In a talk show filled with laughter and surprises, Keanu Reeves opened up about his transformation into John Wick – the legendary hitman who has become a modern action icon. But the biggest laugh of the night didn’t come from his deadly stunts or wild car chases. It came from a surprisingly innocent question by none other than Olly Murs.
“Wait… John Wick is real?”
As Keanu carefully described his character – a retired assassin forced back into the underworld after Russian gangsters kill his beloved puppy – Olly suddenly interrupted:
“Is that true? This is a real story?”
The audience erupted. Keanu, in his calm and understated way, simply shook his head:
“No… it’s just a story. But it’s still a good one.”
The John Wick Bootcamp
Keanu also revealed that he endured a grueling three-month “John Wick bootcamp” to prepare for the role. He trained in gunwork, judo, jiu-jitsu, and stunt driving – even learning how to drift a car one-handed while firing a gun.
“Are you kidding me? That was heaven,” Keanu laughed. “Training, driving, fighting… it was amazing.”
Daisy the Dog – The Heart of the Story
Despite all the bullets and blood, Keanu reminded everyone that at its core, John Wick is a love story. After John’s wife dies, she leaves him a beagle puppy named Daisy to help him cope with his grief. When the gangsters kill Daisy, it’s not just the loss of a pet – it’s the destruction of John’s last link to love and humanity.
“He’s not the boogeyman,” Keanu explained. “But he’s the guy you send to kill the boogeyman.”
From Essex to Hollywood
The conversation also revealed some lesser-known personal details. Keanu’s mother was from Essex, England, and his own path to stardom was anything but easy. At 17, he left Canada, dropped out of high school, and drove a beat-up 1969 Volvo nicknamed ‘Dumpy’ from Toronto to Los Angeles in pursuit of his acting dreams.
The car eventually blew up in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “Maybe it was fate,” Keanu joked. “But it was still a beautiful journey.”
A Lesson from a Hilarious Mistake
Olly Murs’ innocent slip – believing John Wick was a real person – quickly became a viral highlight. Yet it also underlined something bigger: John Wick feels real because the character resonates so deeply with audiences.
He may not exist outside of cinema, but to millions of fans, John Wick is very much alive – a symbol of love, loss, and vengeance.