Los Angeles Times

LOVE GETS IN THE RING

In ‘Creed II,’ the relationsh­ip is as important as the boxing

- BY TRE’VELL ANDERSON

“Creed II” returns with a mission. Not just to continue the successful extension of the 42-year-old “Rocky” franchise but to further explore a deep, relatable and unmistakab­ly real relationsh­ip between two young black profession­als. It’s the sort of love story rarely seen in mainstream Hollywood films, period, let alone in the few pictures centered on folks of color. A pre-“Black Panther” Ryan Coogler had revived the “Rocky” franchise with “Creed” in 2015 to critical praise and an impressive box office take of $109.8 million domestical­ly. Michael B. Jordan solidified his stardom in the title role, and the picture even garnered an Oscar nomination (and Golden Globe win) for Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky Balboa reprisal, nearly 40 years after his first nomination for the role. And like “Rocky” before it, “Creed” emerged as a careful balance of underdog sports movie and intimate romantic study. The sequel again finds its emotional core in Adonis Creed’s personal life, as he begins building a family with his longtime musician girlfriend Bianca (Tessa Thompson). Of course there’s also some boxing. Newly crowned light heavyweigh­t champ under the tutelage of Rocky (Stallone), Adonis is challenged by Viktor Drago (Florian Munteanu), the son of Ivan (Dolph Lundgren). That plotline connects back to “Rocky IV,” in which Ivan, as the Soviet Union’s best athlete, fatally defeated Creed’s father, Apollo (Carl Weathers). Balboa avenged Apollo’s death in a follow-up match. Together, Adonis and Bianca must decide

if a fight that could end Creed’s life — as it did his father’s — is truly worth it.

Jordan said he had “no hesitation­s whatsoever” about jumping back into the “Creed” character, even though the film would be his first sequel. The same was true for Thompson, who said she “loved that [Bianca] resembled a woman that you might know, in a way I haven’t seen particular­ly in narratives around sports.”

But the stars knew that another notch in the franchise’s belt would work only with the right director, since Coogler (who returns as an executive producer) was not available. The studio, with the blessings of Stallone, Coogler, Jordan and Thompson, landed on Steven Caple Jr.

Like Coogler with “Creed,” “Creed II” is Caple’s sophomore feature. His debut film, “The Land,” about four teenage boys in Cleveland pursuing a dream life of profession­al skateboard­ing, premiered at 2016’s Sundance. It was produced by hip-hop star Nas and featured an ensemble cast including Jorge Lendeborg Jr., Machine Gun Kelly and Erykah Badu.

Coming from the indie film world, Jordan felt the two had “a lot in common, and that’s always good when making a film,” he said. “He’s somebody else that understand­s the character of Adonis and what he would be going through. He’s another young black male in America going through a rise of his own, trying to figure out who he is.”

Caple says the decision wasn’t an easy one. He knew that following in Coogler’s footsteps would be no easy feat, so there was “complete hesitation.”

“You don’t want to mess up something that is already good,” he said as a fan of the entire franchise. “I thought that [a sequel] could be a huge hit, or it might backfire.”

But after reading Stallone’s initial draft of the sequel’s script, and having a conversati­on with him and Jordan, Caple felt more at ease. He knew he could make the film his own without the burden of living up to what Coogler had accomplish­ed.

“They said, ‘The door is open and we’ll follow your lead’ — that felt reassuring,” he said. “When I saw they were really lenient to letting me rock, I felt comfortabl­e.”

Once signed on, Caple strove to set aside both the pressure that comes with a studio-produced project and the expectatio­ns of an opinionate­d fanbase.

“People have their favorite characters and moments and even favorite shots,” he said, “I wanted to make sure I paid homage to those things but put my own stamp on it.”

While the director handles with aplomb the series’ all-important fight scenes and the reintroduc­tion of a handful of legacy characters, including Drago, he took particular care when it came to the evolution of Adonis and Bianca’s relationsh­ip. As Caple saw it, it was crucial to home in “on what’s important in a film: the heart.”

Caple explained, “There was a lot of conversati­ons with Mike and Tessa about, ‘How do we show the maturity of their relationsh­ip?’ How do we go from ‘I, I, I,’ to ‘We, we, we’? She wants her career, he wants his legacy, and what brings them together is the family.”

Jordan added: “We wanted to let people know what that looks like, when two profession­als want to be successful in their own right and have their own agency. But at the same time, how do you compromise and make a relationsh­ip work when you’re on that path to success?”

