Clubber Lang May Have Been Rocky 3’s Villain, But He Was Also Right About Balboa

James “Clubber” Lang (Mr. T.) was the villain of Rocky III, but he also had a legitimate grievance against Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) and his manager, Mickey Goldmill (Burgess Meredith). Written and directed by Sylvester Stallone, Rocky III was a box office smash in 1982. Tonally and stylistically different from the first two movies in the Rocky franchise, Stallone’s threequel was a soft reboot that brought Rocky into the 1980s, fusing his seminal boxing movie franchise with the flashy, rock video energy of MTV.

Five years after winning the heavyweight championship of the world from Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers), Rocky Balboa is riding high in Rocky III. Now a millionaire and celebrity, Rocky is a dominant champion with ten successful тιтle defenses. However, the gravest threat to Rocky’s тιтle emerges in Clubber Lang, the undefeated number one contender. Naturally, Clubber wants to crush Balboa and become champion, but he can’t get a тιтle sH๏τ despite his rank. The truth of why Rocky was “ducking” Clubber came out in Rocky III.

Clubber Lang Was Right That Mickey Was Blocking His тιтle Fight With Rocky

To Clubber, Mickey And Rocky Were The Bad Guys

Clubber Lang crashed a press conference in Philadelphia where Rocky Balboa was honored with a statue as the city’s favorite son. Rocky was on the verge of announcing his retirement when Clubber goaded him with an inconvenient truth: Balboa was ducking his number one contender. But what Rocky didn’t know was that it was actually Mickey who was blocking a тιтle fight with Lang. Clubber was right that Rocky’s manager refused to grant the legitimate number one contender a crack at the heavyweight тιтle.

Mickey confessed that other accusations by Clubber were true: Rocky’s 10 тιтle defenses were handpicked by Mickey because they weren’t serious threats. Goldmill believed that Rocky couldn’t endure another punishing fight like his two bouts with Apollo. Mickey was protecting Rocky, but he was also abusing his influence as the heavyweight champ’s manager. From Clubber Lang’s point of view, Mickey and Rocky were frauds and cowards – and in a way, Lang has a point.

Was Clubber Lang Really A Villain In Rocky 3?

Clubber Had A Legit Grievance, But He Was Still A Bad Guy

If Clubber Lang was right that Mickey Goldmill and Rocky Balboa were legitimately blocking his тιтle sH๏τ, does that make him a bad guy? Yes, Clubber is still Rocky III’s villain even though he was being cheated by Mickey. Lang is a cruel and violent bruiser. A former prison inmate, Clubber is a loner who brutalizes his opponents in the ring. While Lang’s fights don’t last more than three rounds – and a lack of endurance turned out to be his weakness – the one upside of fighting Clubber Lang is he puts his foes away quickly.

Clubber publicly propositioned Adrian Balboa (Talia Shire), Rocky’s wife.

The crucial moment that cemented Clubber Lang as a bad guy was immediately after he exposed Mickey at Rocky’s press conference: Clubber publicly propositioned Adrian Balboa (Talia Shire), Rocky’s wife. Lang was likely just pushing Rocky’s ʙuттons by promising Adrian “a real man,” but it was a low (if amusing) move. Ultimately, Clubber showed no remorse by starting a brawl before his first fight with Rocky that led to Mickey’s heart attack, and Lang didn’t care that Mickey died as long as he was world champion.

Rocky’s Real Enemy In Rocky III Was His Own Fear

To Regain The Eye Of The Tiger, Rocky Had To Face Himself


Rocky and Adrian at the beach in Rocky III

Clubber Lang was the physical opposition Rocky Balboa had to overcome in Rocky III, but Lang was just the flesh-and-blood manifestation of Balboa’s real enemy: his own fear and self-doubt. Rocky was shattered when he learned his ten тιтle defenses weren’t “real,” and he stopped believing he was the legitimate champion. After Clubber smashed him and took the тιтle, and Mickey subsequently died, Rocky was a broken man who no longer believed in himself, and not even Apollo Creed training him could reignite Balboa’s “eye of the tiger.”

Rocky needed reᴀssurance from Adrian to help him win his climactic fights in Rocky II, Rocky III, and Rocky IV.

Rocky’s road to redemption was Mickey’s as well: Balboa had to fight Clubber Lang again and decisively beat him. Regaining the heavyweight тιтle was secondary; Rocky’s true goal was to prove to himself that he truly was the fighter, champion, and man Mickey made him think he was. Clubber Lang was wronged by Mickey at the outset of Rocky III, but as champion, Lang no longer considered Rocky any kind of threat. This was Clubber’s downfall when he faced the new and improved Rocky Balboa, who thoroughly trounced him to become a two-time world champion.

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