Close Menu
The Industry Highlighter MagazineThe Industry Highlighter Magazine
    Trending
    • Rocky Is Officially Changing Formats After 50 Years
    • Dragon Noodles
    • Ariana Grande’s Ex Ricky Alvarez Attends ‘Eternal Sunshine’ Tour After Ethan Slater Split
    • Bluegrass Star Billy Strings Announces Metal Bands for His Ionia Freak Fair
    • Ravi Mohan’s Karathey Babu Locks Theatrical Release
    • PlayStation Officially Drops 2 Huge Free RPGs, No PS Plus Required
    • Big Tigger Appears to Assault Wife Alicia on Ring Camera Video
    • Best Songs of the Week: Staff Picks June 19th
    The Industry Highlighter Magazine
    • Home
    • Travel/Adventure
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Film/Tv
    • Food
    • Money Business
    • Music
    The Industry Highlighter Magazine
    You are at:Home»Film/Tv»Rocky Is Officially Changing Formats After 50 Years
    Film/Tv

    Rocky Is Officially Changing Formats After 50 Years

    Team_The Industry Highlighter Magazine By Team_The Industry Highlighter MagazineJune 27, 2026No Comments14 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Copy Link LinkedIn Email Threads


    50 years ago, Sylvester Stallone broke onto the scene with Rocky. The 1976 sports movie became a global sensation, earning $225 million and receiving 10 Oscar nominations, winning three, including Best Picture. As a result, the Rocky movie franchise was immediately born, one that Stallone has been directly involved with for eight of nine movies.

    He wrote and starred in the first six movies and directed Rocky II, Rocky III, Rocky IV, and Rocky Balboa. Stallone made the first four sequels in just 11 years, before taking a 16-year break from playing the Italian Stallion again. And while 2006 seemed to be the end, 2015 brought Creed and a new take on the boxing franchise.

    From the very first entry and through the latest (2023’s Creed III), the franchise has remained incredibly popular. With $1.9 billion made at the box office, the series continues to be a major priority for Amazon MGM Studios. That’s why new Rocky and Creed projects keep entering development, such as Creed 4 and a Drago spinoff.

















    From a Philly Club Fighter to Adonis Creed · Eight Questions
    How Well Do You Know Rocky?
    “Yo, Adrian — I did it!”

    🥊The Italian StallionStallone’s no-hoper, 1976

    🤝The Corner MenAdrian, Paulie & Mickey

    🏃The Steps72 stone steps, Philly

    🐅Eye of the TigerClubber, Apollo, Drago

    👊The Creed EraAdonis & Rocky, 2015–

    01

    In March 1975, broke (he later claimed $106 in the bank) and on the verge of selling his dog, Sylvester Stallone watched journeyman club fighter Chuck Wepner go nearly fifteen rounds with Muhammad Ali and immediately drafted the Rocky screenplay in roughly three-and-a-half days. Producers Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff loved it and offered him a then-extraordinary $360,000 for the script alone — an offer Stallone famously turned down. Why?




    ✓ Correct! Stallone refused unless he played Rocky himself. Winkler and Chartoff offered up to $360,000 (some accounts say the figure climbed even higher) on the condition that they cast a name actor — Ryan O’Neal, James Caan, Burt Reynolds and Robert Redford were all floated. Stallone turned it down repeatedly and the producers eventually relented, agreeing to make the film for a much smaller $1 million budget with Stallone in the lead. Rocky grossed $225 million worldwide and won Best Picture — the most famous “hold out for the lead” bet in modern Hollywood history.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is that Stallone refused to sell the script unless he could star in it as Rocky. The producers wanted a known name — Ryan O’Neal, James Caan, Burt Reynolds and Robert Redford were all considered — and offered up to a reported $360,000 for the script alone. Stallone, with $106 in the bank, refused until they relented. He directing it (option A) never came up; John G. Avildsen directed and won the Oscar.

    02

    The reigning heavyweight champion who picks an unknown Philly club fighter for a bicentennial-themed publicity-stunt title bout — a showman modelled loosely on Muhammad Ali, dressed up as Uncle Sam and George Washington for his ring entrance — is Apollo Creed. The actor who plays him was a former Oakland Raiders linebacker. Name him.




