The Continental - John Wick TV show

John Wick TV Show: Keanu Reeves Expected to Guest Star, a New Title, and More Plans for the Prequel
Chad Stahelski hopes to direct part of “The Continental,” the “John Wick” prequel series focused on the “magical, mythical” world of the assassins’ hotel.

TV Critic Ben Travers Jun 14, 2017 8:00 am @BenTTravers


John Wick
Summit Entertainment

Prior to the box office boom of John Wick: Chapter 2, the films director and franchise mastermind Chad Stahelski said he and screenwriting partner Derek Kolstad had plans for a TV series. Those plans are still in motion, with the project in development at Lionsgate and a new title assigned to the prequel.

IndieWire has learned that the series is being developed under the name, The Continental, and Lionsgate is very excited about the series. In a separate interview, Stahelski said the focus was expected to be the cool, Wick-ian, magical, and mysterious world of the titular hotel.

Theyve got a really good structure, Stahelski said. Its very tied to the film [in that] its about the Continentals all over the world, how certain people come into that world, and what happens in relation to those people, which is cool. I think the world is very vast, and everything Ive heard from it is very positive. Its something that studio seems very, very intent on [making] and very, very behind.

John Wick: Chapter 2 was the first to delve into the worldwide reach of The Continental, a hotel chain that serves as a respite for assassins and an access point for resources specific to the job. No business is allowed on hotel grounds, and Wick (Keanu Reeves) faces repercussions for violating that rule heading into the upcoming third film.

I like telling stories from my one characters perspective, Stahelski said. Once you put that aside with the TV show, [you can] expand to all the different characters and follow them throughout their journey. You can be with the consigliere, concierge, the sommelier you can be with all these different characters and walk through the world in different aspects; ones that Im a little limited [from exploring] by staying with my lead guy.

That being said, plans for the series include incorporating Wick into the story and putting Reeves on-screen.

I think he would make an appearance, Stahelski said. I think thats part of his thing, [But the series] isnt centered around John Wick.

Lionsgate could not confirm Reeves role in the series at this time, nor say who is writing the show Stahelski said hes a really good showrunner but the director wants to stay as involved as time allows, given that hes directing the third John Wick as well as pursuing other feature film projects.

Currently, Id like to stay involved throughout the development stage and hopefully direct a couple of episodes, he said to IndieWire

Stahelski and Reeves busy schedule also contributed to their other TV project Rain, the limited series based on Barry Eislers novel being put on the back-burner.

I think Rain is kind of on hold right now, Stahelski said. It deals with Keanus schedule. Hes a busy guy, and hes in love with the Wick franchise, so he wants to put his time and energy into that.

For us and Keanu, [John Wick] was a one-off, he added. Thats when we were developing Rain, in between [Chapter 1 and Chapter 2], and then all of a sudden everybody wanted us to do No. 2, and No. 2 did really well. So now, he kind of had to choose where to put his time, and hes kind of vested into John Wick at least for the series and No. 3 of John Wick. And if he chooses to afterwards, theres always Rain.’

Stahelski, though, remains very excited about shooting television.

Look at Battle of the *******s,’ Stahelski said of the action-packed Game of Thrones episode. As an action designer, I think thats the best battle Ive ever seen on TV. They did a great job, and they werent careless with their money. They planned it, they boarded it you watch the behind-the-scenes, [its clear] the guys did everything right.

Granted, theyre the biggest budgeted show on TV right now, but could we do something interesting with John Wick with what we have? Yeah. Id like to give it a go and prove to the TV world that you can have feature action on a TV show. It would be a nice little feather in my cap, sure, he said.

John Wick: Chapter 2 is now available on Digital HD, 4K, Blu-ray, and DVD.

John Wick
John Wick 2
John Wick 3

Starz … with Keanu Reeves

I don’t get Starz. :mad:

Some Starz content is on Amazon Prime so hopefully I can watch this there.

