Apollo Creed
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Apollo Creed The Master of Disaster | |
---|---|
Rocky character | |
First appearance | Rocky (1976) |
Last appearance | Rocky IV (1985) |
Created by | Sylvester Stallone |
Portrayed by | Carl Weathers |
In-universe information | |
Nicknames | The Dancing Destroyer The King of Sting The Count of Monte Fisto The Thane of Pain The Prince of Punch The Master of Disaster The One and Only |
Title | World undisputed Heavyweight Champion |
Occupation |
|
Spouse | Mary Anne Creed |
Children | Adonis "Donnie" Creed Alex Creed Artemis Creed |
Relatives | Amara Creed (granddaughter) Bianca Creed (daughter-in-law) |
Apollo Creed | |
---|---|
Born | August 17, 1942 Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Died | August 31, 1985 (aged 43) |
Nationality | American |
Statistics | |
Weight(s) | Heavyweight |
Stance | Orthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 49 |
Wins | 47 |
Wins by KO | 46 |
Losses | 2 (1 loss in World Championship bout with Rocky Balboa and 1 in exhibition with Ivan Drago) |
Draws | 0 |
Apollo Creed is a fictional character from the Rocky franchise, portrayed by Carl Weathers. He appears in the first four Rocky films, serving as the main antagonist in Rocky and Rocky II, and later becoming one of the protagonists in Rocky III and Rocky IV. Sylvester Stallone, the writer and star of the Rocky series, stated that Jack Johnson was the inspiration for the character of Apollo Creed.[1] Protagonist Rocky Balboa—Creed's rival in Rocky and Rocky II—faces underdog odds, but he views Creed with respect, pointedly refusing the prodding of a reporter to trash-talk Apollo Creed, even after he publicly taunts Balboa by remarking "he's great."[2][3][4][5]
In Rocky, Creed cleans out his division of serious challengers but decides to fight Balboa for the fan spectacle as well as for the implied symbolism of fighting a man with an Italian background.[6] In the sequel film Rocky II, Balboa and Creed find themselves evenly matched in the ring, becoming friends in Rocky III. Creed had many nicknames, including "The King of Sting," "The Dancing Destroyer," "The Prince of Punch," "The Count of Monte Fisto," and most prominently "The Master of Disaster."[2]
Role in the series
[edit]Rocky (1976)
[edit]Apollo Creed first appears in the 1976 Oscar-winning film Rocky as the charismatic, intelligent, and undefeated 33-year-old World Heavyweight Champion. A planned bicentennial fight against number-one contender Mac Lee Green was scheduled for January 1, 1976; however, Green hurt his left hand in training, and other top-ranked contenders were either busy or claimed they didn't have enough time to get in shape. A frustrated Creed is unwilling to waste the time, effort, and money he's already invested in the fight, so he comes up with a novel idea he believes will generate publicity—he will offer an unknown local fighter an opportunity to battle for the title in a match in Philadelphia.[7]
Upon reviewing the local boxers in Philadelphia, Creed is drawn to a club fighter named Rocky Balboa, an Italian with a catchy nickname, "The Italian Stallion." Creed explains his interest in Rocky by saying, "Who discovered America? An Italian, right? What better way to celebrate its 200th birthday than to get it on with one of his descendants?" Creed brushes off his manager Tony "Duke" Evers' warning that he shouldn't fight the left-handed Rocky, pledging to knock him out in three rounds.[8] Despite Evers showing concern when he sees Balboa in a television interview punching sides of beef in a meat-packing plant, Creed puts more effort into giving everyone a good show than training for the bout. When the match takes place, Creed dresses up as both George Washington and Uncle Sam in the pre-fight festivities (with his matching trademark "stars and stripes" boxing shorts) and is in a jovial mood until Balboa knocks him down in the first round with a single uppercut, the first time Creed has been knocked down in his career.[9] He then endures a grueling 15-round fight with Balboa, who gets to his feet after Creed takes him down in the 14th round, which appeared to be the end of the match. This was the first time anyone had ever taken the champion the full 15 rounds.
