The release of the first trailer for I Play Rocky comes as the original Rocky approaches its 50th anniversary, serving as a reminder that no boxing film has left a bigger mark on the sport. Five decades after Sylvester Stallone introduced the world to Rocky Balboa, the movie continues to inspire fighters, trainers and fans in a way few sports films ever have.
Amazon MGM Studios released the trailer Wednesday for I Play Rocky, which tells the story behind one of Hollywood’s greatest underdog success stories. Anthony Ippolito stars as Stallone, portraying the struggling actor and writer who refused to sell his script unless he was cast as the lead. Despite repeated rejection from studios that wanted an established star, Stallone held firm and ultimately changed both his own life and boxing movie history.
The timing is fitting. As Rocky nears its 50th anniversary in November, its influence remains visible throughout boxing. Fifty years after its release, Rocky remains the boxing movie against which every other boxing film is measured. Its story of an unknown club fighter getting one chance at the heavyweight championship helped turn Rocky Balboa into one of the sport’s most recognizable fictional figures.
For countless fans, Rocky was the movie that sparked a lifelong interest in boxing.. It won three Academy Awards, including Best Picture, while Stallone received Oscar nominations for both Best Actor and Best Original Screenplay. The success of Rocky also launched one of cinema’s most enduring franchises, eventually expanding into the Creed series and generating nearly $2 billion at the global box office.
Directed by Peter Farrelly, I Play Rocky also stars Matt Dillon, AnnaSophia Robb, P.J. Byrne, Toby Kebbell, Tracy Letts, Jay Duplass and Stephan James. The film is scheduled for a limited theatrical release on November 6, with a newly remastered 4K version of the original Rocky also set to return to theaters as part of the 50th anniversary celebration.
The anniversary represents more than nostalgia for boxing. Rocky remains the sport’s defining film, capturing the determination, sacrifice and belief that have inspired generations of fighters long after the final bell rang for Rocky Balboa’s first trip to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

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Last Updated on 2026/07/16 at 2:30 AM
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