John Wick 5

John Wick 5 Confirmed, Will Shoot Back To Back With Fourth Movie
Lionsgate officially announces John Wick 5 is in development, with the plan being to film it back-to-back with John Wick 4 next year.
BY CHRIS AGAR
20 HOURS AGO


Keanu Reeves in John Wick

John Wick 5 is officially confirmed and will shoot back-to-back with John Wick 4. Back in 2014, Keanu Reeves experienced a career renaissance when the first John Wick movie came out, earning widespread praise for its exhilarating action sequences and simple, yet effective, story. The film was a sleeper hit at the box office, grossing $86 million worldwide against a $20 million production budget. That success spawned a franchise, with John Wick: Chapter 2 hitting theaters in 2017, and John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum debuting last year. Each installment has proven to be a bigger hit than the last.

Unsurprisingly, Lionsgate had plans in place for John Wick 4, which was originally supposed to premiere in 2021. However, due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, John Wick 4’s premiere was pushed back to 2022. Reeves still has to finish filming The Matrix 4 (which was in the middle of production when the coronavirus shutdowns started) before he suits back up as the Baba Yaga. It would appear the delay has proven to be beneficial for the John Wick creative team, and they’ve locked down a fifth movie in the series.

Lionsgate officially announced John Wick 5 during their most recent earnings call. The idea is for it to film back-to-back with John Wick 4. CEO John Feltheimer said the studio is aiming for production to take place “early next year.” You can read his full quote, below:

“Were also busy preparing scripts for the next two installments of our John Wick action franchise, with John Wick 4 slated to hit theaters Memorial Day weekend 2022. We hope to shoot both John Wick 4 and 5 back to back when Keanu becomes available early next year.”

Since John Wick 4 hasn’t locked down an official shooting date yet, it may be a little surprising John Wick 5 already got the green light, but this development makes sense. The John Wick franchise has gotten stronger as it’s gone on, so Lionsgate is interested in keeping it going for as long as possible. Especially as the film industry (both studios and theaters) looks to bounce back from the COVID shutdowns, banking on established properties that are safe bets at the box office is a logical way to go. Unless John Wick 4 marks a steep decline in quality and the series falls out of the public’s favor (and based on its track record, it won’t), John Wick 5 has the makings of being a surefire hit for Lionsgate.

The John Wick franchise was already serialized in nature (there’s virtually no time jump between the three movies to date), so filming the next two installments back-to-back is fitting for the franchise. Other sequels that went this route (like Reeves’ own Matrix followups) are normally two halves of a bigger whole, working together to tell an overarching story. It stands reason to believe John Wick 4 and John Wick 5 will be intricately connected narratively. It’ll be interesting to see what director Chad Stahelski and company came up with, as each John Wick film further deepens the series’ rich mythology and expands the universe. And John Wick 5 may not even be the end of the road. Stahelski’s said he has ideas for several more sequels.

Source: Lionsgate

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Caine

John Wick Spinoff Film Centered on Donnie Yen’s Caine Officially in the Works
Yen will be returning to reprise the role.
BY ALEX STEDMAN
UPDATED: MAY 15, 2024 1:40 PM
POSTED: MAY 15, 2024 10:00 AM

As the John Wick universe continues to grow, Lionsgate has added another project to its slate: a feature film focused on Donnie Yen’s Caine character from John Wick: Chapter 4.

Lionsgate announced the news today, adding that Yen will be returning to reprise the character. It’s set to begin production in Hong Kong next year, and is being written by Robert Askins, known for his work on Netflix’s The Umbrella Academy, AMC’s The Son, and his Tony-nominated play Hand to God.

Plot details are currently being kept under wraps, but the studio says the new movie “will continue Yen’s story arc following the events of John Wick: Chapter 4, as Caine has been freed from his obligations to the High Table.”


DONNIE YEN AS CAINE IN JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 4. (IMAGE CREDIT: LIONSGATE)

The film is being developed as part of a recently announced deal with John Wick director Chad Stahelski that gives him creative oversight over the entire franchise. The Caine film will be shepherded by Stahelski and Wick producers Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee of production company Thunder Road.

