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Ballerina Expands the World of John Wick, and Offers Its Own Delights
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Ballerina
Ballerina Expands the World of John Wick, and Offers Its Own Delights
Hold me closer, tiny assassin.
By Leah Schnelbach
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Published on June 9, 2025
Credit: Lionsgate
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Credit: Lionsgate
You can’t spend a decade building John Wick up as this mythological killer and then give us a small woman who can magically do all the same stuff as him.
And Ballerina… doesn’t do that.
Eve Macarro messes up a lot. Her work is difficult, it takes effort, and she fails—often—along the way, but she always gets back up and stabs again. And unsurprisingly Ana de Armas is fantastic as Eve. Ballerina is basically The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Killer, and de Armas shows us every bit of Eve’s journey and growth, and grounds her character even in a fantastical and over-the-top world. While there is some clunkiness, and I don’t think it reaches the heights of the best of John Wick, I enjoyed it for what it is. It has the wit and inventiveness that have always made the series fun, and it expands the world in an interesting way (one that I wish was explored a little more) and leaves room for the further bloody adventure of Eve Macarro.
We meet Eve as a little girl (a winning performance from Victoria Comte), living alone with her dad in a castle by the sea (like you do) pining for her dead sister (also as you do in these kinds of action movies), gazing at her ballerina music box in the most foreshadow-y way possible.
This Eden is quickly destroyed with the arrival of Gabriel Byrne’s The Chancellor, and Young Eve goes to live with the Ruska Roma, under the strict eye of The Director (Angelica Huston) and her assistant Nogi (Sharon Duncan-Brewster). We watch her learn to fight and learn to dance, and best of all, in an expanded version of a sequence we saw in the trailers, how to CHEAT.
Credit: Lionsgate
Because again, the fun thing with this movie is that the writers took a long hard look at John Wick, and asked, “What if a much shorter, smaller, woman tried to do this?” So we see her learn to use her thighs more often than her arms, to use her lower center of gravity against arrogant tall people, and to use close-up blade attacks more often than guns—though I think that last one is more about personal preference. (This also leads to a wonderful scene of Eve collecting all the knives she’s used from the corpses they’re buried in—like I said, this movie’s fun.)
We get to see more of the inner workings of the school that we got brief glimpses of in John Wick’s movies before Eve goes off on her own rogue mission to hunt down the men who murdered her father.
And here’s another place where it strikes out on its own. Part of the appeal of the first John Wick was that we were watching an elite assassin get dragged back into a life he left behind, but not to avenge murdered father or his murdered wife or his honor—it was, on the surface, because of a murdered puppy, but really because he wanted the right to grieve for his wife in peace. Over the course of the series, that initial desire morphed into him caring for a new dog, to honor his wife’s final wish that he find a positive reason to live, and that in turn became a desire to protect every dog he comes across. Eve’s vengeance tour is a little more standard issue—but it, too, gets complicated.
Eve isn’t trained to be an assassin, but to be a kikimora—in the Wickverse, the transformation of a sometimes helpful Slavic household spirit into a protector—sent out to guard the vulnerable against more powerful enemies. The fact that she wants revenge actually is a bug, not a feature. Especially when it’s revealed that there’s a shadowy cult involved. But her initial blood-soaked plans are thrown off course when she finds an extremely vulnerable person only she can protect.
Like all the other Wicks, there are some bigger ideas bubbling away under the action. In this case, the film plays with ideas of free will versus fate—not enough to turn a solid action film into a philosophical discourse, but enough to give a little more weight to the proceedings. Is Eve fated to be a killer? Or has she chosen her life with the Ruska Roma over other viable options? Is her instinct to protect the vulnerable hardwired into her, or born of her own tragic childhood? Were the people who murdered her father forced into it by their own fates, or actively choosing to upend her life, and calling it her fate to control her?
Again, this isn’t exactly a Tarkovsky movie (though the director does get a shout out that delighted me) but it does have a brain along with all of its bullets and blades. I also want to note that kikimora are often associated with wetness and swamps, and leave wet footprints around the house, which makes it extra fun that Eve weaponizes water in some of her battles.
Here’s a thing that will maybe tell you too much about me: I love it when people stab well in films. So many times in action movies you see a person stab someone and just leave the knife in there, but here, in the World of John Wick, Eve essentially perforates people—quick stabs in as many places as she can reach, to maximize blood loss and overwhelm her target. And I loved every second of it. Another thing I loved was the Jackie Chan-esque levels of improvisation that went into Eve’s fights. She uses knives, dishes, beer steins, frying pans, swords, ice skates, a flamethrower, and a TV REMOTE as weapons.
Credit: Lionsgate
And the film continues the tradition of showing us the exhaustion of this kind of fighting. Eve gets the shit kicked out of her over the course of this movie. (Ballerina also upholds the law of Looney Tunes physics that all the movies do—everyone’s spines should be in pieces, but don’t think about that too hard) But where John Wick tends toward stoic grunts, Eve’s attacks are punctuated by feral roars that underscore how much she’s fueled by rage rather than grief.
The performances are all perfectly calibrated. Angelica Huston is almost warm in some of her scenes with Eve, but generally speaking she’s still the same steel-eyed Director. Winston and Charon are delightful as ever, and it was a joy to see Lance Reddick for a moment. The new additions work well—if we get more Eve Macarro centered films, I hope we get to see more of Nogi, cause she’s the BEST. Norman Reedus’ Daniel Pine is a perfect grizzled assassin—but I was also pleased that Pine’s role is fairly brief, rather than taking too much of the spotlight from de Armas. Catalina Sandino Moreno wrings a ton of emotion out of a small-but-pivotal role. And Keanu Reeves is at his monosyllabic Wickian best.
But then we come to my one slight complaint about the film. Gabriel Byrne is solid as the shadowy cult leader, but we don’t get enough of The Chancellor. He’s mostly relegated to intoning over the phone, when I think if he had been more central, and a bit more dramatic, it would have upped Ballerina’s tension. Instead the film focuses on the Chancellors cult (we hit a point where Eve is basically fighting an entire town, which has its own joys) but I wanted more of the two of them together, and more on the workings of the cult, to give Eve a more sinister foe.
Credit: Lionsgate
My concern with this film was that either they’d make Eve a Girlboss Assassin, and try to one-up everything that’s come before in the Wick films to establish her as a strong heroine, or, on the other side of the coin, that they’d surround her with dudes. Instead they’ve given us an action movie as process post. We watch her learn to be a killer, how to play to her strengths and fight through pain and fatigue. There is no point where this feels effortless. The film deepens her training by telling her, and us, that these powers can be used to protect rather than to hurt, but it also allows her the space to reject any sort of stereotypical feminine nurturing roles—she gets to hunt some bastards and make them pay, just like her big Ruska Roma brother did, but there’s also a possibility of life on the other side of all that blood.[end-mark]
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