Quediri said that he has shaped many people, and there is no rough division of people into good people and bad people in action films, and there is no so-called decent and villain. Creed and Lundgren are more like completing a fateful duel. Or as Stallone said, it's an ending.
In this play, except for the last scene of Creed and Lundgren's endless punch-to-meat boxing match, which makes people feel refreshed and explosive, the front paving is more like a parent's short feeling. It seems that your neighbor's eldest brother wants to avenge his father. The eldest brother's master is talking about persuasion, while the eldest brother's opponent is constantly working hard to gain the approval of his family.
Maybe boxing, maybe anything but boxing.
This film does not have the big scenes of the action blockbuster like Aquaman, nor does it have fast-paced fights. The plot is more like shaping the characters of the characters, such as the old Rocky chattering, discouraging Creed like an old father, and silently. care about him. More like a neighbor uncle. Not the hero of the past.
Creed has a more human taste, feeling helpless when proposing marriage, resentful because of his father's death, and feeling helpless when facing the soft, newly born daughter. After being beaten down, he urinated blood but refused to admit defeat. More of a person than a boxing or action movie symbol.
As for Lundgren, it was actually so that his mother could take another look at him. In the face of her mother's departure, she still worked hard. As a tool for his father's revenge, the tool he used, the last punch, even if he fell to the ground, he had to get up. He gave everything for his family.
Lundgren's father threw a white towel (admitting defeat) at the end of taking advantage of his son.
This movie is more of a drama than an action movie, and the action is only part of it. But the digging is not deep enough. There are inevitably two types, but neither is deep enough.
But the story is still good.
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