The Standard (St. Catharines)

Creed II is necessary sequel that does its characters justice

- KATIE WALSH

It seemed unlikely that a “Rocky” sequel could feel fresh and exciting in this day and age. And then Ryan Coogler came along with “Creed” in 2015 and proved it wasn’t just possible, it was vital. His film smartly centred on Adonis Creed (Michael B. Jordan), the son of late Rocky opponent Apollo Creed, rather than the Italian Stallion himself. It became an instant classic in the boxing movie canon, scoring a Golden Globe for Sylvester Stallone as an emotionall­y vulnerable and battle-weary Rocky Balboa. With the critical and commercial success of “Creed,” it’s logical and in fact, necessary for a sequel, especially with the unfinished business Adonis has with yet another boxing dynasty.

The Creed legend continues where it must in “Creed II,” with a showdown against Viktor (Romanian-German boxer Florian “Big Nasty” Munteanu), son of Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren), the man who killed Adonis’ father, Apollo, in the ring in “Rocky IV.” Much like his father, Viktor is a monosyllab­ic mountain of hardened man meat, with a training regimen as brutalist as the architectu­re in their native Kiev, but far less technologi­cally advanced than his father’s. There are no computers or injections — just hours of hauling concrete and miles run on desolate roads. The pair seek to restore their damaged reputation by challengin­g the newly minted heavyweigh­t champion of the world, Adonis, in a match over three decades in the making.

Director Steven Caple Jr. takes the reins from Coogler for “Creed II,” and along with writers Cheo Hodari Coker, Juel Taylor and Sascha Penn, as well as Coogler and Stallone, maintains a firm grasp on the characters and world. Much of the film is a family melodrama, exploring generation­al grudges and traumas, the losses acutely felt and patterns carried over. Adonis found a father figure in Rocky, but Rocky balks at the match against the bigger, meaner, faster Viktor, who is dangerous because he has nothing to lose. Adonis’ sense of abandonmen­t comes surging back, lighting a reckless fire within that only puts him in danger and threatens his burgeoning future with singer Bianca (Tessa Thompson).

The film simmers before it explodes, and it often, it maintains the slow burn for a moment too long in the quieter moments between family members. But when Caple really lets “Creed II” run wild, it’s breathtaki­ng. There’s a particular­ly compelling training montage set in a

minimalist desert gym where Adonis strips it down to the basics and learns to get as mean and nasty as Viktor, flipping tires and sledgehamm­ering the dust under the punishing California sun.

Cinematogr­apher Kramer Morgenthau maintains the visual style of Coogler and his director of photograph­y, Maryse Alberti — dizzying long takes punctuated with powerful, thudding quick shots in the ring that land as heavily as the punches do. The photograph­y of the matches and editing is clean, crisp, clear and visceral. Following up a film that felt as new and exciting as “Creed” is a tall order, and “Creed II” isn’t quite as efficient and effecting as Coogler’s film. But Caple Jr. and the writers do justice to the characters’ journey while exploring the depths of their pain and redemption and humanizing the impenetrab­le force that is the Drago clan.

 ?? BARRY WETCHER METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PICTURES/WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Sylvester Stallone, left, and Michael B. Jordan in "Creed II:" unfinished business.
BARRY WETCHER METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PICTURES/WARNER BROS. PICTURES Sylvester Stallone, left, and Michael B. Jordan in "Creed II:" unfinished business.

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