Both fighters are beaten, bloodied, and bruised by the end of the bout – Balboa with severe eye damage and Creed with internal bleeding in his abdomen. Creed gains a controversial split decision victory, and neither fighter wants a rematch, at least not at that moment.
Rocky II (1979)
[edit]In the second film, despite promising there would not be a rematch, Creed demands a rematch against Balboa while in the hospital emergency room. The public opinion is that Creed fixed the fight against Balboa to retain his title, which leads to Creed's desire for a rematch to intensify against the pleas of his staff, who tell him to "let it go". Ignoring them, Creed challenges Balboa to a second fight on Thanksgiving 1976. By this time, Balboa had retired from boxing after being discharged from the hospital from his first fight and had married his girlfriend Adrian. Creed uses various humiliation tactics to coax Balboa out of retirement, which he accomplishes when Balboa and his trainer, Mickey Goldmill, accept the rematch. Creed taunts Balboa at the press conference, insisting that he would "drop him like a bad habit" and telling Balboa as he leaves, "Come November, you're mine!" In a press interview during training, he also insists that Balboa "cannot last five minutes in the ring with a superior athlete like [him]." Creed trains harder than ever before with the intention of punishing Balboa for the embarrassment he caused 11 months earlier. Mickey trains Rocky to become faster, using unusual methods like chasing and catching a chicken. He also instructs him to change his boxing stance from left-handed to right-handed to confuse Creed and to protect his damaged right eye.
Unlike their first fight, Creed dominates Balboa throughout most of the second fight, thwarting Rocky's strategy of fighting right-handed. Despite this, he is unable to make good on his promise of an early knockout victory, as Rocky absorbs his punches and manages to get up both times after being knocked down. By the final round, Creed is well ahead on points but is fatigued, and it is apparent that he cannot knock Balboa out. Creed takes a beating from Balboa. Not wanting a repeat of the first fight (and ignoring the pleas of his trainers), he vows to knock Balboa out rather than take the safer route by winning on points. At the beginning of the 15th round, he tells Rocky, "You're going down," to which Balboa replies, "No way." After going toe-to-toe for much of the final round, Creed is knocked down by Balboa, with Balboa falling down in exhaustion as well. Balboa gets up by the count of 9, but Creed is unable to pull himself up and is counted out, losing the match and the championship by knockout, his first professional loss.[10]
Creed retires from boxing soon after. Despite the loss, he regains the respect of the public, as he lost in a fair fight. The fight also results in Creed finally acknowledging Balboa's ability as a fighter, rather than seeing him as a fluke.
Rocky III (1982)
[edit]In the third film, a 40-year-old Apollo Creed appears at the first fight between James "Clubber" Lang, 28, and Rocky Balboa, 37, as a guest moderator. Before the match, the former champion Creed steps into the ring to greet the fighters. When he offers Lang a handshake, the latter slaps away Creed's hand and mockingly insists that he "don't want no has-been messin' in my corner." He further says, "You want to jump? Jump. Come on, Creed." When Creed walks away, Lang laughs at him and calls him a "chicken." This prompts Creed to tell Balboa to "give everybody a present and drop this chump." Following the match, in which Lang wins by a brutal second-round knockout, Balboa's beloved manager, Mickey, dies in the locker room. Determined in part to put the disrespectful brute in his place, Creed finds an apprehensive and bereaved Balboa at Mickey's gym. Despite hesitating at first, Balboa agrees to let Creed train him for a rematch against Lang, who laughs off the prospect of "one has-been teaching another" during a television interview. The pair subsequently travels to the "Tough Gym" in Los Angeles, where Creed used to train, in preparation for a rematch with Lang. Creed encourages Rocky not to ignore the naysayers who say he is too old but, instead, to refocus. During this talk, he states, "Now when we fought... you had that eye of the tiger".[11] This quote is referred to throughout the movie, including the film's theme song, "Eye of the Tiger" by Survivor. Creed mentions that Rocky will owe him "a big favor" once he wins. Rocky's training is geared toward making him quicker and more agile to counter the larger, stronger brawler. Creed even teaches his own fighting style to Rocky.[12] Rocky has trouble concentrating during his training, suffering from guilt over Mickey's demise and self-doubt. Adrian helps Rocky recognize this as a simple fear of losing again and convinces him that he can't let fear control his life and that he has to fight again, not to prove a point but to live without fear. Creed helps Rocky rediscover the fire that had won him the title, and which he had lost in the time leading up to the Lang fight. Creed calls this fire the "eye of the tiger."
