Finally! I finally sat down and watched John Wick Chapter 4. It took me about 12 hours to get through it, watching an hour here, twenty minutes there. Which isn’t to say that I didn’t enjoy the mayhem playing out before my eyes. But at 2 hours and 49 minutes, who has such a large block of time?
Not I.
All of the John Wick movies are so distinct I can’t fault anyone who only likes the first or despises the third. The tonal shifts aren’t quite as wild as with, say, the Rocky franchise, but the series definitely evolves with each instalment. Chapter 1 is a small revenge movie with hints of a deeper mythology, which is gradually built upon until Chapter 3 when the worldbuilding aspires to epic proportions.
Secret Gypsy schools? Eastern Orthodox assassins? Mysterious Arabs in the desert? Okay!
But Chapter 4 is its own animal. By now the rules of the world have been defined and our focus can fully return to the character. All John Wick wants is to be left in peace, and in order to do that he’s willing to engage in a ton of violence. The people who hate him object to his desire because it will upset the established order (I think? It gets a little muddled). What the bad guys want doesn’t really matter though.
We’re on Wick’s side. Therefore, they must die.
The last ultra-violent action movie I watched was the aptly named Violent Night, which wanted to be John Wick with Santa Claus. It has tons of killing, some mythologizing, and a weary warrior played by a dad-aged star as the focal point. As far as it goes, the movie is fine. But after a certain point I got tired of watching bad guys die. Believe it or not, I was bored by all the repetative stabbing and shooting. Where the John Wick movies excel (and Chapter 4 in particular) is in being inventive not just in the kills, but also the weapons and camera work.
That overhead gunfight!
Ultimately, John Wick movies are sporting events for action movie aficionados. The story is peripheral, and the entertainment comes from the constant movement and display of skill. I may not know much about the rules of a game or the names of the players, any more than I know about martial arts or the personal lives of the hoards of assassins in John Wick, but I understand conflict. There’s drama in conflict, even when there’s little to no plot.
And yet…