The Michigan Daily-Saturday, August 4, 1979-Page 7 'ROCKY H' The sequel steals By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Second of Two Parts At first glance, Sylvester Stallone would seem almost the antithesis of The In-Laws' Arthur Hiller: The creative outsider, champion of the small budget and enemy of cinematic bloat, the anti- establishment independent under no one's thumb but his own. Stallone, for all his well-advertised ego, appeared the embodiment of what a filmmaker could achieve if the studio monoliths would simply leave him alone. You couldn't help but root for him even if you had reservations about his work. He seemed a quintessential, unapologetic nose-thumber. Which is precisely why Rocky II (just departed after a successful Ann Arbor run) stands as the most venal, melan- choly cinematic event of the summer. Presumably any work of "art" needs inborn grounds for existing, some pur- pose underlying its tangibility; yet by these standards there seems to be no visible reason to have made Rocky II at all. CERTAINLY THIS accusation could be applied to a great many Hollywood opuses, yet we'd come to hope for more from the maker of Rocky. Stallone's otfginal may have been structurally flawed and often sentimentalized, yet you never lost the feeling that it was at least honest, that its creator was setting his creative sights somewhere beyond simple pursuit of the almighty buck. The picture rang with a gritty idealism that swept you up in it regardless of your most resolute, cynical resolve to remain dispassionate. For all the at- tendant publicity it received, Rocky remained a lovely cinematic innocent. One can only speculate about whether Stallone suddenly developed cold feet following the subsequent failures of F*I*S*T and Paradise Alley, deciding that perhaps now was not the moment, financially speaking, to break new thematic ground. For whatever reason, what he's ultimately given us-amidst bellowing fanfare ("the story continues ...")-is a retread and a cheat. Rocky II doesn't continue, it conveniently doubles back on itself, calculatingly running what amounts to an instant replay on the original. Yet despite the surface kinship, this sequel proves every bit as avariciously cunning in form and spirit as the original was ar- tlessly spontaneous. Stallone the graceful primitive has lost his virginity. As Rockey II commences, we find Rocky Balboa celebrating his losing but self-acquitting ring heroics against champion Apollo Creed in flamboyant fashion. He announces his retirement from the ring, finally marries his love Adrian (Talia Shire), pours his fight purse into a new house and a snazzy sports car and settles down into matrimonial contentment. UNFORTUNATELY (and in sharp contrast to the athlete-stockbrokers of pro sports today), Rocky finds himself unable to capitalize on his new-won fame. Carrying himself in a stum- blebum fashion that would have Pete Rose or Irvin Johnson doubled up with laughter, Rocky flubs TV commercials, job interviews, and is finally, un- believably relegated back to his old position of mopping the floor at his ex- manager's training gym. Rocky en- dures the abject humiliation with his humble, sunny personality intact, nobly, almost breezily, enduring the slings and arrows of his once-again u cheats, blue collar malcontent into an Ed Nor- ton grotesquerie whose only conflict in life seems the pursuit of bigger and bet- ter ice cream cones. IF ROCKY II'S personalities are wearisome, its plot logic is downright enervating. Early on we learn that Rocky sustained enough eye damage in the first Creed fight to force his retirement; if he were ever to climb in- to the ring with the champ again, Mickey dolefully warns, Creed would at least blind and probably kill him. Along the way, though, this stern medical proclamation is forgotten by all the principals, who one by one urge our now-handicapped protagonist to an- swer that bell again. "I think we should knock his block off!" asserts the sud- denly amnesiac Mickey following a particularly insulting press conference and lies himself, now the world must.revere him as well. In the process of ego transition, our hero sheds his everyman trappings and regenerates into nothing less than the cinematic equivalent of God-a transmutation that could obviously ap- ply to Stallone the writer/director/star as well. ALAS, STALLONE'S directional abilities are far from godlike. While Rocky I director John Avildsen's visuals were unabashedly, swarthily inventive, Stallone's are slick, manipulative and dull. There's a pasty, waxen quality to everything he shows us, a lack of spontaneity every bit as sterile