• Home
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

AlphaNerd

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
By nerds for nerds

Your Custom Text Here

AlphaNerd

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact

CREED Movie Review: A Love Letter

November 27, 2015 Marc Aces
Creed Movie Poster

When we first meet Adonis Johnson in 1998, he’s serving time in juvenile detention.  He is coiled rage, ready to strike, fists gripped tight.  No one can get through to him – at least, until Mary Anne Creed (a returning Phylicia Rashad) comes into his cell and drops a bit of familial truth on him.  Adonis’s fists slowly unclench, and his eyes grow wide.  “What was his name?” he asks, and we smash cut to the title.  At that point, Ryan Coogler’s CREED owned me.

Coogler, along with screenwriter Aaron Covington (based on Coogler’s story), have tapped into everything that makes the ROCKY Saga great, but have also added their own voices and skills to the mix.  CREED respects and honors the films before it, but also stands on its own merits.  I’m surprised no one has come up with the idea of Apollo Creed’s son being trained by Rocky Balboa to fight the heavyweight champion before – it reads like a marketing fever dream.  But it would simply be another stale sequel had not Coogler, Michael B. Jordan, and Sylvester Stallone filled it with such heart and power.  This is more than a passing of a torch – this is breathing new life, and meaning, into a story that felt concluded, and in doing so, has given us a hero for a new generation of fans.  This power, this willingness to change with the times but still remain true to its core values, is why this franchise endures.

Rocky and Adonis

It also announces Ryan Coogler as a major talent in cinema. His FRUITVALE STATION (a crowning film for both director Coogler and star Michael B Jordan) was a great first film, but CREED is a leap forward in quality and skill. His direction is superb, getting terrific performances from his cast, but he also has an ear for great dialogue, and a true cinematic eye.  It must be difficult to write for such an established character as Rocky Balboa, but Coogler knows Balboa as intimately as anyone.  Add to that Stallone’s career-best work as Rocky, as well as Michael B. Jordan’s firecracker of a performance as Adonis (any doubt on Jordan’s ability after seeing Fantastic 4, this film should put those doubters to rest), this is the role that is going to show everyone who the new Will Smith is…sorry Jayden.  Add in Coogler’s willingness to stay grounded, and you have a film that can safely be compared to the first ROCKY in power and magnitude.

Look, I could go into a lengthy discussion of how much the ROCKY movies have meant to me.  This is a franchise that has always been better than it has been given credit for, even when it dipped into the ridiculous.  There’s only one truly bad movie in the series (although I’m going to be honest, I’m not the biggest fan of ROCKY IV, THE MONTAGE. There’s a reason they don’t show the death scene in this fim).  Sylvester Stallone’s marble-mouthed, decent but brutal, kind but formidable Italian Stallion has to be regarded as not only his most famous character, but also as Stallone’s best work as an actor.  These films are rich with feeling, silly a lot of the time, even achingly romantic.  I don’t care who you are – if you grew up watching Stallone’s “I can’t beat him” testimonial to Adrian, you felt it.  Believed it.  Took it to heart.  Made it a creed, for lack of a better term, in your life.  The films in the franchise bobbed and weaved through earnestness straight through to superhero silliness and back again, but the basic truth of the ROCKY movies remained – we are here, and we are important, and no one is going to knock us down, especially ourselves.

Adonis eventually decides that there’s only one person in the world that can take him seriously, so he moves to Philadelphia to find him – Rocky Balboa, still managing Adrian’s Restaurant, living alone since Paulie’s passing (RIP to my favorite character, dude was married to a damn robot) a few years before.  Rocky is reluctant to train Adonis, even after Adonis reveals his parental lineage.  But Rocky recognizes that hunger in Donny, and takes it upon himself to train him.   But all the while, Adonis is running from who he is, still full of anger and fury, refusing to come to grips with his past.  Even as his skills as a boxer progress, he cannot make peace with it.  And suddenly tragedy strikes Rocky, just when Adonis needs him the most.

Adonis Creed

Michael B. Jordan embodies the son of Creed, and fills him with passion and love.  Adonis is desperate to connect with anyone, looking for fathers everywhere, and Jordan makes that need palpable.  His relationship with Rocky is always effective and riveting, and Jordan and Stallone have a wonderful chemistry together.  But when Adonis feels the pain of loss, Jordan brings all that anger and hurt to his eyes.  It’s a powerhouse performance, and the other actors around him are boosted by it.  Tessa Thompson’s Bianca brings stability and love into Adonis’s life, and Thompson gives Bianca compassion while being fiercely independent and strong.  

