boxing stories, there was no happy ending for Morrison who eventually passed away from HIV health related problems on September 1st He did however leave behind a real-life show reel of knockouts that would even outshine that of Mr Balboa.
Stallone had flirted with this idea before with former WBC heavyweight Champ Ken Norton who was said to have originally been signed up to play Apollo Creed before his late withdrawal left the door open for Carl Weathers to take on his most famous role.
Rocky V is not a particularly good movie and is widely regarded as the weakest entry in the series. However, it does still deserve mention and I truly believe that Stallone had the basis of a good film here that simply got lost along the way.
The introduction of a Don King style promoter in the character of George Washington Duke is perhaps a little bit more than on the nose, but it should be pointed out that around the time that this film was made, Mr King had practically owned a piece of every one of the top heavyweight fighters since the late seventies.
Sure, he has a bizarre penchant for dangling earrings but it was the nineties after all. Unfortunately this is another slight against the film.
Whereas the first two films have the gritty edge and griminess of the seventies and the following two movies bask in the excess and gloss of the eighties, the fifth film feels strangely out of place in the nineties, a decade now more associated with the hard-edged humour and violence of Tarrantino, the street level warfare of films like Boyz n the Hood and New Jack City.
The Philadelphia story on display here plays a much more twee version, as Rocky Junior gets his nice warm, winter coat stolen by two tubby street kids.
Having just defeated Moscow super-boxer, Ivan Drago, Rocky returns home. Rocky and Adrian discover that Paulie left power of attorney to Rocky's accountant who invested all of his money that went belly-up and lost it all.
To make matters worse, they discover they have years worth of unpaid property taxes. With Rocky's status, he would just need to win a couple of more fights to help with the money.
Unfortunately, they discover that Rocky has suffered irreversible brain damage that could be fatal if Rocky were to continue fighting.
They sue the accountant and move back to Philly's ghetto. Rocky starts training talented young fighter, Tommy Gunn, who is a huge fan of Rocky's.
As Tommy becomes more successful, Rocky distances himself from his family and a huge resentment grows toward him from his son.
When Tommy is brainwashed by promoter, who has been at Rocky's throat throughout the whole movie, Tommy betrays Rocky and Rocky realizes he may not have a choice but to fight.
Touted upon its release as the finale of the Rocky saga, this fifth entry in the long-running series of sports dramas reunites star Sylvester Stallone with John G.
Avildsen, director of the Oscar-winning original. Stallone is Rocky Balboa, suffering from career-ending brain damage as a result of his punishing bout with Ivan Drago at the finale of the previous film.
Upon their return to Philadelphia, Rocky and his wife, Adrian Talia Shire , discover they are broke, their fortune squandered by an incompetent accountant.
Forced to move back to their working-class neighborhood, Rocky finds that his only asset is the run-down gym willed to him by Mickey Burgess Meredith, who appears in new flashback sequences.
Rocky's son played by Stallone's real-life son Sage Stallone feels neglected by his father, who lavishes attention on his protege, but Tommy ultimately turns his back on his mentor to sign a more lucrative deal with Duke, leading to a street-fight showdown.
After gaining permanent brain damage, Rocky Balboa Stallone is finally force to retire from the sport of boxing.
Rocky then begins training boxers at Mickey's gym, Adrian gets her old job back at the pet store across the street and Paulie goes back to the meat packing plant.
Cane then went on to. Things start to look up when Rocky meets a hungry young fighter from Oklahoma named Tommy Gunn Tommy Morrison and takes him under his wing.
Training the young fighter gives Rocky a sense of purpose, and Tommy fights his way up the ladder to become a top contender.
Rocky eventually becomes so distracted with Tommy's training that he winds up neglecting Robert who becomes withdrawn and angry, falling in with the wrong crowd at school and as a result, he begins acting out at home.
Tommy's impressive rise through the ranks catches the eye of Duke, who uses the promise of a title shot against Cane to lure him away from Rocky.
Duke pulls up outside the Balboa house with Tommy in tow, who has now been deceived into thinking that Rocky doesn't have his best interests in mind.
When Rocky tries to convince him otherwise, Tommy drives off in a huff, leaving Rocky for good. As Rocky watches Tommy speed off into the night, his head suddenly pounds with nightmarish flashbacks of his fight with Drago.
When Adrian attempts to comfort him, Rocky's frustrations finally boil over. He confesses his life had meaning again when he was able to live vicariously through Tommy's success.
She reasons with him, telling him Tommy never had his heart and spirit — something he could never learn. When this realisation hits him, Rocky embraces his wife and they begin to pick up the pieces.
After finding Robert hanging out on a street corner, Rocky apologises to his son and they mend their broken relationship.
Tommy wins the heavyweight title by knocking out Union Cane in the first round, but is booed by spectators after the fight and hounded by reporters.
They insist Cane was nothing but a "paper champion", because Cane didn't win the title from Balboa. Therefore, the public would never consider Tommy the real champion unless he fights a worthy opponent.
With Tommy enraged by the press's reaction, Duke tells Tommy he needs to fight Rocky man to man. Duke and Tommy show up at a local bar to goad Rocky into accepting a fight.
But after Tommy hits Paulie, Rocky challenges Tommy to a street fight on the spot. Despite Duke's warnings to keep the fight in the ring, Tommy accepts.
He then hears the voice of his old mentor urging him to get up and get back in the fight, to go just "one more round".
Rocky gets back up, and utilizing his vast street fighting knowledge, defeats Tommy by knocking him into the grill of a bus with his final blow.
Afterwards, Tommy gets arrested, and Duke commends Rocky, trying to appeal to him. Duke threatens to sue if Rocky touches him, but after a brief hesitation, Rocky punches Duke in the gut anyway, knocking him onto the hood of a car.
The crowd cheers as the bankrupt Rocky shrugs and quips "Sue me for what? The next day, Rocky and Robert take a trip to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and Rocky gives his son Rocky Marciano's cuff-link, given to him years ago as a gift from Mickey.
The film ends with a shot of Rocky's statue looking out over Philadelphia. The film contains cameos by several sportswriters and boxing analysts, most notably Al Bernstein, Stan Hochman and Al Meltzer.
Sportscaster Stu Nahan makes his fifth and final appearance in the Rocky series, this time as a sports journalist.
The character "Tommy Gunn" was played by Tommy Morrison. Morrison's nickname in boxing was "The Duke" similar to George Washington Duke, who becomes his manager in the movie.
Morrison has claimed to be the grandnephew of John "The Duke" Wayne. Michael Williams , who plays Union Cane, was also a real-life boxer. He and Morrison were to have an actual match about a month after Rocky V was released, but had to be canceled when Williams was hurt.
The match was being hyped as "The Real Cane vs. Gunn Match". Jodi Letizia, who played street kid Marie in the original Rocky , was supposed to reprise her role here.
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