In 1976, Sylvester
Stallone captured the hearts of the world with his Rocky Balboa character; a
Philadelphia boxer with the heart of a lion, and altered the pop culture and
sporting worlds forever. After five sequels spanning nearly 40 years, Stallone
moves Balboa to a supporting role in the first ROCKY spinoff, CREED.
Adonis Johnson (Michael B. Jordan), the son of the late famous
boxer Apollo Creed, a former opponent and friend of Rocky Balboa (Stallone),
seeks to make a name for himself in the boxing world. Adonis travels to
Philadelphia and seeks out Rocky for training, while Rocky himself faces his
toughest challenge yet.
Famous mythologist and writer Joseph Campbell once wrote
about the connection that is often found between people at the end of their
lives and people at the very beginning of their own. It is a gold mine for
storytelling that the cinema world has mined extensively, and that is the heart
and soul of CREED. With Adonis seeking out his own identity with a desire to
know the father that he never met, and Rocky now alone with his old friends now
passed on and his health not what it used to be, the stage is set for the two men
to find common ground. It’s an old matchup, but director Ryan Coogler, working
from a script co-written by Aaron Covington (this is the first ROCKY-involved
film not at least co-written by Stallone), does not allow his film to all into
any old and tired clichés. Instead, a great amount of conflict and emotion is
injected into the story, and as Rocky and Adonis circle around each other like
fighters, some great drama unfolds both in the ring and out.
CREED is a film which is saturated in nostalgia, but never
leans on that like a crutch. There are plenty of homages and winks towards the
past, and Coogler uses them as building blocks or launching pads for even
further storylines. Even though CREED feels so very familiar, it avoids any
cookie-cutter type storytelling and is certainly its own beast. The culture of
Philadelphia is on full-display, and the score by Ludwig Goransson uses some of
the old ROCKY themes while bringing some new ones…much of it sounding like an
Old West theme. The fight scenes are brutal and realistic…and an early bout
which is an un-interrupted, single-shot from the locker room to the end of the
fight…has to be seen to be believed.
Michael B. Jordan is fantastic as the son of Apollo Creed.
He doesn’t channel any of the flamboyance that his fictional father once had,
and he isn’t asked to either. His character is a troubled and lost soul, and
Jordan plays it perfectly. As good as he is, he is clearly upstaged by
Stallone, who puts in the performance of a lifetime at long last. This time ol’
Rocky is going through some serious shit, and Stallone puts on a display of
equally serious emotion. The supporting cast of Tessa Thompson (as Adonis’ love
interest), Phylicia Rashad (Adonis’ mom), and real-life boxer Tony Bellew (as
the final opponent) are all excellent.
As a boxing film, it is necessary for CREED to have a final
fight, and it delivers with perfection. It is rousing and powerful, and then
leads into a quieter wrap-up which is sure to have viewers reaching for the
tissues. CREED is a powerful and beautiful film, worthy of a champion’s belt.
BOTTOM LINE: See it
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