
I love all the John Wick films and I truly adored From the World of John Wick: Ballerina. I enjoyed it from the structure in thebeginning to the pattern of revenge which evolved throughout the film. Directed by Len Wiseman, the aspect that fuels thisfilm is the background correlating to the John Wick franchise. As it moves forward it contains the same momentum that results in non-stop mayhem until a price is paid. It is a rollercoaster that is unstoppable and a force of power that is not to be messed with. From the World of John Wick: Ballerina weaves a mode of continuity that makes audiences come to worship Ana de Armas.
Ana de Armas plays Eve in the film. She saw her father get killed right in front of her at a young age. Her childhood wasrough, but she always has a plan for revenge. She is introduced to Winston (Ian McShane). For those familiar with the John Wick films, Winston is an inspiration for some unsettling and throttling events. Eve begins her training to find the man who killed her father. The dangerous target is The Chancellor (Gabriel Byrne). Over the course of the film, Eve gets her training and finds herself on the run while hunting down The Chancellor. The correlation to John Wick is the presence of his character, played by Keanu Reeves. Wick is not a massive presence, but the correlating lines of vengeance expand rapidly.
It is a two-hour ride where Armas is brutally and insanely good. The riveting components of revenge leads to in-depth motions that are loud and fearless. Gasp as grenades go spiraling, watch fighting on roller skates, and do not mess with Armas. From the World of John Wick: Ballerina paints a portrait of one “ballerina” that is not be reckoned with. The many intriguing aspects of this franchise’s universe are bound to have more to offer. Three-and-a-half out of four stars for From the World of John Wick: Ballerina.