Before the match begins, Creed expresses his confidence that Rocky will win. He gives Rocky his signature colors – his stars and stripes boxing trunks – to wear during the fight (telling him to wash them afterward). Just before the fight, Lang mocks Creed again and shoves him, nearly starting a brawl. Re-energized with Creed shadow boxing in his corner, Rocky regains his title with a three-round knockout of Lang. After his victory, Creed reveals his favor: a third fight with Rocky – not as a bloody fight between bitter rivals but as a private sparring match between friends. Rocky happily accepts the challenge. The film ends as each boxer hits the other at the same time, symbolizing the equality of their greatness. The result was not revealed until the 2015 film Creed, in which Rocky tells Apollo's son, Adonis, that his father won this fight.
Rocky IV (1985)
[edit]In 1985, Apollo, now 43 years old, comes out of a five-year retirement to fight mammoth Soviet Olympic boxer Ivan Drago, who has come to the United States on behalf of the Soviet Union to enter the world of professional boxing.[3] Not wanting the Soviets to appear superior to American fighters, the patriotic Apollo challenges Drago to an exhibition match and calls out Drago at the press conference that sets up their exhibition bout in the Jubilee showroom at the first MGM Grand in Las Vegas, on August 31, 1985.
Highlighted by a pre-match rendition of "Living in America" by James Brown, Apollo enters the arena from a descending scaffold overhead, dancing to the music in his old red, white, and blue Uncle Sam outfit. With Rocky, Duke, and Paulie in his corner, Apollo is overly confident that he can dispose of Drago with ease. However, Apollo is not ready for the extreme size and strength of the Russian. After taunting Drago and landing a number of ineffectual punches, Creed is pummeled badly in the first round. Rocky wants to stop the fight but Apollo refuses. Apollo adamantly tells Rocky not to stop the fight "no matter what!"
At the start of the second round, Drago pummels Creed with ease. Rocky again tries to stop the fight by throwing in the towel, but hesitates too long, giving Drago a chance to deliver (just as Rocky drops the towel) a fatal blow to Apollo, who dies in Rocky's arms in the middle of the ring.
An enraged Rocky then sets out to avenge Apollo's death by challenging Drago himself and agrees to an unsanctioned 15-round bout in the Soviet Union. Rocky again wears Apollo's stars-and-stripes boxing trunks. He succeeds as the film ends with Rocky winning the fight by knockout in the last round, with the Soviet premier and the Politburo looking on.
Rocky V (1990)
[edit]With his character's death, Carl Weathers departed the franchise after Rocky IV. In Rocky V, the fifth installment of the series, immediately after Rocky defeats Drago, Apollo's trainer Duke praises Rocky on his victory, saying that he made everyone proud, especially Apollo, by holding up his red, white, and blue trunks. Apollo was thereafter only mentioned briefly in the past tense, including a flashback scene between Mickey and Rocky before Balboa's first fight with Creed, in which Mickey says, "Apollo won't know what hit him." Rocky's pupil Tommy Gunn also claims to have been a fan of Rocky since his first fight with Apollo. Tommy was eventually allowed to wear Creed's trunks. There was a poster of Apollo and Rocky during the events of Rocky II in Rocky Jr.'s bedroom before the Balboas went bankrupt. During Tommy's fight with Union Cane, Rocky commented that it was like his own first fight with Apollo. Later, during Rocky's street fight with Tommy, he begins to hallucinate and sees images of Apollo's death at the hands of Drago, believing that he is about to suffer the same fate. However, a vision of Mickey telling him to get up gives Rocky the strength to win the street fight.
