An assassin trained in the traditions of the Ruska Roma organization sets out to seek revenge after her father's death.An assassin trained in the traditions of the Ruska Roma organization sets out to seek revenge after her father's death.An assassin trained in the traditions of the Ruska Roma organization sets out to seek revenge after her father's death.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Ava Joyce McCarthy
- Ella
- (as Ava McCarthy)
Jung Doo-hong
- Il Seong
- (as Doohong Jung)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.9120.6K
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Summary
Reviewers say 'Ballerina' is praised for its action sequences, choreography, and integration into the John Wick universe. Ana de Armas' performance is often highlighted, with many noting her ability to hold her own in the action scenes. The film's visual style, direction, and music are also commended. However, some reviewers criticize the plot for being repetitive and lacking depth. The character development and emotional resonance are seen as weaker points, with some finding the story and characters unengaging. Despite these criticisms, many still find 'Ballerina' enjoyable and a worthy addition to the franchise. The film's pacing, cinematography, and special effects are frequently mentioned as strong elements. Overall, 'Ballerina' is seen as a solid action film that, while not reaching the heights of the best John Wick movies, provides entertaining and stylish action.
Featured reviews
I Pray This is the Last Sequel Within John Wick Universe
Going to keep this short. While I loved John Wick 1-4, all for different reasons, this one was just one word: boring and repetitive. I am not sure what they were trying to do with this movie. First, there was a weak and very predictable storyline to this movie. Second, the main character just isn't as believable or has the charisma as Keanu / John Wick. There is no 'it' factor. I fell asleep multiple times in this movie whereas in John Wick 4, at almost 3 hours, I was on the edge of my seat refusing to go to the bathroom. Third, there is something about the lighting of many of the fight scenes. They just don't pop. They don't give you the ooh factor. They just seem redundant as if they ran out of ideas. Lastly, this just feels like they are going to run this franchise into the ground. Keanu might actually be portraying himself in real life if he keeps signing onto these movies. He just can't get out if you know what I mean.
Fights, lots of fights!
Get ready for plenty of fighting and gunfight scenes when you take your seat. Nearly three-quarters of the film consists of this type of scene. While the quality of these scenes is slightly below that of the latest John Wick movies, they are still quite enjoyable. It looks like Ana de Armas must have worked very hard to be able to perform in these scenes. Her efforts deserve respect.
The plot of the movie is extremely simple. Perhaps if it had been slightly deeper and more interesting, the movie would have been better.
Another criticism is that our 50-55 kg main character takes extremely heavy blows from men but recovers in just a few seconds. This wasn't believable or realistic. Similarly, our main character is too emotional to be a death angel.
The grenade scenes were over-the-top and even absurd, but the flamethrower scene was the most entertaining.
The duration of John Wick's scenes may exceed your expectations, but that's a good thing, It was nice to see him.
In summary, if you've watched and enjoyed the John Wick movies, you should watch Ballerina. I hope there will be a sequel.
The plot of the movie is extremely simple. Perhaps if it had been slightly deeper and more interesting, the movie would have been better.
Another criticism is that our 50-55 kg main character takes extremely heavy blows from men but recovers in just a few seconds. This wasn't believable or realistic. Similarly, our main character is too emotional to be a death angel.
The grenade scenes were over-the-top and even absurd, but the flamethrower scene was the most entertaining.
The duration of John Wick's scenes may exceed your expectations, but that's a good thing, It was nice to see him.
In summary, if you've watched and enjoyed the John Wick movies, you should watch Ballerina. I hope there will be a sequel.
No no no....
I love the John Wick series...the first two were absolutely great, the third was good en the fourth was a bit messy. But I love the storyline.
Then there was Ballerina... When I saw the preview wasnt convinced this would be good, but I wanted to give it a chance. The story, eventhough so simple written, could have been better. Then it all went like a jet... too fast to easy and not really believable. Also not really to feel in line with the character, that she's angry of course, to be top of her class...ah well could be. But then it all goes down the drain. A lot of fights and she manages to "slap" them all without having a scratch.
Someone else said it here in the reviews as well. John Wick had a believable story you saw him suffer. You understood. But now it's all so unbelievably in your face and you don't even have the time to feel her story. And everything she does is really not to believe.
They could've made a great story to build upon, but they really didn't think this through and just made a mess unfortunately.
But if you love a lot kicking and shooting with no real dialogue..pls do watch.
Then there was Ballerina... When I saw the preview wasnt convinced this would be good, but I wanted to give it a chance. The story, eventhough so simple written, could have been better. Then it all went like a jet... too fast to easy and not really believable. Also not really to feel in line with the character, that she's angry of course, to be top of her class...ah well could be. But then it all goes down the drain. A lot of fights and she manages to "slap" them all without having a scratch.
Someone else said it here in the reviews as well. John Wick had a believable story you saw him suffer. You understood. But now it's all so unbelievably in your face and you don't even have the time to feel her story. And everything she does is really not to believe.
They could've made a great story to build upon, but they really didn't think this through and just made a mess unfortunately.
But if you love a lot kicking and shooting with no real dialogue..pls do watch.
Dumb. But the action is insane!
Ballerina checks every box of a John Wick film! It just gives you what you want from these movies - just the coolest stuff every 5 minutes, even after I assumed the John Wick movies left everything on the table with regards to inventive action scenes. It's impressive how John Wick writers keep finding new ways to do combat scenes. Ana de Armas kicks ass in a variety of violent and creative action sequences - grenades, flame-throwers, you name it! All movies should write action like this! Instead of relying on the same bang-bang-bang routine, the filmmakers constantly search for fresh angles - be it through location, weaponry, or method. That's a big reason why John Wick continues to offer the best gunplay in Hollywood.
So yes, Ballerina absolutely delivers on the action, and I had a blast with the fight scenes. But, like most of the Wick films, the story falls short. The revenge-driven plot is serviceable but basic, with flat characters who lack compelling motivations, and a villain who ultimately disappoints. It's the action - not the narrative - that keeps the film alive.
At a certain point, I had to stop watching it critically. Because it's so dumb, and yet so entertaining. I fully admit this is not an ideal situation, and normally I'd be very against this. On many occasions, after giving a negative review to something, someone will say to me, "Oh, just turn your brain off and enjoy it." To that, my response is always, "Well, if it was actually good, I shouldn't have to." Ballerina, however, is somehow both not good and also incredibly good at the same time. It's a mostly brainless, cold, cookie-cutter revenge movie that has so much unfathomable yet enjoyable action in it that the two are completely at odds. How can a film this hollow have action this entertaining? Why is such care devoted to these sequences when the story and emotion are so surface-level? It's bizarre and a little confusing. And yet, without realizing it, I did exactly what I always say not to do - I shut my brain off and had fun. I'm not surprised. I've had to do the same with the other Wick films, and Ballerina fits right in. And, like those films, I still came out leaning positive in the end.
Ana de Armas is a force of nature here, bringing intense physicality and a surprising vulnerability to this scrappy revenge tale. She ensures her character feels just as iconic as John Wick himself. Keanu Reeves has a much larger role than expected, but I appreciated that Wick never fully overtook the film - even if his presence does feel a bit like fan service. That said, I really missed Dan Laustsen's luminous cinematography from the earlier films. The visual identity takes a hit here. Still, the fact that Ballerina works as well as it does is a testament to the foundation that Chad Stahelski and Reeves have built and continue to shape. But when the bar is set this high, it's hard not to notice that this doesn't quite measure up. Even so, this is still everything you could want from a summer blockbuster. It's tons of fun and packed with killer set pieces.
So yes, Ballerina absolutely delivers on the action, and I had a blast with the fight scenes. But, like most of the Wick films, the story falls short. The revenge-driven plot is serviceable but basic, with flat characters who lack compelling motivations, and a villain who ultimately disappoints. It's the action - not the narrative - that keeps the film alive.
