Tras dominar el mundo del boxeo, Adonis ha prosperado en su carrera y en su vida familiar. Cuando un amigo de la infancia y antiguo prodigio del boxeo resurge, el enfrentamiento entre ellos ... Leer todoTras dominar el mundo del boxeo, Adonis ha prosperado en su carrera y en su vida familiar. Cuando un amigo de la infancia y antiguo prodigio del boxeo resurge, el enfrentamiento entre ellos será más que una pelea.Tras dominar el mundo del boxeo, Adonis ha prosperado en su carrera y en su vida familiar. Cuando un amigo de la infancia y antiguo prodigio del boxeo resurge, el enfrentamiento entre ellos será más que una pelea.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 2 premios y 26 nominaciones en total
Thaddeus J. Mixson
- Adonis Creed (15)
- (as Thaddeus James Mixson Jr.)
Tony Bellew
- 'Pretty' Ricky Conlan
- (as Anthony Bellew)
Patrice Harris
- Boog
- (as Patrice 'Boogie' Harris)
Ann Najjar
- Ann
- (as Ann 'Mitt Queen' Najjar)
Reseñas destacadas
The first half of Creed III was decent and the initial premise of a childhood friend opened up some interesting possibilities for the story. But it sadly wasn't developed well enough and the movie ends up feeling somewhat of a wasted opportunity. By the end, it has the feeling of one of those dime-a-dozen fighting movies that didn't quite hit the mark in any memorable way.
The actors all did a good job however, and I didn't really notice that Rocky wasn't around. It was almost refreshing to see Creed and the other characters take their first independent steps, without the guiding hand or strong presence of Stallone. Things felt promising early on in the movie and it was probably the good acting which prevented the movie from being a complete flop.
Around the half way point unfortunately cracks started to appear in the story. The childhood friend angle just wasn't used to best effect, in a convincing way. Things just descend into a series of somewhat unrealistic and almost cliched interactions between the main characters. The story sort of dwindles into mediocrity.
Overall still reasonably entertaining. Good acting, decent directing/cinematography. Fight scenes not bad. Ultimately a weak screenplay turned what could have been a good Creed movie into the least impressive one so far in the franchise.
The actors all did a good job however, and I didn't really notice that Rocky wasn't around. It was almost refreshing to see Creed and the other characters take their first independent steps, without the guiding hand or strong presence of Stallone. Things felt promising early on in the movie and it was probably the good acting which prevented the movie from being a complete flop.
Around the half way point unfortunately cracks started to appear in the story. The childhood friend angle just wasn't used to best effect, in a convincing way. Things just descend into a series of somewhat unrealistic and almost cliched interactions between the main characters. The story sort of dwindles into mediocrity.
Overall still reasonably entertaining. Good acting, decent directing/cinematography. Fight scenes not bad. Ultimately a weak screenplay turned what could have been a good Creed movie into the least impressive one so far in the franchise.
The 'Creed' boxing actioner melodrama series has none of the magic of the early 'Rocky' films that it span off from - with "Creed III" a typical example. Titular champ Michael B Jordan (charismaless - also on his directorial debut here) retires to a dream LA home with pop star wife Tessa Thompson, but then moody childhood pal Jonathan Majors (good - but no Mr T) re-emerges after 18yrs in jail. Via Keenan Coogler & Zach Baylin's hole-filled, cartoonish, short-cutting writing Majors becomes Jordan's nemesis, for whom he must return to the ring, to fight in a showdown finale. As lamely cheesie as it sounds it still has some Hollywood polish, but 'Creed' is definitely no 'Rocky'.
Yes, exactly. Without Rocky, without Sylvester Stallone, it tastes like a burger without meat. Wiping out Rocky means wiping out all the past, and all the experiences that viewers lived. There was always a balance between strength and weakness in Rocky movies. They carried it very well in Creed and Creed II. But this movie lacks balance I think.
Michael B. Jordan announced that he wants to shoot a lot of Creed movies and wants to turn them into a cinematic universe. But how do you think you can do it without Rocky in it? I mean Sylvester Stallone was the backbone of that series. People went to watch Creed because of this was the continuation of Rocky films. They were seen by viewers like Rocky 7 and Rocky 8.