Rocky Balboa (2006)
[edit]In the sixth installment of the Rocky franchise, Rocky is seen paying tribute to Apollo by telling customers at his restaurant stories about his friendship and fights with him. In a deleted scene, when Rocky wakes up he sees Paulie sleeping and a photo of his first fight with Apollo, but his face is censored and Rocky's face is covered by a scrap of paper with Paulie's head. During the commentary before the Rocky vs. Mason Dixon fight, a montage of Rocky's opponents that omits his two fights against Apollo is shown.
Creed (2015)
[edit]In the seventh installment, it has been revealed that Creed had an affair and, from that, Adonis "Donnie" Johnson Creed was born. In 1998, after Adonis' biological mother's death in the late '90s, Apollo's widow, Mary Anne (Phylicia Rashad), adopts him. At a young age, not only does he possess the boxing skills of his father, but also his fiery temper. Seventeen years later, presumed to be a well-educated young man, Donnie (Michael B. Jordan) leaves his job to pursue a full-time career in boxing. He first seeks tutelage from Duke's son, "Lil' Duke" (Wood Harris), who runs the Delphi Boxing Academy. Duke refuses to work with Donnie to ensure his safety. Donnie, to his mother's dismay, moves to Philadelphia to seek out Rocky. While meeting up at Adrian's, Rocky is surprised when Donnie mentions a third fight between him and Apollo that happened behind closed doors (Rocky III) and presents himself as Apollo's son. Rocky compliments his father's boxing ability and reveals that Apollo won their third match.
When the word got out that Donnie is Apollo's illegitimate son, the media heavily publicized the story of his infidelity, which catches the eye of the trainer for the reigning light-heavyweight champion, "Pretty" Ricky Conlan (Tony Bellew). Both parties would want the fight to happen, however, on the condition that Donnie would assume his actual name instead of his mother's last name, Johnson, to which he agrees. Leading up to the fight, Rocky has been diagnosed with cancer, which greatly impacts Donnie's behavior, including being incarcerated for the night after a brawl at a club. While Rocky visits him in jail, Donnie angrily blames him for his father's death, while Rocky tries to calm him down and understand Apollo, who isn't there to defend himself. After getting his mind straight, Donnie makes a pact with Rocky that they would both fight their respective battles together.
In Liverpool, Donnie receives a gift from Mary Anne — boxing trunks that strongly resemble his father's trunks, which he passed to Rocky, who then passed them to Tommy "The Machine" Gunn. The fight presents many parallels to Rocky and Apollo's original fight, with Donnie assuming his trainer's role. Conlan presents an unrelenting attack on Donnie, in which he knocks him down. After a less-than-stellar introductory round, Donnie finally manages a right hook strong enough to cut Conlan by surprise. In the 11th round, after an intense flurry, Conlan manages a strong shot that seemingly knocks Donnie unconscious. While down, Donnie sees visions of his relationship with his girlfriend, Rocky's ailing composure, and finally, a scene of his father in his prime – motivating Donnie to return to his feet (and baffling Conlan and the audience).
Before the final round, Rocky is adamant on stopping the fight to save Donnie from the long-term effects of his injuries, a decision he contemplated 30 years after Apollo's death. However, Donnie wants to continue to fight to prove that he is not "a mistake." After the revelation, Rocky tells Donnie that, though he's never had the chance to thank Apollo for stepping in when Mickey died, it does not match what he's done for him and that he loves him.[clarification needed] In the closing seconds of the fight, Donnie finally unleashes a style that is comparable to his father's and Rocky's, and manages to knock down Conlan for the first time in his career. A split decision determines Conlan the winner of the fight, and gives Donnie the ultimate respect, telling him that he's "the future of this division." During the post-fight interview, HBO Boxing analyst Max Kellerman asks Donnie what he would like to say to his father, to which Donnie tearfully says that he loves him and he knows he didn't leave him on purpose, in which he concludes the interview saying he's "proud to be a Creed."