“From the moment Donnie Yen appeared on screen in John Wick: Chapter 4, he captivated audiences and created an authentic, emotional connection that left an indelible mark and had fans asking for more,” said Adam Fogelson, chair, Lionsgate Motion Picture Group in the announcement. “The John Wick universe that Chad, Basil, Erica, and Keanu have built offers a tapestry of fascinating characters brought to life by the most extraordinary performers, and we’re excited to have one of the world’s biggest superstars on board to continue this journey.”

"Caine is an incredible character with a haunted past, and I am excited to return to the role.

“Working on John Wick: Chapter 4 was an extraordinary experience,” added Yen. “The reason these films resonate so deeply is because, like myself, Chad, Basil, and Erica push themselves to create action, fights, and stunts that are not only thrilling, inventive and artistic, but also expressive of character, story, and emotion. Caine is an incredible character with a haunted past, and I am excited to return to the role.”

The announcement doesn’t come as a huge shock given the way Lionsgate has continued to invest in the Wick franchise, and also Yen’s own stated desire to return to the character. Last March, Yen said in an interview that he would “love” to do a spinoff centered on Caine.

The next film in the John Wick universe, Ana de Armas’ Ballerina, will hit theaters on June 6, 2025. It’s also been confirmed that John Wick 5 is in the works, and Stahelski has teased both an anime and a TV show, separate from The Continental series that came out last September.

Alex Stedman is a Senior News Editor with IGN, overseeing entertainment reporting. When she’s not writing or editing, you can find her reading fantasy novels or playing Dungeons & Dragons.

This will need its own thread whenever they release a working title.

Lionsgate Loading Up On ‘John Wick’ Franchise; Sets Fifth Movie With Keanu Reeves & Chad Stahelski Returning

By Anthony D’Alessandro Anthony D’Alessandro

Editorial Director/Box Office Editor
@AwardsTony

April 1, 2025 11:04am 23COMMENTS Services to share this page.

[IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://deadline.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Keanu-Reeves-John-Wick.jpg?w=681&h=383&crop=1”}[/IMG2] Keanu Reeves in ‘John Wick’ (2014).David Lee/Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection

John Wick isn’t dead. He’s so not dead that Lionsgate is literally exploiting the franchise at full tilt with an animated version, a Donnie Yen directed Caine character spinoff and yes, of course, a John Wick: Chapter 5 with Keanu Reeves returning to star, franchise filmmaker Chad Stahelski back to direct and produce and Thunder Road producers Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee also returning to produce.

All of this went down at Lionsgate’s beefy CinemaCon presentation this morning at Caesars Palace Colosseum in Las Vegas.

The most recent film in the franchise, John Wick: Chapter 4, took in over $440 million at the worldwide box office, with each of the first four films accomplishing the rare feat of outperforming its predecessor. The franchise as a whole has earned over $1 billion at the global box office. In addition to the four hit films, the John Wick Universe includes two spinoff films, including Ballerina, to be released June 6, and a spinoff directed by and starring Donnie Yen reprising his Caine character, set to start production this summer. In addition, Lionsgate Television produced the series The Continental: From the World of John Wick for Peacock and Amazon Prime, and the Company is developing the highly anticipated series John Wick: Under the High Table, which Stahelski and Keanu Reeves are executive producing. The studio recently opened an immersive John Wick experience in Las Vegas and has a John Wick AAA video game in the works. Related Stories

Fogelson said, “Keanu, Chad, Basil, and Erica would not return unless they had something truly phenomenal and fresh to say with these characters and this world. We can’t wait for audiences to see where the journey takes us next.”

Iwanyk and Lee said, “It’s so important to get this story right and give John’s story the proper next step. It’s exciting to take the first step on that road.”

April fools?

May 5, 2025 7:30am PT Rina Sawayama to Reprise Role as Akira in Donnie Yen’s ‘John Wick’ Spinoff ‘Caine,’ Lionsgate Launching Sales in Cannes (EXCLUSIVE)

By Alex Ritman

[IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://variety.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/SC3_2546.jpg?w=1000&h=667&crop=1”}[/IMG2] Stewart Cook/Getty Images for Lionsgate
Akira is coming back for more John Wick ass-kicking.