JANUARY 12, 2018 11:30am PT by Lesley Goldberg
‘John Wick’ TV Series in the Works at Starz (With Keanu Reeves Attached)
‘The Continental’ will be exec produced by the screenwriter behind the franchise as well as original star Reeves.


Photofest
Reeves in ‘John Wick’

‘The Continental’ will be exec produced by the screenwriter behind the franchise as well as original star Reeves.

John Wick is the latest feature film to get the small-screen treatment.

Starz announced Friday at the Television Critics Association’s winter press tour that it was developing The Continental, an ongoing drama series based on the John Wick film franchise starring Keanu Reeves. Reeves, Starz execs said, is expected to make an appearance in the potential series but will not star.

The potential TV series is set in the John Wick universe and focuses on the inner workings of the exclusive Continental Hotel, which serves as a refuge for assassins.

Chris Collins (Sons of Anarchy, The Wire, Man in the High Castle) will pen the script and serve as showrunner should the drama move forward. The original film’s creative team is on board for the TV offshoot, with Thunder Road Pictures’ Basil Iwanyk — who produced the first two features and serves in the same capacity on the forthcoming third — leads an exec producing team that also includes Chad Stahelski (who directed the first two and is returning for the third), original franchise screenwriter Derek Kolstad, Collins, David Leitch (who co-directed the original) and Reeves. Stahelski will direct the premiere of The Continental, should the script move forward.

//youtu.be/RllJtOw0USI

The John Wick franchise — produced by Lionsgate, which now fully owns Starz — has grossed nearly $300 million worldwide. The third feature, with Reeves starring, is due in 2019. Starz will retain domestic multiplatform pay TV and SVOD rights to the series, while Lionsgate will control international, domestic distribution and home entertainment rights.

"This series is truly unlike anything else on TV,” Starz CEO Chris Albrecht said. “The Continental promises to include the thunderous fight sequences and intensely staged shootouts between professional assassins and their targets that fans have come to expect in the John Wick movie franchise as well as introduce some new, darkly compelling characters who inhabit this underground world.”

The Continental arrives as reboots and spinoffs remain in high demand while broadcast, cable and streaming platforms continue to look for proven franchises in a bid to cut through a cluttered landscape that is expected to top 520 original scripted series in 2018. Key to the reboots is having the original producers involved, which The Continental has with Lionsgate and the John Wick’s original producing team.

The project arrives as Starz continues to ramp up its scripted offerings from Lionsgate after the company was sold last year. Starz went to series on Lionsgate-produced Vida and Stephenie Meyer’s The Rook. Those join a roster of scripted originals that includes American Gods, Ash vs. Evil Dead, The Missing, Outlander, Power, Counterpart, Howard’s End and Sweetbitter.

The Continental - John Wick TV show

‘John Wick’ Spinoff ‘Ballerina’ Lands ‘Underworld’ Director
OCTOBER 08, 2019 10:24AM by Aaron Couch


| Courtesy of Lionsgate

Len Wiseman will helm the film, which centers on a female assassin.

The next piece of a John Wick universe is falling into place. Filmmaker Len Wiseman is coming on board to direct Ballerina, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed. Plot details are being kept in a safe in the Continental Hotel, but the film centers a female assassin.

The script comes from Shay Hatten, who sold the pitch to Lionsgate in 2017 at the age of 23. He penned the story on nights and weekends while working as an assistant at Robert Downey Jr.'s Team Downey, and since then has gone on to earn writing credits on Zack Snyder’s upcoming Netflix zombie movie Army of the Dead and last year’s John Wick: Chapter 3 Parabellum, the latest entry in the Keanu Reeves franchise that also happened to introduce a ballet academy to the universe.

Basil Iwanyk, Erica Lee and John Wick filmmaker Chad Stahelski will produce Ballerina. Reeves will executive produce, with James Myers overseeing for Lionsgate. The latest John Wick film earned $323 million globally and the studio is currently working on a fourth installment, due out in 2021.