Creed II (2018)
[edit]In the three years since the last film, Donnie has become WBC World Heavyweight Champion. Ivan Drago, who is destitute and divorced from his wife Ludmilla as a result of his loss to Rocky, has trained his son, Viktor, to be a boxer, hoping to restore his reputation vicariously through Viktor. Viktor rises in the ranks and eventually challenges Donnie to a match. The match is billed as "Creed vs. Drago II" and will be held at MGM Grand, the same place where Ivan killed Apollo, with many speculating it could end the same way. Ivan meets Rocky and taunts him by saying Viktor will break Donnie just like he broke Apollo. Rocky, who is still burdened by guilt over not stopping Apollo's match with Ivan, encourages Donnie to refuse the match. But Donnie insists on proving himself, so Rocky refuses to train him. During the weigh-in, Ivan mocks Donnie for being shorter than Apollo.
Viktor dominates Donnie in the match but gets disqualified for attacking Donnie while he was down. Donnie is hospitalized, with many noting he is lucky to have survived. When Donnie recovers, he and Rocky reconcile and Rocky agrees to train him for a rematch against Viktor, to be held in Russia.
Donnie has Mary Anne, his wife Bianca, and Rocky in his corner. Thanks to his training, Donnie puts on a better performance. By the 10th round, Viktor is exhausted and unable to defend himself, so Ivan throws in the towel to save his son, resulting in Donnie's victory.
Donnie and Bianca later take their infant daughter, Amara, to visit Apollo's grave. Donnie makes peace with the memory of his father and the burden of carrying on his legacy.
Creed III (2023)
[edit]After Adonis' childhood friend Damian is released from prison and is looking for an immediate title shot, he asks Adonis, now a promoter, that if Apollo could give an underdog (Rocky) a title shot, why Adonis couldn't do the same?
After suffering a series of strokes, but before dying, Mary Anne talks with Adonis and then talks to Apollo.[clarification needed] She is angry that he left her but tells Apollo that he brought her a son named Adonis, and this allowed her to forgive him. It is unclear if this is for his dying or his infidelity or both.
Characterization
[edit]Anthony Digioia writes that the storyline of Rocky "gives enough time to Apollo Creed and his camp of men to express their lack of concern for Balboa as a challenge" and that the group sees Balboa "as a weak opponent".[13] John Hansen calls Apollo "an over-the-top, glistening specimen in this first movie, a carnival-barking cartoon mixed with athletic perfection" whose ring entrance in American flag-colored George Washington garb is the biggest indication that the sequels would feature opponents with "deliciously evocative names and billboard-sized personalities."[14] Richard Corliss of Time notes the original film's "boxing-movie clichés — the grizzled trainer (Burgess Meredith), the shy, sallow girlfriend (Talia Shire), the unbeatable champ Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers, briefly a linebacker for the Oakland Raiders)".[15]
Liam Gaughan of Collider writes that Rocky II addresses an underdog becoming an icon and how an "arrogant celebrity" can cope with being overshadowed by the former champ. He credited the film with equally considering both Creed and Rocky's perspectives. According to Gaughan, Creed knows his career is challenged and notes that although the film "doesn’t specifically mention the racial pressure of being matched by a white man on a national stage, it's an impossible factor to ignore that lingers over the story, and Weathers delivers a much more vulnerable depiction of the heavyweight champ."[16]
Andrew Bujalski of The New Yorker contrasts Apollo with Clubber Lang: "Apollo Creed had been nearly as sympathetic and charismatic as our hero, but Lang is all comic-book villainy."[17] John Orquiola writes that Clubber "had every right to be confident because he destroyed Balboa in a way even Apollo never could" and opines that Creed was never a bad guy despite being "a proud and arrogant champion." Orquiola further writes that Creed respected Rocky and "was steadfastly on Team Rocky while Clubber hated them both."[18] Rita Kempley of the New York Times compares Creed's appearance to Sugar Ray Seales and observes that Creed and Rocky learn that "training together is the sweat bond of friendship."[19] Ewan Gleadow writes that the third film gives a sense that its struggling story is aided by "placing characters in familiar scenarios but in different roles" and cites Apollo and Rocky as "together again, but as allies rather than enemies."[20]
After three films in which he functions as little more than a means to illustrate Rocky’s greatness, Apollo is offered the highest of honors: He dies to provide the franchise’s white protagonist with motivation and character development. In almost every sense the movies can communicate, Apollo is deemed a fraudulent champion.
