
Movie Review: Ana de Armas is better at killing than ballet in ‘Ballerina,' a John Wick spinoff
Watch a bunch of John Wick movies all in a row, and you can get pretty paranoid.
You start to think everyone's an assassin. The guy at the newsstand, the street musician, the subway rider, that nice neighbor in the elevator — ruthless contract killers, all.
So perhaps it shouldn't be too surprising that in 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' the latest installment in the Wickian world, we reach the logical endpoint: a town where every single inhabitant's a killer. Yes, it's a picture-perfect, snowy winterscape in Austria, where everyone wears wool beanies and very nice sweaters. But they also wield a mean flamethrower, and schoolkids have mandatory shooting practice.
The early scenes in this wacky place high in the mountains are the best part of 'Ballerina' — they actually contain deft surprises and even a glimmer of humor, which is hardly something we expect in a John Wick film. (Have you ever see the guy smile?) Watching our energetic star, Ana de Armas, engage in a plate-smashing contest with a sweet waitress-turned-vicious-killer reminds us that action can be clever, even if most scenes in this series inevitably become numbing, as the body count rises stratospherically.
Before we go further, some clarification on where this film fits into the timeline. Let's forget (for now) that there was a John Wick 4, because the events of 'Ballerina' take place during the third movie. So, erase from your mind whatever huge, life-altering thing may or may not have happened in the last film. OK?
Eagle-eyed viewers may, in fact, remember a brief scene in the third movie where a ballerina is trying to do a series of fouettés, those whiplash turns on one leg that are a big attraction in 'Swan Lake.' The same scene returns in 'Ballerina,' where we see de Armas' character, Eve, doggedly trying to master them in training. Why she keeps falling — every time, after years and years of class — is a mystery. We don't aim for full realism in action films, guys, but may we suggest that falling flat on the floor in your pointe shoes every time you do a turn feels like much more difficult stunt work than anything else in 'Ballerina' — including obliterating a horde of townspeople. It also speaks to a troubling lack of coordination, a definite problem for an assassin.
Anyway! We actually first meet Eve as a child, living alone with her cherished father in some wind-swept coastal abode. Suddenly, a crew of black-clad assassins arrives by sea, targeting the father. He manages to protect Eve, but dies from his wounds.
Soon, now-orphaned Eve is approached by Winston (Ian McShane, returning) owner of the Continental Hotel. Winston says he can bring her to her father's family. He takes her to The Director (a haughty Anjelica Huston), who welcomes the budding dancer to what seems an elite ballet academy but is also the training ground of the Ruska Roma, the crime organization where Wick himself learned his trade.
The years go by. Eve is now a young woman determined to strike out on her own, though she still has problems completing a fouetté turn. ('Tend to your wounds before you get sepsis and we have to cut off your feet,' the Director suggests helpfully.) Luckily she shows more aptitude with firearms. And that's important, because her overriding goal is to avenge the death of her father. So when Wick himself (Keanu Reeves, of course, appearing in a few key scenes) makes a crucial stop at the academy, Eve looks at him and asks, 'How do I get out of here?'
'The front door is unlocked,' Wick replies – a line that got applause at the screening I was at, but so did virtually everything Wick said or did. 'No, how do I start doing what YOU do?' Eve asks. Wick tells her she can still leave — she has the choice to reject a killer's life. The sad subtext: He does not.
But while Wick wants out — always — Eve wants IN. Otherwise we wouldn't have a movie. And so, her quest for vengeance takes her, clue by dangerous clue (and against the Director's strict orders) to the snowy hamlet of Hallstatt. There, the fearsome Chancellor (Gabriel Byrne, duly chilly) leads a band of assassins — all of whom want to kill her. Oh, also: the Chancellor killed her dad.
And so Eve has to fight, using all the training and ingenuity she has amassed. One lesson she must draw on, from a trusted teacher: 'Fight like a girl.'
In this case, as you can imagine, that's not a derogatory phrase. What it means is to lean into your strengths — you won't beat a man by brute force, the teacher has told her, but with smarts and inventiveness.
That means using ever more interesting weapons to kill an endless supply of people (it must be said, the cheers from moviegoers are, as ever, disconcerting.) And, by the end, getting pretty comfortable with a flamethrower.
'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' a Lionsgate release, has been rated R by the Motion Picture Association 'for strong/bloody violence throughout, and language. ' Running time: 125 minutes. Two stars out of four.
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New York Post
35 minutes ago
- New York Post
‘From the World of John Wick: Ballerina' leaps into first position at the box office
The latest installment in the 'John Wick' series leaped into first position at the box office. 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' pirouetted to the No. 1 spot Friday, its opener, raking in $10.65 million, according to The Numbers. The thriller, which The Post said 'has good fights, bad everything else,' is the fifth installment of the 'John Wick' franchise starring Keanu Reeves — and features Ana de Armas as a ballerina who doubles as an assassin. Landing in second was the live-action remake 'Lilo & Stitch,' with sales of $9.3 million. The film, which was slated to be a direct-to-streaming title on Disney+, went on to set the record as the biggest four-day Memorial Day weekend domestic opening of all time. 3 In 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' Ana de Armas plays a ballerina who doubles as an assassin. ©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection 'I and the other filmmakers always believed that it could be a big, perfect summer blockbuster to go see on a huge screen,' its director, Dean Fleischer Camp, told Variety. 'I'm proud of how hard it delivers on that. It's super funny, it's action-packed, and it's super emotional.' Taking third was 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning' with $4 million in revenue. 3 Maia Kealoha made her film debut in 'Lilo & Stitch.' ©Walt Disney Co./Courtesy Everett Collection Tom Cruise's stunts in the film just earned him the Guinness World Record for most burning parachute jumps by an individual. 'The star leapt out of a helicopter 16 times while strapped to a parachute pre-soaked in fuel and lit ablaze, before cutting away the charred remnants of the first chute and safely deploying a backup. No other actor or stuntman has come close to that amount of death-defying drops,' the record book stated on its website. 3 Tom Cruise earned a Guinness World Record for his stunts in 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning.' ©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection Wes Anderson's 'The Phoenician Scheme,' which Slate called the filmmaker's 'worst yet,' was in fourth, with a $2.55 million dollar take. 'Karate Kid: Legends,' which The Post said was 'awful,' fought its way to fifth, earning $2.45 million.


