Creed II: Rocky's Legacy (2018)
65KCreed II: Rocky’s Legacy: Directed by Steven Caple Jr.. With Michael B. Jordan, Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson, Phylicia Rashad. Under the tutelage of Rocky Balboa, newly crowned heavyweight champion Adonis Creed faces off against Viktor Drago, the son of Ivan Drago.
“Greetings again from the darkness. The theatre was packed and I donu0026#39;t recall having heard a louder outburst of cheering for any movie moment. Was it predictable? Yes. Did it deliver what the fans wanted? Absolutely. Is it (as my son asked) u0026quot;ROCKY IV in 4K?u0026quot; Yes, thatu0026#39;s pretty much exactly what it is. So despite CREED (2015) director Ryan Coogler opting to make BLACK PANTHER instead of this sequel to his own movie, Iu0026#39;ve seen proof that itu0026#39;s clearly a crowd-pleaser … which is what the u0026quot;Rockyu0026quot; franchise has always done best.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMichael B Jordan returns as Adonis Johnson/Creed and Sylvester Stallone is back as Rocky Balboa. And although that would likely be enough, we also have Tessa Thompson as Adonisu0026#39; girlfriend Bianca and Phylicia Rashad as Adonisu0026#39; mom, both also from CREED. We see an early training/boxing sequence in Russia featuring (professional boxer and chiseled human mountain) Florian Munteanu as Viktor Drago being trained by his father Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren). If you are a fan of the franchise at all, you know exactly where this is headed – and so does opportunistic boxing promoter Buddy Marcelle (Russell Hornsby).u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThink of it as u0026#39;Revenge vs Redemptionu0026#39;. Adonis fighting the son of the man who killed his father Apollo is the obvious revenge side, and Viktor fighting to redeem his disgraced father Ivan, who lost to Rocky 30 some years ago. This one lacks the real world Cold War element of ROCKY IV (1985), and while itu0026#39;s missing the political heft of that film, it still packs quite a punch as a revenge flick … even if there was no other possible route this sequel could take. If anything, the filmmakers should be commended for not force-feeding any cheesy political statements on todayu0026#39;s environment.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu0026quot;What are you fighting for?u0026quot; This must be both a necessary boxing question to answer and a tough one, as it seems to get asked over and over during the film. The combination of writers: story by Cheo Hodari and Sacha Penn, characters by Ryan Coogler, and screenplay by Sylvester Stallone and Juel Taylor, place quite a bit of focus outside the ring. Relationship quandaries are at every turn: young married couples, father-son (double whammy), mother-son (another double whammy), and first time parents.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eDirector Steve Caple Jr seems more comfortable outside the ring himself, as the boxing match camera work does not hit the level of the first, although audience membersu0026#39; emotions run even higher. Perhaps to overcompensate for the more basic camera work, some of the sound effects for rib punches may have been pulled right out of battle scenes in war movies – they sound like explosions, and are exaggerated so that we viewers might u0026quot;feelu0026quot; the ribs cracking.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWisely the relationship between Adonis and Bianca is a key element this time. Mr. Jordan and Ms. Thompson have tremendous chemistry, and the filmmakers deserve credit for hitting the hearing-impaired issue head-on. Itu0026#39;s a topic thatu0026#39;s rarely seen in movies, and appears to be very well handled. There are some other ties to the u0026quot;Rockyu0026quot; franchise with Wood Harris playing u0026quot;Little Dukeu0026quot;, son of Duke, played numerous times by Tony Burton throughout the Rocky films, and there are a couple of other (very) familiar faces that pop up from both IV and ROCKY BALBOA (2006). On the music front, Ludwig Goransson is a rising star composer thanks to FRUITVALE STATION, CREED, BLACK PANTHER, VENOM, and now CREED II. He toys with the familiar Rocky numbers, but some will argue not enough.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis sequel is more grand scale than the first (which was identity driven), yet more restrained than IV. Sure we have the mandatory zany training montage (zany may be too mild), and the final bout is held in Moscow (even though it makes no sense that the champion would agree to this), but itu0026#39;s definitely more low-key when comparing Biancau0026#39;s musical intro to James Brownu0026#39;s u0026quot;Living in Americau0026quot;.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eFor fans, itu0026#39;s great to see Rocky Balboa and Ivan Drago back in the ring together – even if only for a moment; however, maybe not as thrilling (dramatically speaking) as when the two first reunite Godfather-style in a table at Adrianu0026#39;s Café. Itu0026#39;s a surreal moment that both Lundgren and Stallone play perfectly – one with pent-up emotional turmoil and the other quite content with what life has delivered. Of course, Sly can play Rocky in his sleep … and no that wasnu0026#39;t meant to encourage one-liners followed by rim shots. Heu0026#39;s comfortable with the shuffles and mumbles of an elderly Rocky and itu0026#39;s a pleasure to watch an old friend. The only real question remaining … is the u0026quot;Creedu0026quot; franchise gonna fly now?”