Now Rocky may be on the outside of the ring this time, but his story is no less compelling.  I’ve never been a fan of the idea of “legacy Oscars,” rewarding an actor for their years of work instead of one particularly great performance, but I would have absolutely no problem with an awards campaign for Sylvester Stallone here.  It wouldn’t be just a legacy, either.  Stallone has never been better, in any role, than he is here, and I’m including the first ROCKY film in that assessment.  Sly has lived inside this character for almost 40 years – he knows this character inside and out, and even with CREED he still has the capacity to surprise us.   Rocky is more subdued, sadder, but still fighting, still moving forward.  Stallone gives Rocky vulnerability that we haven’t seen to this degree before – all his family and friends are gone, including his son Rocky Jr. who has moved to Vancouver (there’s a bittersweet, mournful moment with Stallone’s real life son in a photograph, and it’s difficult to separate the scene from the tragedy of his loss).  Rocky is as lonely as Adonis is, and to quote the first film, “together we fill gaps.”  Their friendship and love for each other feels genuine, and the moments Jordan and Stallone share the screen are a joy to experience.  Rocky is a good, kind man, but Stallone never makes those personality traits of Rocky dull or maudlin.  He still demonstrates the same power in his work here that made his fans adore him as they do.  Stallone deserves all the accolades that will hopefully come his way this awards season. As of now he’s my pick for best supporting actor come awards season.

Rocky and Adonis in the Ring

This may also be the best-looking film in this franchise yet – cinematographer Maryse Alberti shoots the fights with an intensity that matches the subject. We follow Adonis in the ring, sometimes right over his shoulder, and each punch that lands feels like it punches straight to the face of the audience.  One fight is shot in a continuous unedited take, but it’s not a gimmick; as the match goes on, the excitement builds, and Alberti puts us inside the fight like none of the other ROCKY films have before, not like this.  She’s helped tremendously by Ludwig Göransson’s fantastic score, which manages to weave Bill Conti’s classic themes into something newer, vital, and all its own.  I love how Rocky’s theme is more subdued, less urgent, while Adonis’s theme comes pounding in with fury and thunder.  But when that great Conti theme we all know and love comes in, it is an audience moment for the ages, once that theme hit in my theater, the audience erupted with ovation and cheers, and I defy anyone not to go into rapturous applause during it.  There are a lot of moments like that in CREED – it is a true audience experience, as rousing as the grandest moments in the ROCKY Saga.

But it’s no longer just the ROCKY Saga, is it?  It’s more. Rooted in the past, but with eyes on the future, CREED promises more stories in this world, and I’m eager as hell to start experiencing them.  Sylvester Stallone has done a brave thing here – he’s letting other artists frolic in his playground, and these films are all the better for it, because everything we love about the ROCKY Saga can go on for generations to come. I want this series to last as long as these filmmakers are willing to make these movies. Ryan Coogler does something exemplary. CREED is a movie about the search for those bonds of family – if we can’t find them in our own family, Coogler suggests, then find that love somewhere, because we are not whole without it, and trust me … There is love in every single frame of CREED.  A love that you get to take with you when you leave.  This film is alive, breathing, and essential, a triumphant ringing of the bell, and one of the most joyous experiences (next to Fury Road) I've had in a movie this year.

Related Posts
images.jpg
Evil Dead Rise Review
images.jpg
Infinity Pool Review
M3GAN Review
M3GAN Review
MV5BMzQ3NTQxMjItODBjYi00YzUzLWE1NzQtZTBlY2Y2NjZlNzkyXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTkxNjUyNQ@@._V1_.jpg
Birds Of Prey Review
joker-poster.jpg
Joker Review
Screen Shot 2019-05-16 at 1.08.01 PM.png
John Wick 3 Review
shazam_poster_1103240.jpg
SHAZAM! Review
Best Films of 2018
Best Films of 2018
61H0yjl1iiL._SY741_.jpg
GLASS Review
Dsdlbj3U4AAJoO7.jpg
AQUAMAN Review
il_570xN.1534226589_7f1c.jpg
Venom Review
meg_ver2.jpg
The Meg Review
In Film Tags Adonis Johnson, Phylicia Rashad, Creed, Ryan Coogler, Aaron Covington, Rocky, Rocky Balboa, Apollo Creed, Marc Aces, film, movie, Sylvester Stallone, Michael B. Jordan
← Implementing Small Habits to Create Big ChangeAces' Guilty Pleasures: Starship Troopers →

Articles by Category

  • Fitness (11)
  • Tech (11)
  • Nutrition (14)
  • Lifestyle (26)
  • Film (71)


Featured Articles

Featured
joker-poster.jpg
Film
Joker Review
Film
Film
Best Films of 2018
Film
Best Films of 2018
Film
Film
Dsdlbj3U4AAJoO7.jpg
Film
AQUAMAN Review
Film
Film
il_570xN.1534226589_7f1c.jpg
Film
Venom Review
Film
Film

Subscribe to AlphaNerd

Subscribe to receive updates and exclusive AlphaNerd content.

We respect your privacy and your time.  We believe in quality over quantity and will only send worthwhile content.  Your information will never be shared or sold, and we will never send you spam.

Thank you!

Archive by Month
  • April 2023
  • January 2023
  • March 2022
  • February 2020
  • September 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • October 2018
  • August 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
Blog RSS

Copyright © 2014-2024 AlphaNerd. All Rights Reserved.
Articles and information on this website may not be copied, reprinted, or redistributed without written permission.
The statements made on this website have not been evaluated by the FDA (U.S. Food & Drug Administration). Any information published on AlphaNerd.co is for entertainment purposes and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The information provided by this website is not a substitute for professional medical advice.