Synopsis
Your legacy is more than a name
The former World Heavyweight Champion Rocky Balboa serves as a trainer and mentor to Adonis Johnson, the son of his late friend and former rival Apollo Creed.
2015 Directed by Ryan Coogler
The former World Heavyweight Champion Rocky Balboa serves as a trainer and mentor to Adonis Johnson, the son of his late friend and former rival Apollo Creed.
Michael B. Jordan Sylvester Stallone Tessa Thompson Phylicia Rashād Andre Ward Tony Bellew Ritchie Coster Jacob 'Stitch' Duran Graham McTavish Malik Bazille Ricardo 'Padman' McGill Gabe Rosado Wood Harris Buddy Osborn Rupal Pujara Brian Anthony Wilson Joey Eye Johanna Tolentino Tony Brice Kash Goins Michael Barker Clare O'Malley Kevin King Templeton Roy James Wilson Mauricio Ovalle Mark Rhino Smith Josue Rivera Hans Marrero Derrick Webster Show All…
Irwin Winkler Sylvester Stallone William Chartoff Kevin King Templeton Charles Winkler Robert Chartoff David Winkler Nicolas Stern
Rocky 7: Creed, Creed: Corazón de campeón, Rocky 7 - Creed L'Heritage de Rocky Balboa, Creed - The Legacy of Rocky, רוקי 7: קריד, Крід, Creed: The Rocky Legacy, Rocky VII: Creed, 크리드 1, Rocky 7 - Creed - Nascido para Lutar (2015)
The truest scene in this movie is when Adonis is sitting on the stoop outside the gym and a kid on a motorbike comes up to him and goes "I heard you were Apollo Creed's son" and Adonis is like "yeah," and the kid goes "that's what's up" and does a wheelie.
If only boxing in real life was this exciting. The fights in this film are filmed to absolute perfection. They're intense, brutal, and down right raw. Floyd Mayweather should watch this movie and then maybe he'll actually learn how to fight an exciting fight.
I am very impressed with director Ryan Cooler. He knocked his first film, Fruitvale Station out of the park and he has now knocked his second film, Creed out of the park. I cannot wait to see what he does next. You'd think this man has been behind the camera for years with the quality of his first two films.
The performances are what really make this movie. Yes, the fight scenes are incredible. But this…
Creed succeeds on so many different levels. It is a sports movie with a heart of a champion. It is a movie about the relationship between a father and a son. It introduces us to Michael B Jordan's Adonis Johnson and allows him to develop his own story; all while having the legend himself, Rocky Balboa along for the ride in a moving and gut wrenching supporting role. It is emotional and might just bring tears to your eyes.
Gloves off to Michael B Jordan. He looks and acts the part of a boxer. All the boxing choreography is near flawless. The casting of professional boxers helps, a lot. The training montages are Rocky-esque. What I really like is the…
This is such a great way to breathe some new life into this franchise. It never feels like a cheap or disingenuous attempt at a reboot but sits solidly up in the upper echelons of the Rocky films.
Don't let the lack of a 6/5 fool you...I FUCKING LOVED Creed.
"That bell doesn't mean you're dismissed. That bell means hell."
I went into it expecting to be moved, but it's been some time since a film has wetted my cheek so thoroughly.
"What's wrong with your eyes?" -- Terminator 2 quote about crying
(A stupid question coming from a machine with "detailed files on human anatomy.")
This awards season, I hope Oscar voters will be stroking Stallone's shaft and cupping his balls**, because he deserves it.
** Via Urban Dictionary: Actor Sylvester Stalone's instructions to a young female production assistant.
Common phrase used casually (by crew mostly) in the Vancouver film community. Derived from the true story of…
*previously an 80, now a 94*
The glory of Hollywood redefined and resurrected via a humanistic, compassionate lens. Johnson/Creed: it says it all; Coogler merging the old and the new together into one moving populist spectacle. Can't help but constantly tear up during the final 30 minutes, as the myth-making never resorts to fan-service, propelling history on a fast track to collision with the modern. There's such a swift attention to montage and how the preparation for physical showmanship requires just as much effort if not more so, especially when the claim for prideful heritage is on the line. Thinking about that final run within the city, an entire generation rising to claim something as their own, lets the waterfalls…
“- Rocky Balboa: Prove what?
- Adonis Johnson: That I'm not a mistake!”
I can't believe how good this movie is.
