JOHN WICK 4 (2023)

John Wick 4 poster

John Wick 4

On March 7th 2023, approximately 9 years after it first came out, I watched John Wick.

Let me rewind a little, I had been invited to a screening of John Wick 4 by the kind people at Studio Canal and I had a dilemma. I had never seen any of the earlier films so do I watch Chapter 4 cold without seeing the threevious ones or do I embark on the journey properly and go back? Having consulted my dear friend and fellow cinema-ista, Adam Nightingale, I was given the recommendation to go for it and watch them all in the order they is meant to be seen “It is an ongoing saga with its own rules and laws and expanding universe. To go in cold would be to deny yourself the pleasure of seeing the world unfold”.
He was not wrong.
As it happens the first 3 films are all on Netflix, so I began at the beginning.

John Wick is a fun, very well made, action-er that is hugely enjoyable not least for the incredible cast and Keanu getting to do what he does very well and that is actioné. Michael Nyqvist is superb as the villain and it was with sadness that I found out he had passed away back in 2016.
John Wick is retired and mourning the death of his wife (Bridget Moynahan) but some Russian gangsters played by Alfie Allen and Toby Leonard Moore pay him a visit and make him very angry and thus Baba Yaga is back in business. Special mentions go to Dean Winters (Ryan O Reilly from HBO’s Oz) who should be in more films, of course, the master, Willem Dafoe playing John Wick’s former colleague and friend and John Leguizamo as the owner of a car shop.

All of the John Wick films are directed by Chad Stahelski who was a former stuntman and the stunt double for Keanu Reeves in The Matrix films and Brandon Lee in The Crow. The first three of the chapters were written by Derek Kolstad who created the franchise.

This is a good sign. Through-lines and consistencies. I like it.

John Wick and his dog

One man and his dog

John Wick-Chapter 2Just when I thought I was out.

This chapter sets the tone for what probably follows in 3 and 4. Let’s do this.
One of the many things I appreciate from having Stahelski direct is the care and attention to the filming and editing of the choreography. He knows his stuff. A lot of fight choreography in film is ruined by the editing, it is so chopped up that the beauty and flow is lost and turned into something lesser than is originally intended. Some of this is to usually to make the actors look better than they are but if you have the talent like the artists in Gareth Evan’s The Raid you will see grace in the movement and Stahelski creates that here, the fights are brilliant, brutal and balletic and have a rhythm that flows and ebbs beautifully.

We get some Peter Stormare at the beginning, who plays the brother of Michael Nyqvist’s character from Chapter 1 and that’s always fun. The original Django himself Franco Nero plays the manager of the Continental hotel in Rome. We are then introduced to Morpheus, sorry, the Bowery King played by Laurence Fishburne, an underground crime boss who runs his empire through fake homeless people and pigeons. The big bad here is played by Riccardo Scamarcio as a Camorra crime boss who calls on John Wick to settle a blood oath and drags him back into the world of death and Baba Yaga-ing. The mirror scene at the end brings to mind the classic Bruce Lee Enter the Dragon finale and is shot beautifully.

Riccardo Scamarcio and Ruby Rose in John Wick Chapter 2

Riccardo Scamarcio and Ruby Rose in John Wick Chapter 2

John Wick Chapter 3 Parabellum. This is where the series really hits its stride. The first two were brilliant set ups and here we have the main course, a deeper dive into the mythology.

I have served. I will be of service.

Just before I saw this I heard the sad news that the great Lance Reddick had passed away so watching this had a bittersweet effect. He gets to fight in this one so that was fun to see him alongside Keanu taking out the enemy.
R.I.P. Lance Reddick, thank you for your work.

Lance Reddick in John Wick Chapter 3-Parabellum

Lance Reddick in John Wick Chapter 3 – Parabellum

In Chapter 3 we are introduced to the adjudicator (Asia Kate Dillon) who is not well pleased with Ian McShane’s Winston or Laurence Fishburne’s the Bowery King because of the High Table’s perception of them helping John Wick in Chapter 2 and so a new dimension is brought to the series. John Wick is ex communicado now and has a multi million dollar bounty on his head that was revealed at the end of 2 and sees every assassin in New York coming after him. The ante is massively upped. There are, as usual many fantastic action set pieces and the film plays heavily on the mythology and is so much fun. We are introduced to the world of the Ruska Roma crime syndicate led by the legendary Anjelica Huston. Here we get some great (actual) ballet sequences and a peek into John’s earlier years. Halle Berry is fierce as Sofia who owes John a debt and Jerome Flynn has a blast playing a member of the High Table, Berranda. The fight sequence with Wick and Sofia is exquisite and the use of the dogs is tops.

Keanu Reeves and Halle Berry in John Wick 3 - Parabellum

Keanu Reeves and Halle Berry in John Wick Chapter 3 Parabellum

Mark Dacoscas has a lot of fun playing Zero, a Japanese assassin with two students played by the great Yayan Ruhian (The Raid) and Cecep Arif Rahman (The Raid 2), all three get to have fun fights with Wick and are given more than the usual fare.

Si vis pacem, para bellum-If you want peace, prepare for war.

