"Rocky 3" is also a nickname for Sergei Rachmaninoff's 3rd Piano Concerto.
Rocky III (1982) is the third installment in the Rocky movie series, starring Sylvester Stallone, Carl Weathers, and Talia Shire.
Rocky III features Mr. T, who plays the character Clubber Lang, a contender who has some characteristics of a classic boxing villain whose human side is usually hidden by his loudness.
It also features Terry "Hulk Hogan" Bollea as the character Thunderlips, a role which helped popularize Hogan.
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Rocky III begins where Rocky II left off, with Rocky winning the title from Apollo Creed (played by Weathers). Creed retires, and Rocky becomes an accomplished champion, making ten defenses of his belt over three years. Meanwhile, he buys a mansion, appears on several magazine covers and makes several TV show appearances (including the The Muppet Show), and becomes a household name as he appears on everything from T-shirts to chocolate bars. While this is all happening, Clubber Lang (played by Mr. T) is coming up in the ranks, beating everybody put in front of him. He becomes the number one challenger, while Rocky gets reconstructive nose surgery and starts to learn how to speak in public.
While Rocky lives comfortably as the heavyweight champion of the world, his brother-in-law Paulie (played by Burt Young) still lives in the slums of Philadelphia, and is jealous of his wealthy and successful brother-in-law. Paulie walks into a video arcade off the streets of Philadelphia, and he spots a Rocky pinball machine. Enraged, Paulie hurls a Buckfast bottle at the machine, smashing it. He is later arrested and Rocky bails Paulie out of the drunk tank. After Paulie is out he swings at Rocky a few times and shows his jealousy toward Rocky's achievements. He is also mad at him because Rocky never asked him to live with him or support him with some kind of job (although Rocky never knew this, because Paulie had never asked him for anything before). Finally, Paulie asks for a ringside job and Rocky agrees, taking Paulie home to his mansion.
Rocky attends a charity boxing-wrestling match with Thunderlips (Terry "Hulk Hogan" Bollea), with Lang watching at ringside. Early in the match, Rocky, who is not taking the match seriously by lightly tapping the wrestler in the stomach (mainly because Rocky appears to believe the adage that pro wrestling was scripted), angers Thunderlips, who grabs Rocky and attacks him with a variety of wrestling moves such as the backbreaker and suplex. After being thrown out of the ring, Rocky decides to remove his gloves and fight back, finally hurting the wrestler. In a stunning display of strength, Rocky carries Thunderlips and dropped him out of the ring. Ultimately, the contest is a draw.
Rocky has a statue unveiled in Philadelphia, but Lang shows up there too, and taunts Rocky that his fights had been fixed after the Creed rematch. Mickey, his trainer, refuses to allow Lang to have the match. Lang goes as far as to come on to Adrian, causing Rocky to jump after him and accepts the challenge. Mickey, however, doesn't want anything to do with it and tells Rocky that if he wants to fight Lang, he'll have to do it with a new trainer.
Rocky catches up with Mickey at home and demands he explain, and Mickey admits that his fights after winning the championship were against opponents that were hand-picked to make sure they were not of championship caliber, in order to protect him from another dangerous fight like his two fights with Creed. To that end, he strongly advises Rocky against fighting Lang since the challenger is not only brutal, but also has a superior fighting spirit while Rocky has become too comfortable as champion.
Rocky, feeling he needs to prove to himself that he is worthy of his title of Heavyweight Champion of the World, begins to train for the match with Lang. Unfortunately, Rocky fails to take his training seriously as he made his pre-fight training public by renting a hotel's multi-purpose, allowing people to interrupt him for pictures or kissing, selling memorabilia, hiring musicians and specialists to decorate his training into a public party, etc. While Rocky relaxed and enjoyed a stylized training, Lang pushes himself very hard as trains himself with total dedication in isolation. Mickey fears disaster as a result.
