John Wick (2014)

Read Time:3 Minute, 40 Second

We are professional killers—civilized!” cried a crime-lord.

Do I look civilized?” John Wick answered.

READ THIS REVIEW IN:

  

John Wick‘s plot is, basically, as simple as this: a hitman, John Wick indeed, retired from his business to marry a woman. Five years later, his wife died. A bunch of punk steals his vintage ’69 Mustang and kills his dog in ‘not-so-right’ time. Infuriated, John seeks for vengeance. He immediately learns that the punk is the son of a crime-lord he used to work with; and… there will be blood.

Keanu Reeves marks his audacious come-back to a real one-man action movie (after Speed—around 20 years ago; and The Matrix—over a decade ago) with an intense performance and, surprisingly, a brutal B-movie joyride. John Wick highlights a feast of festive close quarters combat—with series of well-choreographed vast fight scenes, top-notch “gun fu” bravura, along with suspenseful soundtracks. Reeves’ former stunt-double for The Matrix, Chad Stahelski, directs this movie with a very dynamic/kinetic/jaw-breaking choreography that rushes through your veins along with shots of adrenaline. There’s no brain involved to nourish the plot (except those scattered brain resulted from head-shots); and there’s no morality involved to go deeper in characterizations; all we know is kill and John Wick is a slave of over-kill.

Despite the slim plot (that somehow reminds me to The Raid: Redemption on its first viewing) that, somehow, makes a little sense along with some genre-cliche, John Wick presents a roller-coaster ride with tight pacing and effective editing. In such a simple plot, the antagonists fueled by Game of Thrones crime-lords (Michael Nyqvist and Alfie Allen) are not as threatening as John Wick; yet, brief-but-substantial performance from Willem Dafoe, John Leguizamo, Ian McShane, and David Patrick Kelly with his “food delivery” squad is just enough to mend the flaw.

With lots of inside jokes and unveiled secrets from John Wick’s dark past, I think a further development on his story—to make a new franchise—is more than just possible. As long as John Wick has the guts, I believe he knows how to entertain action aficionados; and as long as you love Rambo-esque action flicks, you’ll get thrilled by John Wick.

John Wick (2014)

Action, Thriller Directed by: David Leitch, Chad Stahelski Written by: Derek Kolstad Starred by: Keanu Reeves, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Willem Dafoe, John Leguizamo, Ian McShane, David Patrick Kelly Rated R for strong and bloody violence throughout, language and brief drug use

IMDb | Official Site

7 responses

  1. I’m actually kinda interested to see that because it’s shocking how high the score for Keanu Reeves action flick is – both on imdb and RT. But the dog dies in it, so I’m not sure I’ll be able to handle that.

    1. Yeah “the dog dies” part kinda bothers me too, but Keanu is cool here (remembering that he’s turning 50 something this year). Watch it, tho 🙂

  2. A good time, if that’s all you’re expecting from here. Nice review.

  3. […] Cummings find an ugly truth. Gavin O’Connors (Warriors) could have presented The Accountant like John Wick (in the end, both films have similarities—the sometimes ridiculous plot and the brutal action […]

  4. […] might remember John Wick (2014) for the over-the-top gun-fu bravura and feasts of headshots; or, better, for a revenge actioner […]

  5. […] of mobsters in retribution for the death of his beloved dog. Absurd as the premise might sound, the first movie instead spawns a new icon—celebrated for the gun-fu bravura, the devotion to over-kill and the […]

  6. […] in fact, is a faithful spin-off, ticking all the mandatory boxes of the saga’s credo. Directed by John Wick & Deadpool 2 director, David Leitch, and written by long-time Fast & Furious […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error: Content is protected !!