I sat down to watch Ryan Cooglerâs Creed last night, and immediately started thinking about what a remarkable film it is. Fortunately, I donât have to, because the inimitable Grant Watson has already written the best review of the film youâre going to see. So good, in fact, that I immediately went back and re-watched bits of the film that he talks about so I could appreciate them all over again.
But from a writing point of view, I do have things to add, because there are things that Creed does that are worth learning from.
In this case, itâs a film of enormously subtlety, with a script of enormous subtlety. It isnât afraid to set things up, then let them pay off without you noticing.
Case in point: There is a scene, early in the first act, where our protagonist Adonis Johnson tells his mother, Mary-Anne Creed, that he plans to be a full-time boxer. She immediately tries to talk him out of it. âDo you know how many times I had to carry him up those stairs because he couldnât walk?â she asks. âHow many times I had to wipe his ass, because he couldnât use his hands?â
It seems like a throw-away series of question, three seconds of dialogue that demonstrates the dangers of boxing and establishing the stakes. And they do that, admirably, but they also do more, because both of those questions and the way they are phrased set up stakes for things that happen later in the film in ways youâre not even thinking about as a regular audience member, because they immediately connect Adonis Johnson to the two most important people he meets in the second act.
The first question â do you know how many times I had to carry him up those stairs â is all about Mary-Ann Creedâs history with her husband. Itâs a warning, yes, but itâs also a testament to the connection between her and her husband. Itâs about the past, and shared experience, and one that only happens because the two of them are bonded.
Then the second act of the film introduces our B-Plot: the beginning of a surrogate father-and-son relationship between Adonis Johnson and an aging Rocky Balboa. And while the thing that lays Rocky low in this story isnât boxing, there is a particularly loaded moment in the finale that involves Johnson carrying his father figure up a flight of stairs, and itâs incredible.
The film never hits you over the head with this. It doesnât actually care if you notice or not, âcause that stair scene will make you feel if youâve got a goddamn heart of stone, but the resonance sings through the movie.
The second question â about losing the use of his hands â proves to be just as big a set-up. One of the first people Johnson meets when he hits Philadelphia is Tessa Thompsonâs Bianca, a young musician with a degenerative hearing condition that will eventually take her hearing. She explains it during the pairâs first not-really-a-date, teaching Johnson the one piece of sign language she well and truly remembers in preparation for the date. Johnson mimics the sign, and they bond, the whole love-interest vibe sealed.
And itâs a beautiful moment, because even though the film never touches on it again, the threat of what losing his hands could really mean for Adonis Johnson’s future is immediately contextualised and given an external metaphor.Of course, that metaphor is also a musician committed to following her dreams today, before the inevitable happens,which makes her simultaneously a warning and a cheerleader urging the plot forward.
I’ve got an incredible amount of admiration for the layers in this film. Now either of these things would have been unbearable if they had attention called towards them. It would have seemed schmaltzy and sentimental, drawing away from the other parts of the film.
But because they are inserted into the script, and used with a deft hand, the viewer is free to make the connections themselves and lose nothing if they do not. Itâs a little thing that pays off if you choose to do a closer reading, and it shows the level of control and craft thatâs gone into every aspect of the film.
Itâs a technique worth stealing, when you get the chance.