Lang and Rocky meet at Philadelphia's Spectrum. During a melee before the fight, Mickey is inadvertently shoved into a rail by Lang, and suffers a heart attack. By the time of the fight, Rocky is both enraged and severely distracted by his mentor's condition, and despite attacking Lang fiercely in the beginning of the first round, without direction Rocky is easily knocked out by the superiorly conditioned Lang in the second round, losing the title of heavyweight champion. When he returns to his locker room, he and Mickey have their last conversation, and Mickey, refusing medical treatment, passes away in Rocky's arms, but not before Rocky tells Mickey he lost the fight just as Mickey predicted.
After the fight and Mickey's funeral, Rocky is deep in self-doubt, and goes to Mickey's gym one night deep in thought. While there, Apollo Creed shows up and tries to talk Rocky into training with him for a rematch with Lang, telling him he needed to regain the "eye of the tiger," his competitive spirit. Rocky agrees, and he, Adrian, and Paulie head to Los Angeles with Apollo. To keep Rocky's focus on the task at hand, Apollo insists on a bare bones approach- going to the same gym he had started in, checking Rocky and his entourage into an old dirty hotel in an L.A. slum, etc.
Once the training start, Apollo starts teaching Rocky how to box with rhythm. He also insists that Rocky begin to learn new methods of training for fights, namely swimming and running on sand. Apollo realizes that Rocky has to train to survive a fast pace, which is the only thing it will take to defeat Clubber Lang in a rematch (most, if not all, of Lang's fights were early round knockouts).
Rocky attempts to learn from Apollo, but his regrets and fears sap his resolve and Apollo is frustrated. A heart to heart with Adrian occurs, in which Rocky admits his fears (after a little prodding on her part) and she reassures him that she will be with him no matter what. Thus inspired, Rocky returns to the training with renewed vigor. He returns to the ring almost 15 pounds lighter than he had been against Lang the first time, ready to regain his title.
In a rematch versus Lang, and with the world watching, Rocky fights with a level of skill and fighting spirit that no one, including Clubber Lang, expects. Defying Lang, Rocky intentionally takes a beating, gambling that Clubber Lang will tire before Rocky is knocked down, which frustrates Lang right along with the fact that Lang gets confused by Rocky alternating his fighting style during the fight. Defeating Lang with a knockout in the third round, while he manages to stay standing, he recovers his world heavyweight championship and his self-respect at Madison Square Garden in New York. Rocky and Apollo then are shown entering Mick's gym, where Apollo wants Rocky to do him a favor: Apollo wants a third fight with Rocky, even though this one will only be a practice bout. The movie finishes with Rocky and Apollo engaging each other in the ring. The movie contained a song by Survivor, Eye Of The Tiger, which became a chart topper the year the movie was released, in 1982.
A bronze statue of Rocky, called "ROCKY", was commissioned by Sylvester Stallone and created by A. Thomas Schomberg in 1983. Three statues were created and one was placed on the top of the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art for the filming of Rocky III. After filming was complete, a furious debate erupted in Philadelphia between the Art Museum and the City's Art Commission over the meaning of "art." Claiming the statue was not "art" but rather a "movie prop" the city considered various alternate locations and settled upon the front of the Wachovia Spectrum in South Philadelphia. It was later returned to the Art Museum where it was used in the filming of Rocky V, as well as Mannequin and Philadelphia. Afterward it was again moved to the front of the Spectrum.
The third of the three statues was listed on eBay with a starting bid of US$5,000,000 to raise funds for the International Institute for Sport and Olympic History. It failed to sell and was listed again for US$3 million; after receiving only one bid, which turned out to be fraudulent, it has been relisted several times for US$1 million. *
The statues weighed 2 tons each and stood about ten feet tall.
1982 films | American films | Boxing films | Sequel films | Rocky
Rocky III | Rocky III | Rocky III | Рокки 3 (фильм) | Rocky III | Rocky III
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