Yeah, it tastes like a vegan burger. But still eatable if you are hungry.
Michael B. Jordan announced that he wants to shoot a lot of Creed movies and wants to turn them into a cinematic universe. But how do you think you can do it without Rocky in it? I mean Sylvester Stallone was the backbone of that series. People went to watch Creed because of this was the continuation of Rocky films. They were seen by viewers like Rocky 7 and Rocky 8.
Yeah, it tastes like a vegan burger. But still eatable if you are hungry.
Okay, maybe guts aren't an organ, but there are things missing in this movie. Those things and Sylvester Stallone. He's missing, and his absence is felt, when often this movie is trying so hard to make you do just that, feel.
With no heart and no guts, it's hard to do that.
The boxing scenes here feel like a video game and the non-boxing scenes feel like a Lifetime movie.
The only reason this movie is a seven and not a six, is because of the screen presence and charisma of both Michael B. Jordan and Jonathan Majors. They are incredible.
But there is no grit. No toughness. It's too glossy.
It's nice to have a running time of under two hours. It is. But this story is unbelievable with the sudden ascent of the antagonist.
With the time given, a nice Rocky montage with cheesy rock music or even rap music would've been an effective shoutout.
The movie also takes way too long to get to the root cause of the legal incident that pulled these two guys apart as young men as well.
This is the weakest Creed film by far.
In the Rockyverse it's right at the bottom there with Rocky V.
In fighting terms this portion of the Creed trilogy is remarkably underweight at weigh-in.
With no heart and no guts, it's hard to do that.
The boxing scenes here feel like a video game and the non-boxing scenes feel like a Lifetime movie.
The only reason this movie is a seven and not a six, is because of the screen presence and charisma of both Michael B. Jordan and Jonathan Majors. They are incredible.
But there is no grit. No toughness. It's too glossy.
It's nice to have a running time of under two hours. It is. But this story is unbelievable with the sudden ascent of the antagonist.
With the time given, a nice Rocky montage with cheesy rock music or even rap music would've been an effective shoutout.
The movie also takes way too long to get to the root cause of the legal incident that pulled these two guys apart as young men as well.
This is the weakest Creed film by far.
In the Rockyverse it's right at the bottom there with Rocky V.
In fighting terms this portion of the Creed trilogy is remarkably underweight at weigh-in.
The performances of this movie is what saves it from being a complete flop. The Creed franchise suffers from trying to live up to what Stallone accomplished with rocky 1-4. And this is the problem with films today. The first two creeds had that same grit feel of the rocky franchise and this movie did not have that. The scenes were anticlimactic and generic. The story seemed to suffer from not having enough source material and first time director Michael B Jordan made the mistake of thinking this script was good enough without even mentioning rocky. Ok they mentioned him once. Yeah that's it, once. Which is ironic because the whole story is based on what got him here to this point. I also didn't like that they went thr MCU route, CGI should not exist in this world. Sorry had to say it.
'Creed III' Stars Answer Our Burning Questions
'Creed III' Stars Answer Our Burning Questions
Michael B. Jordan breaks down his directorial debut, Jonathan Majors opens up about the champions he studied for his role, and Tessa Thompson reveals her character's obstacles in this anticipated threequel.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesMila Davis-Kent is deaf in real life.
- PifiasAdonis tells his daughter that he used a straight right hand to knock Danny "Stuntman" Wheeler out in 'Creed II.' The punch was actually a left hook.
- Citas
Damian Anderson: Here... help yourself up for once.
- Créditos adicionalesIn the opening title, Leo the Lion is seen roaring in the MGM logo but is not heard. Rather, hip-hop music is playing all through the logo sequence.
- ConexionesFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Most Anticipated Franchises Returning in 2023 (2023)
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- How long is Creed III?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 75.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 156.248.615 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 58.370.007 US$
- 5 mar 2023
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 276.148.615 US$
- Duración1 hora 56 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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