Adonis and Bianca’s relationsh­ip is perhaps where Caple’s experience most came into play. He’s in a relationsh­ip, and has been for 15 years, with his high school sweetheart. And when he originally sparked to the series, it was the love between Balboa and Adrian in “Rocky” and Adonis and Bianca in “Creed” that he most responded to.

“I just wanted to put my own spin on it and talk to this generation,” he said. “I wanted to capture something for this generation and showcase their relationsh­ip and smaller themes because everything was so hyped up about the big fights. But the intimacy — in the proposal scene, for example — I pulled from my own life.”

That authentic intimacy helps “Creed II” deliver a fresh and much needed representa­tion of black love on screen — one between two young people committed to each other who aren’t perfect and don’t have it all together.

“To me, the imperfecti­ons make the relationsh­ip healthy,” Caple continued. “That and the genuine conversati­ons that they have.

“And all of these things that emphasized the growing pains of a relationsh­ip, a lot of it was in the script, but we’d have conversati­ons right before set. We’d spend 20 minutes before shooting talking about the scene — where are we going to be, how we’re speaking to our people and showcasing black love to change the narrative about how we’re perceived on screen.”

Because the film is called “Creed II,” it was obvious that Adonis would continue to have control and voice in his life developmen­ts. But that sort of character developmen­t wasn’t so certain for Bianca, especially if Hollywood’s history with girlfriend and wife characters was to serve as the prototype.

“Tessa and I didn’t want to fall into the cliche of ‘I’m just a girl and I want to support him,’” Caple said. “[We wanted to] break some of the norms we see in these types of characters.”

In fact, more depth and agency for Bianca was of the utmost importance, Thompson said. She wanted her to “occupy her own narrative,” as the film extends beyond a pat “happily ever after” ending.

“I wanted to make sure that she continued to make music and, regardless of her being a mother, that she doesn’t change and her whole life isn’t centered around domesticit­y.”

She’d often joke with Jordan: “All right, I’ll be pregnant, but I want to do some more stuff.”

It was also important to Thompson to continue to treat her character, who in the first film was managing progressiv­e hearing loss, with care. In the sequel, Bianca can hear only with a hearing aid.

“Hearing loss is incredibly difficult to understand. And in the process of making this movie, I’m just beginning to understand even how hearing works,” she said. “We were trying to navigate how to tell that story with honesty and authentici­ty but also make it accessible to an audience, because it is so complicate­d.”

They consulted with hearing experts, audiologis­ts and people from the signing community, “and I hope it speaks to folks who have been in similar situations.”

As audiences of all kinds begin to see the film, Caple just hopes they’re “able to relate.”

“I know people are going to come in asking if it’s better than ‘Creed,’ ” he said, “but I care about it being relatable. If we fail at that, we don’t have a movie.”

Thompson acknowledg­ed the cards stacked against Caple “coming into a franchise [and having] to satisfy all of the players involved who have their own idea of what they want to do, myself included.

“But he was really good at hearing everybody and also being steadfast in his vision,” she said. “And to me, the beauty of this film, and all of the ‘Rocky’ films, is that they’re at their strongest when they feel like movies about people and relationsh­ips and love and the backdrop is boxing. I think that’s when they really, really work.”

At the core of every picture in this particular franchise, she continued, is the breakthrou­gh spirit of a dark horse.

“Someone either behind the lens or in front of it [has always been] new to the game that has a lot of skin in the game because of it. They’re underdogs. The genesis and origin story of this is somebody who by hook or crook does something remarkable.

“I think we did that with the first movie, and Steven did that again with this one.”

 ?? Michael Nagle For The Times ?? MICHAEL B. JORDAN and Tessa Thompson reprise their roles in a sequel to the 2015 hit that revived the “Rocky” franchise.
Michael Nagle For The Times MICHAEL B. JORDAN and Tessa Thompson reprise their roles in a sequel to the 2015 hit that revived the “Rocky” franchise.
 ?? Barry Wetcher Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures ?? MICHAEL B. JORDAN stars in “Creed II” as Adonis Creed, who builds a family with girlfriend Bianca, played by Tessa Thompson.
Barry Wetcher Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures MICHAEL B. JORDAN stars in “Creed II” as Adonis Creed, who builds a family with girlfriend Bianca, played by Tessa Thompson.
 ?? Michael Nagle For The Times ?? STEVEN CAPLE JR., right, with Jordan and Thompson, took over the helm of “Creed II.”
Michael Nagle For The Times STEVEN CAPLE JR., right, with Jordan and Thompson, took over the helm of “Creed II.”

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