The News-Times

Jonathan Majors brings the heat, but ‘Creed III’ is otherwise lukewarm

- By Mark Meszoros THE NEWS-HERALD,

“Creed III” enters the ring with many of the ingredient­s needed for it to be another memorable installmen­t in the “Rocky” franchise.

In theaters this week, the follow-up to 2018's “Creed II” has the sequel series' engaging star, Michael B. Jordan, ripped six ways from Sunday as usual for this latest boxing drama.

It boasts the requisite visceral boxing sequences, with bloodied fighters trading atomic punches, landing thunderous body blows and suffering earthshaki­ng knockdowns.

Best of all, it sees a terrific actor, Jonathan Majors, lacing up the gloves for the first time as the film's heavyweigh­t villain.

But its lackluster writing keeps it from being a knockout.

Jordan makes his directoria­l debut with “Creed III” and shows some promise in that arena, but the screenplay by Keegan Coogler and Zach Baylin weighs him down.

Coogler is the brother of Ryan Coogler, the talented director of 2015's “Creed” (and of the “Black Panther” films). He, Keegan and Baylin are credited with the underwhelm­ing story.

It revolves around Jordan's now-retired heavyweigh­t-champion boxer, Adonis “Donnie” Creed, pouring his energies into being a husband to Bianca (Tessa Thompson of “Westworld”) and a father to their young daughter, Amara (Mila Davis-Kent), and into promoting boxing matches instead of fighting in them. The next big fight is the heavyweigh­t-title bout between his old rival Viktor Drago (Florian Munteanu) and champion Felix Chavez (newcomer

José Benavidez).

However, this new chapter of Adonis' life is interrupte­d when he encounters someone from his past, Majors' Damian “Diamond Dame” Anderson.

Jordan establishe­s the bond between the characters in the film's opening by introducin­g a 15-yearold Donnie (Thaddeus J.

Mixson) looking up to his 18-year-old friend and fellow boxer, Damian (Spence Moore II). A night that begins with great promise results in Damian spending nearly two decades in prison.

Now free and looking to make up for lost time, he visits Donnie, who hasn't exactly kept in touch. Donnie invites him into his

home and offers to help in any way he can. However, what Damian wants — a shot at the heavyweigh­t title — Donnie says he can't give him.

Damian, though, isn't exactly the accepts-no-foran-answer kind of guy, and he takes matters into his own ferocious hands. And, of course, his actions put these old friends on a collision course that ends in the ring.

“Creed III” is actually at its best outside the ring, as Adonis and Damian reconnect and spend some time together. Thanks in part to Jordan's direction, these scenes capture the familiarit­y these two have with each other but also all the distance that's grown between them. The film too often lacks nuance, but it can be found here.

Majors — also in theaters as Kang the Conqueror in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a” — is captivatin­g, saying as much with his face and his body movements as he does with his line reads. And even as Damien devolves into a cartoonish­ly ruthless antagonist — a developmen­t that's disappoint­ing if not unexpected — he remains somewhat interestin­g because Majors is a force of nature on the screen.

Even without Rocky, this all feels incredibly familiar at this point — the personal conflict, the training montage, the climactic, win-at-all-costs final fight.

 ?? Eli Ade/TNS ?? Michael B. Jordan, left, and Jonathan Majors in “Creed III.”
Eli Ade/TNS Michael B. Jordan, left, and Jonathan Majors in “Creed III.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States