Skip to content
Wherever I Look Logo

Wherever I Look

  • HomeExpand
    • About Wherever I LookExpand
      • Our Writers
    • Editorial Guidelines
    • Cookie & Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • HTML Sitemap
  • TV Shows
  • Movies
  • Character Guide
  • Live Performances
  • Videos
Wherever I Look Logo
Wherever I Look

Home - Movies - Creed II – Summary/ Review (with Spoilers)

Creed II – Summary/ Review (with Spoilers)

Like most boxing movies, when the actors are in the ring you’re flinching and engaged. However, once they leave the ring? Well, let’s just say you’ll be counting down to the next fight.

ByAmari Allah Hours Posted onNovember 21, 2018 9:38 PMNovember 22, 2018 2:47 PM Hours Updated onNovember 22, 2018 2:47 PM
Creed II - Title Card

Spoiler Alert: This summary and review contains spoilers.


Additionally, some images and text may include affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission or receive products if you make a purchase.


  • Summary (Ending on 2nd Page)
  • Highlights
    • You Will Absolutely Flinch & Appreciate The Art of Boxing
  • On The Fence
    • While You Have To Appreciate The Long History of The Franchise and Adonis' Relationship With Bianca, It Gets Boring
  • Overall: Positive (Worth Seeing) | Purchase Or Rent On (Fandango/ Amazon)
  • Follow Wherever I Look on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.

Like most boxing movies, when the actors are in the ring you’re flinching and engaged. However, once they leave the ring? Well, let’s just say you’ll be counting down to the next fight.


[adinserter name=”General Ads”]

Director(s) Steven Caple Jr.
Written By Sylvester Stallone, Juel Taylor
Date Released 11/21/2018
Genre(s) Drama, Sport
Good If You Like Boxing Movies
Noted Cast
Ivan Drago Dolph Lundgren
Rocky Sylvester Stallone
Viktor Drago Florian Munteanu
Adonis Michael B. Jordan
Mary Anne               Phylicia Rashad
Bianca Tessa Thompson
Bobby Milo Ventimiglia

Images and text in this post may contain affiliate links which, if a purchase is made from those sites, I may earn money or products from the company. Most affiliate links contain an upward facing, superscript, arrow.

Summary (Ending on 2nd Page)

It has been approximately 33 years since Ivan Drago killed Apollo Creed in the ring. It also is about the same amount of time since Rocky beat Ivan and made him lose it all. The respect of his country, his wife, and also Rocky ended up causing Ivan’s son, Viktor, to lose the love of his mother. Making Ivan raising Viktor as a fighter, someone who could redeem him, win his mother’s love, maybe make Ivan a star again a big deal. Hence why his sights get set on Apollo Creed’s son Adonis. Someone who sees the potential of this fight as vicariously getting revenge but, with all emotion and no technique, so comes the question if Apollo might have bitten off more than he can chew.

[adinserter name=”In Article”]

Oh, add in Bianca having his kid and Mary Anne’s life without Apollo haunting both Bianca and Adonis? So comes the question of if the fight is worth it? For Viktor’s technique is just like his father’s and while Rocky beat him, it wasn’t like he easily whooped Ivan’s ass. So what can he really provide to Adonis who is smaller than Viktor, doesn’t pack the same punch, and is slightly blinded? Add in the fight with Viktor is for the world title and you see, as Rocky says, only one person with everything to lose. Making him more vulnerable than he cares to admit.

Highlights

You Will Absolutely Flinch & Appreciate The Art of Boxing

Adonis (Michael B. Jordan) sitting in a window.
Adonis (Michael B. Jordan)

Creed II will have you moving like your behind is in the ring. You’ll be flinching when Adonis or Ivan get hit, shifting like you’re the one dodging a punch, and looking at every bruise, swollen eye, and blood as if you just saw someone get stabbed countless times. Leading to you really appreciating how brutal this sport is and how much you have to focus on not just brute strength but technique, endurance, and so much more.

And while, naturally, the fights are the climax, better said: the main event, even watching the characters train is strangely exciting. It is like hearing the foot stomps and claps when hearing Queen’s “We Will Rock You” and though montages are often boring as hell, sports movies make use of them in a way to get you hyped. I’m talking, got a few drinks in you, rent money became bet money and you need this win or you will be homeless hyped. Something which is given in the two good fights there are in this movie. The rest, honestly, are matches to build up Viktor as a formidable opponent. Adonis also gets one non-Viktor fight but it isn’t noteworthy.