Rina Sawayama, who became a fan-favourite as the fearless daughter of Hiroyuki Sanada’s Shimazu Koji in “John Wick: Chapter 4,” will reprise her role opposite Donnie Yen in the franchise’s upcoming spinoff “Caine” for Lionsgate.

First officially unveiled at CinemaCon, “Caine” is also being directed by Yen, and produced by franchise producers Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee (“John Wick” chapters 1 through 4, “Ballerina,” “Monkey Man”) through their Thunder Road shingle and by Chad Stahelski (“John Wick: Chapter 3—Parabellum,” “Day Shift,” “John Wick: Chapter 4”), who produces through his 87Eleven Entertainment production banner. Yen will also serve as an executive producer on the project.

“Rina is such a badass,” said Stahelski. “I love what she did with this role in Chapter 4 and can’t wait to see her cross paths with Caine once again.”

Added Yen: “Most delighted to welcome Rina back into this new exciting journey with us. It will be my pleasure and attempt to elevate her amazing character that left us mesmerized from John Wick: Chapter 4!”

The film is being billed as an Hong Kong-style action thriller much like those that made Yen famous, with the latest screenplay written by Mattson Tomlin (the upcoming “The Batman Part II” and “BRZRKR”). The previous draft was written by Robert Askins.

While the logline is being kept under wraps, the new film will continue the story arcs following the events of “John Wick: Chapter 4,” as Caine has been freed from his obligations to the High Table.

The film is being developed through Stahelski’s deal with Lionsgate as he oversees the expansion of the John Wick universe.

“John Wick: Chapter 4 introduced us to so many compelling, original characters, including Akira. We’re beyond thrilled to have Rina coming back to the franchise—Caine and Akira have unfinished business, and this next chapter in their stories will be explosive,” said Adam Fogelson, chair of the Lionsgate Motion Picture Group.

Added Iwanyk: “Rina will be a tremendous addition to this film, and we’re excited to be returning to Caine’s corner of the John Wick Universe as we start production soon.”

“Caine” marks the latest addition to the expanding John Wick universe, of which the first spinoff is “Ballerina,” starring Ana de Armas as an assassin trained in the traditions of the Ruska Roma. The film, directed by Len Wiseman, written by Shay Hatten, based on characters created by Derek Kolstad, and produced by Basil Iwanyk, Erica Lee, Chad Stahelski, will be released on June 6.

Lionsgate also recently announced that is is working on an animated John Wick film, to be directed by Shannon Tindle and written by Vanessa Taylor, and is in development on a fifth chapter in the John Wick story.

Sawayama is represented by Paradigm and Wasserman Music.

John Wick 5
Caine

[IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“height”:“810”,“width”:“1440”,“src”:“https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/john-wick.jpg?crop=0px%2C58px%2C5374px%2C3007px&resize=1440%2C810”}[/IMG2] ‘John Wick’ Boss Chad Stahelski Gets Candid About Franchise: “My Process Is F***ed”

BY JAMES HIBBERD

JUNE 5, 2025
John Wick creator Chad Stahelski is attempting one of the trickiest pivots in Hollywood: Turn a series of hit movies with a dead hero into a broader franchise. His four John Wick films starring Keanu Reeves as a stoic ronin gunslinger have been a rousing success for studio Lionsgate. But his last effort, 2023’s John Wick: Chapter 4, killed off its world-weary protagonist in a finale that felt perfectly fitting. After the film grossed nearly half a billion dollars, Lionsgate and Stahelski suddenly had a high-class problem: John Wick the franchise clearly has a lot more life left in it, while the John Wick character was seemingly six feet under.

What to do? Lionsgate attempted (without Stahelski and Reeves) a Peacock spinoff TV limited series titled The Continental, which fell flat (Stahelski has thoughts about this). This week sees the release of the franchise’s first spinoff movie, Ballerina, which stars Ana de Armas as an assassin in the world of John Wick (Reeves shows up briefly). There is also a recently released documentary going behind the scenes of making the films (Wick is Pain), a forthcoming John Wick prequel anime movie, a spinoff in the works starring Donnie Yen’s fan-favorite blind assassin Caine and — possibly, perhaps certainly? — a John Wick: Chapter 5(Stahelski has thoughts about all of this, as well).

