Burl here, reviewing contemporary action!
Yes, I recently watched John Wick Chapter
2, and, yes, Keanu Reeves from Speed
is still playing the titular character, all shaggy and bearded and sad about
his departed wife! Like its predecessor, it’s a slick and shiny action picture
with gunfights that go one well past the point of absurdity, with so many
henchmen falling to Wick’s gun-fu that you start to see the same guys popping
out from behind doorways to be shot!
I’ll back up and explain the plot, insofar
as there is one! John Wick is an unstoppable super-assassin living in a world
apparently so populated with assassins that they have their own world-spanning
secret culture, currency, ethics, accommodations and even their own style of
subtitles! Ha ha! In the first picture, Wick, whose abiding desire is to “get
out” of this crazy assassin’s life, is dragged back into it by the murder of
his dog and theft of his beloved Mustang auto; in response he takes on the
whole Russian mafia! As part two begins he’s bent on retrieving his auto, which
he does, but immediately wrecks! After that the real plot begins: again he is
dragged back in to the super-assassin lifestyle when he’s forced to fulfill a
pledge! His house is exploded this time, and he is forced to do a killing, and
wave upon wave of henchmen come running haplessly at him, and they fall before
his pistols like wheat to the thresher!
The picture does its best to create this
assassin world, presenting it as a completely separate and parallel society to
our own, like the wizard-world in the Harry Potter stories! That’s fine and
all, and it is compelling, but also very silly, ha ha! The filmmakers work very
hard to create an atmosphere of decadent elegance, but it sometimes seems a
little forced, like a movie version of the kind of gold-plate gaudiness you
might find in Trump Tower or some equally horrible place, ha ha!
But they populate the world with plenty of
worthwhile talent, there’s no denying that! Ian McShane from Too Scared to Scream plays the manager
of the New York branch of the all-assassin motel, while Franco Nero from The Visitor and Django Unchained is his Roman counterpart! Laurence Fishburne from Fast Break, Death Wish II and A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors is the king of the hobo assassins, John
Leguizamo from Die Hard 2 and Collateral Damage is Wick’s
long-suffering mechanic, and Peter Stormare from Fargo has a cameo at the beginning, in which he sits behind a desk
and attempts a Russian accent!
There are many figures in direct, as
opposed to oblique opposition to Wick! An Italian fellow proves the main
antagonist, but there is also Common, a rapmaster playing an aggrieved
bodyguard, and Ruby Rose from The Meg,
leading a small army of hipster barbers into the world’s most on-the-nose art
installation for the Lady From Shanghai-inspired
climax! And of course aside from the main baddies, there are seemingly hundreds
of anonymous henchmen, who seem never to have been in a gunfight before judging
by how they blunder into Wick’s path without a thought that he might be waiting
around the corner ready to blast them with artillery of his own!
None of it is very realistic, and it’s all very
stylish and impressive and silly and repetitive at the same time! Somehow,
though it’s action-packed, it’s rarely very exciting, and the characters and
the world in which they travel are as overwhelmingly fantastical as the planet
Mongo in Flash Gordon! There’s
nothing wrong with that in theory, but here the cleverness of the
world-building, while undeniably present, is as synthetic as everything else! I
won’t say I didn’t enjoy parts of the picture, but it never came together for
me in the way it’s clearly supposed to! So I give John Wick Chapter 2 just two piles of garbage for hiding in!
Great readiing
ReplyDeleteThank you! A very kind comment!
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