
'Creed' universe expands with new TV series on Amazon Prime Video
Amazon Prime Video is officially expanding the 'Creed' universe into a new television drama titled Delphi, named after the iconic boxing gym featured in the hit franchise.
While full plot details are still under wraps, the upcoming series will center on young fighters training at the Delphi Gym, a major setting throughout the Creed films.
The gym, run by Tony "Little Duke" Evers Jr. (played by Wood Harris), carries on the legacy of his father, who famously trained Apollo Creed.
Marco Ramirez will serve as showrunner and executive producer.
Ramirez previously created Hulu's boxing drama La Máquina and worked on high-profile series like Daredevil, The Defenders, Fear the Walking Dead, and the Twilight Zone reboot.
He brings notable experience to Delphi, ensuring it's rooted in both character and sport.
Michael B. Jordan, who stars as Adonis Creed in the films, will executive produce through his Outlier Society banner, alongside Liz Raposo. Irwin Winkler, David Winkler, and Charles Winkler of Winkler Films are also executive producers.
Outlier Society currently holds a first-look film deal and an overall television deal with Amazon MGM Studios.
The Creed films themselves are a continuation of the legendary Rocky series, and Delphi marks the first major TV entry in this cinematic universe.
With its focus on rising boxers, legacy, and the grit of the gym, Delphi is poised to bring a fresh perspective to the fight game.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
4 days ago
- Express Tribune
Michael B. Jordan shares Denzel Washington's advice on staying relevant in film industry
Michael B. Jordan has emerged as one of Hollywood's leading actors, thanks in part to a deliberate strategy of maintaining a measured public presence. In a recent New York Magazine cover story, Jordan revealed that he limits his social media activity and avoids sharing much about his personal life to 'create a demand' for himself as a movie star. This approach seems to be paying off, as his latest film Sinners, directed by Ryan Coogler, has grossed over $350 million worldwide. Jordan credits much of his career guidance to Denzel Washington, who encouraged him to be cautious about overexposure. Washington famously asked Jordan, 'Why would they pay to see you on a weekend if they see you all week for free?' This advice has influenced Jordan to stay relatively offline, contributing to the anticipation and allure surrounding his projects. Before reaching this level of stardom, Jordan's career path was less certain. He began with television roles on shows like The Wire and Friday Night Lights, but he was eager to prove himself in film, especially in an independent movie where he could showcase his talents as a lead actor. That opportunity came with Fruitvale Station, which director Ryan Coogler presented to him, affirming Jordan's potential as a movie star. The film received critical acclaim and helped launch both Jordan's and Coogler's film careers, leading to successful collaborations on Creed, Black Panther, and Sinners. Phillip Sun, Jordan's manager, emphasized that their focus was on quality roles rather than specifically seeking parts based on race. Continuing his careful management of public image, Jordan avoids popular platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and TikTok, but maintains an Instagram account with 25 million followers, primarily posting during film promotions. Washington and Jordan's mentor-mentee relationship was also strengthened when Washington directed Jordan in the 2021 film A Journal for Jordan, underscoring the lasting influence of Washington's guidance on Jordan's career strategy.


Express Tribune
5 days ago
- Express Tribune
Ryan Coogler addresses future of Sinners after massive box office success
Director Ryan Coogler has confirmed that he will not create a sequel to Sinners, his critically acclaimed vampire thriller that has been a box office success in 2025. Despite its popularity and financial performance, Coogler emphasized that he always intended Sinners to be a standalone film. The supernatural drama starred Michael B. Jordan in a dual role as vampire twins and was praised for its original storytelling and genre-bending direction. It became the only original title to break into the top 10 highest-grossing films of the year, solidifying its impact without needing franchise backing. In a recent interview with Ebony, Coogler explained his decision: 'I've been in a space of making franchise films for a bit, so I wanted to get away from that… I was looking forward to delivering something original and personal.' He added that he wanted Sinners to feel like 'a full meal'—complete and self-contained, with no cliffhangers or need for continuation. Coogler's directorial journey began with Fruitvale Station in 2013, followed by major successes like Creed, Black Panther, and Wakanda Forever. While those films expanded into franchises, Sinners represents a return to his indie roots and creative freedom. Looking ahead, Coogler is working on Wrong Answer, another collaboration with Jordan, and the Disney+ spinoff series Eyes of Wakanda. He's also expected to return for Black Panther 3, according to The Hollywood Reporter. For now, Sinners continues to draw audiences in theaters—with no sequel planned, just as Coogler envisioned.


