Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

John Wick (Franchise)

 John Wick (Franchise)
type
TVTItem
 John Wick (Franchise)
label
John Wick (Franchise)
 John Wick (Franchise)
page
JohnWick
 John Wick (Franchise)
comment
John Wick is a neo-noir action thriller franchise created by Derek Kolstad, directed by Chad Stahelski and set in a shadowy underworld of assassins and criminals.John Wick (played by Keanu Reeves) begins the story attending the funeral of his terminally ill wife. As a final memento, she arranges for John to receive a puppy to care for so he would not be alone. Unfortunately for John, less than a day later, some young Russian gangsters break into his house to steal his Cool Car, and in the process they kill the dog out of spite.Even more unfortunately for the gangsters, the man they just crossed wasn't just any random person but the dreaded "Baba Yaga", a retired hitman infamous in the New York criminal underground. Having lost everything keeping him at peace, so begins a Roaring Rampage of Revenge as John cuts a One-Man Army trail back to the punks who wronged him. This unveils a surprisingly complex network of criminal organizations, assassins and a central concierge that everyone defers to as the Continental Hotel. The sequels expand on John's past and his membership in the Continental, which has ties to an Ancient Conspiracy now known as the High Table.John Wick is known for its tightly choreographed but over-the-top fight scenes using advanced gunplay and lots of headshots. The films can be best described as what happens when Neo is reimagined in the real world as the deadliest assassin alive.Not to be confused with game designer John Wick.
 John Wick (Franchise)
fetched
2024-02-24T09:16:00Z
 John Wick (Franchise)
parsed
2024-02-24T09:16:00Z
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to CarChase: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to Fortnite: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to JohnWick: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to JohnWickChapter2: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to JohnWickChapter3Parabellum: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to JohnWickChapter4: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to JohnWickHex: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to MaxPayne: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to PAYDAY2: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to TheContinental: Not a Feature - ITEM
 John Wick (Franchise)
processingUnknown
CarChase
 John Wick (Franchise)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1a74b900
type
World of Badass
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1a74b900
comment
World of Badass: Apparently, half of the population in any major city of the world in the setting are either hitmen, assassins, bounty hunters, and various kinds of deadly killers who are all part of a criminal world so powerful and vast, they pretty much are their own law enforcement. Even civilians in the setting don't even bat an eye or panic that much when people start killing each other right next to them.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1a74b900
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1a74b900
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_1a74b900
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1e75509c
type
Adventure-Friendly World
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1e75509c
comment
Adventure-Friendly World: Darker and Edgier version anyway. The world's crime organizations have formed The High Table, with the various services of The Continental providing a network of safe havens and services for scores of assassins to conduct their deadly business (in Parabellum in particular, roughly a third of the population of New York appear to be assassins). While this formalised underworld and shadow economy is naturally the perfect background for a crime/action movie, one can only imagine what life is like for ordinary people as a result of criminals having so much power.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1e75509c
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_1e75509c
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_1e75509c
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_2044af1
type
Faceless Goons
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_2044af1
comment
Faceless Goons: Uses this on a few occasions, most notably during the home invasion scene in the first film, the catacombs fight in the second, and the Casablanca fight and the invasion of the Continental in the third. Otherwise, the films largely avoid this and make a point to show off a mook's face and end-of-life emotions whenever possible.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_2044af1
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_2044af1
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_2044af1
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_20bf0546
type
Franchise-Driven Retitling
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_20bf0546
comment
Franchise-Driven Retitling: The first film has been given the subtitle, Chapter 1 to match the sequels.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_20bf0546
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_20bf0546
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_20bf0546
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_25dc6ef5
type
Apathetic Citizens
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_25dc6ef5
comment
Apathetic Citizens: There is a general disinterest in the bloody violence that occurs through the films. While much of it is explained as people who are in on the nature of the characters (a cop shows up to Johns' house with bodies on the floor as a "noise complaint" and is non-plussed by the scene, but John knows him as Jimmy) at other times they appear to be outright oblivious to it.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_25dc6ef5
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_25dc6ef5
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_25dc6ef5
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_281de59f
type
Extremely Short Timespan
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_281de59f
comment
Extremely Short Timespan: Each film takes place over the course of a week at most, and are separated by days at most (the end of Chapter 2 and the start of Parabellum are separated by less than an hour in-universe, which is a plot point), which means that all the physical and emotional battering that John has gone through since his wife died at the start of the first film has taken place over the course of a month at most. In Parabellum, the Director even refers to "all the chaos you've caused in the last few weeks," when chastising John for showing up at the theater; that takes place the same night his excommunicado is in effect, and the final scene of the film is the morning after the seven days the Adjudicator gave Winston and the Bowery King. There is a significant Time Skip between Parabellum and Chapter 4, which John spent hiding and healing before going back out to hunt, but the film itself takes place over maybe a week at most like all the others.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_281de59f
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_281de59f
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_281de59f
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_323f135b
type
Sorting Algorithm of Evil
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_323f135b
comment
Sorting Algorithm of Evil: The antagonists get bigger with each movie. The first movie had the Tarasov Russian mob, who were mostly localized to New York. The antagonists of Chapter 2 operate across multiple countries and had ties to the High Table. Chapter 3 sees the High Table themselves step forward and send their representative and personal assassins after John. Chapter 4 features an even higher-ranking High Table representative with more resources and a much bigger amount of assassins at his disposal.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_323f135b