ABSOLUTELY
INCREDIBLE
MOVIE
It's not supposed to be this way. Hollywood reboots are unilaterally terrible, cash ins, whitewashed garbage that plays up the cheapest aspects of the originals, matches it beat for beat but only in the shallowest possible way, ignoring the thematic resonance that made it great in the first place. Yet, here we are, something that takes the fundamental underdog story of the original and builds upon it in a way that makes it more complex, modern, and re-invigorated, in a way that speaks to new audiences, yet still capturing what made the original a good film. Having been so long since I saw Rocky, it's hard for me to do a, ahem, blow-by-blow comparison, but no matter: the feeling of…
i liked the part where creed has to poop.
ALSO (and this is important)... be *very* careful when naming your child "Adonis." sure, it worked out in this case, but that's still a risk you may not want to take.
is "Don" always short for "Adonis?" because that'd be a fun twist.
anyway, you've seen this movie before. this time it's a little better than usual. i want to talk about that "long take." later.
80/100
Ryan Coogler's Creed is bone-chilling, both in its rousing emotion and its quiet reverberations across a detailed history of Boxing cinema. Tremendous style is woven into a superbly crafted genre piece, and the quiet moments are just as poignant as its various beat-by-beat story points. You know this narrative, but you haven't seen it told with such heartrending delicacy.
Coming off of 2013's excellent Fruitvale Station, Coogler and Jordan prove themselves to be a team of dexterity and deep-rooted understanding. Along with Sylvester Stallone's Oscar-Worthy performance as an aged and weathered Balboa, the highlight of Creed comes from the unwavering versatility from every player involved. This is a carefully told and bittersweet opera, and Coogler avoids any sense of…
Adonis Johnson, the out-of-wedlock son of the late boxing champion Apollo Creed, is taken home and raised by Creed's widow as her own child. When he grows up he decides to follow his father's footsteps and become a boxer. So he travels from Los Angeles to Philadelphia and asks for help from Apollo's former friend and rival, Rocky Balboa.
Say what you want about writer/director Ryan Coogler but one thing is certain: this guy has balls to match his talent. He took a franchise that seemed dead and buried and revived it in a spectacular way. Visually arresting and emotionally volatile, "Creed" is a movie that looks furtively to the past but with both its feet planted firmly into the…
61/100
Spent the first half thinking it was adhering a bit too strictly to formula, but it kept slugging (note boxing metaphor!) and ultimately won me over, for the most part. Coogler does a superlative job with both of the big fight sequences—one beautifully choreographed unbroken shot for the first, which functions almost like a dance; a disorienting flurry of cuts for the climatic slugfest—and coaxes a genuinely soulful, dignified performance from Stallone (though I still miss the original conception of Rocky Balboa as barely articulate). Large-scale predictability is balanced by small-scale specificity, e.g. Bianca's progressive hearing loss (which has no narrative or metaphorical function, as far as I can tell—miraculous) and Donnie's abrupt onset of gastrointestinal distress seconds before…
After the last Rocky movie (Rocky Balboa), I swore never again would I watch Stallone in yet another remake. Still, I found myself watching, and to my surprise, it wasn't bad. Maybe my expectations were so low. It seemed better than it was. It's a copy of the first film, yet it's also a tribute to all the Rocky films remade before it.
8/10
Don’t know why it took me so long to watch this film, but I’m glad I finally did, it’s a great successor to Rocky and also a really good film by its own.
74/365
I love how the movie they choose to watch after Adonis wins the first fight is Skyfall.
i never saw the rocky movies so i like how i can watch this without having to know every rocky plot, although it still holds a connection to its roots which i appreciate. every character is weirdly charming, adondis can be a bit bland at points but i still love his character. i dont think it needed to be over 2 hours but it can hold your interest throughout. (edit: THE CLIMAX BOXING SCENE WAS PERFECT BTW, CREEDS FIRST PUNCH MADE ME SCREAM)
Tessa Thompson and Michael B Jordan...in one movie???? Together???? The hotness is too much!!!
Also legitimately, this is one of the best sports movies I think I’ve ever seen. It’s also one of the best “remakes.” Everyone who wants to touch an existing franchise should watch this and take notes. It pays homage to the existing world, honors it, takes its themes, BUT creates mainly a new storyline with new characters and updates it. So so good.
I am so endlessly in love with underdog stories. It doesn’t matter if it’s Rocky or Creed. This story moves me so much every time. Love is worth fighting for.
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