Несмотря на то, что Сталлоне мне всегда нравился, после серии этих фильмов я еще выше начала ценить его как актера, ну и кинематографиста раз уж на то пошло.
В саге о Рокки данную часть нельзя назвать хорошей. Ноя поставила фильму оценку на бал выше тех частей, которые мне не понравились.
Всё потому, что в фильме много достаточно трогательных и эмоциональных моментов, связанных с семьей Рокки.
Вот и опять сына Рокки играл Сэйдж Сталлоне, сын Сильвестора, который недавно ушел из жизни.
Но фильм сохранил вот эти драгоценные кадры отца и сына вместе, и запечатлел их навсегда.
In an interview with Jonathan Ross, Sylvester Stallone was asked to rate each of the Rocky movies out of 10. He gave this movie zero. читать дальшеThis is the only film in the entire Rocky saga to have lost money at the box office.
Sylvester Stallone originally toyed with the idea of killing Rocky off at the end of the film.
The plan was that Rocky would die in an ambulance on its way to the hospital with Adrian by his side.
At the hospital, she would have announced to the world of his passing and his spirit would live on with a final flashback of the famous scene of him running up the steps.
However, they were ordered by the studio to change the ending, because they told him iconic characters like Rocky Balboa shouldn't die.
The only sequel in the Rocky series not directed by Sylvester Stallone.
According to director John G. Avildsen, when shooting the picture, he felt that cinematographer Steven Poster was over-lighting many of the scenes, and thus negating the realism of the piece.
He told Poster he wanted the film to look more like Rocky, which had been lit by James Crabe, oftentimes using a single spotlight to light an entire scene (such as the opening boxing match).
Poster told Avildsen that the original film "looked like a cheap documentary". Avildsen responded to this piece of criticism by smiling and saying, "Exactly".
Just as he had done with the first four films, writer Sylvester Stallone incorporated much biographical material into the plot of the film.
Stallone particularly focused on the notion of Rocky's fall from grace. In Rocky III and Rocky IV, Rocky was top of the world, unbeatable and incredibly famous and popular.
These two films had coincided with the height of Stallone's own popularity, which had waned decidedly in the years since Rocky IV.
As such, when composing the sсript for Rocky V, he decided to look at the notion of how a man can have it all, only to suddenly lose it.
The speech Mickey gives to Rocky in the flashback sequence is based on an interview with Cus D'Amato given in 1985, shortly after Mike Tyson's first professional victory.
As in all the films in the Rocky saga, most of the reporters in this movie were played by real reporters and boxing writers.
Jodi Letizia, who played street kid Marie in Rocky, was supposed to reprise her role in this film.
Her character was shown to have ended up as Rocky predicted she would: a prostitute, who had recently been made homeless.
The scene however, ended up on the cutting room floor, although Letizia can briefly be seen during the street-fight at the end of the film.
The character would be reintroduced properly in Rocky Balboa, where she would be played by Geraldine Hughes.
Michael Anthony Williams, who plays Union Cane, was a real-life boxer, just as was Tommy Morrison (who plays Tommy Gunn).
He and Morrison were to have an actual match about a month after Rocky V was released, but it had to be canceled when Williams was hurt.
The match was being hyped as "The Real Cane vs. Gunn Match".
The golden glove necklace featured so prominently in this film was first seen in Rocky III, then again throughout Rocky IV.
As a promotional gimmick, replicas of the necklace were distributed to moviegoers at the Hollywood premiere of Rocky V at Grauman's Chinese Theatre.