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Ballerina

Ballerina

  • Status: Released
  • 04-06-2025
  • Runtime: 125 min
  • Score: 7.046
  • Vote count: 406

Taking place during the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum, Eve Macarro begins her training in the assassin traditions of the Ruska Roma.

Ana de Armas

Eve

Keanu Reeves

John Wick

Ian McShane

Winston

Anjelica Huston

The Director

Gabriel Byrne

The Chancellor

Catalina Sandino Moreno

Lena

Ava McCarthy

Ella

Juliet Doherty

Tatiana

Norman Reedus

Daniel Pine

Lance Reddick

Charon

Sharon Duncan-Brewster

Nogi

David Castañeda

Javier

Victoria Comte

Young Eve

Robert Maaser

Dex

Sooyoung Choi

Katla Park

Jung Doo-hong

Il Seong

Anne Parillaud

Prague Concierge

Marc Cram

Prague Manager

Rila Fukushima

Petra

Abraham Popoola

Frank

Magdalena Šittová

Agnetha the Waitress

Waris Ahluwalia

The Eye

Daniel Bernhardt

Scarred Eye Assassin

Anna Schmidtmajerová

Hallstatt Mother

Emílie Páclová

Hallstatt Daughter

Jackson Spidell

Mikel

James Beaumont

Club Promoter

Tracie Bennett

Muriel

Stephanie Brush

Woman Near Tatiana's Theater

Mirko Marchesi

The Baptist

Zac Ladkin

Garner

JPV852

Entertaining enough spin-off that features great stunts and action sequences one would expect from the franchise and while the story isn't terribly strong (to be fair none of the JW movies had amazing plots), it was a solid time-waster and Ana de Armas was fairly good in the lead. Reeves for his part probably had about 10-minutes of screen time and likely collected a nice paycheck for a day or two of filming. I won't say it broke new ground however I did think it was a step up from John Wick: Chapter 4. **3.5/5**

CinemaSerf

This isn’t a film, it’s a live action video game with a predictable plot and loads of energetically choreographed CGI to substitute for anything vaguely akin to a story. It starts with the young “Eve” (Victoria Comte) who witnesses her father’s death at the hands of “The Chancellor” (Gabriel Byrne) before being adopted into the secret society of “John Wick” by “Winston” (Ian McShane) and his drag-like boss (Angelica Huston) where she learns to combine the artistic skills of a ballerina with deadly ninja ones - as she morphs into Ana de Armas (whilst everyone else remains exactly the same). Anyway, none of that really matters as she accidentally discovers the identity of the tribe who ruined her life and despite warnings of dire consequences, sets off on a lethal mission of retribution that takes her to a Czech Republic where everyone speaks perfect English. The thing is, it appears that her gang and the one she is pursuing have a sort of unwritten truce, and given she is about to throw that under the Skoda, Angelica has no choice other than to bring out of retirement the legendary you know who. Will that make anything any different or safer or even less repetitive? It not so much that this is derivative and really quite dull, it’s that the dialogue is woeful and the constant frying pan to fire scenarios where people get used and abused are ridiculous. Knives, guns, bottles, pots, pans, kettles - even a pair of ruthlessly applied roller skates and some flamer throwers help our heroine along but it’s hilarious that they always appear just when she needs them. She’s got the points and gone up a level, She also heals as if she were the sister of “Wolverine” and no amount of training is going to remove a six inch shard of glass from your body without it impeding your ability to scale a wall and wield a pick axe. Maybe I just wasn’t in the mood, but just like the series upon which this is based, it is unoriginal and after the umpteenth time she has survived against innumerable odds to fight again just had me wondering how long until she’s back with “Ballerina II - the Pirouette”. All of that said, though, it does look good on a cinema screen and that’s where it ought to be seen. It will be even more unimpressive on a television where you can easily hit the fast-forward button.