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_323f135b
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_323f135b
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_38d02d44
type
Batman Gambit
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_38d02d44
comment
The Marquis also plays loose with every deal he makes, ultimately alienating not just the Harbinger, but the Tracker (Nobody) and Caine, who both decide to ally with John, though they've been tasked with killing him or else die themselves. Caine does this out of loyalty to his friend and Nobody because John saved his dog. John repays Caine by allowing the latter to kill him in their duel so he can reunite with his daughter, and so that John can trick the Marquis into entering the dueling ground and be killed.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_38d02d44
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_38d02d44
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_38d02d44
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3b7ba342
type
Nebulous Criminal Conspiracy
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3b7ba342
comment
Nebulous Criminal Conspiracy: There's two in the form of the Continental hotel chain, which acts as a Truce Zone and business ground for criminals and assassins, and the High Table, an alliance of the twelve heads of the world's most influential criminal organizations. The Continental and High Table seem to have some sort of arrangement worked out between each other, with the latter being dominant, but the specifics of it aren't fully delved into.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3b7ba342
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3b7ba342
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_3b7ba342
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c0a4666
type
Noodle Incident
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c0a4666
comment
Noodle Incident: Characters occasionally mention the "Impossible Task" that Viggo Tarasov gave John as the condition to leave the criminal underworld. The Impossible Task is never described in detail, beyond that John left behind an ocean of corpses over the course of a single night that allowed to Tarasov Crime Family to become the major power players they are today, and that Santino D'Antonio apparently gave John assistance in exchange for a blood debt. Viggo Tarasov also references another incident: "I once saw him kill three men in a bar. With a pencil."
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c0a4666
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c0a4666
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c0a4666
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c828df5
type
Flashmob
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c828df5
comment
There's a difference in tone from the first movie regarding the underground economy the Continental represents, where the Continental and the gold coins is presented more as this secondary economy used by the underworld rather than the all controlling murder illuminati it becomes in the second and third film. A lot more emphasis is given to the pageantry and the efforts of the Continental to disguise itself, and it's implied it has clients who know nothing of the criminal activities what with the bar that serves assassins being hidden in the basement beyond the laundromat of the hotel. In later movies it seems no one uses the Continental that doesn't know what it's about, and a lot less effort is made to hide the activities of the hotel. It also shows the assassin world being much smaller - the two assassins taking contracts on John are people he knows himself prior (Perkins and Marcus) despite Viggo's contract on John being an open contract. By the second movie, there are apparently enough assassins in New York for Winston to organize a borderline Flashmob of them, and by the third, it's like half of New York's population is a hitman and John having a contract on him causes dozens of assassins to home in on him.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c828df5
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c828df5
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_3c828df5
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4389e368
type
Actionized Sequel
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4389e368
comment
Actionized Sequel: The first film had plenty of action but was a slow burn until the first major shootout about 40 minutes in, but still had a number of quieter moments in between the carnage. Each sequel escalates the size and length of the fighting, to where Chapter 4 has some action set-pieces continue for over 30 minutes and it's noted that John Wick himself only has just over 100 words of dialogue.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4389e368
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4389e368
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_4389e368
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4f4372e9
type
Early-Installment Weirdness
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4f4372e9
comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: Unlike the rest of the series, Keanu Reeves didn't train at Taran Tactical for the first film, resulting in Wick's fighting style being subtly different. The first film he had a more traditional stance with both arms extended forward focusing on one target, while he later takes on a modern "Center Axis Relock" style keeping the gun closer to the shoulder, slightly angled and visibly scouting multiple targets. In turn there is a lack of Product Placement for Taran Tactical in the first film, whereas future films take the opportunity to showcase their logo on several of John's weapons. The first film has a lower budget compared to the other movies, which is apparent in its smaller scope and having a bit more mood and atmosphere; it's notably the only film in the series that doesn't travel abroad, instead taking place entirely within New York City and its immediate surroundings. A Car Chase at the end of the film is comparatively low energy because they didn't have the budget to wreck the vehicles. Later films ramped up the scale with globe-trotting, sustained action sequences and a few VFX shots. Mrs. Perkins isn't referred to as becoming "excommunicado". Winston simply tells her that her membership to Continental has been revoked, and has four mooks shoot her dead with no fanfare. Though it's implied either excommunicado is rare or Perkins had simply pissed off Winston enough that he didn't show any mercy for the circumstances. The first two films dropped multiple hints that Winston is the All-Powerful Bystander and ultimate authority in the assassin's world. He was shown inspecting coins from a craftsman and putting it in circulation, implying that he's the creator and central bank of their financial system. He was also shown keeping the book of blood oaths and markers and most notably Santino was always shown shrinking before him despite being a High Table member. The third movie showed that he's really only middle management and most of his authority can be revoked by the High Table. There's a difference in tone from the first movie regarding the underground economy the Continental represents, where the Continental and the gold coins is presented more as this secondary economy used by the underworld rather than the all controlling murder illuminati it becomes in the second and third film. A lot more emphasis is given to the pageantry and the efforts of the Continental to disguise itself, and it's implied it has clients who know nothing of the criminal activities what with the bar that serves assassins being hidden in the basement beyond the laundromat of the hotel. In later movies it seems no one uses the Continental that doesn't know what it's about, and a lot less effort is made to hide the activities of the hotel. It also shows the assassin world being much smaller - the two assassins taking