Tom Reimann writes that Apollo in Rocky IV is so "desperate to cling to his former glory that he makes it his personal mission to publicly embarrass Drago, a man who has done absolutely nothing to offend Apollo beyond merely existing." Reimann describes Apollo as having a "near-psychotic temper" during the press conference and inserting himself into the conflict between Rocky and Drago as the latter was in the United States to fight Rocky.[22] /Film credits the director's cut of the fourth film with better explaining why Apollo "is so eager to step into the ring with Drago — a decision that will ultimately cost him his life." According to /Film, Apollo starts the film having "seemingly everything he needs" but has an emptiness as he misses being World Heavyweight Champion and being relevant.[23]
Adam Serwer views Creed as having "profoundly altered the character of Apollo Creed" and that Coogler's film accomplishes a redemption for Apollo "in several ways: through cameos from sports reporters discussing Creed as one of the greatest boxers ever, through the casual manner in which Philly’s denizens recognize and revere the name, and through Rocky, who acknowledges that Creed defeated him in their final, secret fight."[21] Had Apollo survived, Carl Weathers believes his character would advise Adonis against boxing but would agree to train him as there was no one "better to show his son the ropes than the greatest."[24]
Fighting style
[edit]In the film series, Apollo Creed is known as one of the world's best fighters, possessing a combination of great speed and strength. His powerful jab and emphasis on agility complement his flashy personality and outfit.[3] Creed focuses on a long-reaching jab to slowly wear his opponents down. He makes good use of long punches instead of strong uppercuts or hooks, and is constantly moving, trying to take as little damage as possible while confusing his opponent. In terms of weaknesses, his only major drawback appears to be his deep sense of pride and strong self-confidence, which allows Rocky to get an edge over him in the ring by surprising Creed in their first encounter.[7]
Apollo Creed's personality and fighting style has been compared to real-life boxer Muhammad Ali.[25] The original film's release in 1976 also happened while Muhammad Ali was reigning champion.
Reception
[edit]In 2013 Bleacher Report ranked Apollo the 3rd-best fictional boxer, only behind Rocky and Little Mac.[26] In 2022, Screen Rant listed Apollo as the second greatest villain in the Rocky and Creed films, only behind Ivan Drago.[27] W. Kamau Bell praised Apollo as "the rare Black character in the movie who was clearly way smarter than the white character in the movie" that 1970s films did not often have.[28]
Stephen Carty cited Apollo training Rocky in the third film as "a nice twist" and added that "more Weathers screen-time is always good".[29] Marcus Irving writes that a positive of Mick's death in the third film was "that Apollo Creed becomes a much larger part of the film, becoming Rocky’s new trainer" and observed the interactions "between Stallone and Weathers in Creed’s old training grounds are the closest that the film comes to feeling emotionally resonant."[30] Reviewing Rocky IV: Rocky Vs Drago, Sean Price hailed Weathers' performance as the "best and most surprising revelation to come out of this new version" and called Weathers "the only actor here that shows any depth in their performance," comparing his performance to that of Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler.[31]
References
[edit]- ^ "Trump pardons late black boxing champion Jack Johnson". Reuters. May 24, 2018. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
- ^ a b Jacobson, Matthew Frye (2009). Roots Too: White Ethnic Revival in Post-Civil Rights America. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674039063.
- ^ a b c Palmer, William J. (1995). The Films of the Eighties: A Social History. SIU Press. p. 220. ISBN 9780809320295.
- ^ Soto, Isabel; Johnson, Violet Showers (2011). Western Fictions, Black Realities: Meanings of Blackness and Modernities. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 277. ISBN 9783643901095.