Wiseman, who is known for the Underworld franchise and helming Live Free or Die Hard, is repped by CAA, Hatten by Lee Stobby Entertainment.

The Hollywood Reporter
AARON COUCH
aaron.couch@thr.com
@AaronCouch

THE WICK THREADS
John Wick
John Wick 2
John Wick 3
The Continental
John Wick 4

For continuity’s sake, I’m going to copy this new Ballerina thread to The Continental

Albert Hughes

‘John Wick’ Prequel Event Series ‘The Continental’ Lands Albert Hughes as Lead Director (Exclusive)
The Lionsgate and Starz event series will detail the origin of the hotel for assassins.

BY BORYS KIT
JULY 16, 2021 1:10PM

Albert Hughes COURTESY OF ALBERT HUGHES

Director Albert Hughes has checked into The Continental.

The filmmaker, who with his brother co-directed movies such as Menace II Society and The Book of Eli, has signed on to direct two episodes of Lionsgate and Starz’s three-installment event series based on the hit John Wick action movies that star Keanu Reeves.

Continental, which is set in the unique hotel for assassins in the Wick movies, was initially envisioned as spinoff series but was redeveloped as a three-night event series with movie length and movie budgets. The installments are to run about 90 minutes in length and, according to sources, have budgets upwards of $20 million.

Hughes will direct the first and third episode while executive producing all three. A director for episode two has not yet been chosen.

Lionsgate and Starz had no comment.

Many members of the film franchise are involved, with Basil Iwanyk of Thunder Road, original screenwriter Derek Kolstad and franchise director Chad Stahelski exec producing. (Stahelski was slated to direct the premiere episode when Continental was to have been a series.) David Leitch is also an exec producer while Reeves is in talks to exec produce, as well.

A prequel spinoff, Continental is set 40 years before the events of the Wick series and focuses on a young man named Winston. He will one day grow up to be the character played by Ian McShane in the Wick movies but in the prequel’s story is a young man starting as a hitman hotelier who, along with others, create a haven for unsavory types, all set against a backdrop of 1970s New York.

Wick, and building out an expanded media universe, is a top priority for Lionsgate as it looks to lay a foundation of franchises as a company that does not own a library of big IP brands. The movies organically built a worldwide following one movie at a time, with the three movies generating close to $600 million on a global scale. Recognition factor and ancillary sales are huge and Wick 4 is now in production, with a fifth one to shoot after.

Hughes and his brother Allen Hughes directed and wrote key 1990s urban dramas Menace, which premiered at Cannes, and Dead Presidents, and were two of the few high-profile Black filmmakers of the era. The brothers eventually went on separate filmmaking paths and as a solo helmer, Hughes last directed the well-regarded feature Alpha, an adventure story set in prehistoric times, and a premiere episode of Ethan Hawke’s acclaimed Western series, The Good Lord Bird.

He is repped by CAA and Goodman Genow.

Starz…yet another streaming service I’m not subscribed to at the moment.

Progress

Oct 19, 2021 1:15pm PT[URL=“https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/john-wick-starz-prequel-series-the-continental-cast-1235092791/”]
‘John Wick’ Starz Prequel Series ‘The Continental’ Adds Five to Cast, Including ‘Vida’ Alum Mishel Prada

By Joe Otterson


Don Braun; Adrien Sauvage; Ben Rigby
The “John Wick” prequel series at Starz, “The Continental,” is rounding out its main cast with five new additions.

Mishel Prada (“Vida”) will play KD; Hubert Point Du-Jour (“Blindspot,” “Madame Secretary”) will play Miles; Jessica Allain (“The Laundromat,” “Thriller”) has been cast as Lou; Nhung Kate (“Swapping Fate,” “The Better Man”) has been cast as Yen; and Ben Robson (“Animal Kingdom,” “Vikings”) has been cast as Frankie.

The five join previously announced series lead Colin Woodell as well as cast member Mel Gibson.

