anticipated film. Especially, for those who eat, breathe, and cry
boxing. Who's going to check it out?
http://gotnexttv.com/hands-of-stone-box ... rto-duran/
no. it isn't.
I loved that movie, no matter what. I don't care wether it's considered a masterpiece or not, as long as I liked it.
Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 07:37 The thing with biopics, is that they can easily turn into hagiographies... too easily: Alí, Bohemian Rhapsody, Someone Up There Likes Me, all smell like corny, cheesy melodrama, quite blackmailing, too (morally): "If you don't like this, you're not a legitimate fan/lover/evaluator"... that's the kind of statements they make, and it's sneaky-enough to me.
The only biopic I liked is Raging Bull, which is also the only boxing-movie I liked... Million Dollar Baby came close, but it's just too sad...
As much as I love boxing, I hate the whole Rocky saga... every once in a while, someone comes out with the usual monferrina: the "real Rocky" (real person which the character of Rocky would be based on), is: Gerry Cooney, Rocky Marciano, Vinny Pazienza, motherfuckin' Joe Bugner... "the real Rocky: Charlie Zelenoff!": we just miss this.
Forget about it...
The thing with Charlie Z is: he's clearly a psychotic, but even if he meets a doctor and recovers, he will forever be remembered for his antics, by millions of people around the world...Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 13:45Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 07:37 The thing with biopics, is that they can easily turn into hagiographies... too easily: Alí, Bohemian Rhapsody, Someone Up There Likes Me, all smell like corny, cheesy melodrama, quite blackmailing, too (morally): "If you don't like this, you're not a legitimate fan/lover/evaluator"... that's the kind of statements they make, and it's sneaky-enough to me.
The only biopic I liked is Raging Bull, which is also the only boxing-movie I liked... Million Dollar Baby came close, but it's just too sad...
As much as I love boxing, I hate the whole Rocky saga... every once in a while, someone comes out with the usual monferrina: the "real Rocky" (real person which the character of Rocky would be based on), is: Gerry Cooney, Rocky Marciano, Vinny Pazienza, motherfuckin' Joe Bugner... "the real Rocky: Charlie Zelenoff!": we just miss this.
Forget about it...
Have you seen "Fat City"? It's the opposite of those corny, cheesy boxing movies. It's my favorite boxing flick. It is the quintessential maudlin boxing movie though!
I ran into Duran on 47th St. in Manhattan once.
Charlie Z. I haven't heard about him lately. Is he still doing his thing, undefeated, 7,000-0?
Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 15:55The thing with Charlie Z is: he's clearly a psychotic, but even if he meets a doctor and recovers, he will forever be remembered for his antics, by millions of people around the world...Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 13:45Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 07:37 The thing with biopics, is that they can easily turn into hagiographies... too easily: Alí, Bohemian Rhapsody, Someone Up There Likes Me, all smell like corny, cheesy melodrama, quite blackmailing, too (morally): "If you don't like this, you're not a legitimate fan/lover/evaluator"... that's the kind of statements they make, and it's sneaky-enough to me.
The only biopic I liked is Raging Bull, which is also the only boxing-movie I liked... Million Dollar Baby came close, but it's just too sad...
As much as I love boxing, I hate the whole Rocky saga... every once in a while, someone comes out with the usual monferrina: the "real Rocky" (real person which the character of Rocky would be based on), is: Gerry Cooney, Rocky Marciano, Vinny Pazienza, motherfuckin' Joe Bugner... "the real Rocky: Charlie Zelenoff!": we just miss this.
Forget about it...
Have you seen "Fat City"? It's the opposite of those corny, cheesy boxing movies. It's my favorite boxing flick. It is the quintessential maudlin boxing movie though!
I ran into Duran on 47th St. in Manhattan once.
Charlie Z. I haven't heard about him lately. Is he still doing his thing, undefeated, 7,000-0?![]()
I had heard of that Fat City... so I rented the home-video, but that was, by opposite means, the equivalent of Rocky: as much as Rocky's corny and cheesy, Fat City was gratuitously bitter and decadent... I only liked Raging Bull as a boxing movie, for some reason.
Probably I'm just not an estimator of boxing-movies...
Thanks for the suggestion anyway.
That's suggestive-enough, but I like more romantic stuff, while Fat City is already decadent (or the equivalent of it): I like it not corny, not bitter, just a little romantic or picaresque: Once Upon A Time In America, Barry Lyndon,Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 23:20Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 15:55The thing with Charlie Z is: he's clearly a psychotic, but even if he meets a doctor and recovers, he will forever be remembered for his antics, by millions of people around the world...Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 13:45
Have you seen "Fat City"? It's the opposite of those corny, cheesy boxing movies. It's my favorite boxing flick. It is the quintessential maudlin boxing movie though!