contracts on John are people he knows himself prior (Perkins and Marcus) despite Viggo's contract on John being an open contract. By the second movie, there are apparently enough assassins in New York for Winston to organize a borderline Flashmob of them, and by the third, it's like half of New York's population is a hitman and John having a contract on him causes dozens of assassins to home in on him. A side effect of the above is that some element of John's backstory in the first movie clash with later revelations. Namely that John had to do favors to the Tarasov Crime Family to retire. Later movies establish John as being not only already famous in the broader organization but in close terms with two separate members of the High Table, and Winston. It seems ludicrous that he'd need Viggos' (who doesn't appear to have any High Table connections beyond owning some gold coins) permission to retire. Similarly John's fame inside the organization and how many assassins recognize him on sight after only receiving his name and a bounty number makes it really hard to believe Iosef and his two friends didn't know who John is. He's basically the only person in New York who doesn't. Perkins's willingness to kill inside the Continental is seen as just the money (a $2 million bounty) being too good to pass up, but Chapter 2 has Santino put a $7 million dollar bounty on John's head halfway through the movie, which doubles by the end of the movie and continues to climb throughout Parabellum and Chapter 4. Despite this, absolutely no one even tries to kill John while he is in a Continental, even Zero and his students, who are hunting John on behalf of the High Table, until the New York Continental is deconsecrated and invaded in Parabellum. The first film was more subdued with the apparent reach of the Continental and Winston, with both Perkins and Viggo seeing it as just a bigger obstacle when subsequent movies show that doing so is considered an act against the most powerful organization in the world. Being declared "excommunicado" and subsequently marked for death by every assassin in New York is your best-case scenario for just a few million dollars. In the first film's Red Circle shootout, it is noteworthy that the many clubgoers actually react realistically to a deadly fight breaking out within their midst, with everyone cowering or trying to run away. The film draws attention to this by demonstrating how Iosef escaping John is partially thanks to him running with the crowd and John's unwillingness to put innocents in harm's way. Starting with the second film, it becomes a Running Gag that any fight in a public place is treated as an Unusually Uninteresting Sight as civilians try to continue whatever they were doing, and since both Chapter 2 and Chapter 4 also contain major nightclub fight setpieces this contrast is easy to spot. The series' love of heavy on-set neon color washes was present in the first film, but significantly more subdued and naturalistic, with the bright neons largely being confined to the Red Circle club where it has an easy justification. This change in cinematography style is likely thanks to the inclusion of Dan Laustsen to the production crew, who became the lead cinematographer in Chapter 2 and returned for all of the sequels.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4f4372e9
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_4f4372e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_4f4372e9
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b36340
type
What Measure Is a Mook?
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b36340
comment
What Measure Is a Mook?: Being a henchman in this universe isn't a fun time; while plenty of attention is given to the conflict and politics of the big names in the criminal underworld, their underlings are treated as little more than collateral damage when those names start falling out. For two examples: In the beginning of Chapter 2, John kills or at least seriously injures a number of mooks on his way to find Abram Tarasov, who he is amicable towards and spares without a fight. Chapter 3 really indulges in this. Zero's men slice their way through both The Director's and The Bowery King's men to get to their respective leaders, after which they're physically punished but left alive. Winston shooting John also counts as this, regardless of Winston's true intentions.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b36340
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b36340
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b36340
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b517e7
type
Culturally Religious
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b517e7
comment
Culturally Religious: The films use a lot of Christian imagery and terminology, although no character expresses real belief in any religion. For example, no business can be done on the grounds of a Continental while it's considered consecrated and those who fall foul of the High Table are declared excommunicado. This is taken to its furthest conclusion in Chapter 4, with the finale taking place at the Sacré-Cœur Basilica, the Harbinger donning a priest's stole and quoting the King James Bible in Latin, while John ultimately becomes a Christ-like martyr (complete with stigmata) and dies while showing his fellow assassins that the grip of the High Table isn't absolute.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b517e7
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b517e7
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_52b517e7
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: Chapter 1 begins at John's wife's grave. Chapter 4 ends at John's. Similarly, Chapter 1 sees Marcus go out on his own terms, refusing to allow an authority figure to decide how his story will end, and John ends Chapter 4 doing the same.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5313c266
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5313c266
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_5313c266
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5ce7dbb9
type
Central Theme
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5ce7dbb9
comment
Central Theme: Rules and consequences: every single plot development across all the films result from someone breaking the rules and suffering the consequences that follow. This is codified into the myriad, archaic rules that govern the assassin underworld that its members are defined and abide by. More broadly, the films also showcase characters that are bound by their past choices and sworn oaths, and the consequences of honoring or not honoring their word.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5ce7dbb9
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5ce7dbb9
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_5ce7dbb9
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5fcb9ad1
type
Time Skip
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5fcb9ad1
comment
There is a significant Time Skip between Parabellum and Chapter 4, which John spent hiding and healing before going back out to hunt, but the film itself takes place over maybe a week at most like all the others.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5fcb9ad1
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_5fcb9ad1
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_5fcb9ad1
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_6293c185
type
Sequel Hook
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_6293c185
comment
In Parabellum, the High Table begins a crackdown on people who aided John against their rules, ultimately making an enemy of the Bowery King (setting up the sequel), who is newer to the scene and already doesn't like either them or their rules.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_6293c185
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_6293c185
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_6293c185
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_64f0c18c
type
Critical Existence Failure
