Shoot-em-up action movies often fall into distinct
categories; men-on-a-mission, defeat-the-baddies, and the good old fashioned
out-for-revenge movie. The newest asskicker of a movie by directors David
Leitch and Chad Stahelski, JOHN WICK…goes for the path of revenge, and not much
else.
John Wick (Keanu Reeves) is a retired hitman who has just lost
his wife (Bridget Moynahan). When his newly adopted puppy is murdered by the
Russian mob, Wick embraces his old self and goes on a revenge-fueled rampage.
Payback is a bitch, and JOHN WICK is a film which embraces
that approach 110%. The trick to revenge films is giving the audience a reason
to hope that the revenge comes about, and JOHN WICK spends a lot of time
setting that up. A good portion of the film is spent with Wick as he loses his
wife, and then his so-adorable-you-could-puke puppy to some very despicable people.
A surprising amount of emotion and feeling is generated in the opening act of
the film, and once the bullets and fists and blood starts to fly, you are
certainly rooting for those despicable bad-guys to get what they deserve.
Directors David Leitch and Chad Stahelski stage some
stunning and big-nuts fun action sequences surrounded by some glorious looking
setpieces. The gunfights and fistfights are not only loads of fun, but they are
easy to follow thanks to some fluid camerawork and editing. The battles are
important, because with so little plot or script to work with, JOHN WICK hangs
all of its hats on those action sequences…nearly to its demise. In presenting
fight-after-fight, and bloodspill-after-bloodspill, the film falls into the redundancy
of a Ferris Wheel; just the same thing every few minutes only under different
scenery. The fight scenes begin to lose their peril because we already know
what the endgame is, and none of the battles, as great as they are, move the
plot (what there is of if) forward. With so much redundancy, JOHN WICK oddly
feels a lot longer than its 96-minute running time, and it’s easy to zone-out
once the 568th fistfight rolls around.
Keanu Reeves is magnificent in what may be the best he’s
ever acted. The early goings of the film have him carrying a great amount of
quiet emotion which is let loose in small bursts. Reeves shows great range in going
from sadness to raging wrath in a blink. The physical and emotional demands of
his responsibilities are massive, and he handles them with ease. The rest of the
cast is solid as well; Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Willem Dafoe, Adrianne
Palicki, Bridget Moynahan, John Leguizamo, and Ian Mcshane.
JOHN WICK spends a lot of effective time in building the universe
that Wick and his fellow assassins inhabit, and the film gives enough to make
us want to visit it again…only with maybe a little more story. One’s enjoyment
of the film hinges upon their lust for guns and booms and asskicking, because
that’s all the movie wants to be. It’s an un-ambitious effort, and that alone
is a fault.
BOTTOM LINE: Rent it
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