Is Adonis Creed'S Mother Mentioned In Creed 3?

2026-04-29 10:04:52 198

4 Réponses

Tabitha
Tabitha
2026-04-30 06:24:20
Mary Anne Creed, Adonis' mother, isn't directly mentioned in 'Creed III', which honestly surprised me. The film really zooms in on Adonis' relationship with Damian and his own family—Bianca and Amara. But her absence feels like a quiet nod to how much Donnie's life has moved forward since the earlier films.

I kept expecting a photo or a throwaway line referencing her, especially since she was such an emotional anchor in the first 'Creed'. Maybe the writers wanted to avoid overcrowding the story, but part of me missed that layer of his past. Still, the film's focus on fatherhood and legacy hits hard without her.
Abigail
Abigail
2026-05-01 01:33:25
Funny you should ask—I rewatched the trilogy last weekend, and Mary Anne's absence in 'Creed III' stuck out like a sore thumb. The first film made her such a pivotal figure in Adonis' identity struggle, so her ghost not even getting a name-drop feels intentional. The movie's all about unresolved tension though: Damian's grudge, Donnie's guilt, even Bianca's career sacrifices. Maybe Mary Anne's memory was too 'resolved' for this chapter? Still, Phylicia Rashad's performance in 'Creed' was so warm that I half expected her portrait on their wall.
Piper
Piper
2026-05-02 18:21:23
Not a whisper about her, which low-key bugged me. 'Creed III' packs so much into its runtime—boxing drama, childhood trauma, Deaf representation—that I get why they trimmed subplots. But Mary Anne's influence shaped Adonis in ways that still echo, like his drive to prove himself outside Apollo's shadow. Her omission makes the story feel leaner, though maybe too lean for fans who loved those early emotional beats.
Jonah
Jonah
2026-05-05 12:02:22
Nope, no mention of Mary Anne in this one! As someone who geeks out over character continuity, I found it interesting how 'Creed III' almost deliberately sidesteps her. The script leans hard into Adonis' present—his retirement, his kid, his old beef with Damian. It makes sense pacing-wise, but I did wonder if a small flashback or even Bianca asking about her mother-in-law would've added depth. Then again, maybe the silence speaks volumes about how Donnie's defining his own family now.
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