Ana de Armas – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Thu, 04 Dec 2025 05:03:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Ana De Armas’ R-Rated Action Flop http://livelaughlovedo.com/ana-de-armas-r-rated-action-flop-is-finally-getting-the-attention-it-deserves-on-streaming/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/ana-de-armas-r-rated-action-flop-is-finally-getting-the-attention-it-deserves-on-streaming/#respond Fri, 10 Oct 2025 19:43:59 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/10/11/ana-de-armas-r-rated-action-flop-is-finally-getting-the-attention-it-deserves-on-streaming/ [ad_1]

For a series that’s ostensibly about brutal, bloody vengeance and an increasingly inscrutable underworld of assassins and hoteliers, part of the magic of the John Wick movies is how quietly personal they are for star Keanu Reeves and series director Chad Stahelski. Wick, and his inability to leave his life as a killer behind, is essentially a metaphor for Reeves’ career, and the movies’ use of well-choreographed action scenes is a tribute to Stahelski’s history as a stunt performer (specifically Reeves’ stunt performer on the Matrix movies). So it would’ve been completely understandable — predictable and forgivable, even — if the series’ first major spin-off was a total disaster, but Len Wiseman’s From the World of John Wick: Ballerina is borderline miraculous for how it managed to avoid that fate.

Ballerina, which stars Ana de Armas as an assassin-in-training who briefly crosses paths with John Wick while on her own quest for vengeance, didn’t make a John Wick-level splash at the box office when it was in theaters earlier this year, but it was a major player on the VOD charts until recently. Now it’s the top performer on Starz according to FlixPatrol, handily beating lower-profile movies on the streamer like McVeigh, Pretty Thing, and Flight Risk. This is a well-deserved redemption for Ballerina, and it will hopefully help solidify the film’s legacy (and the potential of future John Wick spin-offs) in the future.

Is ‘John Wick’ Spin-Off ‘Ballerina’ a Secret Masterpiece?

Ana de Armas as Eve in an elevator at the Continental in From the World of John Wick: Ballerina.
Ana de Armas as Eve in an elevator at the Continental in From the World of John Wick: Ballerina.
Image via Lionsgate

Ballerina has a 75% on Rotten Tomatoes, which is lower than any of the main Wick movies, but the point is that it’s better than it has any right to be, not that it’s better than any of the other movies. And the reason it’s so surprisingly good is that it’s actually a smarter approach to the material than simply “a different bankable star does John Wick stuff.” The movie (featuring series regulars Ian McShane and Lance Reddick, plus newcomer Norman Reedus) knows that it can’t live up to exactly what John Wick does and that it will just reflect poorly on Ballerina if it tries too hard to do that, so it makes a few clever choices to sidestep any direct and unfavorable comparisons between it and the main series.

Early on, when Ana de Armas’ Eve is in training to become an assassin, an instructor explains to her that she’ll never be able to beat the male opponent she’s sparring against because he’s bigger and stronger than she is. In order to win, she has to fight smarter, which could be read as the movie’s philosophy about how it can compete against a regular John Wick movie — which is to say that it can’t compete unless it does things its own way. Later on, Eve goes to an arms dealer for what appears to be a clichéd “getting geared up” scene that initially evokes the far superior “Sommelier” scene in John Wick: Chapter 2, but then it quickly goes off in a different direction and becomes one of Ballerina’s funniest, most memorable action sequences.

Ballerina isn’t proof that just anyone can make a John Wick movie, because countless pretenders (Hotel Artemis, Gunpowder Milkshake, Kate) have tried and failed. It is, however, a lesson on how to make a John Wick-style movie work, which is by playing to your strengths rather than simply emulating what Reeves and Stahelski have spent their entire careers preparing for. Also, it helps that John Wick himself shows up a few times.


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Release Date

June 6, 2025

Runtime

125 minutes

Director

Len Wiseman


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Try Ana de Armas’s Ballerina Chrome Manicure For the Softest Summer Nail Art http://livelaughlovedo.com/try-ana-de-armass-ballerina-chrome-manicure-for-the-softest-summer-nail-art/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/try-ana-de-armass-ballerina-chrome-manicure-for-the-softest-summer-nail-art/#respond Thu, 05 Jun 2025 00:02:14 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/06/05/try-ana-de-armass-ballerina-chrome-manicure-for-the-softest-summer-nail-art/ [ad_1]

Key Takeaways

  • Ana de Armas combined two of our favorite summer nail trends—the ballerina manicure and a chrome finish—for the prettiest, softest nail art.
  • She wore the short manicure to the premiere of her new movie Ballerina, which is not actually about the ballet but we can dream.

I’m not a big action movie girl, which means I’ll probably never see Ballerina. I’m sure John Wick is great, but his world is a world I do not care to visit.

Thus, I have the pleasure of pretending for the rest of time that the movie, which lands in theaters this Friday, is actually a sweet story about a beautiful non-assassin prima ballerina played by Ana de Armas who is best friends with Anjelica Huston. There are no fight scenes (maybe just an internal struggle over balancing her passion and wanting to have a life outside of the studio) and everything is pink.

To be fair… the actress’s latest manicure isn’t telling a different story.

Ana de Armas’ Ballerina Chrome Manicure

Getty Images


On Tuesday, June 3, the 37-year-old arrived at the world premiere of her new movie wearing the loveliest Ballerina Chrome manicure that, according to nail artist Ashlie Johnson, was “inspired by the lavender and silver beaded beauty of [de Armas’s] Louis Vuitton gown.”

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Cut short and filed into a your-nails-but-better rounded shape, each finger utilized the same pale lavender-pink polish brushed with chrome powder. The final look reminded me of satin pointe shoes. The dancer who owns them might not have all her toenails, but her fingernails are perfect.

How to Get the Look

Johnson was kind enough to break down the exact products she used to make the soft manicure happen in an Instagram post.

Steps one through three consisted of removing old polish, shaping and buffing the natural nail, and working in some cuticle care. