‘John Wick’s Best Action Sequence Is a Cut Above the Rest

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  •  The knife confrontation in John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum is the best action scene in the series because it showcases all the franchise’s strengths: choreography, cleverness, and humor.
  •  Director Chad Stahelski and the stunt team made the scene as realistic as possible, showcasing how messy knife fights are and putting the gun-fu John Wick at a disadvantage.
  •  The confrontation has more martial arts than other fight scenes, and no music, instead using sound effects to emphasize the fight’s brutality.

The John Wick series is many things at once and one thing never: the latter being, “boring.” Each new entry ups the ante. Those venerated action scenes are spectacles supported by skill, ingenuity, and passion. Declaring one fight scene better than the rest might seem like a fruitless exercise if “above and beyond” wasn’t the goal, and if there weren’t clear contenders. And, among those contenders, there’s a winner: the knife confrontation in John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum. It doesn’t have the spectacular grandeur of the horse stable or the motorcycle chase, or the visual tricks employed by the hall of mirrors. It doesn’t need it. This seemingly more simplistic (yet anything but) 3-minute brawl has everything that makes John WickJohn Wickchoreography, cleverness, humor, gore, and a protagonist too stubborn to die.

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John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum

John Wick is on the run after killing a member of the international assassins’ guild, and with a $14 million price tag on his head, he is the target of hit men and women everywhere.

The Knife Scene in ‘John Wick: Chapter 3’ Is Realistic

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Image via Lionsgate

em>John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum opens with its titular anti-hero (Keanu Reeves) on the run from a bajillion assassins after breaking the Continental’s rules by killing Santino D’Antonio (Riccardo Scamarcio) in John Wick: Chapter 2. Now labeled excommunicado, John dashes around a rainy New York City nightscape reminiscent of Blade Runner, evading enemies at every turn or killing them with library books. Early on, he seeks refuge in an antique shop. Bare minutes pass before he’s beset by another group of would-be killers foolish enough to take him on. However, this time around, John’s already tired. He’s injured. He’s weaponless, frantically searching the display guns for an antique that works. He’s not at his usual top of his game. With no advantage except, well, being himself, his opponents quickly corner him. Just as fast, they’re tossing old knives with abandon in between bouts of feisty hand-to-hand combat. In essence, John Wick brought a gun to a knife fight.

This is just one example of how the John Wick movies always take things a step further — and then one more just to see if they can. They layer scenarios like a house of cards, then (to mix metaphors) unpeel the onion to reveal the cocktail of obstacles John must overcome this time around. The knife scene is no different in its conceit and beats. Director Chad Stahelski and his writing team — Derek KolstadShay HattenChris Collins, and Marc Abrams — decided to ditch the guns and do a “real” knife fight to challenge themselves as much as audience expectations. He told Polygon in 2019:

“In every action movie the hero always throws a knife. And what does it do? It sticks in every time. I know professional knife throwers. That’s where I learned from. Seven out of ten? Miss. […] So we were like, wouldn’t it be nice to do a real knife fight? […] You and your little brother, you have a snowball fight. How many snowballs can you get in? So we’re gonna have a snowball knife fight where nothing hits. […] We just thought that’d be hilarious. And it’s super serious. No one’s trying to do a gag. But the whole time people are laughing going, oh my god. And I think that’s the secret of a good action sequence.”

Why Is the Knife Fight in ‘John Wick: Chapter 3’ the Best?

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