    ✓ Correct! Carl Weathers (1948–2024). Weathers was a real-deal athlete: a linebacker for the Oakland Raiders in 1970–71, then for the BC Lions in the CFL, before acting work began trickling in. He landed Apollo at 28 with virtually no screen experience and immediately became one of the most charismatic American sports villains-turned-allies of the ‘70s and ‘80s. Weathers reprised Apollo in Rocky II (1979), Rocky III (1982) and Rocky IV (1985) — in which Apollo is killed by Ivan Drago — and went on to play Dillon in Predator (1987) and, decades later, Greef Karga in The Mandalorian. Tony Burton played Apollo’s trainer Duke.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Carl Weathers. Tony Burton played Apollo’s longtime trainer Duke — he’s in all six original Rocky films and Creed II. Yaphet Kotto and Roger E. Mosley were ‘70s/‘80s leading Black actors but never appeared in Rocky. Weathers, a former Oakland Raiders linebacker turned actor, played Apollo across Rocky I through IV.

    03

    Burgess Meredith’s grizzled, raspy-voiced trainer Mickey Goldmill — the elderly former boxer who runs the Front Street Gym and adopts Rocky as “the best damn fighter I’ve seen in years” — is the emotional anchor of the early Rocky films. In which film does he suffer a fatal heart attack in the locker room before Rocky’s rematch with Clubber Lang?




    ✓ Correct! Rocky III (1982). Mickey collapses in the dressing room after a pre-fight altercation between Clubber Lang and the Balboa camp and dies shortly afterward in Rocky’s arms — the scene that arguably remains the franchise’s most-quoted emotional moment. Meredith was 75 at the time. He appears posthumously in flashback in Rocky V (1990) and again, in a hallucinated speech, in Rocky Balboa (2006); the “you was robbed” / “but you ain’t a fighter” scene in the latter is one of Stallone’s personal favourites from the entire franchise.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Rocky III (1982). Mickey collapses in the dressing room after the pre-fight altercation with Clubber Lang and dies in Rocky’s arms before the first Lang bout. He appears posthumously in flashback in Rocky V and in a hallucinated locker-room speech in Rocky Balboa (2006), but his death scene is Rocky III.

    04

    Rocky III’s terrifying challenger Clubber Lang — the “baddest man on the planet,” who taunts Rocky with the one-word fight prediction “Pain” and out-trains him in the run-up — was played by a former Chicago bodyguard with a Mohawk, gold chains and almost no acting experience. Stallone cast him after he won a televised toughest-bouncer contest. Name him.




    ✓ Correct! Mr. T (born Laurence Tureaud). Stallone first saw him on NBC’s 1980 “America’s Toughest Bouncer” competition and cast him with virtually no screen experience. Rocky III made him a household name and led straight into his role as B.A. Baracus on The A-Team the following year (1983). The trap here is Hulk Hogan, who really is in Rocky III — as “Thunderlips,” the gigantic wrestler Rocky fights in a charity bout in the film’s opening — but he isn’t Clubber. Clubber Lang is Mr. T, and his “Pain” pre-fight prediction is one of the most-quoted lines in ‘80s American film.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Mr. T. The trap is Hulk Hogan, who genuinely does appear in Rocky III as “Thunderlips,” the absurdly large wrestler Rocky faces in a charity bout early in the film — but he isn’t Clubber Lang. Ken Norton and Joe Frazier were both real-life Ali rivals who Apollo Creed was loosely modelled on, but neither acted in the Rocky films. Mr. T is Clubber.

    05

    Rocky IV (1985) opens with a brutal exhibition bout in which Apollo Creed — coming out of retirement to fight a 6′5″ Soviet champion in Las Vegas — is beaten to death in the ring while Rocky watches helplessly from the corner. The Soviet boxer Ivan Drago (“I must break you”) was played by a then-27-year-old Swedish actor with a Fulbright scholarship in chemical engineering, making his Hollywood debut. Name him.