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_64f0c18c
comment
Like many player-characters in shooter games, John Wick is very capable of pushing himself through even serious injuries with just some first aid and/or the aforementioned pain killers. Even when visibly fatigued by his accumulated injuries, he is still racking up an absurd amount of kills. John is also surprisingly resistant to Falling Damage.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_64f0c18c
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_64f0c18c
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_64f0c18c
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_675056e4
type
Signature Move
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_675056e4
comment
Signature Move: The Gun Fu John employs relies heavily on headshots, body shots to distract them then follow up with a headshot, or flip someone to the ground and follow up with a headshot. This was especially true in the first film. Later films spice things up with using more martial weapons and not just firearms, but the principles remain similar.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_675056e4
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_675056e4
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_675056e4
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7095c87e
type
TheMasquerade
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7095c87e
comment
The Masquerade: Though not as distinctly overt as some examples, there's a subtle indication that there are two worlds; one law enforcement, civilians, and mundane existence, and a secret realm of assassins. There's a visual and audible shift when one transitions between the "normal" world and the underworld of criminals and assassins. In the civilian world everything is paler, with a more washed-out color palette and somber music. Once John moves into the underworld of killers and criminals - or said underworld intrudes into the civilian one - the colors become more vibrant and more intense music is played. In more than one case, Winston or other characters speak of the civilian world as being "outside" of the realm of assassins. For example, even though Santino has a Marker given by John, he only cashes it in for John's service when he believes John has "returned" to the world of assassins. The events of both the second and third movies don't outright say it, but civilians don't even seem to be able to perceive assassins killing each other all around them unless it is done so in a way that puts them in danger. John and Cassian can shoot each other with silenced weapons with no response from others, and John and Zero can knife assassins in a crowded train station with no response from anyone nearby. The various dealings of criminals are referred to as being "under the Table". This can be taken both literally (within the rules and sanctions of the High Table) and metaphorically (secretive and out-of-sight).
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7095c87e
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7095c87e
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_7095c87e
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7360a6b6
type
Noble Demon
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7360a6b6
comment
Noble Demon: The Underworld of criminals and assassins runs on rules, a code of conduct grounded in honor and respect. Breaking these rules typically results in lethal punishment. John's staunchest allies, in particular, show respect and loyalty, and the conflict of the later films is between the loyalty shown to ones comrades and the respect demanded by the High Table and its representatives.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7360a6b6
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7360a6b6
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_7360a6b6
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7464705c
type
Arc Words
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7464705c
comment
Arc Words: "Be seeing you, John."
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7464705c
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7464705c
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_7464705c
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_78c5ce7e
type
Screw the Rules, I Make Them!
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_78c5ce7e
comment
Screw the Rules, I Make Them!: The third film sets up the High Table and the Elder who sits above it as the real antagonists. The fourth film makes the story a conflict between those who value loyalty, friendship, family, and the rules that create community on the one hand and the authority figures who think they're above the rules on the other. John breaks the rules but honestly seeks to make amends, while the High Table cares only for its own power. The Adjudicator bulls through New York punishing people who helped John within the rules, but against the High Table's wishes, or in a conflict between different rules and against the High Table's wishes. The Bowery King helped John; absolutely not against the rules, but he helped John kill a member of the High Table, so his men are killed and he's almost executed. Note that Santino also killed a member of the High Table, but the High Table didn't have a problem with it because he did so to take his sister's seat. They value their power over the rules and see his attempt to acquire that power as legitimate, whereas they view John's grievance at having been used as a tool and discarded as illegitimate. Winston gave John an hour's head start, something that was within his authority, but he is likewise punished because the High Table views it as an insult. His hotel is deconsecrated and his life declared forfeit. When he's offered a path back in, the Table sets the price as the death of his friend. In the fourth film, Winston is punished further because, despite shooting John and causing him to fall off the roof of the New York Continental, John survived. His hotel is demolished and his friend, Charon, the Concierge, murdered in front of him. The Director aided a member of her family and made it clear that it would be the last time he would ever be allowed to call on them. In consequence, many of her family are killed and she gets stabbed through the hands by Zero. The fourth film doubles down on this, as the Director has vanished and we learn that the new head of the family, Katia, saw her father (John's uncle) killed by the High Table in further punishment and then they sent her a bill for the cost of his execution. John earned his Marker with Sofia by secreting her daughter from the underworld, and she consoles herself for that loss with the comforts of her position as Manager of the Casablanca Continental and with a replacement family in her dogs. Markers are extreme and this is extremely It's Personal so she reluctantly takes him to a member of the High Table to beg an audience with the Elder. To punish her for her loyalty, the member demands one of her dogs, then shoots it when she refuses, prompting her to massacre the compound alongside John (who gets it). We never learn how or if she was punished for that. The Marquis in the fourth film is given a blank check and suspends all the rules, punishing everyone near John Wick so that he can "kill the idea of John Wick". This backfires, as even the Harbinger is uncomfortable with his excesses and prefers to abide by the rules. The Harbinger ends up siding with John, declaring him the victor of his duel after the Marquis, in his arrogance, steps into the field and leaves himself vulnerable within the rules. Everything about the duel is within the rules, but the Marquis has to be manipulated into it by Winston. The Marquis also plays loose with every deal he makes, ultimately alienating not just the Harbinger, but the Tracker (Nobody) and Caine, who both decide to ally with John, though they've been tasked with killing him or else die themselves. Caine does this out of loyalty to his friend and Nobody because John saved his dog. John repays Caine by allowing the latter to kill him in their duel so he can reunite with his daughter, and so that John can trick the Marquis into entering the dueling ground and be killed. The fourth movie's first act is at the Osaka Continental, where John seeks refuge from his old friend, Koji, the Manager there. Koji all but lays out the film's central premise when he welcomes John at great cost to himself.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_78c5ce7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_78c5ce7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_78c5ce7e