I ran into Duran on 47th St. in Manhattan once.
Charlie Z. I haven't heard about him lately. Is he still doing his thing, undefeated, 7,000-0?![]()
I had heard of that Fat City... so I rented the home-video, but that was, by opposite means, the equivalent of Rocky: as much as Rocky's corny and cheesy, Fat City was gratuitously bitter and decadent... I only liked Raging Bull as a boxing movie, for some reason.
Probably I'm just not an estimator of boxing-movies...
Thanks for the suggestion anyway.
Charley psychotic?
I don't think i ever saw Raging Bull. Well, Fat City is about the underbelly of boxing. Like so many other very good movies the music makes it memorable.
Nah, he just playing around... it's all staged, by the way.
Any resemblance to actual persons (specially Floyd Mayweather Sr....), living or dead, is merely coincidental.Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 12:26
No unsuspecting casual gym visitors were harmed in the making of those movies. All were played by stunt actors.
Oh... don't try this at home, kids.Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 12:26
No unsuspecting casual gym visitors were harmed in the making of those movies. All were played by stunt actors.
...without parental supervision.Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 14:57Oh... don't try this at home, kids.Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 12:26
No unsuspecting casual gym visitors were harmed in the making of those movies. All were played by stunt actors.
Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 14:56Any resemblance to actual persons (specially Floyd Mayweather Sr....), living or dead, is merely coincidental.Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 12:26
No unsuspecting casual gym visitors were harmed in the making of those movies. All were played by stunt actors.
Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 16:54Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 14:56Any resemblance to actual persons (specially Floyd Mayweather Sr....), living or dead, is merely coincidental.Ilya Muromets wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 12:26
No unsuspecting casual gym visitors were harmed in the making of those movies. All were played by stunt actors.
F. Mayweather Sr. was played by Elliot Seymour, the homeless street guy who got KOd by delapidated 60 year old Hollywood actor Mickey Rourke in his triumphant return to the boxing ring.
I like the Rocky films but I get where you're coming from. It created a generation of new boxing fans though.....Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 11:38I loved that movie, no matter what. I don't care wether it's considered a masterpiece or not, as long as I liked it.
Scorsese has done a more defining movie in Taxi Driver, and Goodfellas made him definitely a cultural icon, but I still consider Raging Bull one of the highest peaks in Scorsese's career.
Now what's really overrated is Rocky... talk about this: watching that movie is like tasting a slice of bread spread with butter, marmalade and sugar, drowned in honey.
It draws the stereotyped concepts of: boxing, Italians, and cheap philosophy, all in one movie.
I'm completely with this take on the two movies. (Though I like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas more than Raging Bull.) Rocky is only good in the sense that an eat-some-candy, try-to-finger-your-date movie can be good. But so far as quality film goes, I'm sure I'd take Scorsese's old home movies over everything Stallone has ever done.Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 11:38I loved that movie, no matter what. I don't care wether it's considered a masterpiece or not, as long as I liked it.
Scorsese has done a more defining movie in Taxi Driver, and Goodfellas made him definitely a cultural icon, but I still consider Raging Bull one of the highest peaks in Scorsese's career.
Now what's really overrated is Rocky... talk about this: watching that movie is like tasting a slice of bread spread with butter, marmalade and sugar, drowned in honey.
It draws the stereotyped concepts of: boxing, Italians, and cheap philosophy, all in one movie.
Stallone is obviously very limited: I've heard that Pacino was offered the role in First Blood/Rambo, declined, then it was given to Stallone. That made pretty much Sly's fortune. Now "Rambo" was honest entertainment. Pure 70's-solid-stuff. Like Deliverance, for example... stuff new generations have guiltily forgot.squiggy wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 17:39I'm completely with this take on the two movies. (Though I like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas more than Raging Bull.) Rocky is only good in the sense that an eat-some-candy, try-to-finger-your-date movie can be good. But so far as quality film goes, I'm sure I'd take Scorsese's old home movies over everything Stallone has ever done.Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 11:38I loved that movie, no matter what. I don't care wether it's considered a masterpiece or not, as long as I liked it.
Scorsese has done a more defining movie in Taxi Driver, and Goodfellas made him definitely a cultural icon, but I still consider Raging Bull one of the highest peaks in Scorsese's career.
Now what's really overrated is Rocky... talk about this: watching that movie is like tasting a slice of bread spread with butter, marmalade and sugar, drowned in honey.
It draws the stereotyped concepts of: boxing, Italians, and cheap philosophy, all in one movie.