At a certain point, I had to stop watching it critically. Because it's so dumb, and yet so entertaining. I fully admit this is not an ideal situation, and normally I'd be very against this. On many occasions, after giving a negative review to something, someone will say to me, "Oh, just turn your brain off and enjoy it." To that, my response is always, "Well, if it was actually good, I shouldn't have to." Ballerina, however, is somehow both not good and also incredibly good at the same time. It's a mostly brainless, cold, cookie-cutter revenge movie that has so much unfathomable yet enjoyable action in it that the two are completely at odds. How can a film this hollow have action this entertaining? Why is such care devoted to these sequences when the story and emotion are so surface-level? It's bizarre and a little confusing. And yet, without realizing it, I did exactly what I always say not to do - I shut my brain off and had fun. I'm not surprised. I've had to do the same with the other Wick films, and Ballerina fits right in. And, like those films, I still came out leaning positive in the end.
Ana de Armas is a force of nature here, bringing intense physicality and a surprising vulnerability to this scrappy revenge tale. She ensures her character feels just as iconic as John Wick himself. Keanu Reeves has a much larger role than expected, but I appreciated that Wick never fully overtook the film - even if his presence does feel a bit like fan service. That said, I really missed Dan Laustsen's luminous cinematography from the earlier films. The visual identity takes a hit here. Still, the fact that Ballerina works as well as it does is a testament to the foundation that Chad Stahelski and Reeves have built and continue to shape. But when the bar is set this high, it's hard not to notice that this doesn't quite measure up. Even so, this is still everything you could want from a summer blockbuster. It's tons of fun and packed with killer set pieces.
Entertaining, super repetitive and predictable
If you love what the John Wick series has become then you'll love this movie, it's full of action and great fight scenes. However I can't get over how repetitive it is, it's just on and on with the enemies and to me that gets boring pretty quick.
Also, there is almost zero depth to the movie, thematically, emotionally, metaphorically, you name it. Even the main character barely has any story or depth, let alone any other character. It's just one big revenge story and that again ties into the predictability aspect, after about 25 minutes most people should be able to guess what happens the rest of the way.
It's a good theater flick, it's entertaining, but it's not worthy of a high rating due to its tunnel vision plot and lackluster depth.
Also, there is almost zero depth to the movie, thematically, emotionally, metaphorically, you name it. Even the main character barely has any story or depth, let alone any other character. It's just one big revenge story and that again ties into the predictability aspect, after about 25 minutes most people should be able to guess what happens the rest of the way.
It's a good theater flick, it's entertaining, but it's not worthy of a high rating due to its tunnel vision plot and lackluster depth.
Soundtrack
Preview the soundtrack here and continue listening on Amazon Music.
Did you know
- TriviaLike Keanu Reeves for the mainline series, Ana de Armas did most of her stunts, including using an actual flamethrower to (safely) burn a man alive on camera. She admitted in interviews that the first time she tested out the weapon, she broke down crying on set at the sight of setting a person on fire.
- GoofsWhen Eve grabs the fire hose, she doesn't turn the water on. She just walks outside and starts spraying to fight the guy with the flame thrower.
- Crazy creditsThere is a mid-credit dedication for Lionsgate Co-President Jason Constantine who died on June 3, 2025 at the age of 55, after a long battle with cancer. He worked as Summit Entertainment's creative executive on John Wick: Chapter 2 (2017), and as a studio executive for Lionsgate on John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum (2019). Constantine is also best known for being an executive producer on the Saw (2004) series of films, as well as all four The Expendables (2010) films, and Texas Chainsaw (2013).
- ConnectionsFeatures Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928)
- SoundtracksThe Four Seasons: Summer 3
(Robot Koch Remix)
Written by Antonio Vivaldi
Performed by Max Richter
Courtesy of Deutsche Grammophon
under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- From the World of John Wick: Ballerina
- Filming locations
- Dubrovnik, Croatia(croatia)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $90,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $58,051,327
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $24,501,663
- Jun 8, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $137,216,585
- Runtime
- 2h 4m(124 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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