DVD Review: Rocky Balboa
Published July 25, 2007
Rocky Balboa is a movie that needed to be made. Contrary to early naysayers, this franchise needed more closure than it got back in 1990 when audiences last visited with a cinematic icon. Sylvester Stallone directs, acts, and writes this final sequel and the result is a moving, nostalgic, and engrossing effort worthy of the Rocky name.
Balboa is a flashback to the first installment of the franchise. Instead of following closely with the eventual opponent and building him up to create tension in the closing moments, it takes the opposite approach. This is squarely focused on Stallone, which takes nothing away from Antonio Tarver's believable performance in his first film role after reigning as real life light heavyweight champion.
Characters are re-introduced and follow Rocky's surprisingly long turn back into a pro boxer. Lesser characters make a re-appearance for nostalgia's sake, such as Spider Rico, again played by Pedro Lovell. The movie builds its story around the death of Rocky's wife, and nearly everything focuses on that point. Fans looking for a rousing ego clash along the lines of those featured in Rocky III or IV are in for a wait. The emotional impact of the first 30 minutes is a complete departure from what the series had become.
This leads to a nearly flawless conclusion aside from a few blatant and distracting product placements. A trick ending sends the film in a direction that leans towards being predictable, then twists again to end the franchise on a somber note. The final words of the film could not have been chosen better.
With only brief flashbacks and a somewhat darker tone, Balboa avoids extensive use of nostalgia to carry itself. Led by multiple re-workings of the classic theme "Gonna Fly Now" at all times, it's the right way to mix old with new. Even though the film contains less than 15 minutes of total boxing, these scenes are believable and at times mirror any real life, pay-per-view boxing event.
As expected, the script contains countless inspirational lines designed to bring the audience out of their seats to cheer. While at times forced, careful direction and believable performances splice these moments in where they should be. The inevitable training vignette is a long time in coming and the payoff is stronger because of it.
- DVD Review: Rocky Balboa
- Published: July 25, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Drama
- Writer: Matt Paprocki
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Comments
Great review! I don't know if I needed another Rocky movie, but the reintroduction of old characters made the movie surprisingly watchable. The series is 0fficially done though. If Sly does another one, he will have officially jumped the shark.




![Rocky Balboa [Blu-ray] Rocky Balboa [Blu-ray]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Vu5WoDjxL._SY90_.jpg)





Great review! I sincerely teared up when I saw this in the theater. This to me is a million times better that the disaster called Rocky V.
Loved how you went in depth with everything the DVD holds..
again, awesome review!