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7a4013f3
type
Deuteragonist
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7a4013f3
comment
Deuteragonist: Winston turns into this starting in Chapter 2, after Chapter 1 presented him as the All-Powerful Bystander who was sympathetic to John. While John drives most of the plot and action, Winston is the one primarily interacting with the High Table and its representatives and is ultimately one of the few characters who receives tangible development of any kind other than John.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7a4013f3
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_7a4013f3
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_7a4013f3
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_89499ccf
type
Dolled-Up Installment
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_89499ccf
comment
Dolled-Up Installment: The spec script for Ballerina was written as an original story, and was adapted to fit into the John Wick universe after it was purchased by Lionsgate.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_89499ccf
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_89499ccf
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_89499ccf
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_8ed601a6
type
Two-Part Trilogy
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_8ed601a6
comment
Two-Part Trilogy: While the first movie can be watched standalone on its own, the second one directly follows up on the first and ends on a very clear cliffhanger that leads directly into the third. The third movie ends in another cliffhanger leading into a fourth, it ends up being a two-part tetralogy. Not that anyone's complaining.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_8ed601a6
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_8ed601a6
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_8ed601a6
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_970c790a
comment
Also, once per movie, the Big Bad calls John (or in the third film, Winston) to engage in some Evil Gloating, only for John to hang up on them in mid-sentence without saying a word. In the fourth film, Mr. Nobody gets in on it as well in his last phone call with the Marquis, who called him in a middle of a furious firefight with John Wick to negotiate the price on John's head. Mr. Nobody, fed up with the Marquis's mistreatment of him, simply gives him his final price offer (that goes up to 40 million) before hanging up on his boss before the Marquis could protest otherwise.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_970c790a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_970c790a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_970c790a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_974b47a7
type
Men Are the Expendable Gender
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_974b47a7
comment
Men Are the Expendable Gender: Prevalent in the first three movies. In contrast to the 250+ men that John killed throughout the series, the number of female Mooks he has encountered could be literally counted on one hand: Ms. Perkins in the first film, Ares and the Violinist in the second, and the young assassin at Grand Central Station in the third. Of these characters, only the Grand Central assassin was a completely throwaway extra. John Wick: Chapter 4 tipped the balance and added many more female Mooks to go after John (and be gunned down in turn).
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_974b47a7
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_974b47a7
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_974b47a7
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_99ddfcec
type
Unwitting Instigator of Doom
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_99ddfcec
comment
Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Iosef launches an unstoppable destructive force upon the magical underworld by unleashing the righteous fury of John Wick... because a spoiled brat wanted a car.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_99ddfcec
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_99ddfcec
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_99ddfcec
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9f1b0b39
type
Counting Bullets
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9f1b0b39
comment
Counting Bullets: Assiduously followed to degrees almost unseen in the genre, to the point action scenes are planned out to always account for how much ammunition John has, scripting around when he has to reload or grab another firearm once emptied plus making sure he checks magazines and performs tactical reloadsnote retaining partly used magazines instead of dropping them from time to time.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9f1b0b39
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9f1b0b39
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_9f1b0b39
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9fbe06a5
type
Badass in a Nice Suit
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9fbe06a5
comment
Badass in a Nice Suit: As John Wick, Keanu Reeves gets to wear at least two extremely well-tailored suits per movie. The second movie introduces us to Wick's underworld tailor, who details the finer points of the jacket while he demonstrates the soft body armor sewn into the lining. Many other characters get similar outfits.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9fbe06a5
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_9fbe06a5
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_9fbe06a5
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a0db7803
type
It's Personal
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a0db7803
comment
John earned his Marker with Sofia by secreting her daughter from the underworld, and she consoles herself for that loss with the comforts of her position as Manager of the Casablanca Continental and with a replacement family in her dogs. Markers are extreme and this is extremely It's Personal so she reluctantly takes him to a member of the High Table to beg an audience with the Elder. To punish her for her loyalty, the member demands one of her dogs, then shoots it when she refuses, prompting her to massacre the compound alongside John (who gets it). We never learn how or if she was punished for that.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a0db7803
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a0db7803
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_a0db7803
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a60e3252
type
Rule of Funny
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a60e3252
comment
Rule of Funny: In the later films; after large exchanges of gunfire, Wick will shake himself or remove his jacket to the sound of spent bullets falling off and hitting the ground.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a60e3252
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a60e3252
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_a60e3252
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a922f8de
type
To Be Lawful or Good
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a922f8de
comment
To Be Lawful or Good: The central conflict of the series, albeit for a given value of "good". John Wick goes up, time and again, against the powers that control the mystical underworld (the Law) while relying on the honor and good will of everyone else on the ground level (the Good).
