Ana De Armas Recalls Finding 'Connection' With Keanu Reeves Beyond ‘John Wick: Ballerina' Fight Scene — CinemaCon
Although John Wick fans can expect a high-octane showdown between the pair, Ana de Armas was excited to connect with her Ballerina co-star Keanu Reeves through words.
A decade after they starred together in Knock Knock (2015), the actress spoke to Deadline at CinemaCon about her 'very special' experience working with Reeves on her upcoming film From the World of John Wick: Ballerina, premiering June 6.
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'It was amazing to have him on set, honestly. The scene turned out to be longer than we thought it was going to be in the script originally and during rehearsals,' she explained. 'And then on set, on the day, we just kept finding things and little moments between them, not just action, but the acting moments and the connection between these two characters and establishing what their relationship is.'
De Armas continued, 'And I think in such a short time, we accomplished that very well. It's a good setup for who these two people are and what's going to happen with them. So, it was very special just to have that moment with him.'
Set during the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum (2019), Ballerina stars De Armas as Eve Macarro, the titular dancer who begins her training in the assassin traditions of the Ruska Roma, setting out to exact revenge for her father's death.
Ana de Armas on reuniting with Keanu Reeves for #BallerinaMovie and establishing the dynamic audiences will see between Eve Macarro and John Wick pic.twitter.com/VP2FcyEadX
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) April 2, 2025
A trailer released last month shows Eve face off against Reeves' John Wick in an epic fight sequence. The movie also stars Anjelica Huston, Gabriel Byrne, Lance Reddick, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Norman Reedus and Ian McShane.
Directed by Wiseman from a script by Shay Hatten and characters by Derek Kolstad, the Thunder Road Films/87eleven feature is produced by Basil Iwanyk, Erica Lee and Chad Stahelski.
John Wick (2014) grossed more than $86 million worldwide, with the franchise crossing the $1 billion mark last year with John Wick: Chapter 4.
The franchise will continue with Ballerina. Meanwhile, Donnie Yen is set to reprise his role as the highly skilled, blind assassin Caine in an upcoming Lionsgate film. A prequel anime film is also in development.
In addition to last year's Peacock prequel limited series The Continental, the sequel series John Wick: Under the High Table is in the works.
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Time Magazine
2 hours ago
- Time Magazine
Ballerina Is a Worthy Addition to the John Wick Franchise
Don't be misled by the title Ballerina: there's very little traditional ballet in this John Wick spinoff, and frankly, it could use more. But this fifth installment in the Wick franchise does feature plenty of balletic violence, perhaps the next best thing to actual dancing. You begin to wonder how any fight choreographer could come up with so many variations on the classic roundhouse kick, so many ruthlessly clever chokeholds, such a kaleidoscopic menu of eye gouging, arm-breaking, and flamethrowing. The pleasures of Ballerina are both blunt and fleeting; you're not going to remember the plot—or any of the performances, perhaps save one—five minutes after the end credits role. But the picture's cartoonish brutality is cathartic. Feeling angry enough to bust some balls, literally, but don't want to cause undue harm and/or get arrested? Ballerina is your movie. Let Ana de Armas crack those nuts for you. The movie opens, classically and predicatably, with backstory: we see a young girl with a bloodied face clutching a dome-shaped music box with a twirling ballerina figure inside, its surface smeared with bloody fingerprints. We learn that her father gave her this little trinket, not long before he was killed by a mini-army of highly skilled thugs. Somehow, this newly minted orphan manages to escape their vengeance. Thanks to the intervention of Ian McShane's scary but principled Winston, she'll be raised by a chilly mother figure and ballet instructor known only as The Director, played, in a fetching array of gold-embossed shawls and velvety kimonos, by Angelica Huston. The Director also happens to be the bloody mama of the secret crime syndicate the Ruska Roma—the very organization whose clutches John Wick is seeking to escape. (If you're keeping track, the events of Ballerina take place between John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum and John Wick: Chapter 4.) The heartbroken little girl with the ballerina music box will grow up to be Ana de Armas' Eve Macarro, a young woman bent on—what else?