“The Continental” will explore the origin behind the titular hotel-for-assassins through the eyes and actions of Winston Scott (Woodell), who is dragged into the Hell-scape of a 1975 New York City to face a past he thought he’d left behind. Winston charts a deadly course through the New York’s mysterious underworld in a harrowing attempt to seize the iconic hotel, which serves as the meeting point for the world’s most dangerous criminals. In the films, Scott is played by Ian McShane.

“The Continental,” which will air as a three-episode event series, hails from writers and executive producers Greg Coolidge and Kirk Ward, who also serve as showrunners. Chad Stahelski, Derek Kolstad, David Leitch, Shawn Simmons, Paul Wernick, and Rhett Reese all serve as executive producers with Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee of Thunder Road Pictures also executive producing.

Point Du-Jour is repped by Buchwald and Kanner Entertainment Inc. Allain is repped by UTA, Link Entertainment and Independent Talent Group. Prada is repped by UTA. Nhung is repped by Bowery Artists. Robson is repped by Management 360 and Rogue Management.

‘a three-episode event series’

More cast additions

Nov 10, 2021 10:41am PT
‘John Wick’ Prequel Series ‘The Continental’ At Starz Casts Peter Greene, Ayomide Adegun and Jeremy Bobb

By Selome Hailu

Adegun: Samuel Black; Bobb: Jeremy Bobb
Starz announced that Peter Greene, Ayomide Adegun and Jeremy Bobb have been cast in “The Continental,” the upcoming three-episode prequel series based on Lionsgate’s “John Wick” film franchise.

First greenlit in 2018, the series centers on the backstory of the titular Continental hotel from the perspective of the manager, a young Winston Scott (Colin Woodel, based on Ian McShane’s character in the films). Winston is dragged through 1975 New York City in order to face a past he thought he’d left behind and seize control of the hotel, which serves as a meeting point for the world’s most dangerous criminals.

Greene will play Uncle Charlie, a younger version of David Patrick Kelly’s character from the films, who cleans up bodies and crime scenes for criminals. Greene’s previous credits include “Training Day” and “For Life.” Adegun will play Charon, the Continental’s concierge played by Lance Reddick in the films. Bobb, who has appeared in “Russian Doll” and “The Knick,” will play Mayhew, a new character to the franchise.

They join previously announced cast members including Woodell, Hubert Point-Du Jour as Miles, Jessica Allain as Lou, Mishel Prada as KD, Nhung Kate as Yen, Mel Gibson as Cormac and Ben Robson as Frankie.

Greg Coolidge and Kirk Ward serve as writers and showrunners, and executive produce alongside Albert Hughes, Thunder Road Pictures’ Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee, Chad Stahelski, Derek Kolstad, David Leitch, Shawn Simmons, Paul Wernick, Rhett Reese and Marshall Persinger. Hughes will direct the first and third episodes while Charlotte Brändström directs the second. “The Continental” is produced for Starz by Lionsgate television.

(Pictured: Jeremy Bobb, left; Ayomide Adegun, right)
Uncle Charlie!

Peacock & Amazon Prime

‘John Wick’ Prequel Series ‘The Continental’ To Launch Internationally On Prime Video
By Katie Campione
TV Reporter
@katie_campione

November 3, 2022 5:27pm

Lionsgate

John Wick prequel series The Continental, which is slated for 2023 debut, will be housed internationally on Prime Video in all territories Amazon’s streaming service is available except Israel and the Middle East.

In the U.S., The Continental, produced by Lionsgate Television, will launch on Peacock after it moved from Starz to the NBCU streamer earlier this year. As Deadline reported, the three-part action event series is more of a natural fit for Peacock, which also acquired the rights to the John Wick movies.

