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It took place 25 years
ago and was filmed on a 28-day shoot - not a lot of time
to make a feature film, much less retain memories of it,
yet all those involved with Rocky seem to recall
the film as if it were just yesterday.
Now
fans can hear cast members Sylvester Stallone, Talia
Shire, Burt Young and Carl Weathers and filmmakers such
as director John G. Avildsen share their thoughts on the
1976 Best Picture Oscar winner, new on special-edition
DVD as part of a five-disc set that includes all the
films in the series.
For those who need a
left hook to jar their memory, the film is about the
plight of Rocky Balboa (Stallone), a thug-turned-boxer
who defies all odds in his quest for the heavyweight
championship. The film co-stars Shire as Adrian, a
shopkeeper racked by low self-esteem, until Rocky brings
love into her life for the very first time.
Perhaps the most
amazing fact about Rocky is that it was
essentially a low-budget film with a big studio feel.
Shire told me in a recent interview that the lack of
money and the short shooting schedule actually served
the movie - which was made for just under $1 million -
very well.
"It was like the
independent movies of today - it was about taking a
risk," Shire said. "It wasn't about having so
much money at stake, where you tend to forfeit your
ideas and solve your problems in a more formulaic way.
In 'Rocky,' there wasn't that much money. And
because the risk factors were changed, little
eccentricities were allowed to happen."
One of those
eccentricities, Shire said, was the memorable scene in
which Rocky took her ice skating. The scene called for a
crowd of people, but there wasn't enough money in the
budget to hire enough extras.
"That turned out
to be something that just suited the scene
beautifully," she said.
But one thing that she
can't figure out to this day is why nobody used the
scene as the basis for a "Rocky and Adrian"
ice show act.
"I've always
looked at it and asked, 'Why hasn't anybody ever done
this as a ballet on ice?' Rocky and Adrian - it seems so
perfect," Shire mused.
And while she and Sly
managed to make the best of the ice-rink situation,
Shire is still amazed by how the filmmakers pulled off
the scene that absolutely required time, money and
bodies: the championship fight scene.
"I've
been thinking to myself, 'My God, how did they do the
big fight sequences?' That would generally in itself
cost a few million dollars, never mind the story around
it," Shire said. "You've got to worry about
the continuity of blood, prosthetics, scarring and so
forth, and they were moving around people to give the
illusion of a crowd. I don't know how they did it."
But perhaps the most
lasting impression for Shire about the film was her
initial meeting with Stallone.
"Even though I
read the piece beforehand, I was not prepared for the
man, who was absolutely larger than life - that scale,
that size, that energy and wit - and he was coming in
the door backwards," Shire said.
But soon enough - and
it's pretty evident from their scenes together in the
film - Shire and Stallone developed a strong chemistry.
"Even in my first
audition, when I punched him, I felt a great sense of
give and take and jest, yet with an intelligence,"
Shire said, laughing.
And while she's
maintained that connection with Stallone over all the
intervening years, she's thrilled that audience members
still maintain a connection with Adrian. The character
to this day inspires people with low self-esteem to
break out of their shells, and people approach Shire in
public to thank her for it.
"It happens all
the time, and with both men and women," Shire said.
"Many young girls, too. I can't tell you how many
(who have come up to me) who have felt unloved, rejected
or not up to the ideal standards.
"Especially today,
there is so much pressure for women to look a certain
way, and Adrian comes out of nowhere and is transformed
by love through love. Rocky sees her a certain way, and
that has a great meaning for young girls."
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