—avenging her father's murder. The ultra-simple plot mechanics of Ballerina are perhaps one reason de Armas —so delightfully flirty and kick-ass as a Bond accomplice in No Time to Die and so disappointing, through no fault of her own, in Andrew Dominik's Marilyn Monroe exploitation-fest Blonde —doesn't really resonate here as a performer. She's a little like that ballerina under the dome: graceful, tenacious, but ultimately more decorative than interesting. The movie's blunt 'You killed my father'-centric dialogue, characteristically laconic in the John Wick tradition, doesn't help. But de Armas has got the moves, and she's adequately dazzling in a scene where she slinks into a polar-themed nightclub to protect the ditzy daughter of some rich muckety-muck. Nobody can crotch-kick a dude like she can, particularly in a svelte sequined dress. Even if de Armas is the star of this show, there's just enough Keanu Reeves to remind you what franchise you're watching. He appears in just a few scenes, but his somber-funny Zen presence is a welcome relief from Eve's somewhat boring intensity. Gabriel Byrne shows up as a nasty villain known as the Chancellor, who has kidnaped the adorable moppet Ella (Ava Joyce McCarthy) and whisked her off to a bucolic Alpine village where a society of ruthless killers are able to raise, and train, their children in peace. Ballerina also includes a lost-sibling subplot that feels like an afterthought—but again, who's going to remember, or care? Because really, Ballerina is a stunt-person-employment extravaganza. There's no way to count how many tireless individuals get stabbed, stomped, thrown against walls, or blitzed with automatic weapons. From the movie's end credits, it appears that most of these trained professionals were hired locally in the movie's European filming locations, which include Austria, Hungary, Croatia, and the Czech Republic. Hollywood films, as we know, are increasingly being made pretty much anywhere but Hollywood—but that doesn't detract from the reality that all over the world, there are skilled pros who are eager to let themselves be set on fire, or worse. Ballerina 's director is Len Wiseman, one of the creators of the Underworld franchise, as well as the director of the fourth Die Hard movie, Live Free or Die Hard, from 2007. Here, he fulfills at least one basic filmmaking directive: Ballerina is never boring. And its attention to detail, particularly in its costumes, is admirable. Many of the operatives and assassins wear fantastic costume jewels—masses of chains, chunky heart pendants—though none are more opulent, in that grand, phoney-baloney movie-magic way, than the stacks of enameled bangles and ropes of beads worn by Houston's Ruska Roma matriarch; clearly, she's mastered the art of plugging 'Chico's necklace' into the eBay search engine. Whether we articulate it or not, this is the sort of thing we go to the movies for: larger-than-life faces, don't-try-this-at-home stunts, costumes that signal, in smart visual shorthand, a character's essence. That's what the dance is all about, with hopefully not too many bruised ribs, smashed noses, or broken bones along the way.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
This girl is on fire 🔥
This girl is on fire 🔥 The "John Wick" universe has some new blood. Ana de Armas makes a strong pitch as Hollywood's top action heroine in "Wick" spinoff "Ballerina" – and she gets strong backup from the hitman himself, Keanu Reeves. The franchise return is the latest major summer movie to check out at the cinemas, though if you're in the mood for something quirkier, there's Wes Anderson's comedy "The Phoenician Scheme" with Benicio del Toro and Mia Threapleton. And if you're looking for something to stream at home, here comes a third season of Netflix's soapy dramedy "Ginny & Georgia." Now on to the good stuff: See a fiery Ana de Armas unleashed in 'John Wick' spinoff 'Ballerina' Ever since her criminally short but movie-stealing scene in the last James Bond outing "No Time to Die," action-movie fans have been waiting for Ana de Armas to be unleashed in a full two-hour film. That time is now, fam: She kicks, punches, shoots and stabs with gusto in "Ballerina," a "John Wick" side adventure that focuses on a dancer/assassin (de Armas) who goes after the cult that murdered her dad. It's a strong effort that conjures the neo-noir feel of the other "Wick" flicks with different kinds of fight scenes and an engaging new lead character. (Peep my ★★★½ review.) I sat down with de Armas at CinemaCon, the convention of theater owners, to chat about working with Reeves again on "Ballerina," yearning for more action in her career and how they crafted her character's fights to her disadvantages. 'She gets tired and she's overwhelmed and they keep coming at her. And the only thing that keeps her going is the motivation that she has," says de Armas, who also pays tribute to "Ballerina" co-star Lance Reddick. Introduce yourself to Mia Threapleton's talents in 'The Phoenician Scheme' Benicio del Toro is a delight as a global arms dealer everyone's trying to kill in the Wes Anderson comedy "The Phoenician Scheme" but so is newcomer Mia Threapleton as the guy's estranged, pipe-smoking nun daughter. Here's a fun fact: She's Kate Winslet's kid. She told my bud Patrick Ryan that she dreamed of being a marine biologist ('I feel far more at home under the water than floating on top of it") but seeing Jodie Foster in "Bugsy Malone" sold her on acting. 'I remember thinking, 'This person is amazing!' I wanted to be her,' Threapleton says. "The Phoenician Scheme" is a solid entry in Anderson's signature oeuvre, and a new movie means an update to our ranking of Anderson's weird and wonderful films. Stream Season 3 of Netflix's soapy 'Ginny & Georgia' Are you like me and need to catch up on Netflix's "Ginny & Georgia"? (My bad, got waylaid by the superb "Department Q"!) My colleague Erin Jensen wrote up a guide to what you need to know about the main characters in Season 3 and what you should remember about Season 2. Arrested matriarch Georgia Miller (Brianne Howey) has apparently killed two husbands and framed her son's abusive dad for embezzlement in order to protect her beloved children, so obviously I need to get on that. If you're looking for more streaming shows, TV critic Kelly Lawler has a roundup of everything premiering this weekend. Even more goodness to check out!


