After starting out as an assistant director on films by
Arthur Penn and
Otto Preminger and acting as director of photography on the 1969 film,
Out of It, Avildsen's early low-budget feature
Joe (1970) received good notices for star
Peter Boyle and was a big box-office hit grossing nearly $20 million on a $100,000 budget. Avildsen followed this early success with the low-budget 1971 cult classic comedy film
Cry Uncle! (released in the UK as
Superdick and on video as
American Oddballs), a 1971 American film in the
Troma Entertainment library that stars
Allen Garfield. This was followed by
Save the Tiger (1973), a film nominated for three
Academy Awards, winning
Best Actor for star
Jack Lemmon at the
55th Academy Awards. Avildsen's greatest success came with
Rocky (1976), which he directed working in conjunction with writer and star
Sylvester Stallone. The film was a major critical and commercial success, becoming the
highest-grossing film of 1976 and garnering ten Academy Award nominations and winning three, including
Best Picture and
Best Director for Avildsen at the
49th Academy Awards. He later returned to direct what was then expected to be the series' final installment,
Rocky V (1990). Avildsen directed the mystery-drama
The Formula (1980), starring
Marlon Brando and
George C. Scott, for which he was nominated for
Razzie Award for Worst Director at the
1st Golden Raspberry Awards. Avildsen's other films include
Neighbors (1981),
For Keeps (1988),
Lean on Me (1989),
The Power of One (1992),
8 Seconds (1994), and the first three
The Karate Kid films. Avildsen was the original director for both
Serpico (1973) and
Saturday Night Fever (1977), but was fired over disputes with, respectively, producers
Martin Bregman and
Robert Stigwood. Although his job directing
Serpico was terminated, Avildsen became long time friends with the film's real life subject
Frank Serpico, even sharing a property with him on
Long Island, New York during the early 1980s. His last film was
Inferno (1999), starring
Jean-Claude Van Damme. A documentary on the life, career and films of Avildsen was released in August 2017, approximately two months after his death.
John G. Avildsen: King of the Underdogs (2017), directed and produced by
Derek Wayne Johnson, features interviews with Sylvester Stallone,
Ralph Macchio, Jean-Claude Van Damme,
Martin Scorsese,
Jerry Weintraub, and
Burt Reynolds, among others. The documentary is a companion to the book
The Films of John G. Avildsen: Rocky, The Karate Kid, and other Underdogs, written by Larry Powell and Tom Garrett. ==Personal life==