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Stallone's deft as Rocky in the Q&A ring

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  • Stallone's deft as Rocky in the Q&A ring

    Stallone's deft as Rocky in the Q&A ring

    By Michael Booth
    Denver Post Staff Writer

    DenverPost.com
    Article Last Updated:12/16/2006 12:27:21 PM MST

    Facing the barbs of the insatiable media, Sylvester Stallone is as gracious
    and imperturbable in answering all questions as Rocky was deflecting the
    insults of classless opponents.

    With the sixth Rocky movie arriving in theaters Wednesday, Stallone at 60
    knows full well many critics label him a one-note writer and actor.

    No one will cry for Stallone, with his millions in crafty percentage deals,
    but he can be called a victim of his own success: Thirty years ago, he wrote
    and starred in one of the iconic American movies, and as Stallone put it in
    an interview here, "therein lies a dilemma."

    One career direction means "you fall back on something you know the audience
    wants to see, but it's not going to break any new ground or gain any new
    respect from your peers. Next thing you know, it will be 'Cobra 3.' That is
    a real problem," Stallone said, in Denver to publicize "Rocky Balboa."

    "Or is it that you're so locked into the 'Rocky' persona, that anything
    other than that is going to be a disappointment, a letdown. That happened in
    a real good film like 'F.I.S.T.' There's an expectation. That's human
    nature," he said.

    In other interviews, Stallone has spoken nostalgically of the 1976 "Rocky"
    as "setting the bar too high." His first major role, his first finished
    script, and the film was the year's top box office draw, won the
    best-picture Oscar, and garnered acting and writing nominations for
    Stallone.

    With "Rocky Balboa" putting the aging Philly fighter seemingly irretrievably
    into retirement (yes, again), Stallone said he's ready to put the Italian
    Stallion's saga behind him.

    "If this film reaches the audience the way I hope it does, and I had a
    chance to never act again and just direct, I'd take that in a second," said
    Stallone, looking appropriately middle-aged yet fairly buff in blue jeans
    and an open-necked shirt.

    "Rocky Balboa" finds Adrian dead and Rocky wandering his old haunts in
    Philly, running a restaurant and reminiscing to excess. Then ESPN pits
    champion-era Rocky against current champ Maxon "The Line" Dixon (Antonio
    Tarver) in a simulation. Rocky wins, and the miffed Dixon challenges
    long-retired Rocky to an exhibition.

    While the movie is no revelation, it revives a beloved character that
    Stallone plays well. Rocky is part of the collective American consciousness
    of perseverance and decency, whether real or imagined. There is something
    sweet and appropriate in watching both Stallone and Rocky contemplate aging
    and making their later years useful.

    And the truth-myth of how "Rocky" got made only adds to the movie's place in
    popular culture. Stallone was a small-part actor struggling to break through
    who began writing scripts with parts to suit his ambition. He'd knocked
    around the Philadelphia docks and gyms, getting to know people with severe
    "lack of expectations," he said.

    Hollywood producers loved the script and said they'd buy it. Stallone
    refused to sell unless he could play Rocky. David Thomson's "New
    Biographical Dictionary of Film" tells it this way: "Instead of taking
    $265,000 for it from Robert Chartoff and Irwin Winkler, he held out for
    $75,000, a percentage and the lead part."

    Fifty-six million dollars later, "Rocky" won the box office that year over
    runner-up "A Star is Born," at $37 million.

    Asked why he thinks people love the Rocky character, Stallone said it has
    little to do with sports and victories.

    "Rocky is about abandonment. He had no parents, never did. He literally is a
    waif of the streets. He's America's waif. He gathers these other broken
    people and they create a family unit," Stallone said, a theme he continued
    in writing the script for "Rocky Balboa."

    Then, once Rocky begins to see some success, he acts in a way that people
    admire, but which they don't see often in their real-life leaders in sports,
    politics or business.

    "Rocky considers himself better than no one. He's not judgmental. He's just
    a sweet guy. He'll accept your insults and still reach out and try to
    embrace you. Those are real Christian ideals," Stallone said.

    Stallone acknowledges he also has considered making another "Rambo" picture,
    the money-dangles from producers too lucrative to ignore. But his better
    self pushes him to spots behind the cameras for the remainder of his career.

    "I would like to spend it in writing and directing, less in the public eye
    but providing something for the public."

    So what is the Stallone Surprise, the project he's always wanted to write or
    direct?

    For years Stallone's wanted to create an epic, and the book that intrigues
    him is Franz Werfel's "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh," detailing the Turkish
    genocide of its Armenian community in 1915. (After futile attempts to turn
    the novel into a movie, filmmakers finally succeeded in 1982, but it was a
    low-profile production.)

    French ships eventually rescued some Armenians, and Stallone has his
    favorite scene memorized: "The French ships come, and they've dropped the
    ladders and everybody has climbed up the side. The ships sail. The hero, the
    one who set up the rescue, has fallen asleep, exhausted, behind a rock on
    the slope above. The camera pulls back, and the ships and the sea are on one
    side, and there's one lonely figure at the top of the mountain, and the
    Turks are coming up the mountain by the thousands on the far side."

    A pretty great shot.

    The movie would be "an epic about the complete destruction of a
    civilization," Stallone said. Then he laughed at the ambition. "Talk about a
    political hot potato. The Turks have been killing that subject for 85
    years."

    Source: http://www.denverpost.com/search/ci_4841925

    --Bou ndary_(ID_W23SseTioJPTkZ40fD9qAQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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