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Ana de Armas remembers 'Ballerina' co-star Lance Reddick as 'so sweet'
Ana de Armas remembers 'Ballerina' co-star Lance Reddick as 'so sweet' Show Caption Hide Caption Ian McShane talks working with Ana de Armas in 'Ballerina' Ian McShane shares why it was smart to bring Ana de Armas into the "John Wick" franchise in the new film "Ballerina." 'John Wick' filmmakers and actors tend to use the same superlatives when remembering Lance Reddick: a great guy, a kind and generous man, a gifted musician. There's another, more surprising one, given his deep voice and often authoritative roles. 'Good-looking guy, very articulate, but he was a nerd. Totally,' says Chad Stahelski, who directed Reddick in four 'Wick' movies. 'He knew video games and Japanese anime as well as anybody.' Reddick, who died at 60 on March 17, 2023, has his last posthumous performance in the 'Wick' spinoff 'Ballerina' (in theaters now). It's a final role in a long and varied career that included films such as 'White House Down' and 'One Night in Miami,' voiceover work in video games and animation, and TV shows like 'The Wire,' 'Lost,' 'Fringe,' 'Oz' and 'Bosch.' Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox In 'Ballerina,' Reddick reprised his longtime character Charon, loyal concierge at the hitman-filled New York Continental hotel and right-hand man to manager Winston (Ian McShane). He has a couple of scenes opposite Ana de Armas, who plays new assassin Eve Macarro. 'He was so sweet. He had a very calm presence,' says de Armas, who chatted with him about his daughter. 'There was this softness about him that was really just very special.' 'Ballerina' exclusive scene: Ana de Armas checks into the Continental Eve Macarro (Ana de Armas) meets Charon (Lance Reddick) and Winston (Ian McShane) at the Continental in an exclusive scene from "Ballerina." Reddick had 'a class about him that I think comes across in his character because that's also part of who he is,' 'Ballerina' director Len Wiseman says. Stahelski, an executive producer on 'Ballerina,' recalls Reddick – whom he was a big fan of from 'The Wire' – being the first actor he cast for 2014's original 'John Wick' movie after signing on franchise main man Keanu Reeves. The script didn't include the visual elements that would ultimately come to define the franchise – the neo-noir, the 1970s style kung fu – but Stahelski remembers Reddick inherently understanding the movie's vast potential for storytelling and world-building. 'It's kind of like, hey, we're creating this Greek mythology,' Stahelski recalls. 'He's like, 'No, I get it. Charon, like the River Styx. The whole underworld thing. This is the gateway, I'm the gatekeeper.' And he just started riffing. I'm just staring at him going, 'Well, that was the shortest pitch ever.' ' It was Reddick's idea for Charon to have an African accent, and he built a backstory for his character plus brought his own tailored suits – one blue, one brown – to wear. 'He just came with the game,' Stahelski says. Reddick was 'the guy you want to go talk to' at the food table, and he struck up an easy friendship with McShane, who also came from a theater background. 'When you saw Winston talking to Charon all the time, a lot of the back and forth came from that relationship.' Working with Reddick was 'always a pleasure,' McShane says, adding that he'll miss his co-star's charm, directness and attitude. Reddick's death 'just came as a complete shock. It still does. It's still hard to look at (the movies) and go, wow, not with us anymore.' McShane recalls Reddick being 'really excited' that Charon got out from behind his desk and into the action in 'John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum.' There's a scene where Charon and Wick grab some heavy-duty shotguns and walk down a hallway together, ready to go to war, that reflects the 'brotherhood' theme inherent in 'Wick,' Stahelski says. Also, 'I just like that image because I'm such a big fan of Lance's.' Reddick was Stahelski's 'comrade in arms when it comes to geeking out,' and the filmmaker wishes Reddick could have been at the premiere of 'Ballerina' to celebrate and reunite with cast and crew. 'He didn't just work on the John Wicks, he was part of the John Wicks.'