John Wick movies ‘destroyed’ Keanu Reeves

WARNING: John Wick spoilers beneath.

John Wick actually could be useless in spite of everything — which is simply what Keanu Reeves requested for.

According to producer Basil Iwanyk, Reeves needed to be “definitively killed off” within the fourth film, which debuted on the field workplace in March and raked in a whopping $289 million within the US and greater than $660 million worldwide.

John Wick: Chapter 4 marked the largest success for the franchise — even with a reported $155 million funds. And — gasp — the movie additionally included the largest shocker of all when the title character seemingly died in the long run.

Despite Winston (Ian McShane) and The Bowery King (Laurence Fishburn) visiting John’s grave within the movie, Iwanyk remains to be holding out hope that Reeves will reprise the position once more.

There’s a “10 per cent little opening” that he would, he informed Collider.

“After the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th movie, making these films is so exhausting and it destroys Keanu, physically and emotionally,” he continued.

“By the end, he’s always like, ‘I can’t do this again,’ and we agree with him. The guy is just a shell of himself because he just goes off and goes for it.”

He added: “We all want another ‘John Wick.’ We don’t know what it looks like and when it will happen, but we love each other and we love this world. It’s gonna be all hands to try to figure it out. Have we figured it out? No. And if we can’t figure it out, will there be one? No, of course not. No one is gonna try to just jam it for the sake of jamming it.”

If Reeves does resolve to return someday, Iwanyk appears ahead to the story that the Speed actor and Stahelski finally develop.

“We’ve all become such good friends and we all like each other so much and we’re all so tickled by the success of these movies, critically and commercially that we all think to ourselves, ‘Okay, how do we get the band back together, in a way that merits a good story in the next evolution of John,’” he informed the outlet.

“The way I describe it is that they’re like Paul McCartney and John Lennon, and I’m Ringo. They’ll call me and let me know, ‘All right, we’re showing up. Here’s where you show up, and here’s what our story is.’”

This story initially appeared on New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Source: www.news.com.au