Ex-hitman John Wick comes out of retirement to track down the gangsters that took everything from him.
Keanu Reeves
John Wick
Michael Nyqvist
Viggo Tarasov
Alfie Allen
Iosef Tarasov
Willem Dafoe
Marcus
Dean Winters
Avi
Adrianne Palicki
Ms. Perkins
Omer Barnea
Gregori
Toby Leonard Moore
Victor
Daniel Bernhardt
Kirill
Bridget Moynahan
Helen
John Leguizamo
Aurelio
Ian McShane
Winston
Bridget Regan
Addy
Lance Reddick
Hotel Manager / Charon
Keith Jardine
Kuzma
Tait Fletcher
Nicholai
Kazy Tauginas
Ivan
Alexander Frekey
Alexander
Thomas Sadoski
Jimmy
Randall Duk Kim
Continental Doctor
David Patrick Kelly
Charlie
Clarke Peters
Harry
Kevin Nash
Francis
Gameela Wright
Delivery Woman
Vladislav Koulikov
Pavel
Munro M. Bonnell
Priest
Patricia Squire
Elderly Woman
Vladimir Troitsky
Team Leader
Matt McColm
Club Goon (uncredited)
Scott Tixier
Violinist (uncredited)
Carolyn Blair
Red Circle Club Goer (uncredited)
Samantha Crawford
Red Circle Club Goer (uncredited)
Nadia Kay
Hot Girl (uncredited)
Natalia Kiriya
Red Circle Model (uncredited)
Tommy Bayiokos
Russian Sniper (uncredited)
J.J. Perry
Bathroom Security (uncredited)
Dennis Keiffer
Club Goon (uncredited)
Alex Ziwak
Assassin (uncredited)
Erik Martin
Russian Thug (uncredited)
Elizabeth Saint
Russian Model (uncredited)
Marija Skangale
Red Circle Cage Dancer (uncredited)
Karen Nazarov
Red Circle Club Dancer (uncredited)
Paugh Shadow
Assassin (uncredited)
Director
Chad Stahelski
Writer
Derek Kolstad
June 25, 2015
9
This is very much my kind of movie. Straightforward, lots of good action, our hero never waivers from his path and no social or emotional nonsense. Those who have watched the movie might wonder why I claim that there is not emotional nonsense since the entire plot is driven by John Wick’s very emotional response to his wife’s death and the subsequent killing of the dog that he received as a last present from her. What I mean with “no emotional nonsense” is that John Wick is never second guessing himself, the movie never really tries to portray him as an “ordinary” guy having second thoughts about killing the bad guys and he doesn’t go into some silly “oh should I really pull the trigger” trance and drops the gun in the worst possible moments as is done in a lot of movies. Sure, there are emotions in this movie. Rage and thirst for revenge in particular with the addition of a healthy dose of fear from the bad guys…eventually that is.
The plot of the movie is, as I wrote, quite straightforward and classical. Retired hit man gets wronged by idiot son of big bad guy. Hit man gets pissed off and goes on a quest for revenge. People die (a lot of them). Hit man and big bad guy have a show down at the end. In terms of story that is about it. However, such a story can be told and presented in a good and entertaining way and in a less good and entertaining way. As far as I am concerned the way the story is told in this movie is very, very entertaining.
Keanu Reeves is quite good as the hit man. So are the big bad guy and most of the other actors of any importance. During the course of the movie we get more than a few glimpses into John Wick’s former life and it is a quite cool background that have been elaborated. The secret world that John Wick was once part of and how it works and operates would be worthy a good old-fashioned James Bond movie.
Then of course there is the action. It is an action movie so you do expect quite some expenditure on the action and this movie do not disappoint. There are lots of action and it is good action. Sure, the ease by which John Wick picks off his opponents waiving his gun(s) in all direction without hardly looking is sometimes a bit over the top but it is still done with a fluidness and grace that just makes it … so cool. The gun fights are generally mixed up with some equally good martial arts close combat stuff and it is really well woven together.
One thing that I really like with this movie is that John Wick is the cool, cold, determined, not to be pissed off, killing machine from start to finish. There are really no slow parts or “obligatory” scenes of doubt and self-recrimination. It is “the bad guys will pay” all the way. This of course gives the opportunity to include some other elements that I quite like in a story like this. For instance the parts where the spoiled total idiot son of the big bad guy slowly gets his arrogance replaced by some good, honest to God, fear. Fear of death and fear of the guy he so carelessly pissed off.
Needless to say, I enjoyed this movie a lot when I sat down to watch it with my oldest son yesterday.