
An outright love ballad, "Glory of Love" didn't suit Rocky IV's uplifting ending where Rocky triumphed over Drago against all odds. However, United Artists and Sylvester Stallone opted not to pick up Peter Cetera's "Glory of Love", which the former Chicago band member wrote and composed as the end-credits song for Rocky IV. Rocky IV also has a memorable soundtrack, with James Brown's "Living in America", Survivor's "Burning Heart", and especially John Caffery's "Hearts on Fire" providing a rousing anthem during Balboa's training sessions as he prepared to fight the towering Russian. USSR politics where Rocky's win over Drago seemed to provide an answer to the Cold War. Rocky IV is the most straightforward and cartoonish of the Rocky films but it remains beloved because of its black-and-white, USA vs. Rocky IV hit theaters in November 1985 and the Sylvester Stallone boxing flick featured his Philadelphia-born champion, Rocky Balboa, going up against a Russian threat named Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren). Miyagi (Noriyuki "Pat" Morita), to his ancestral home of Okinawa, where they found old grudges and new enemies. Released in the summer of 1986, The Karate Kid Part II continued the story of Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio), who accompanied his sensei, Mr. Peter Cetera's "Glory of Love" was the hit theme song from The Karate Kid Part II, but it was originally meant for and was rejected from the Rocky IV soundtrack before the Karate Kid sequel picked it up.