A former stuntman, Stahelski rose through the ranks as a second unit director on action films (such as Captain America: Civil War) before he and then-partner David Leitch were given a shot at helming 2014’s John Wick, which showcased their mesmerizing style of kinetic “gun fu” action. Below, as part of The Hollywood Reporter‘s Titan interview series, Stahelski talks about all things Wick — and being a lone warrior fighting an endless line of studio suits.

Last year, Lionsgate announced that you now have “franchise oversight” over the world of John Wick. How much power does that actually entail?

I don’t know the answer. I promise you, James, I am pushing to find out. We seem to be doing something right, yet with every [movie], there is a bit of an argument. Now, I get it. Studios have to deal with a varying degree of talent and vision and some people fall short of doing what they say. Sometimes [studios are] told, “You don’t understand my vision” and it’s a cop out for “I have no idea what my vision is.” If I said to you, for John Wick 3: “I’m not going to do anything that’s worked before, I’m going to have a bunch of dogs that bite crotches, and I’m going to kill 186 people.” Are you going to give me $100 million for that?

Well, I’d say you have to work on that pitch.

But if I give you the script, believe me, it reads worse than that pitch sounds. But in my head it makes sense. It used to come down to me being a big enough asshole but, sometimes, the asshole route doesn’t work. So now I’m a lot more patient. I go: “Listen, this idea could go south, it’s super weird, just give me two weeks with my stunt team and then watch a video.” Later they’re like, “Oh, that looks cool.” Then everybody takes credit for everything. But nobody thinks half our ideas are going to work.

Leitch says in the Wick is Pain documentary — a bit critically — that you “get a lot of juice by blowing things up and putting them back together again.” Do you think that’s still true?

It’s 100 percent true. My process is fucked. It’s so not linear. I still get told how to write scripts. “You can’t do it that way.” Says who? The guys who suck? I had an argument today with somebody saying “That’s not how you put a set-piece together.”

Who is telling you this?

Everyone who has done it a certain way for 20 years. Because blowing it up and ripping it apart fucks with people’s heads. I’m not trying to be an anarchist with logistics. But this is why there are fucking tropes. So many movies look the same because their process is the same. You have to ask “Why?” “Because they do X,Y, X.” Well, then fuck X, Y, Z. And we have done that in every department for five films now. It does frustrate people. [IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/jw3_d30_10548_cr_rgb-h_2019.jpg?w=1296”}[/IMG2] John Wick Chapter 3 – Parabellum
COURTESY OF LIONSGATE
The John Wick saga crossed the $1 billion mark after the release of Chapter 4. What does that milestone mean to you?

We tried to be an audience member and not chase the dollar. Keanu and I did it a love letter to ’70s action film and wuxia [Chinese martial arts] and Chambara [Japanese sword fighting] There are a lot of fans who like kung fu movies, Samurai films, Lee Marvin, Charles Bronson, Bullet, Clint Eastwood and Sergio Leone. John Wick is a culmination of that. And because we’ve done okay financially with each one, it allowed us to increase the budget and keep doing more of the same — hopefully, in a better way, while expanding the mythology.

Watching the documentary, I marveled at the studio notes on the first movie: They didn’t want you to kill the dog or for Wick to execute the villain played by Alfie Allen, and they wanted the bad guys to have poisoned Wick’s wife instead of her dying of natural causes. I always wonder when I hear stories like this: After the movie is a hit, does anybody say, “We were wrong about literally all those things”?

That happened once. On John Wick 2, there was disagreement with someone very high up in the studio over John Wick doing euthanasia-assist to a character called Gianna (Claudia Gerini). It was, “Oh my God, we can’t have John Wick just kill her!” We’re not killing her. She had already slit her wrists and John Wick offers a way out that’s more honorable. They wanted two versions. We came out of the test screening and the audience was way more on board with what’s in the final film. The executive didn’t miss a beat, they just went, “You were right, I was wrong.”

To their credit.

It was pretty cool. But no one gets this: Even if you do a bake-off with two versions in test screenings, you would need the same audience to watch both versions to compare them, because audiences are different. But that never happens. I think you can learn a lot from test screenings, but I don’t think you can make choices based on them without showing the audience everything.

You weren’t really involved with The Continental TV series. Were there any creative lessons to be learned from that in terms of how to expand this universe?

