🎥 From the World of John Wick: Ballerina — Film Review
🔍 Synopsis & Context
From the World of John Wick: Ballerina (2025) serves as a midquel set between John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and Chapter 4. It stars Ana de Armas as Eve Macarro, a forensic ballet dancer turned lethal assassin, trained by the Ruska Roma after witnessing her father’s murder. While Keanu Reeves returns briefly as John Wick, the story centers firmly on Eve’s individual journey.
💥 Action & Choreography
Critics universally agree: the action scenes are the film’s standout, beautifully balancing ballet’s elegance with brutal combat.
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Rotten Tomatoes shows a 76% critic score and a 93% audience rating, indicating broad approval
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Reviews emphasize the choreography:
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“Action meets Opera… lightning‑speed set pieces” (Times of India, 3.5★) .
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“Very choreographed and calculated” — Norman Reedus
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New Yorker calls standout sword-fight sequences “sporadic cinematic brilliance”
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🧑🎤 Performance & Character
Ana de Armas delivers a strong lead, blending grace with emotional depth:
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The Guardian notes she showcases both action chops and charismatic presence
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Time praises her journey from trauma to vengeance but warns the emotional beats are “largely forgettable”
Supporting roles from Anjelica Huston, Gabriel Byrne, and Ian McShane contribute layered flavor within the Wick universe.
📚 Narrative & Storytelling
The screenplay leans heavily on kinetic energy over plot:
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Most critics describe the narrative as thin or service‑driven: “thin plot,” “tonally inconsistent,” or “just another 87Eleven joint”
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World of Reel labeled early test screenings “catastrophic,” prompting reshoots under Chad Stahelski to “protect the franchise”
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Bollywood Hungama suggests the second half lifts the first, praising improving tension and action
🎬 Audience & Critical Reception
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CinemaScore audience polls graded it “A–”, while PostTrak showed 87% positive, with 79% likely to recommend
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Screenrant highlights record-breaking audience ratings, though critics are more measured
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The Australian frames it as a visually bold, feminist revenge story, but limited by weak character arcs
💰 Box Office & Production
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Produced on a mid-range budget (~$50–$80 million), and grossed approximately $55‑60 million worldwide
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Debuted at #2 in the US, behind Lilo & Stitch, pulling in ~$25M opening weekend
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Reshoots under Stahelski were widely covered, reflecting a high-stakes gamble by producers to reinforce franchise brand integrity
✅ Final Verdict
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Pros: Stunning and inventive action, Ana de Armas’s compelling lead performance, stylish cinematography, and expansion of Wick lore.
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Cons: Thin storyline, occasional tonal dissonance, reliance on legacy cameos.
Overall, the film succeeds as a visceral, action-driven spinoff though it falls short of fully capturing the emotional resonance of the original Winston-Wick canon.