Making a prequel is eternally difficult. A creator could look at a piece of art and make logical decisions about the events and occurrences that caused the events. They then must make it an engaging narrative and avoid any egregious contradictions. The hard part is accomplishing all this without making the original work worse.The Continentalis engaging, and its answers aren’t awful, but there was no way to provide backstory without making things worse.

John Wickis an outlier among action franchises. Rather than selling itself on an outdated star or an ages-old IP,Wicksecured four excellent filmswith pure audience goodwill. Derek Kolstad and Chad Stahelski created a mid-budget neo-noir action thriller, and people loved it enough to keep it coming back. The franchise revived Keanu Reeves' career. Its new expansions have a lot of room to play, but they’re moving in the wrong direction.

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The Continentalanswers questions no one asked

The Continental, recently affixedwith thePennyworth-style subtitleFrom the World of John Wick, tells the story of Winston Scott. Ian McShane portrays the character in all four films. He’s one of John Wick’s closest friends and a reliable ally in the battle against the High Table. Winston is the manager of the titular Continental Hotel’s New York branch.The Continentalcovers Winston’s rise to that powerful office. Colin Woodell portrays young Winston, a con artist dragged into the criminal underworld he left behind by his adoptive father. His dad, Cormac, scooped Winston and his brother Frankie off the street and taught them to be thieves. When Frankie uses his skills and natural gifts as a killer to steal acritical artifact from Cormac, everyone under the Table scrambles to get it back. It’s a snarky 70s-inspired action comedy with fun set pieces and a smooth structure. It’s also aJohn Wickprequel, even though it shouldn’t be.

The story of Winston Scott works as a standalone narrative, but it’s impossible to see the conflicted, vengeful, ineptJohn Wick-like using his name as anything approaching the character. Ian McShane’s Winston was effortlessly likable, impossibly self-assured, unshakably even-tempered, and almost preternaturally wise. McShane plays Winston more like a god than he did Odin inAmerican Gods. No one on Earth asked how he became the man he is inWick. The same appliesto Lance Reddick’s Charon. The tragic passing of Reddick allowed fans to gush about his excellence, but the praise was well-earned. Who needed to know why Charon works at The Continental? Does his having a generic motivation surrounding a missing father make him a better character? The narrative gives these decisions meaning, but they’re forced to carry extra weight because the show is a prequel.

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John Wickwas better without backstory

Everyone knows howthe originalJohn Wickis structured. A seemingly typical widower receives a dog, some thugs kill her, and he sets out to avenge her. The big reveal is that he’s an unstoppable, universally feared superassassin. From there, fans enjoy a slow walk into the criminal underworld John left behind. The audience sees the world through his perspective, learning everything he already knows. This format remains in place for the following two films. Fans know bits and pieces about John’s life. He was born in Belarus, raised by the Ruska Roma, andvalued as a hitmanby the Tarasov crime family. These details generally come up in conversation with characters he shared those experiences with. Almost nothing is mentioned that isn’t relevant.The Continentaldoesn’t live by the same rules.

Much of the power ofJohn Wickis its mythology. The world under the Table is complicated, steeped in tradition, and constricted by rules and rituals. Every new piece of information the audience learns about the High Table is another card placed upon the ever-escalating house. Four movies piled that house of cards well above anyone’s expectations. The filmmakers frequently add details that were unquestionably absent to keep the narrative intriguing. The mythology isn’t all planned out. It’s open and modular. Why make rules when no one asks for them?The Continentalis filling in blanks that were left empty for a reason.

The Continentalis a decent show that wouldn’t have been created without the franchise in its subtitle. The connection weakens both works.John Wickneeds to move forward with future installments. There’s a lot of room to expand the seriesbeyond the life of the man it’s named after. New assassins can explore different corners of the High Table. Rina Sawayama’s Akira can continue the cycle of revenge into a new generation.Ballerinais set to follow a dancer who appeared inJohn Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellumfor approximately a minute. There are countless options for expansion and new horizons. Going back is not the right choice.The Continentalis more fun if its audience tries to forget what it’s connected to.

MORE:The Continental: From the World of John Wick Episode 2 Review