    ✓ Correct! Dolph Lundgren. He really did have a Fulbright scholarship in chemical engineering at MIT, which he abandoned to take the role. The training scenes were brutal — Lundgren reportedly hit Stallone so hard during a fight rehearsal that Stallone was hospitalized for nine days with a swollen heart. Brigitte Nielsen also appears in Rocky IV — as Ludmilla Drago, Ivan’s wife — and married Stallone shortly before the film’s release. Schwarzenegger and Van Damme are the obvious ‘80s muscular-European-villain confusions; both belong to other franchises (Conan, Bloodsport).

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Dolph Lundgren. Brigitte Nielsen, option D, is in Rocky IV — she plays Ludmilla, Drago’s wife (and married Stallone in real life shortly before the film’s release) — but she isn’t Drago. Schwarzenegger and Van Damme are the obvious ‘80s muscle-villain confusions but neither was ever in a Rocky film. Drago is Lundgren’s star-making, scholarship-abandoning Hollywood debut.

    06

    For Rocky III, Stallone originally cut the training montage and end credits to Queen’s “Another One Bites the Dust” — but the band declined to license it. He then commissioned a Chicago bar band to write a replacement to order. The result spent six weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1982, won a Grammy and was nominated for the Best Original Song Oscar. Name the song.




    ✓ Correct! “Eye of the Tiger” by Survivor — written by Frankie Sullivan and Jim Peterik specifically for Rocky III after Stallone sent them a temp cut scored to “Another One Bites the Dust.” It spent six weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in mid-1982, won the Grammy for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, and is one of the rare TV/film theme songs that’s become genuinely synonymous with its source material. The three other options are all real Rocky-franchise songs: Bill Conti’s “Gonna Fly Now” is the original 1976 fanfare; “Burning Heart” (Survivor again) and “No Easy Way Out” (Robert Tepper) are both from Rocky IV.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is “Eye of the Tiger” by Survivor. The other three are all real Rocky-franchise songs: Bill Conti’s “Gonna Fly Now” is the original 1976 trumpet fanfare; “Burning Heart” (Survivor) and “No Easy Way Out” (Robert Tepper) are both from Rocky IV. The 1982 chart-topper Stallone commissioned after Queen turned him down is “Eye of the Tiger.”

    07

    Rocky entered the 1977 Academy Awards with ten nominations — including, famously, two for Stallone himself (Best Actor and Best Original Screenplay). It won three. Best Picture and Best Director (for John G. Avildsen) are well known. What was Rocky’s third Oscar that night?




    ✓ Correct! Best Film Editing — for Richard Halsey and Scott Conrad. Stallone famously lost both of his nominations: Best Actor went to Peter Finch (posthumously) for Network, and Best Original Screenplay went to Paddy Chayefsky (also for Network). “Gonna Fly Now,” despite being one of the most recognisable pieces of film music ever written, lost Best Song to “Evergreen” from A Star Is Born. Talia Shire’s Adrian was nominated for Best Actress and lost to Faye Dunaway (Network again). The 1977 Oscars were essentially Rocky vs. Network — and the night Rocky won Best Picture is still the highest-profile Best Picture upset of the decade.

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Best Film Editing (Richard Halsey and Scott Conrad). Stallone famously lost both of his nominations — Best Actor went to Peter Finch for Network, Best Original Screenplay went to Paddy Chayefsky (also Network). “Gonna Fly Now” lost Best Song to “Evergreen” from A Star Is Born. So Rocky’s three wins are: Picture, Director and Editing.

    08

    The 2015 soft-reboot Creed — in which Apollo Creed’s illegitimate son Adonis Johnson (Michael B. Jordan) seeks out an aging, retired Rocky in Philadelphia and asks him to train him — earned Stallone his second Oscar nomination (Best Supporting Actor) 39 years after his first. It was directed by a then-29-year-old filmmaker who’d come straight off Fruitvale Station. Name him.




    ✓ Correct! Ryan Coogler. He’d made Fruitvale Station with Michael B. Jordan in 2013 (at age 26) and parlayed the relationship and Sundance buzz into the Creed pitch — reportedly walking into MGM with a video of his father (a Rocky superfan) crying about Apollo’s death. Coogler co-wrote the script with Aaron Covington. Creed earned Stallone an Oscar nomination 39 years after his Rocky nod — he lost to Mark Rylance for Bridge of Spies. Steven Caple Jr. (option A) is the trap: he directed Creed II (2018). Coogler went on to make Black Panther (2018), Wakanda Forever (2022) and Sinners (2025).

