John Avildsen, director of ‘Rocky,’ ‘Karate Kid,’ dies at 81 | Inquirer Entertainment

John Avildsen, director of ‘Rocky,’ ‘Karate Kid,’ dies at 81

/ 01:51 PM June 17, 2017

This file photo taken on February 03, 2017 shows director John G. Avildsen speaking onstage at a screening of ‘John G. Avildsen: King of the Underdogs’ during the 32nd Santa Barbara International Film Festiva at the Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara, California.
John Avildsen, the Oscar-winning director whose blockbuster films like “Rocky” and “The Karate Kid” championed the ascent of underdogs, has died, Friday, June 16, 2017. He was 81 years old. The filmmaker died of pancreatic cancer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to the Los Angeles Times, citing Avildsen’s eldest son. AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO

LOS ANGELES—John Avildsen, the Oscar-winning director whose blockbuster films like “Rocky” and “The Karate Kid” championed the ascent of underdogs, has died. He was 81 years old.

The filmmaker died of pancreatic cancer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to the Los Angeles Times, citing Avildsen’s eldest son.

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The 1976 hit “Rocky” — an adrenaline-pumping story that captures the rise of a down-and-out boxer from working-class Philadelphia — earned Avildsen an Oscar for best director.

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The tight-budget drama was a sleeper hit, propelling actor Sylvester Stallone to Hollywood fame and growing into a beloved franchise. Avildsen returned to direct just one of his original film’s six sequels, Rocky V.

The filmmaker also directed the box-office winner “The Karate Kid.” Released in 1984, the film centers on a bullied teenager who gains confidence after learning karate from a Japanese handyman.

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Avildsen went on to direct both “The Karate Kid, Part II” in 1986 and “The Karate Kid, Part III” in 1989.

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“Throughout the decades, his rousing portrayals of victory, courage and emotion captured the hearts of generations of Americans,” said Paris Barclay, president of the Directors Guild of America, of the late director in a statement.

Stallone took to Instagram to pay tribute to Avildsen, who helped usher the actor to stardom: “R. I. P. I’m sure you will soon be directing Hits in Heaven- Thank you , Sly.”

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TAGS: death, obituary, Rocky, The Karate Kid

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