Forbes
5 hours ago
- Forbes
‘Ballerina' Has Higher Audience Scores Than Every ‘John Wick' Movie
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Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Ballerina' Ending, Explained: How the Movie Clearly Sets up an Ana de Armas Sequel
The latest addition to the John Wick universe came in the form of a spinoff that's supposed to take place between the third and fourth movies of the original franchise. Ballerina, starring Ana de Armas, brings an entirely new character, Eve, to the universe. Trained as a killer by the Ruska Roma (just like John Wick was) she finds herself on a mission to track down the cult that killed her father when she was a child. After a tipoff from Winston about a cult member named Daniel Pine who's staying at the Continental hotel in Prague, Eve heads there only to find Pine is on the run, trying to keep his daughter from being kidnapped by the cult, just like they tried to do to Eve when she was little. Lots of fighting ensues (I mean, is it even a John Wick movie without 100 fight scenes?) and the cult manages to take his daughter, Ella. Eve is even more determined to track them down, so how does it all end? Let's get into it. Thanks to the helpful gun shop owner in Prague, Eve secures the rumored location of the cult. The shop owner lends Eve his car and she makes her way to the picturesque, snowy town of Hallstatt, Austria. She heads into a cozy-looking coffee shop that just so happens to sell the ballerina music box she was given as a child — weird coincidence? Probably not. While waiting for her coffee, a man comes into the shop and quickly starts shooting at Eve. They fight back and forth and she disgustingly gouges his eye and breaks his arm before shooting him. She's then attacked by the chef, who seems trained as a fighter, and it's pretty clear something fishy is going on in this town. After managing to lock the chef in the freezer, some townspeople arm themselves and head in after Eve, seemingly confirming that the whole town is part of this cult. Eve handily starts killing them all (that's our girl!) though she does take a knife to the shoulder (ouch!). The Chancellor (AKA the cult leader) orders "full protocols" to be engaged, meaning everyone in the town is now coming after Eve. She's running through the streets, taking people out left and right, but she eventually gets cornered. The woman from the lobby of the Continental hotel (the one who was after Pine and Ella) appears, sees Eve's Ruska Roma tattoo, and hits her over the head, capturing her. We soon learn that Pine was the Chancellor's son. He was part of the Hallstatt cult but tried to escape and take his daughter with him. This also means that the Chancellor put a hit out on his own son. The Chancellor then makes another big reveal: the lobby lady is actually Eve's sister, Lena. As that revelation is unfolding, Eve manages to get a gun and escape. Lena goes after her and when she finally catches up, she tells Eve the truth. They were both born in the village but their father only took Eve with him when he escaped because Lena was too old — she'd already taken a life at that point. Eve, on the other hand, could be raised with no memory of that place. Outside, the Chancellor is growing frustrated and tells his soldiers to just kill them both. They throw grenades into the building where Eve and Lena are and they're both injured, but Eve crawls her way over to Lena. Lena is badly hurt and in her final moments, says she had been told Eve was dead and that she missed her. And Chancellor calls the Director and tells her that her tribe has royally effed up their truce. The Director promises that she didn't send Eve there, but she'll send someone to stop her. And who does she send? John Wick, duh! Once John arrives, the Chancellor makes another announcement to the town, telling them to stay inside and "leave the wolf to its prey." John quickly finds Eve but tells her whether he kills her or not is her choice. Eve tries to fight him, but she's clearly outmatched. John, knowing what the Chancellor did to Eve's father, gives her exactly 28 minutes to squash the issue (AKA kill the Chancellor). The Chancellor calls all the citizens back out to fight Eve, and she starts using just about everything you can think of as a weapon, from guns to figure skates. Then in maybe the most epic scene of the movie, she gets a flame thrower and starts lighting up anyone who gets in her way. Realizing John has gone a bit rogue, the Chancellor's men go after him and only one of them seems to have any sense, telling another "This is suicide. That's John Wick!" And, well, he's right! The Chancellor, with Ella in tow, is trying to make his escape, but Eve starts shooting at the car and takes out the driver. The Chancellor gets out and starts droning on and on about how Eve isn't going to change anything and this cult has been this way for over 1,000 years blah blah blah. And then she finally shoots him. She rescues Ella from the car and takes her away. John calls the Director to tell her it's done, but it's not Eve who's dead, it's the Chancellor. She says "Fine," and hangs up. As it turns out, Pine isn't dead and Ella gets to reunite with her dad at the hospital. Winston warns Eve that she may have cut off the head of the snake, but the body is still there, and the rest of the cult will be coming after her. Later, she's watching the ballet and she gets a notification on her phone: there's a contract out for her with a $5 million bounty. She quickly heads out the door, but to where, we don't know. You Might Also Like Here's What NOT to Wear to a Wedding Meet the Laziest, Easiest Acne Routine You'll Ever Try