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a922f8de
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_a922f8de
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_a922f8de
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_adb98918
type
All-Powerful Bystander
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_adb98918
comment
The first two films dropped multiple hints that Winston is the All-Powerful Bystander and ultimate authority in the assassin's world. He was shown inspecting coins from a craftsman and putting it in circulation, implying that he's the creator and central bank of their financial system. He was also shown keeping the book of blood oaths and markers and most notably Santino was always shown shrinking before him despite being a High Table member. The third movie showed that he's really only middle management and most of his authority can be revoked by the High Table.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_adb98918
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_adb98918
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_adb98918
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_b1dde8fd
type
Loophole Abuse
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_b1dde8fd
comment
Marcus plans to snipe John through his hotel room window. This is clearly against the spirit of the rules, but it's possible he thought shooting into the Continental from across the street was a gray area. In any case, Marcus loses his nerve when he actually sees his old friend, and shoots John's pillow to warn him of Perkins breaking into his room.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_b1dde8fd
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_b1dde8fd
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_b1dde8fd
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bba5445
type
Ammunition Conservation
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bba5445
comment
Ammunition Conservation: John tends to restrict himself regarding how much ammunition he uses against his opponents. This practice gets particular focus in the first film with the Red Circle shootout, where John kills Viggo Tarasov’s men with an average of two and a half bullets per combatant.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bba5445
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bba5445
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_bba5445
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bd5e8cd9
type
Urban Fantasy
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bd5e8cd9
comment
Urban Fantasy: The first film vaguely appears to be a realistic crime drama, but the later films are basically urban fantasy, with a feudal, magical underworld that runs on talismans hiding behind a Masquerade. All the major characters could be vampires, werewolves and mages without making any difference to the plot. This becomes almost undeniable in the fourth film, when a lengthy gun battle involving dozens of people takes place in the Etoile road junction in Paris, without attracting any attention from the mundanes whatsoever.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bd5e8cd9
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_bd5e8cd9
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_bd5e8cd9
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c1967d3e
type
Retro Universe
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c1967d3e
comment
Retro Universe: The series is clearly set in the present day, and the "ordinary world" is no different from our own. The assassins' underworld, however, is built on a feudal system of fealty, and they have a strong preference for antiquated technology in everything except weaponry: gold coins as currency, rotary phones and typewriters all see use and go unremarked upon.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c1967d3e
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c1967d3e
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_c1967d3e
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c2d978fe
type
Car Fu
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c2d978fe
comment
Car Fu: Action sequences revolving around using cars as weapons show up a few times. In particular, the franchise loves to have Wick himself get hit by a car, and as a Running Gag the car always hits him on his right: it happens once in the first film, twice in Chapter 2, and once in Chapter 3.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c2d978fe
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c2d978fe
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_c2d978fe
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c31adf6a
type
Gun Fu
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c31adf6a
comment
Gun Fu: John Wick uses a fusion of Sambo and Center Axis Relock to lethal effect. Unusually for this trope (and despite people depicting him with Guns Akimbo in fanart and elsewhere), John's preference when he goes to work is single-gun.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c31adf6a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c31adf6a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_c31adf6a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c3585f4a
type
Boom, Headshot!
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c3585f4a
comment
Boom, Headshot!: "Headshot" could be an alternate title for the series. John (and Sofia in Parabellum) always make sure their targets are down, which means almost all of them get at least one bullet to the head.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c3585f4a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c3585f4a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_c3585f4a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: John Wick can ingest painkillers to fight with full function, even with debilitating injuries, much like Max Payne does. Like many player-characters in shooter games, John Wick is very capable of pushing himself through even serious injuries with just some first aid and/or the aforementioned pain killers. Even when visibly fatigued by his accumulated injuries, he is still racking up an absurd amount of kills. John is also surprisingly resistant to Falling Damage.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c75df49a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_c75df49a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_c75df49a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cab89481
type
Screw the Rules, They're Not Real!
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cab89481
comment
Screw the Rules, They're Not Real!: The criminal underworld in the franchise has a lot of rules, overseen by the High Table and its enforcers, which they argue are "the only thing that separates us from the animals." They take the rules very seriously and have a lot of resources to enforce them, but... In the first movie: Marcus and Perkins both accept the contract on John despite the rule that "no business may be conducted on Continental grounds". Marcus plans to snipe John through his hotel room window. This is clearly against the spirit of the rules, but it's possible he thought shooting into the Continental from across the street was a gray area. In any case, Marcus loses his nerve when he actually sees his old friend, and shoots John's pillow to warn him of Perkins breaking into his room. For her part, Perkins murders another assassin in an escape attempt after John subdues her, and is executed for it by Winston's security. Starting in Chapter 2, John becomes increasingly frustrated with continually being dragged back into the underworld by its rules, culminating in him blatantly violating the Truce Zone when his enemy Santino takes refuge in the Continental and John kills him anyway. In Parabellum, the High Table begins a crackdown on people who aided John against their rules, ultimately making an enemy of the Bowery King (setting up the sequel), who is newer to the scene and already doesn't like either them or their rules. Chapter 4 establishes that the rules are truly what matter, because the real enemies are the rulers who think they're above that (a conflict that begins with the Adjudicator in the third film and escalates with the Harbinger and the Marquis in the fourth).