Express Tribune
6 days ago
- Express Tribune
Sinners review: horror with a dash of soul
I remember it was a school night. Uneventful. Mundane. Ordinary. Until of course it wasn't. I walked into Sinners knowing absolutely nothing about it. No trailers, no cast announcements, not even a vague plot synopsis. 2025 hasn't been a milestone year for Hollywood so far and my expectations were reasonably demure. In a time where every movie seems dissected by teasers, leaks, and spoiler-filled thumbnails long before it hits the screen, perhaps I was happy to embrace the tiny prick of rebellion that it was to go in blind. I didn't know who directed it, who starred in it, or even what genre it belonged to. All I had was the title, 'Sinners'. So, with little else than the quiet curiosity that the title aroused, we dove in. Seldom does ignorance turn out to be such a gift. 'There are legends of people born with the gift of making music so true, it can pierce the veil between life and death, conjuring spirits from the past and the future." The two hour plus long cinematic experience that unfolded was so wildly unexpected, so unapologetically bold, that I was hooked from the first scene to its very last – post credits and all! Sinners is a story where the Mississippi Delta's revered soul meets fangs, fiddles, and the ghosts of the blues. And because I had no preconceived notions, every twist, every character, and every note of music (!?) hit with full force. They're not wrong when they say, that the best way to experience a story is to let it surprise you. There's a certain magic in the way Ryan Coogler makes a movie feel like both a personal memory and a cinematic epic. With Sinners, he takes that alchemy to bold new territory: a gonzo horror-thriller set in 1930s Mississippi, soaked in Delta blues, with a dash of Irish folk, and the bite of bloodthirsty vampires. On paper, I can imagine that it sounded like a madman's fever dream. On the screen however, it translated into a hypnotic, genre-bending, musical phantasmagoria that redefined what horror — and musical storytelling — can be. For those who might not be familiar, Coogler, known for Fruitvale Station, Creed, and Black Panther, ventures into the deep South for this ambitious tale, intertwining American racial history with folklore and the universal language of music. To put it plainly, Sinners is a vampire movie while also being a heartfelt tribute to blues music. To wax on, Sinners is a meditation on cultural survival, appropriation, and the seductive power of art across time and bloodlines. The Devil at the crossroads At the heart of Sinners are twin brothers Smoke and Stack (the Smokestack twins), both played with remarkable distinction by the luminous Michael B. Jordan. Returning to their rural Mississippi hometown, the brothers venture to open a juke joint, a refuge for Black folks exhausted by the relentless grind of cotton fields and the ever-present threat of Ku Klux Klan violence. Their sanctuary is meant to be a celebration of Black joy and resilience, pulsing with the rhythms of the blues. But once you open a door, you can't be certain of what evil might come barging through. Rather than hooded Klansmen, the true antagonists are a trio of vampires, led by Jack O'Connell's enigmatic Remmick, accompanied by Joan (Lola Kirke) and Bert (Peter Dreimanis). They arrive with fiddles, bodhráns, and the lilting allure of Irish folk music. Bearing them as gifts in honor of the brothers' new music joint. Gifts that might earn them a welcome. Their music is their weapon: hypnotic, foreign, yet eerily familiar. Coogler cleverly riffs on the legend of Robert Johnson, the bluesman who supposedly sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads. But here, the deal is reframed: the vampire Remmick offers freedom from the brutalities of mortal life — eternal youth, power, escape from racism and oppression. His pitch is seductive, precisely because he presents himself as an outsider to America's racial hierarchies, an ancient being who seemed to have witnessed Ireland's own colonisation and sees Mississippi's racial violence with a detached, almost anthropological eye. As defenders of their community Smoke and Stack are drawn into this supernatural conflict, in a marginally pronounced role, as artists grappling with the existential question: Who owns the blues? Is it the people who lived it? Or can it be co-opted, adulterated, transmuted, and commodified by those who neither understand its pain nor respect its roots? As the vampires' influence grows, the juke joint descends into a battleground of culture, memory, and identity (read lots and lots of blood). Blues, blood, and Bodhráns Ryan Coogler's deep reverence for music is evident in every frame. Teaming up once again with composer Ludwig Göransson, the duo crafts a soundscape that is more vital to the storytelling than any dialogue or action sequence. The diegetic music, songs performed on screen by the characters profoundly grounds the film in its historical context. The juke joint scenes are electric, featuring authentic blues performances that feel lived-in: familiar and raw. One standout moment is when newcomer Miles Caton, playing the young singer Sammie, delivers a haunting rendition of the original song 'I Lied to You.' Caton's voice, aged beyond his years, crackles with sorrow and defiance, while the camera dances through the club, blurring the boundaries of time