Rocky V
After the game he has with the strong Russian boxer, Ivan, that ends with a strong injury, Rock Balboa, a strong boxer who achieves many success, has to leave boxing and stay at home, but incidents come to climax, after losing all his money in the stock exchange, the thing that forces him to find another source of living.
1961, Copenhagen, Denmark
16 January 1938, Youngstown, Ohio, USA
8 October 1963, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
5 May 1959, Cambridge, Illinois, USA
2 October 1949, Calistoga, California, USA
30 December 1945, New York City, New York, USA
24 September 1970, San Fernando Valley, California, USA
16 June 1962, Lafayette, Louisiana, USA
23 March 1937, Flint, Michigan, USA
2 November 1943, New York City, New York, USA
2 January 1916, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
2 November 1944, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
30 July 1933, Little Rock, Arkansas, USA
23 June 1926, Los Angeles, California, USA
July 05, 2004
An embarassment to brain-damaged boxers and their wussy sons everywhere.
December 19, 2006
For the most part, the Rocky pictures have been outstanding entertainments, beautifully crafted and executed, and Rocky V is an important and worthwhile addition to the series.
January 01, 2000
In Rock V, the underdog is officially diagnosed as 'brain damaged.' Yo. So what else is new?
June 01, 2007
Time to hang up the boxing gloves, ol' Rocky.
January 01, 2000
Despite Stallone's bantamweight attempts to insert, like, character into the fifth Rocky, it's the same old fight with the same old round of regulars.
February 09, 2006
Whereas the first and far superior Rocky had real heart, this tries and fails to have brains.
December 06, 2006
Much-maligned but sporadically effective...
May 20, 2003
A sloppy but good-natured reminder of just what it is that has kept Rocky Balboa afloat for 14 years.
July 06, 2010
The last 30 min make Rocky V a worthwhile watch, and even though there are numerous flaws, it's a rather engrossing film and the most underrated of the Rocky movies.
December 19, 2006
The dramatic moves are so obvious and shopworn that not even the star's mournful basset-hound expressions can redeem them.