John Wick Chapter 4

Keanu Reeves is John Wick in John Wick 4

Keanu Reeves in John Wick Chapter 4

Nowhere to run.

And now for the reason we’re all here. Seeing this on the big screen with an audience was heaps of fun. The series continues with our titular (wanna be ex) assassin, Jonathan Wick still on the run from the High Table, now being chased by seemingly everyone. The always brilliant Clancy Brown rocks up in Harbinger duties bringing a weight to the proceedings and giving Ian McShane’s Winston a dark message from the Marquis de Gramont, devilishly played by Bill Skarsgård, the main foil to Johnny W.

Ian McShane and Clancy Brown in John Wick 4

Ian McShane and Clancy Brown in John Wick 4

John goes to Osaka to a Continental hotel over there to visit and get help from his old friend Shimazu Koji played with the usual excellence by Hiroyuki Sanada, who runs the hotel with his daughter played by English singer/songwriter, Rina Sawayama in her film debut. Donnie Yen turns up early on as ‘blind man assassin’, Caine, an old friend of John’s who is blackmailed to kill him and gives a lovely performance filled with heart and fists and feet and swords and guns and a pencil.

Donnie Yen, Bill Skarsgård and Marko Zaror in John Wick 4

Donnie Yen, Bill Skarsgård and Marko Zaror in John Wick 4

From Japan, John seeks out help from his old family the Ruska Roma clan where the head, Katia played by Natalia Tena agrees to help him if he will kill the man who killed her father and therein we get to a very entertaining part of the film as we meet Killa played with relish by English actor and martial artist, Scott Adkins who chews up every moment playing the head of the German table in a large person suit that makes him look like he is straight out of Rammstein’s music video for Keine Lust. (Check it out if you haven’t seen it).

Keanu Reeves, Donnie Yen and Scott Adkins in John Wick 4

Keanu Reeves, Donnie Yen and Scott Adkins in John Wick 4

Adkins’ large person suit is a nod to the great Hong Kong martial artist Sammo Hung and the fight sequence in a rainy club!!! is alls in and alls out nuts.

A nice addition to this chapter is Shamier Anderson, who I had never seen before but puts in a solid committed performance as an assassin for hire, Mr Nobody/Tracker with his bad ass Alsatian dog.

Shamier Anderson in John Wick 4

Shamier Anderson in John Wick 4

One thing to point out is the cinematography in all of the films, the symmetry is spectacular and Chad Stahelski clearly has an eye for the mise en scene. There is a nice nod to Walter Hill’s The Warriors and the final sequences at the Arc de Triomphe and the Sacre Coeur are epic.

This is a film that demands to be seen on the big screen, it is spectacular and Stahleski has created a franchise that is by far the best action film series of the 21st century thus far. 

Keanu Reeves and Donnie Yen in John Wick 4

Keanu Reeves and Donnie Yen in John Wick 4

It’s big, bold and more than a bundle of fun.

Thanks to Studio Canal for the invite and thank to Addz for the advice. I had an absolute blast.

Check out the trailer:

If action films are your thing or you want to be entertained………

Go. See. It.

Out now in cinemas everywhere.

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY (2014)

GuardiansoftheGalaxy

In 1969 the first comic book version of G.O.T.G. was born into the Marvel universe. Then in 2008 they were rebooted and the main protagonists (and villains) that became the team, containing previous and new members, were brought together to protect the galaxy. We’ll call them the modern team. These are the Guardians that are featured in this fantastic film version of the comics.

Casting is key here, Chris Pratt is perfect as the Starlord, Peter Quill as are the rest of the team. Zoe Saldana, always excellent, is Gamora, Dave Bautista is Drax, Bradley Cooper brings the voice of a fantastic character, Rocket Raccoon and Vin Diesel uses his dulcet tones to bring to life another great character, Groot. The original serial killer, Michael Rooker is on tough guy duties as Yondu, the sometime collaborator of Quill. Lee Pace delivers the bad guy, Ronan the Accuser to life. Bringing up the support are John C. Reilly, Peter Serafinowicz, Djimon Hounsou, the beautiful Laura Haddock and the irrepressible Glenn Close. Special mentions go to Karen Gillan as Nebula and Alexis Rodney as Moloka Dar.

Now, with a cast like this, your acting duties are well taken care of. All you need is a great story, directing, soundtrack and the elements are all in place.
James Gunn directs this wonderful addition to the Marvel canon with aplomb.

Marvel just seems to be getting better and better at delivering brilliant, entertaining superhero films. The last venture being Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which showed that they are beginning to make films worthy of their pedigree. Although the previous films have made a shed-load of money, they have fallen short of artistic quality. With Guardians they are establishing a real understanding of how to do it properly.

This film ticks so many of the right boxes, the set ups, the characters, story, the humour and effects and one would surely be looking forward to the next film in this series.

This is a big budget film with great low budget sensibilities.
The Guardians are Iron Man and the Hulks geekier, less cool, younger cousins.
This one has come out of the gates racing ahead of the race with a rag tag group of reprobates truly kicking the door of the hinges of the Marvel film universe.

The Usual Suspects in space.

BUY THE BLU RAY DVD HERE

DOWNLOAD THE FILM ON iTUNES HERE

4/5