In the sprawling, sweat-soaked saga of Rocky and Creed , the ghost of the past has always been the toughest opponent. For Rocky, it was the regret of unfulfilled potential and the loss of Mickey. For Adonis Creed, it was the crushing weight of his father’s legacy. But Creed III , directed by and starring Michael B. Jordan, does something audacious: it cuts the cord. For the first time in the franchise’s 47-year history, Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky Balboa is absent. And in that absence, the film finds not a void, but a new kind of thunder.
With stunning direction, a career-best villain turn from Majors, and a final image that lingers like a bruise, Creed III proves that this franchise doesn’t need its past to have a future. It only needs to keep throwing punches at the truth. creed 3
On paper, this is a familiar sports-drama setup: the jealous rival seeking what he’s owed. But Creed III transcends the trope by refusing to paint Dame as a simple villain. Majors delivers a performance of volcanic pathos. His Dame is not angry that Donnie is famous; he’s devastated that Donnie forgot him. He moves with a coiled, desperate grace, his eyes flickering between a child’s hurt and a predator’s hunger. The film’s central question isn’t “Who will win the fight?” but “Can you ever truly atone for the person you abandoned to save yourself?” Stepping into the director’s chair, Michael B. Jordan doesn’t just replicate Ryan Coogler’s verité style. He explodes it. The boxing sequences in Creed III are not just brawls; they are expressionist art. In the sprawling, sweat-soaked saga of Rocky and
In theaters now. Stay for the silence after the final bell. But Creed III , directed by and starring Michael B
The result is the most psychologically complex, visually inventive, and emotionally raw entry in the Creed spin-off series—a film that understands that the heaviest weights aren't lifted in the gym, but carried in the heart. The plot is deceptively simple. Years after retiring from boxing, Adonis Creed (Jordan) is thriving. He’s a family man, a successful promoter, and has traded his gloves for a tailored suit. His peace is shattered by the return of Damian “Dame” Anderson (Jonathan Majors), a childhood prodigy and Adonis’s surrogate brother. After an impulsive street fight decades ago, Dame took the fall, serving an 18-year prison sentence while Donnie went on to become a world champion.
Dame is the dark mirror of Donnie: what happens when talent meets no second chance. The film wisely never lets him become a monster. Even as he commits morally questionable acts, you understand his logic. He doesn’t want the title; he wants the respect Donnie took for granted. In a lesser film, the third-act reconciliation would be a hug. Here, it’s a knockout—and that’s the only honest ending. Creed III is not the best Rocky film—that honor still belongs to the original’s raw poetry. But it may be the most mature film in the entire franchise. By letting go of Rocky, it allows Adonis Creed to fully become his own man, and in doing so, it asks a question the earlier films never dared: What if your biggest failure wasn’t losing a fight, but winning one at someone else’s expense?
The climactic fight, held in a packed L.A. arena, is a masterpiece. As the blows land and the crowd roars, Jordan and his cinematographer, Kramer Morgenthau, pull a radical trick: the sound cuts out. The audience vanishes. The ropes and the ring dissolve, leaving Donnie and Dame battling alone in a flooded, abstract void—a physical manifestation of their shared, unhealed memory. They are no longer boxers; they are two boys from the foster system, finally settling a debt that has haunted them for two decades. It is a breathtaking sequence, borrowing from anime (specifically Hajime no Ippo and Megalobox ) and arthouse cinema to say something words cannot: violence, when born of love turned sour, is a form of prayer. While Jordan’s Donnie is solid—a portrait of a man learning that success doesn’t equal closure—it is Jonathan Majors who gives the film its tragic soul. In an era of superhero spectacle, Majors commits to a raw, Shakespearean brokenness. Watch the scene where Dame confronts Donnie in his own gym, running his fingers over the championship belts like a man touching a ghost. He doesn’t yell. He whispers, “You took my life.” It’s a line that could feel melodramatic, but Majors renders it as a simple, devastating fact.