as the original was lively. About the only real excitement comes from the film's climactic fight sequence, and even here the apocalyptic final round is so likea tag-team wrestling match that you don't know whether to cheer or laugh at what's happening in the ring. Stallone pumps up a lot of self- generated PR these days over his commitment to "positive" films: "If I have a mission, it is to create pictures that make audiences feel good . . . I don't want to leave a theatre feeling worse than when I went in.. . I want to be uplifted by entertainment." For the record, I left Rocky II feeling lousy and cheated. Anyone can push a metaphoric button and make an audience salivate on cue; the soporific craftsman Arthur Hiller knows it, and it's now obvious that, for all his moral/intellectual posturing, Stallone has learned the same lesson all too well. "Not everybody gets corrupted," says Tracy at the end of Woody Allen's Manhattan-but maybe almost everybody. Sly, we hardly knew ye. Join. the Arts Page THE CLIMACTIC title fight between Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) and the champ (Carl Weathers) provides "Rocky II's" only genuine, unabashed excitement. sneering compatriots until he ultimately screws up his resolve, doffs his retirement pledge and mop bucket and climbs back in the ring for his inevitable rematch with the champ. As he fleshes out this predictable rerun, Stallone takes the easy road at every turn. His characters are not ex- panded, they are reduced; they become virtual wax caricatures of their original selves. His proud protagonist, originally a crude but deeply complex and often bitter character, is minimalized into a one-dimensional Mr. Nice Guy-friend to the old, in- spiration to the young (especially the mob of urchins he leads Pied Piper-like through the streets of Philadelphia in an insufferably gratuitous reprise of the Rocky I theme song). The same ellipsis strikes down his manager, Mickey (Burgess Meredith), who is mellowed from . a rancorously believable hard-nose into a fallaciously lovable old salt. The independent- leaning Adrian becomes the epitome of loving, live-for-your-man womanhood, while her brother Paulien(Burt Young) is diluted from an erratic, frustrated taunt by Creed. Even the pacifistic Adrian sees the light: After making a miracle recovery from a days-long coma following childbirth, she shines her lustrous brown eyes up at Rocky's prayerful, tear-stained face and bloodlustingly declares: "I have one word for you: Win!" And here lies the most important philosophical dichotomy between Rocky I and II. Simply going the route with the champ was enough for the un- tainted Rocky; to Creed's manager's rematch query, he responded proudly: "Don't want one!" Winning wasn't everything-proving one's worth as a human being was enough. In Rocky II the standards have changed: Our hero and his entourage no longer just want a piece of the pie-they want it all. "Win" is the determining gospel; it isn't suf- ficient anymore for Rocky just to love John Schlesmeer's 19 MIDNIGHT COWBOY DUSTIN HOFFMAN, JON VOIGHT, BRENDA VACCARO, and SYLVIA MILES in a powerful but sensitive treatment of the once taboed subject of male pros- titution. It vividly captures the squalid Times Square atmosphere and the unlikely friendship between a Texas stud and a tubercular, Manhattan-wise waif. Screenplay by Wazdo Sazt ("Coming Home") from the novel by James - Leo Herlihy. Sunday Free Showing; Murnou's TABU (at 8:00) Friday: Truffaut's STOLEN KISSES CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH AUD The Ann Arber Film Cogperetnve Presents at MLB SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 CARNAL KNOWLEDGE (Mike Nichols, 1971) ' TA 10:20-MLR3 This compelling film examines two friends from their college days on. In a blackly humorous screenplay by Jules Feiffer, Sandy (ART GARFUNKEL) and Jonathan (JACK NICHOLSON) embark on a sod odyssey from sex-hungry adolescents to sexually bewildered adults. Feiffer is painfully funny about the bleak lies people tell themselves and one another about love. Perhaps Nicholson's seediest role. With ANN-MARGARET. -THE FORTUNE (Mike Nichols, 1975) 840 only-ML3 Two ne'er-do-well Hollywood drifters of the 20's meet up with a zany heiress and attempt to dun her out of her money. Starring WARREN BEATTY, JACK NICHOLSON & STOCKARD CHANNING. "THE FORTUNE is a glittering con- coction, its cachet glamorous, its execution talented, and its aspirations adventurous."-Judith Crist. Tuesdey FREE SHOWING OF TWO THRILLERS: THE DAUGHTER OF DR. JEKYLL and the HONEYMOON KILLERS WE SUPPORT PROJECTIONISTS LOCAL 395 1.0v 7.10V 'a 1..JV 7 T