R
7.6
7.6
As a movie history and Wikipedia nut, I genuinely enjoyed digging through the rabbit hole that is Stallone’s enduring career.
The mythology surrounding Sylvester Stallone: the action hero is so big and successful that many people, including myself, often forget about Sylvester Stallone: the prolific writer. He failed to bag roles as a young actor in the 1970s, so he whipped out a script (in a span of three days!) that became the iconic film Rocky. Later on, after witnessing the power of elderly entertainers, Stallone rewrote a screenplay that would become the ongoing franchise The Expendables. He’s a hunk in many people’s eyes, nothing more and nothing less, but Sly successfully steers you away from that one-dimensional reputation and reintroduces you to the dramatist and artist Stallone has been all along. The film begins as an immigrant story (Stallone hails from Italy), then turns into a rags-to-riches story (he grew up in a tough New York neighborhood without formal education) before finally transforming into an honest and earnest meditation on superstardom and artistry. Going in, I was wary that this would be just another puff piece on a Hollywood has-been. And while it does have its fair share of schmaltz, I now believe it's a well-deserved and long overdue ode to Stallone’s unwavering commitment to the power of movies.
It’s a toss-up between Stallone’s anecdote about working with Robert De Niro in 1997’s Cop Land, which is itself a mini masterclass on improvisational acting, and Stallone’s gut-punch of a closer, which proves he is a writer first before he’s an actor. The entire film is riveting, but these two parts in particular had me clapping at their sheer brilliance.
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