and space. In an unforgettable set piece, the walls of the juke joint dissolve as Coogler blends 1930s plantation workers, ancient African drummers, modern DJs, and even twerking dancers into a transcendent musical tableau. It is a literal eruption of history through sound, culminating in the roof bursting into a plume of flames, a shot Coogler proudly confirms was done practically, not digitally. The scene in itself is a visual and sonic manifesto about the enduring, evolving soul of Black music, brought to life through the director's bravura. And then there's the Irish music. One could imagine the vampires' arrival being heralded with ominous strings, spine chilling and ethereal — but what we get instead are sprightly reels tinged with melancholic airs. Coogler's personal affection for Irish folk, shared by his family, informs this choice. The gimmick cashes in triumphantly; the use of Irish music deepens the film's themes. The fiddles and jigs, while at face value, contrast starkly with the heavier, bass hefty blues, snap right into place — an immaculate union; both echoing similar emotional truths — requiems of sorrow, of exile, and of resilience. Jack O'Connell's Remmick isn't your typical gothic villain either. His musicality is central to his allure. Trained intensively by Göransson, O'Connell plays a credible, if uncanny, folk musician. His companions, Joan and Bert, portrayed by real-life musicians Lola Kirke and Peter Dreimanis, add layers of authenticity to their combined performance. Together, their music becomes a siren song, luring the oppressed with promises of transcendence. Göransson's score threads these disparate musical traditions into a coherent sonic universe. He wields the 1932 Dobro resonator guitar like a time machine, layering it with slide guitar, harmonica, and, in moments of climax, Metallica-inspired power chords. Lars Ulrich himself contributes to the film's heaviest sequences, reminding us of the blues' evolutionary path into rock and metal. The musical interplay between the Delta blues and Irish folk is beyond being merely aesthetic; it is instead, thematic – enhancing both arts to a level transcendent. Both genres emerged from oppressed peoples finding solace and power in subdued reverie and song. Yet in Sinners, this mirrored heritage instead becomes a battleground of authenticity versus appropriation, lived experience versus immortal detachment. Horror, history, and the haunting of America While Sinners is packed with thrilling set pieces and gothic horror tropes, Coogler's ambitions stretch far beyond genre thrills. This is a film about America's original sins that scar its tapestry to this day: slavery, racism, exploitation. Remmick and his vampires are not stand-ins for the Klan or plantation owners. They are something far older, and more insidious: the eternal temptation of man to escape suffering at the cost of one's soul. Their 'offer' is alluring precisely because it feels like liberation from the grinding reality of Jim Crow-era Mississippi. But as the film unfolds, it becomes clear that true freedom cannot be bought or bitten into. Delroy Lindo delivers a memorable turn as Delta Slim, an old bluesman who recognizes the vampires' allure for what it ultimately is: a beautiful lie. His piano lessons with Göransson imbue his scenes with lived-in wisdom, his character serving as both a mentor and a cautionary figure. Coogler also weaves in a modern coda. The post-credits scene, featuring blues legend Buddy Guy, ties the film's century-old events to contemporary realities. Coogler's emotional meeting with Guy, himself a former sharecropper, adds a poignant resonance. This scene is a living testament to the blues' journey, survival, and relevance. A bold, beautiful, bloody ballad Sinners is by all means, a very audacious film. The first half of the film is diametrically opposite in tonality to the latter. It is these shifts, from historical drama to horror to musical fantasia, that might not be for everyone but its ambition, mastery in craft, and sheer passion are undeniable. Michael B. Jordan's dual performance anchors the film with emotional depth, while Jack O'Connell's Remmick is one of the most fascinating vampire portrayals in recent cinema: neither purely evil nor entirely sympathetic; just real, bloodcurdlingly real. The music, however, stands out as the film's true star. Göransson's work here is revelatory, a culmination of his collaborations with Coogler. The score while accompanying the visuals, elevates them, and in doing so, becomes part of the narrative fabric. Every pluck, slide, and beat, tells a story, conjuring ghosts of the past while forging new sonic pathways. Sinners commemorates music. Music is magic. Music is memory. Music is resistance. Whoever thought it could not have been done — Ryan Coogler has crafted a film that is as much about the power of art as it is about vampires. It is about how the oppressed find their voice, how that voice can be stolen, and how, through sheer and indelible force of soul, it can be reclaimed. In the end, Sinners is so much more than a horror movie. It is a blues song come to life. It is a lament and it is a battle cry. It is a haunting and it is a healing. It sings, and oh boy, does it sing. Shahzad Abdullah is a PR and communications strategist, cultural curator and director of communications at Media Matters All facts and information are the sole responsibility of the writer