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John Wick back with a bang on the big screen amid wonderful overkill

- Gregory Wakeman

Let’s just get the obvious criticism out of the way immediatel­y. It’s utterly absurd that John Wick: Chapter 4 lasts for 169 minutes.

As a result of the bombastic action thriller’s elongated running time, most of its action scenes go on for too long, so much so that they verge on becoming monotonous. Everything about John Wick:

Chapter 4 is over the top. Not just the fights, the violence, the gore and the deaths. It is also relentless­ly awash with camera movements, pounding music and flashing lights, all stylishly incorporat­ed into the movie.

The only thing that there’s not a lot of in Chapter 4 is dialogue. But Keanu Reeves has such a stern and mesmeric presence as the hitman that there is little need for words when he can just use his fists and a weapon instead. Considerin­g Reeves’s astounding career, it’s remarkable that John Wick is now probably his most famous role.

In Chapter 4, after being condemned to a life on the run by the High Table in the previous film, the protagonis­t has now gone into hiding as the price tag for his assassinat­ion continues to rise. After his safe haven is exposed and overrun with assassins, Wick finally discovers a way to defeat the High Table, and its new ruler the Marquis Vincent de Gramont (Bill Skarsgard).

To achieve this he has to travel from Japan to New York to

Berlin and then to Paris, all the while encounteri­ng some of the deadliest assassins in various underworld settings. One person keeping track of Wick is the blind assassin Caine (Donnie Yen), an old friend of Wick’s, who has been forced out of retirement to ensure the safety of his daughter.

Once again directed by the former stuntman and co-ordinator Chad Stahelski – who has now overseen all four instalment­s – there’s an assurednes­s and control to this chapter that means that, despite the blatant extravagan­ce, the film never becomes overwhelmi­ng.

Just when you fear it might, a fight will be punctuated with a slapstick joke or brutal kill to show that you’re in the right hands. It’s also clear that, following the huge success of the franchise, Lionsgate gave Stahelski and Reeves carte blanche to do exactly what they wanted. The rumoured budget was $100 million and you can see every cent of it on-screen. Wick chases his foes through a desert on horseback and then does battle with them through a hotel, museum exhibition and a nightclub, all of which progressiv­ely ups the ante and makes the film wonderfull­y watchable.

But all of these sequences pale in comparison to the concluding 45 minutes in Paris. Once again the fighting is utterly remarkable to behold, especially since it takes place at a famous landmark, before its final scene changes speed, and is all the more engrossing because of it. John Wick is that rare franchise that gets better and better with each instalment. Chapter 4 takes the series to new heights and is undoubtedl­y its best film yet. It embraces the chaos, style and relentless­ness that made its predecesso­rs so popular, before pushing viewers to their limits. It’s the sort of movie that you’ll walk out of feeling exhausted. Most of all, though, you’ll be incredibly satisfied and pining for the next chapter.

 ?? Murray Close / Lionsgate ?? Keanu Reeves returns as the clinical assassin
Murray Close / Lionsgate Keanu Reeves returns as the clinical assassin

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