Tag: Sylvester Stallone

Rocky IV Movie Essay - 1985 Sylvester Stallone Film

Fight Like a Man: ‘Rocky IV’

“Looking back at a film like ‘Rocky IV,’ we canโ€™t just say ‘wow, look how dumb we were back then’ because the simple truth is that we havenโ€™t earned the right. We are still making the same mistakes, still falling for the same macho con.”

Fight Like a Man: ‘Rocky III’

โ€œThere are things about โ€˜Rocky IIIโ€™ that definitely raise eyebrows — its racial dynamics and maybe even its class politics — but ultimately it shows a fighter overcoming his opponent by reaching out to those around him and confronting the problems within.โ€

Fight Like a Man: ‘Rocky II’

โ€œFilms likeย โ€˜Rocky IIโ€™ age well because the moments that now seem anachronistic serve to shed light on problems we still have today, delivered by the kind of characters viewers can sympathise with, even if one doesn’t agree with all their opinions.โ€

Jack Ascending: Nicholson’s 1980s

โ€œThere has always been a conflict at play in Nicholson’s screen presence: between โ€˜Nicholsonโ€™ and โ€˜Jack.โ€™ The desire to be taken seriously and the lure of the riotous Jack persona have always done battle across his decades of stardom.โ€

Ryan Coogler and Black Intimacy

“Breaking the mold and raising his cinematic voice by embedding black intimacy in his movies, Coogler, in Creed and Fruitvale Station, uses mothers, girlfriends, children, squads of friends and Michael B. Jordan to create community.”