Don't see Al doing the job in Rambo that Stallone did. He was the perfect fit.Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 18:03Stallone is obviously very limited: I've heard that Pacino was offered the role in First Blood/Rambo, declined, then it was given to Stallone. That made pretty much Sly's fortune. Now "Rambo" was honest entertainment. Pure 70's-solid-stuff. Like Deliverance, for example... stuff new generations have guiltily forgot.squiggy wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 17:39I'm completely with this take on the two movies. (Though I like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas more than Raging Bull.) Rocky is only good in the sense that an eat-some-candy, try-to-finger-your-date movie can be good. But so far as quality film goes, I'm sure I'd take Scorsese's old home movies over everything Stallone has ever done.Jacopodb wrote: ↑28 Dec 2018, 11:38
I loved that movie, no matter what. I don't care wether it's considered a masterpiece or not, as long as I liked it.
Scorsese has done a more defining movie in Taxi Driver, and Goodfellas made him definitely a cultural icon, but I still consider Raging Bull one of the highest peaks in Scorsese's career.
Now what's really overrated is Rocky... talk about this: watching that movie is like tasting a slice of bread spread with butter, marmalade and sugar, drowned in honey.
It draws the stereotyped concepts of: boxing, Italians, and cheap philosophy, all in one movie.
I graduated from a film-school (technically a Bachelor of Arts, with a branch in "movie-and-TV-directing"...), and a professor had us watching Taxi Driver: that's how important it can be, and, as far as I'm concerned, it's objectively Scorsese's best movie, as well as the most defining, of course (with all due respect for the rest).
I enjoyed very much Goodfellas, of course, how could any adult human being not do?
Seriously, it was an action hero movie not a dramatic role.Nile4000 wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 20:41Don't see Al doing the job in Rambo that Stallone did. He was the perfect fit.Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 18:03Stallone is obviously very limited: I've heard that Pacino was offered the role in First Blood/Rambo, declined, then it was given to Stallone. That made pretty much Sly's fortune. Now "Rambo" was honest entertainment. Pure 70's-solid-stuff. Like Deliverance, for example... stuff new generations have guiltily forgot.squiggy wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 17:39
I'm completely with this take on the two movies. (Though I like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas more than Raging Bull.) Rocky is only good in the sense that an eat-some-candy, try-to-finger-your-date movie can be good. But so far as quality film goes, I'm sure I'd take Scorsese's old home movies over everything Stallone has ever done.
I graduated from a film-school (technically a Bachelor of Arts, with a branch in "movie-and-TV-directing"...), and a professor had us watching Taxi Driver: that's how important it can be, and, as far as I'm concerned, it's objectively Scorsese's best movie, as well as the most defining, of course (with all due respect for the rest).
I enjoyed very much Goodfellas, of course, how could any adult human being not do?
Understood, but still there are certain things Pacino doesn't need to be un.oogiebe wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 20:43Seriously, it was an action hero movie not a dramatic role.Nile4000 wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 20:41Don't see Al doing the job in Rambo that Stallone did. He was the perfect fit.Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 18:03
Stallone is obviously very limited: I've heard that Pacino was offered the role in First Blood/Rambo, declined, then it was given to Stallone. That made pretty much Sly's fortune. Now "Rambo" was honest entertainment. Pure 70's-solid-stuff. Like Deliverance, for example... stuff new generations have guiltily forgot.
I graduated from a film-school (technically a Bachelor of Arts, with a branch in "movie-and-TV-directing"...), and a professor had us watching Taxi Driver: that's how important it can be, and, as far as I'm concerned, it's objectively Scorsese's best movie, as well as the most defining, of course (with all due respect for the rest).
I enjoyed very much Goodfellas, of course, how could any adult human being not do?
Al Pacino is, as far as I'm concerned, the most talented actor I've ever seen on a screen (in terms of sheer, pure, raw talent, not acting technique): he could read any cheap-diner menu and make it sound like poetry.Nile4000 wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 20:41Don't see Al doing the job in Rambo that Stallone did. He was the perfect fit.Jacopodb wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 18:03Stallone is obviously very limited: I've heard that Pacino was offered the role in First Blood/Rambo, declined, then it was given to Stallone. That made pretty much Sly's fortune. Now "Rambo" was honest entertainment. Pure 70's-solid-stuff. Like Deliverance, for example... stuff new generations have guiltily forgot.squiggy wrote: ↑29 Dec 2018, 17:39
I'm completely with this take on the two movies. (Though I like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas more than Raging Bull.) Rocky is only good in the sense that an eat-some-candy, try-to-finger-your-date movie can be good. But so far as quality film goes, I'm sure I'd take Scorsese's old home movies over everything Stallone has ever done.
I graduated from a film-school (technically a Bachelor of Arts, with a branch in "movie-and-TV-directing"...), and a professor had us watching Taxi Driver: that's how important it can be, and, as far as I'm concerned, it's objectively Scorsese's best movie, as well as the most defining, of course (with all due respect for the rest).
I enjoyed very much Goodfellas, of course, how could any adult human being not do?