- ^ Briley, Ron; Schoenecke, Michael K.; Carmichael, Deborah A. (October 17, 2014). All-Stars and Movie Stars: Sports in Film and History. University Press of Kentucky. p. 211. ISBN 9780813159836.
- ^ Crosson, Seán (July 18, 2013). Sport and Film. Routledge. p. 1937. ISBN 9781135167455.
- ^ a b Young, Black, Rich, and Famous: The Rise of the NBA, the Hip Hop Invasion. U of Nebraska Press. March 2008. p. 60. ISBN 978-0803233720.
- ^ Powell, Larry; Garrett (December 5, 2013). The Films of John G. Avildsen: Rocky, The Karate Kid and Other Underdogs. Tom. p. 75. ISBN 9780786466924.
- ^ Hamscha, Susanne (May 2013). The Fiction of America: Performance and the Cultural Imaginary in Literature. Campus Verlag. p. 59. ISBN 9783593398723.
- ^ Roberts, Randy; Olson, James S. (April 1991). Winning is the Only Thing: Sports in America Since 1945. JHU Press. p. 180. ISBN 9780801842405.
- ^ Jordan, Chris (2003). Movies and the Reagan Presidency: Success and Ethics. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 94. ISBN 9780275979676.
- ^ Bondanella, Peter (December 29, 2005). Hollywood Italians: Dagos, Palookas, Romeos, Wise Guys, and Sopranos. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 125. ISBN 9780826415448.
- ^ Digioia, Anthony (January 9, 2016). ""Rocky" Movie Review". The Silverscreen Analysis.
- ^ "Countdown to 'Creed': Boxer's underdog journey parallels Stallone's in all-time masterpiece 'Rocky' (1976) (Movie review)". Reviews From My Couch. November 16, 2015.
- ^ Corliss, Richard (September 22, 2011). "Rocky". Time.
- ^ Gaughan, Liam (November 12, 2021). "Why 'Rocky II' Is The Underappreciated Gem Of The Franchise". Collider.
- ^ Bujalski, Andrew (November 10, 2015). "A Unified Theory of the "Rocky" Movies". New Yorker.
- ^ Orquiola, John (June 29, 2021). "Why Clubber Lang Was Rocky's Worst Enemy (Not Drago)". Screen Rant.
- ^ Kempley, Rita (May 28, 1982). "'Rocky III': Punched Out". The Washington Post.
- ^ "ROCKY III REVIEW". Cult Following. May 10, 2021.
- ^ a b Serwer, Adam (November 28, 2018). "How Creed Forever Changed the Rocky Series". The Atlantic.
- ^ Reimann, Tom (November 27, 2020). "Nuclear Take: Apollo Creed Deserved to Lose in 'Rocky IV'". Collider.
- ^ Evangelista, Chris (November 21, 2021). "Rocky IV Director's Cut Review: Say Bye To Paulie's Robot, Say Hello To A (Mostly) Better Movie". slashfilm.com.
- ^ Cotter, Padraig (January 7, 2022). "Carl Weathers On The Advice Apollo Creed Would Have Given To His Son Adonis". Screen Rant.
- ^ Campbell, Morgan (August 13, 2021). "Nico Ali Walsh, a Grandson of Muhammad Ali, to Make Boxing Debut". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2022.
- ^ Mcrae, Kevin (May 10, 2013). "Ranking the 10 Best Fictional Boxers in History". Bleacher Report.
- ^ Sherlock, Ben (January 26, 2022). "Every Villain From The Rocky & Creed Movies, Ranked". Screen Rant.
- ^ Bell, W. Kamau (December 2, 2015). "'Creed' Is The Rocky Film 21st-Century America Needs". Medium.
- ^ Carty, Stephen. "Rocky III". Eye For Film.
- ^ Irving, Marcus (November 20, 2018). "The Prediction is Pain: Rocky III (1982)". Talk Film Society.
- ^ Price, Sean (November 11, 2021). "Stallone releases a recut (but surprisingly better) Rocky IV". The Spool.