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cab89481
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cab89481
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_cab89481
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cb70651c
type
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cb70651c
comment
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: The first film is a very grounded neo-noir action film, but the second introduces the High Table and civilians stop responding realistically to the violence around them. It all begins to suggest that the being Under the Table is actually a kind of mystical otherworld that exists alongside the mundane civilian world. However, none of that is ever confirmed and the movies just run on Rule of Cool at any given moment.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cb70651c
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_cb70651c
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_cb70651c
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce104b8e
type
Serial Escalation
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce104b8e
comment
Serial Escalation: Each film aims to heighten the bodycount, the complexity of the action sequences and have John find new ways to dispatch the hundreds of assassins trying to kill him. Accordingly the budget for each film doubles from the previous one. The movies also increase the Magical Realism nature of the setting, with the first being essentially about a realistic hitman going after a realistic criminal organization, and each of the sequels developing more and more of the impossible fantasy assassin underworld.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce104b8e
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce104b8e
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce104b8e
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce27dc3f
type
Protagonist Title
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce27dc3f
comment
Protagonist Title: As one can easily guess, the series is about a hitman known as "John Wick". Though in the third film, it's revealed to be a nickname he adopted after coming over to the United States from Belarus as "Jardani Jovanovich".
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce27dc3f
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce27dc3f
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce27dc3f
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce2969d8
type
Spiritual Antithesis
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce2969d8
comment
Spiritual Antithesis: The film series has similarities to A History of Violence but contrasts in key plot points. Unlike Joey Cusack, John is successfully retired from the underworld, but things get cut abruptly short by his wife's sudden death and he never has any children. While Joey is on the run and in hiding, John gets drawn back into his old life after he goes on Roaring Rampage of Revenge to hunt down a punk who steals John's prized Mustang and kills his dog in petty revenge over a trivial incident at a gas station where John was not interested in selling his Mustang. Joey manages to end his conflict by the end of one film, while John's situation spirals out of control and ends up spanning four films, culminating with a huge body count and major disarray left in the criminal underworld.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce2969d8
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce2969d8
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_ce2969d8
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ceec4df5
type
Roaring Rampage of Revenge
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ceec4df5
comment
Roaring Rampage of Revenge: There is a reason why the trope's main page image is John Wick killing everyone involved in the murder of his beloved dog.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ceec4df5
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_ceec4df5
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_ceec4df5
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d389241a
type
Prefers Proper Names
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d389241a
comment
Prefers Proper Names: Winston and Addy (and Julius, the manager of the Rome Continental) are the only characters in the films to refer to John as "Jonathan". But the third film reveals that this too is an alias.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d389241a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d389241a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_d389241a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d609b01a
type
Carnival of Killers
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d609b01a
comment
Carnival of Killers: Every film but the first has John fight his way through at least one.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d609b01a
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_d609b01a
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_d609b01a
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e2f13529
type
World of Jerkass
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e2f13529
comment
World of Jerkass: The titular character is The Dreaded Hitman with a Heart, while the rest of the cast is made up of merciless criminals — some of whom are Affably Evil, however — who are prepared to hunt down and kill one another for money, pleasure, or vengeance.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e2f13529
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e2f13529
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_e2f13529
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e43c66bd
type
Art Evolution
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e43c66bd
comment
Art Evolution: There is a noticeable evolution and refinement in the films' visual language, as the action goes from relying on mid-to-tight shots in the first film to wider framing to allow for more-elaborate sets and larger, more-complex staging. The fourth film even switched to a digital 65mm format so that even more elements could be put on screen at once. The lighting also becomes more refined with each installment as Chad Stahelski learned to use lights shape scenes and direct viewers' eyes to specific parts of the frame.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e43c66bd
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e43c66bd
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_e43c66bd
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e5507f60
type
Truce Zone
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e5507f60
comment
Starting in Chapter 2, John becomes increasingly frustrated with continually being dragged back into the underworld by its rules, culminating in him blatantly violating the Truce Zone when his enemy Santino takes refuge in the Continental and John kills him anyway.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e5507f60
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_e5507f60
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_e5507f60
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_efacc623
type
Drama-Preserving Handicap
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_efacc623
comment
Drama-Preserving Handicap: On the antagonists' side, the presence of snipers is very limited, with the main sniper threats of the films appearing in Chapter 1 as body guards for Iosef, yet even they are dispatched without a hitch. Marcus is a notable professional sniper but has second thoughts or no thoughts at all about killing John and serves as an ally. When Marcus becomes unavailable due to being killed by Viggo in revenge, this leaves John without a sniper ally and John doesn't have to deal with dodging sniper nests, so contract hunters must engage John in relatively close quarters, leading to intense action scenes.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_efacc623
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_efacc623
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_efacc623
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f05444a4
type
Once per Episode
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f05444a4
comment
Once per Episode: Or rather once per movie we get a massive shootout during the second act that takes up a good portion of the film’s body count. In all movies except the third, this happens in the middle of a crowded club. Also, once per movie, the Big Bad calls John (or in the third film, Winston) to engage in some Evil Gloating, only for John to hang up on them in mid-sentence without saying a word. In the fourth film, Mr. Nobody gets in on it as well in his last phone call with the Marquis, who called him in a middle of a furious firefight with John Wick to negotiate the price on John's head. Mr. Nobody, fed up with the Marquis's mistreatment of him, simply gives him his final price offer (that goes up to 40 million) before hanging up on his boss before the Marquis could protest otherwise. Each of the films features one prominent scene/sequence where John uses a shotgun as his primary weapon; while it only lasted for one scene in Chapter 1, from Chapter 2 onwards it is always a multi-scene sequence showing John going on a rampage with the shotgun.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f05444a4
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f05444a4
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_f05444a4
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f729e5bc
type
Sequel Goes Foreign
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f729e5bc
comment
Sequel Goes Foreign: After the entirety of the first film took place in New York City and its surroundings, Chapter 2 spends its middle act in Rome, Italy, while Chapter 3 does the same with Morocco. Chapter 4 has the first act in Osaka, Japan, the second in Berlin, Germany, and the third in Paris, France.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f729e5bc
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f729e5bc
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_f729e5bc
