Creed III currently has an average rating of 7.1 out of 10 and has been rated by 178 users on our platform.
...the choreography is thrilling and the human drama surprisingly touching.
Read full review at Daily ExpressWhile it may not stray too far from the very familiar format of a Rocky movie, seeing Creed truly begin a legacy of his own apart from Rocky Balboa is an exciting chapter for the series.
Read full review at IgnMichael B Jordan impresses both on screen and behind the camera as he makes his directorial debut for this threequel.
Read full review at Radio TimesIf you’ve skipped out of the last two Creed movies bobbing, weaving and jabbing the air, Creed 3 will hit like a precision uppercut of sports-movie satisfaction.
Read full review at GamesradarA decade ago, another actor taking over and remixing the Rocky series would have seemed like pointless sacrilege. Now it seems like one of the few movie revival series with the drive to compete.
Read full review at Paste Magazine...hugely entertaining threequel packs a mighty punch.
Read full review at The Guardian...captures the spectacle and ceremony of boxing, providing the audience with an entertaining thrill ride.
Read full review at The A.V. Club...the skillful touch of Creed III comes from the way it repositions Adonis into new emotional perceptions and makes him the absolute sole focus...
Read full review at The Austin Chronicle...retains the best traits of the trilogy to remain a suitably introspective, yet thrilling chapter in the Creed legend.
Read full review at Little White LiesIt's still Creed's name that's on the movie poster, though, and his championship belt to claim. Would we have it any other way?
Read full review at Entertainment WeeklyGiving the gloves to Michael B. Jordan both in front of and behind the camera leads to satisfying results, and the year of great Jonathan Majors performances continues.
Read full review at Empire...en klassisk sequel, der malker succesformlens højdepunkter og blæser en tyggegummiboble af fuldfed underholdning. Og man keder sig ikke.
Read full review at Politiken