The Continental explores the origin story and inner workings of the exclusive Continental Hotel, a centerpiece of the John Wick Universe which serves as a refuge for assassins. It told from the perspective of the hotel manager, portrayed by Ian McShane in the film franchise – a young Winston Scott, played by Colin Woodell. Throughout the series, viewers will follow Winston through the underworld of ‘70’s New York, where he will battle demons from his past as he attempts to seize control of the iconic hotel – a hotel that serves as a meeting point for the world’s most dangerous criminals.

Woodell stars alongside Ayomide Adegun, who will portray a young Charon, Peter Greene, who plays Uncle Charlie, Mel Gibson as Cormac, Ben Robson as Frankie, Hubert Point-Du Jour as Miles, Jessica Allain as Lou, Mishel Prada as KD and Nhung Kate as Yen.

Keanu Reeves, who stars in the movies, is not expected to star in the series.

“The John Wick films have created one of the most immersive, detailed and enjoyable universes we’ve seen on screen in the last decade,” said Chris Mansolillo, Director, Content Acquisition, Prime Video. “We are extremely proud to play a part in continuing to build that universe, offering viewers an insight into the origins of the infamous Continental Hotel and its incredible characters.”

Greg Coolidge and Kirk Ward serve as writers, showrunners, and executive producers on The Continental. Other executive producers are Albert Hughes, Thunder Road Pictures’ Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee, Chad Stahelski, Derek Kolstad, David Leitch, Paul Wernick, Rhett Reese, and Marshall Persinger. Shawn Simmons serves as a writer and executive producer.

Hughes directs the first and third nights and Charlotte Brandstrom directs the second night.

I’m glad. I didn’t want to subscribe to Starz.

The Continental: From the World of John Wick | Official Teaser | Peacock Original

//youtu.be/S4GmiggFXRI

[QUOTE=GeneChing;1324635]
//youtu.be/S4GmiggFXRI
[/QUOTE]

Looks like I get to abuse my brother’s Peacock account beyond watching WWE :smiley:

The Continental Is “the Next Step in the Evolution” of the John Wick Universe

Read The Continental Is “the Next Step in the Evolution” of the John Wick Universe ~ my latest feature for Den of Geek.

THE CONTINENTAL is a Perfect Prequel to John Wick

//youtu.be/4csh8J8WBjs

This is a special in-person interview I did for Den of Geek at SDCC.

Non-‘Continental’ TV Show & Anime John Wick

John Wick TV show, Chad Stahelski
‘John Wick’: Chad Stahelski Says A More Cinematic, Non-‘Continental’ TV Show Is In The Works, As Is An Anime Project
Rodrigo Perez November 9, 2023 10:26 am News, Television

“John Wick” fans should note while “John Wick 5” is on hold until filmmaker Chad Stahelski and Keanu Reeves can crack a new story (more on that soon), that doesn’t mean “John Wick” the franchise is staying idle. As the mythology grows and world-building evolves, there’s still potential to do so much more. Stahelski recently joined Mike DeAngelo for an episode of The Discourse podcast— that full interview soon— and during the discussion, after talking about the possibilities of “John Wick 5,” Stahelski opened up to even more ‘Wick’-verse content in the works.

Yes, there was a recent prequel show, “The Continental,” but Stahelski wasn’t very involved in that series. Instead, he revealed he’s getting much more hands-on with another, totally separate ‘John Wick’ TV series spin-off that he is developing, that is not only trying to bridge cinema and TV and include more action but expands the characters and worldbuilding of the “John Wick” universe.

In the free-flowing conversation, our Discourse host said the audience hasn’t met the High Table yet and that would be something fun to see. Stahelski countered with the idea that you must be careful with revealing too much as it could fall into cliches he and his team dislike. “‘Austin Powers’ mocked it so well,” he said of the idea. “An actual table with the stereotypes tropes of evil from different ethnicities from all over the world. We’re never going to show the whole High Table; we’ll show the representatives, but we’ll always keep some of that [mystery].”

Through that conversation, Stahelski revealed there is much more ‘John Wick’-verse content in the works. “And now that we’ve got… Lionsgate is having us develop the ‘John Wick’ TV show, so we thought we could explore The High Table in that a little bit,” he revealed.

