Fight fans will not forget the feud between Carl Froch and George Groves but for now Sylvester Stallone and Robert De Niro's Grudge Match will be taking centre stage.
The questions
McCRORY: Was it easy to play a real boxing legend in shape and out of shape for 'Raging Bull'?DE NIRO: It was hard. At the end of the day, Martin Scorcese and I had our take on Jake and his life but it was hard. The physical stuff was really hard. Gaining the weight... after 15 or 20 inches it's just work, real drudgery. Losing it all was hard too! I had a doctor who was monitoring the whole thing, all the way through. That's the way I had to do it. McCRORY: How did you get expelled from school 14 times?
STALLONE: Well you can probably tell right now, I am a bit hyper! And that's exactly what it was! But back then they had no tolerance. You had to march the way they wanted or you were out! If you were outside looking at a girl or flirted with a girl you liked, or even looked at a caterpillar crawling up your arm and you were more interested in that than school, you were off! Finally they just said to me I couldn't come back. Period. Today they call it ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) but I was ADDAA+A NELSON: How long had the idea for this movie been in your head because clearly it's inspired by Rocky and Jake?
SEGAL: Well it started off just based on two guys in the 60s, not specifically for these two guys (De Niro and Stallone) but the more we worked on it, we realised it was as much a comedy but the fight had to be taken very seriously. We had to play it very, very real and make it gritty and we could not think of any other people who could play these two characters, other than these two. Of course the added bonus got to bring a lot: their legacies and cinematically as well. But once again, we could not have made this story without these guys.