Keanu and I were — I wouldn’t say sidelined, but our opinion was heard and not really noted. [The studio] tried to convince me they knew what they were doing. A group of individuals thought they had the magic sauce. But if you take out Basil Iwanyk’s producing intuitiveness, if you take out Keanu’s way of delivering quirky dialogueand if you take out all the visuals I have in my head from Wong Kar-wai, anime, Leone, Bernardo Bertucci or Andrei Tchaikovsky … then it’s not the same thing. They thought this was as easy as using anamorphic lenses, do a kooky hotel, put in weird dialogue, and insert crime drama.

If you saw our process, you’d be like, “You’re telling me this billion dollar franchise does it thisway?” I’m scouting my next film in London and we saw a cool location yesterday which totally changed the second act. We rewrote the whole thing. I find great cast members and rewrite their parts constantly. That’s what makes [the movies] so good and organic — we’re constantly upgrading. But the studio likes to know what they’re getting for their buck and want to lock a script for budget reasons. While we’re saying, “Just write the check, we’ll see you at the finish line.”

You had the premiere of Ballerina (which THR just gave a rave review) Tuesday night. How did that go?

It seemed to go pretty good. English audiences don’t laugh much. Everybody seemed to really enjoy it … We were very fortunate to find Ana de Armas and the enthusiasm and punch she has. There’s got to be a love if you’re coming into our franchise. Sometimes I’ll call the agencies and ask, “Who loves John Wick?” Norman Reedus bumped into Keanu one day and said, “Hey man, I love the Wicks” [and was cast in Ballerina]. Every cast member we’ve got has been a fan of the previous films. They come to work and it’s a different vibe because they understand the world.

Do you ever lay awake at night and worry that the world of John Wick only works with John Wick? Because that’s a scary question, right?

Keanu and I actually just talked about this. Look, it’s always tricky. I think the world can be supported as long as you don’t go crazy and carpet bomb. What we’re doing now are stories we really want to tell that feel organic. You’ve seen Alice in Wonderland. Now what about the Rabbit? What about the Cheshire Cat? Also, sometimes in your own franchise, you get so far up your own ass with the mythology that by the 10th movie you don’t know what’s going on. I don’t ever want to get that way with Wick. I want each one to be able to stand alone. [IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/bolero-unit-240403-00841rc5-H-2025.jpg?w=1296”}[/IMG2] Ana de Armas as Eve in Ballerina. MURRAY CLOSE/LIONSGATE
Was Keanu always supposed to appear in Ballerina?

That wasn’t in the original script. To be honest, I was kind of against it. But I do see the benefit and we wanted to help out [director Len Wiseman]. We had just opened John Wick 4and it was huge. He couldn’t go back to the model of the first John Wick and do a little $18 million indie thing and try to build it up. In order to stay in the same game, you got to give him a fighting chance. And the easiest way to transfer that over — at least, from the studio point of view — was have Wick in Ballerina in a special timeline.

Does he appear in Caine?

The Donny Yen spinoff doesn’t have the John Wick character. It’s got Donny Yen and it’s an ode to kung fu movies. If John Wick 1 was about Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin, this is about Chow Yun-fat, John Woo and Wong Kar-wai. So I think that one is a little easier to get it across to audiences because it’s in a sub-genre of what we love.

The documentary shows the incredible amount of training Keanu undertakes, and his punishment seems to ramp up higher for each movie. He’s now 60. If you do another with him, there has to be a limit to how hard you can push this guy, right? Because at a certain point, things break.

What do you do if you’re a world-class sprinter in your twenties and you don’t run so fast at 30? You start doing marathons — because marathon runners hit their prime in their mid-to-late thirties. You got to deal with the turns. For the first John Wick, Keanu had a really bad knee injury and he couldn’t punch and kick. So we came up with the Jiujitsu and gun-fu. We’re not going to lower the bar. We’re just going to move the bar to something we haven’t done before.

You’ve said that John Wick 5 won’t renege on the ending of 4, that John Wick will still have died. Has that evolved? The last time we spoke last year, you were trying to crack it.