Wait, yet another series. Is that separate from “The Continental? “Yeah, that’s completely separate,” Stahelski said and then pointed to newer characters from “John Wick: Chapter 4” that could potentially be explored.

“Yeah, I love Donnie [Yen], I love Rina [Sawayama], love the Tracker (Shamier Anderson), and the TV show and the ancillaries will give us a chance to expand the kind of fun world we’ve created, and it doesn’t have to be John Wick, the character specific, you know what I mean so that we can explore all that stuff,” he said.”

“And I think TV is a better format for that, I think because people can jump into the backgrounds, you don’t have to spend so much time with the first act set up and all that,” he continued.

The filmmaker also revealed a “John Wick” anime project is in the works, and it also sounds like it could be a TV series. “So we’re really looking forward to that; we’re really excited about it because we’re doing that and a Japanese anime because I love Japanese anime so much,” he explained. “So to create all the cool stories that anime could achieve better than we could and the TV show to expand our world, we’ll still get our fix, you know what I mean? And we’ll still have all the fun.”

“Cause I think, for TV especially, world-building and action, those two have stayed pretty separate,” he explained. “But to try and combine them and give fans [both]? Look, I love the [TV] slow-burn too, but after six episodes, I would like something to happen in my TV shows, you know? So, to try and bring that to TV, what we do with features would be really exciting,”

So, how much input did he have into the recent “The Continental” series? Not that much, to be honest, he admitted, and it sounds like part of the reason he wants to create his own show.

“We were consulted a little bit to bring that particular creative team to show them the world that I was creating; it was very early in ‘John Wick 4,’ so we showed them some of our concepts,” Stahelski said. “And then, honestly? [My team and I] had very, very, very little to do with it other than helping that creative team look inside our little world, and we gave them a little tour of how we do things, and then they took it and made it their own so that was a separate creative team.”

What is the formula for what John Wick is exactly, and what makes it special? Stahelski says it’s the people involved.

“You try and write it down on paper what the sauce is, and it’s the people. I don’t know how else you explain it. And that’s why franchises change because the people change, the directors change, and the crew changes; I mean, how would you expect it not to change? But we’ve created a [static] creative hub of people who get it, and we all love the same thing.”

“I think the main secret of ‘John Wick’ is they’re not meant to be movies,” he admitted, expounding on how the franchise gets more fantastical, but that’s ok and the point. “I think that’s some of the critiques that the films don’t get. They’re meant to be love letters to things that—yes, we know it’s Bugs Bunny, it’s supposed to be ‘Lord of The Rings,’ it’s fantasy. Like, are you really going to question me about the existence of orcs, magic swords, or rope that unties itself and invisibility cloaks ? Yes, ‘John Wick’ has that too. The funny thing is bulletproof suits do exist. We’re doing a campfire tale. We’re a modern-day fantasy, so it’s supposed to be fun, and it’s supposed to be a little nutty.”

Fingers crossed, we’ll get some concrete details on both series in the upcoming months. Stay tuned for much more from this interview.

John-Wick
The-Continental-John-Wick-TV-show

Greetings,

I watched this series. I give it a perfect 10 for the ensemble work. Mel Gibson is in superb form with this 3 part series. The opening credits is worthy of an award. The only bad thing about the series is the soundtrack. This flick is based in NYC and the music fails to capture that. They should have used NYC talent to put together the soundtrack. Two that come to mind are John “Jellybean” Benitez, who did the incredible soundtrack for Carlito’s Way, or Louie Vega. Both are excellent in capturing that NYC vibe that was so needed with this series. Instead, they went with someone from the UK and that made no sense at all. One thing observed was that the shots were so tight, it was hard to determine the NYC location. It could have been the same street from a different angle, a Non-NYC location or, a studio lot location. This series should get nominations and awards.

mickey

[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