RELATED: ā€˜Inside’ Review – Stuck In Artistic Purgatory With Willem Dafoe Written and directed by John Wick franchise mainstays Derek Kolstad and stunt coordinator-turned-director Chad Stahelski with co-writing credits from Shay Hatten (Day Shift, Army of the Dead) and Michael Finch (Predators, The November Man), John Wick: Chapter 4 finds John, still in hiding since the end of the last

Plot. This is also a compliment to the writers. This movie doesn’t need an elaborate plot. What it needs is to continuously provide John Wick, and other characters, with clear motivation on what they must do next. There’s never a moment when you’re wondering why a character is doing something. ā€œJohn Wick: Chapter 4ā€ is not one of these instances. While it may have a 97% fresh rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, it’s definitely not fresh in its moviemaking approach. The story itself doesn’t reveal or add anything new to the franchise.
In this John Wick Chapter 4, I wanna first talk about the man that directed all four of these films, Chad Stahelski. He should be so proud of what he and his team have accomplished to do. John Wick has the best Action (CC: Lionsgate Movies) Looking at the action genre, which I’m a fan of, besides the obvious comic book movies and, of course

The Ultra HD Blu-ray disc presents John Wick: Chapter 4 at 2160p with Dolby Vision HDR. The 4K Blu-ray played on an average of about 45 to 55Mbps with a noticed peak of 68.8Mbps. That’s not

Only time will tell, but John Wick: Chapter 4 may prove to be my favorite of the bunch. It’s certainly one of the best. Poor John Wick (Reeves) has had a helluva six months (the first three u3KJKdd.
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