I’m not going to lie to you, it’s a bit of a conundrum. Me and Mike Finch — the writer on 4who’s also writing 5 — we’ve got a pretty good story that I think is cool. Once we have a 50-page book, and if we’re feeling it, we’ll sit with Keanu and shape this thing. Look, everybody seems to want it. It’s a matter of whether we crack it. We’re actively working on it. It’s just … is it going to be satisfying?

Is a prequel possible? Because the anime movie is a prequel, I assume this wouldn’t be.

Keanu and I are not interested in going backwards. With the anime, you don’t have to de-age, you don’t have explain weird stuff, you don’t have to add a backstory. You accept anime in its own language without explanations. Anime just goes pop. [IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/JW4_Unit_210713_00040_R-EMBED-2023.jpg?w=1000”}[/IMG2] Donnie Yen as Caine and Chad Stahelski on John Wick: Chapter 4. MURRAY CLOSE/LIONSGATE
I know you’ve heard this before. But John Wick 4 ended so well that there is a certain amount of … like there’s this feeling that nothing popular is allowed to end anymore.

I’m with you, man. Keanu and I have discussed this many times and feel the same way. We finished 3 and thought that was going to be the last one. Look, we never expected to end John Wick. I just hate cheesy endings. I hate happy endings. Over a long enough timeline, everything’s a fucking tragedy. If you kill 86 people, you don’t get away. So when we got to 4, we wanted to have something that had a lot of fate and consequence. The ending was going to be a cliffhanger. Then we were sitting in Japan [during the filming of 4] going, “We didn’t stick the landing.” [Our original ending] kind of sucked. “Fuck, we got to finish this, right?” So I was really happy with the way 4 ended. It was Keanu and I saying, “Thank you, it’s been awesome, but it is time to go.” I didn’t want to overstay our welcome.

If we go down the road of John Wick 5 and build this story and decide this isn’t right, there are probably going to be 10 other things we’ll discover that we’ll use for other things. It’s a great creative exercise. It’s being in the room riffing with people we love. That’s nothing but wins.

So it’s not a lock that John Wick 5 will exist?

The studio would very much will it into existence, I’m sure, at some point. Look, they’ve been great and they’ve asked us to really try and we have a really good couple of ideas and we’re going to try.

What are the biggest mistakes action movies seem to be making when you see other films?

Please make sure you print this: This is only my opinion and my opinion is no better or worse than anybody else’s. Some things I think don’t work might work for some people. It’s the execution. Like with Die Hard. There’s not a lot of action, the whole thing takes place on three floors of a building, but John McClane is a great character. When he runs through the glass barefoot, I’m fucking in — that’s what you have to do.I could do the exact same choreography that’s in John Wick, but if you didn’t love Keanu Reeves as John Wick, we wouldn’t be talking right now. There are better athletes than Jackie Chan—

But we love Jackie Chan.

You fucking love him!For the longest time, [the industry consensus] was, “It’s not about the action, it’s about the story.” That’s not true. And then there was, “It’s not about stories, it’s about the action.” That’s not true! You have to conceive the whole thing together.

So biggest problem with action movies is people think they’re making two separate movies. The story doesn’t stop just because there’s punching and kicking. In some of the superhero stuff, when a second unit guy is doing half the movie, everything looks different during the action. Even the coloring and editing is different. [The film] never feels aligned. So if you don’t want to shoot your own action, then don’t do the movie. Whether it’s Steven Spielberg or Christopher Nolan or Guy Ritchie or the Wachowskis, they all shoot their own action.

You mentioned how Wick with a different actor wouldn’t work. In the documentary, you first offer Jason Statham the Wick style for his movie Safe. Did Jason ever circle back and go, “I should have done that”?

So I want to straighten that up. We showed it to Jason and he thought it was cool as shit and wanted to do it. I’m the one who shut it down because it didn’t fit Jason’s character. With gun-fu, to do even a small sequence, he would have had to kill 20 people. Safe only has like four real bad guys; most of the guys are just guards showing up for work like the Red Shirts in Star Trek. We didn’t want Jason’s character to be a mass murderer.

You talk about studio notes you didn’t do. Was there any note that you did that you regret?

Yeah. On one particular John Wick, I had a shit fight over literally three minutes. Most studios, and even critics, have this weird thing about run times. Do you really give a fuck how long a movie is? The real question is: Are you bored? I have sat through a 90-minute movie that felt like four hours, and I had watched Lawrence of Arabia or Seven Samurai and it felt like two hours even though they’re four. No one bitched and moaned about Return of the King and Peter Jackson’s cut is four hours, so fuck off.