    ✗ Wrong. The answer is Ryan Coogler. The trap is Steven Caple Jr. (option A) — he directed Creed II (2018), not the original. Antoine Fuqua and F. Gary Gray weren’t involved. Coogler made Creed at 29, fresh off Fruitvale Station (2013, also with Michael B. Jordan); he’s since gone on to Black Panther, Wakanda Forever and Sinners.

    The Bell Has Rung · Final Scorecard
    Your Title Standing

    🥊

    / 8

    Italian Stallion — or down for the count?

    But after spending 50 years exclusively exploring this boxing world on the big screen, Rocky is about to change formats. Amazon MGM’s desire to expand the series into new territories is ushering in a major shift, one that could continue to define the franchise for years to come.

    The First Rocky TV Show Is On The Way

    Sylvester Stallone punching toward the camera while training in Rocky

    Amazon MGM are officially working to bring fans the first TV show set in the Rocky universe. While Stallone has floated the idea of a prequel series since 2019, the concept has never gained much traction. That show may still see the light of day eventually, but Amazon has prioritized a spinoff series called Delphi.

    Announced in 2025, the series has already been picked up for a full season. As suggested by the title, Delphi will focus on the iconic gym that Apollo and Adonis Creed have trained in, the same one that Adonis came to own by the events of Creed III. The spinoff show has Marco Ramirez (Daredevil season 2) attached as the showrunner, with Michael B. Jordan producing.

    Production on Delphi is underway, having started filming in May in Los Angeles. Wood Harris returns as Tony “Little Duke” Evers, who runs Delphi Boxing Academy. Delphi‘s cast also includes Demián Bichir, André Holland, Theo Rossi, Andre Royo, and a collection of younger stars set to play rising boxers who train at Delphi for a shot at becoming the sport’s newest stars.

    An official release date has yet to be confirmed for Delphi, but it likely will debut on Prime Video in 2027, so long as production goes smoothly. And when it does, the Rocky franchise will no longer be exclusive to movie theaters. Long-form storytelling done through TV will enter the mix.

    Rocky’s Expansion To TV Will Continue


    Michael B Jordan preparing to enter the ring as Adonis Creed in Creed 3
    Michael B Jordan preparing to enter the ring as Adonis Creed in Creed 3.
    Eli Ade /© MGM /Courtesy Everett Collection

    Delphi will not be a one-off venture for the Rocky franchise, either. In an effort to expand the franchise and reach more audiences, Amazon and Jordan have their eyes on making multiple other TV shows that will be exclusive to Prime Video. Stallone also has a deal with Amazon through Balboa Productions that could eventually bring his ideas for new projects to fruition.

    Reports have brought a few different in-development TV shows to light over the years. After Creed III‘s success, Jordan and Amazon began talking about making an anime series set in this universe. Jordan also confirmed in 2025 that a show revolving around Adonis’ daughter, Amara, has been picked up by Amazon. Those reports also noted another live-action companion series, which may have become Delphi.

    Given Jordan’s love of anime and the prominent role that Amara is poised to have in the franchise’s future, both of those shows are likely to be made so long as Amazon finds success moving Rocky to this format with Delphi. That result would also certainly spark ideas for fresh ideas. Even the cancelled Drago film could be reworked into a new Rocky show, potentially.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Team_The Industry Highlighter Magazine
    • Website

    Related Posts

    PlayStation Officially Drops 2 Huge Free RPGs, No PS Plus Required

    June 27, 2026

    Xbox Game Pass Members Only Have 24 Hours Left To Play 3 Free Games

    June 27, 2026

    Malenia Officially Releases Winter 2026

    June 27, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Categories
    • Celebrities
    • COCO'S GOSPEL
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Film/Tv
    • FILM/TV
    • Food
    • Health and Wellness
    • Money Business
    • Music
    • NEW RELEASES
    • RALEIGH/DURHAM NEWS
    • Travel/Adventure
    • Uncategorized
    • WORLD NEWS
    Copyright © 2024 Industryhighlighter.com All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    • About IHM
    • Advertise With Us!
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.