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f9f2c33
comment
In the first film's Red Circle shootout, it is noteworthy that the many clubgoers actually react realistically to a deadly fight breaking out within their midst, with everyone cowering or trying to run away. The film draws attention to this by demonstrating how Iosef escaping John is partially thanks to him running with the crowd and John's unwillingness to put innocents in harm's way. Starting with the second film, it becomes a Running Gag that any fight in a public place is treated as an Unusually Uninteresting Sight as civilians try to continue whatever they were doing, and since both Chapter 2 and Chapter 4 also contain major nightclub fight setpieces this contrast is easy to spot.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_f9f2c33
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_f9f2c33
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fb3576b2
type
The Dog Bites Back
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fb3576b2
comment
The Dog Bites Back: A recurring plot element in the series is how those in power think they can get away with screwing those beneath them, namely John, thinking their resources will provide protection. They eventually find out it's a bad idea to antagonize a violent man who is The Determinator with Unstoppable Rage.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fb3576b2
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fb3576b2
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_fb3576b2
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fc225bec
type
Artistic License – Physics
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fc225bec
comment
Artistic License – Physics: The armored suits introduced in Chapter 2 and seeing use throughout the rest of the series are presented using realistic concepts such as ballistic fibers and composite layers, however in real life no material that is as flexible and lightweight as that shown in the movie would provide the level of protection we see in the films. While it would be possible to create a suit out of composite armor materials that would prevent bullets from penetrating, the wearer would still suffer severe bruises and broken bones from the impact, and the suit would be incapable of stopping anything more powerful than a heavy handgun round. To the film's credit, it is explicitly stated that being shot while wearing the suit is still "quite painful," though even this is a massive understatement.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fc225bec
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fc225bec
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_fc225bec
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fd76df83
type
Artistic License – Economics
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fd76df83
comment
Artistic License – Economics: A justified example. The shadow economy of the High Table and the Continental network runs on favors more than money, with the network minting their own gold coins to represent exchange of favors, along with markers representing non-transferrable, non-refusable blank checks in regards to return favors. Bounties are still offered in dollars, and it's unclear how exactly the conversion between gold coins and conventional currency works.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fd76df83
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fd76df83
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_fd76df83
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fdb355db
type
Fun with Subtitles
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fdb355db
comment
Fun with Subtitles: The franchise has fun Playing With this trope. In the beginning of the first film, when John was a civilian, the subtitled foreign languages were an unobtrusive white text. But as soon as he returns to the criminal underworld, all translations use a bold, noticeable font that highlights significant words with colour, which remains in use for the rest of the series. Subtitles are so ubiquitous the series tries to cram in as many foreign languages as possible, and even has a villain in the second movie who is mute, meaning she can only "speak" subtitles through ASL.
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fdb355db
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_fdb355db
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_fdb355db
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
type
ItemName
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
comment
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
 John Wick (Franchise) / int_name
itemName
John Wick (Franchise)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Action Genre / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Ammunition Conservation / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Angry Guard Dog / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Badass in a Nice Suit / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Battle Butler / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Bottomless Magazines / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Brutal Brawl / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Criminal Procedural / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Culturally Religious / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Dark Action Girl / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Detrimental Determination / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Downloadable Content / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Dragon-in-Chief / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Elite Mooks / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Equal-Opportunity Evil / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Estrogen Brigade / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Experienced Protagonist / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Extremely Short Timespan / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Feelies / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Fictional Currency / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Film Noir Index / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Films of the 2010s – Franchises / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Films of the 2020s / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Gangster Fiction / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Gangsterland / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Giant Mook / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Global Currency / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Guns in Church / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Heroic Bloodshed / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Hollywood Action Hero / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Homeless Pigeon Person / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Horrifying the Horror / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Iconic Sequel Outfit / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Instant Death Bullet / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Lawful Evil / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Licked by the Dog / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Like Reality, Unless Noted / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Living Legend / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Magic Antidote / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Memetic Hair / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Mook Lieutenant / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Murder, Inc. / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
N.G.O. Superpower / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Nebulous Criminal Conspiracy / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Nebulous Evil Organisation / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Never Given a Name / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Non-Fatal Explosions / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Ominous Mundanity / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Phrase Catcher / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Prefers Proper Names / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Price on Their Head / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Professional Killer / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
"Ray of Hope" Ending / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Sacred Hospitality / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Screw the Rules, They Broke Them First! / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Screw the Rules, They're Not Real! / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
See You in Hell / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Seeking Sanctuary / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Shotguns Are Just Better / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Sidelined Protagonist Crossover / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Staircase Tumble / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Standard Evil Empire Hierarchy / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Steel Ear Drums / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Call Knows Where You Live / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Gunslinger / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Queenpin / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Syndicate / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Thieves' Guild / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Truce Zone / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Two-Part Trilogy / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Unconventional Vehicle Chase / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
Wainscot Society / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
We Do the Impossible / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
World of Badass / int_ddba3ce8
 John Wick (Franchise)
hasFeature
World of Symbolism / int_ddba3ce8