They’ll say, “There’s metadata that says people get bored with anything over two hours and 20 minutes.” No one’s going to come out of a movie going, “That movie is fucking great, but it should have been a nice 2:36.” So when they said, “You’ve got to cut three minutes,” I looked at them like, “The audience gave it a 90 in a test score!”

They may be running the studio and great at financing, but I’ve made four movies that have grossed over a billion dollars. I’m like, “If the movie sucks, I’m willing to listen to anything. But if people love the movie, then who fucking cares?”

I’m sure there are times where you’re like: “How many hit movies do I need to make — in a row, with each grossing more than the last — in order for you to trust me?”

We know it’s not four! I know that. I don’t have plans on sucking on the next one. But if I get past five, we can have this conversation again. [IMG2=JSON]{“data-align”:“none”,“data-size”:“full”,“src”:“https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/JW4_Unit_210810_00374_R.jpg?w=3000”}[/IMG2]

Ballerina
The Continental - John Wick TV show
John Wick
Caine

John Wick 5
Wick is Pain

Keanu Reeves Demands ‘John Wick 5’ Script Match His Age as He Prepares for $35 Million Payday: ‘There’s No Faking This’

Story by OK! Staff
• 2d •
3 min read

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Keanu Reeves pushed for a realistic ‘John Wick 5’ script to reflect his age and physical limits.Mega© OK Magazine

Keanu Reeves is ready for another round in the John Wick franchise, but this time, he’s demanding that the script reflects his aging body. The action star, 60, knows he has pushed his limits throughout his martial arts-heavy career.

The grueling work will pay off — Reeves stands to make a staggering $35 million for the upcoming fifth installment.

“What’s happening with John Wick right now is the slow walk-up that goes along with any Keanu Reeves movie these days,” the insider told a news outlet.
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Keanu Reeves earned just $2 million for the first film but negotiated bigger paydays for each sequel.Mega© OK Magazine

“The script is being written and Keanu is being perfectly honest about what he’s willing and not willing to do stunt-wise. There’s no faking this. He’s being totally honest about what he can and can’t do, and he has put his body through h— for these movies,” the insider shared.
In the past decade, the Speed star has raked in an estimated $22 million from the franchise, with the majority coming from John Wick 4, which netted him about $15 million. As he gears up for the next film, the source noted that the payday only grows.

“He feels he’s earned every penny for what he’s put himself through,” the insider added.
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Keanu Reeves, now 60, has been upfront about his stunt limitations.Mega© OK Magazine

“It’s a work in progress, and it’s what you get when you agree to pay Keanu $35 million for a giant action sequel,” the source continued. “He’s going to do everything and anything he possibly can to make this work, but he’s in his sixties now and everybody has their limits.”

While Reeves took a more conservative approach, A-list stunt king Tom Cruise continued to defy age. At 62, the Mission: Impossible star refused to back down, despite his injuries sustained over the years.
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Keanu Reeves is still committed to making the next chapter of ‘John Wick’ work, a source said. Mega© OK Magazine

“Family, friends and colleagues are telling him to hang it up, that there’s nothing to prove,” a separate source told In Touch. “But Tom says part of the fun of filmmaking for him is doing his own stunts and he’s not giving that up.”

Even with a more mindful strategy, Reeves remained on board with Cruise’s philosophy — it’s not quite time to hang it all up yet.
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Keanu Reeves now advocates for age-appropriate action scenes.Mega© OK Magazine

“What’s amazing is how much foresight Keanu has had when it comes to this franchise,” the insider explained. “He agreed to make the first movie back in 2014 for around $2 million, as long as he got a huge raise in the event of sequels. It was basically an indie movie, and Keanu loves betting on himself. Cut to 10 years later and he has made a mountain of money from this character.”

“The Wick franchise was a genius financial move that paid off in spades,” the insider added. “Keanu isn’t giving up on that world anytime soon, but he needs the writing to reflect his age and his limitations so he has a chance of surpassing them, which he always does!”

I admire Keanu’s authenticity here.