[adinserter name=”Box Ads”]

On The Fence

While You Have To Appreciate The Long History of The Franchise and Adonis’ Relationship With Bianca, It Gets Boring

As we’re reminded quite a few times, the story of Viktor and Adonis trying to avenge their fathers’ defeats is a story over 30 years in the making. Alongside that, we got Rocky dealing with the fact he hasn’t seen his son, Bobby, in many years, Bianca’s career and relationship with Adonis, and them having a baby. A good portion of this 2 hour and 10-minute movie is dedicated to all that. Which, at times, is a problem.

Why? Well, think about it. You go from an intense fight where it is two men punching each other to the point they can’t get up and then go to Adonis proposing. If not Rocky hemming and hawing about not talking to his son for a long time. Those moments, which are focused on character building, they don’t match the energy of what happens in the ring at all.

Bianca (Tessa Thompson) and Adonis (Michael B. Jordan) with their daughter.
Bianca (Tessa Thompson) and Adonis (Michael B. Jordan)

For example, as much as I love seeing two Black characters together, there isn’t much between Bianca and Adonis to swoon over. Are they cute? Yeah, but they aren’t #Goals or the type of couple whose love is so strong that you could set aside the boxing stuff and see this as a quality romantic movie. Bianca is a supporting character in every which way imaginable. Be it supporting her man when he fights or giving him a reason, if fighting is something he must do, to do so smartly for she doesn’t want to end up like his momma.

[adinserter name=”In Article”]

All of which, to a point, gives the film some emotion, but never enough to engage you as much as when Viktor and Adonis are in the ring.

Overall: Positive (Worth Seeing) | Purchase Or Rent On (Fandango/ Amazon)

Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) talking to Adonis.
Rocky (Sylvester Stallone)

While the personal lives of the characters, like any movie featuring intense action, mostly act as a cool down period, you recognize why it’s necessary. You may check your phone to estimate how much longer you’ll have to deal wait on the next fight, but you know the story is kind of a necessary evil. After all, Rocky missing his kid, Adonis trying to be like his father, yet better, and Viktor trying to not feel the same tinge of abandonment his father dealt with adds another layer to why the fights are important. Hell, it is what makes the ending something you may cry over.

Leading to why the positive label. With respect to the franchise as a whole, and the need to build up to some really epic fights, you’ll come to appreciate what can feel like the duller moments. For while Creed personal life doesn’t match up to his boxing matches, you know neither can be great if its counterpart isn’t included. And, again, let me tell you, when the final boxing match ends, it is because of all those dull and boring parts, combined with the fight you watched, you’ll be mentally exhausted and emotionally may find yourself crying. Thus giving us a respectable entry into the long-running Rocky franchise.

[adinserter name=”Amazon – Native Shopping Ads”]


Follow Wherever I Look on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.


[ninja_tables id=”24271″]

Pages: 1 2

Follow/Subscribe To Our External Pages

  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • Amazon
  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • X

Sending
User Review
0 (0 votes)

Listed Under Categories: Movies, Positive (Worth Seeing)

Related Tags: Dolph Lundgren, Drama, Florian Munteanu, Juel Taylor, Michael B. Jordan, Milo Ventimiglia, Phylicia Rashad, Sport, Steven Caple Jr., Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson

Amari Allah

Amari is the founder and head writer of Wherever-I-Look.com and has been writing reviews since 2010, with a focus on dramas and comedies.

Facebook Instagram YouTube

Post navigation

Previous Previous
My Brilliant Friend: Season 1/ Episode 2 “Soldi (The Money)” – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
NextContinue
Black Lightning: Season 2/ Episode 6 “The Book of Blood: Chapter Two: The Perdi” – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)

Site Pages

  • Home
  • About Wherever I Look
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie & Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer & Disclosure Policy
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • HTML Sitemap
  • Our Writers
The Wherever I Look logo featuring a film reel, a video game controller, old school TV set, a stage, and more done by artist Dean Nelson.

The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.

Category Pages

  • Articles
  • Character Guide
  • Collected Quotes
  • Live Peformances
  • Movies
  • Our Latest Reviews
  • TV Series
  • Video Page
Scroll to top

Wherever I Look logo

Welcome to Wherever I Look, your go-to destination for insightful and personable reviews of the latest TV episodes, movies, and live performances. Also, dive into our character guides and discover what’s truly worth your time.

  • Home
    • About Wherever I Look
      • Our Writers
    • Editorial Guidelines
    • Cookie & Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • HTML Sitemap
  • TV Shows
  • Movies
  • Character Guide
  • Live Performances
  • Videos
Search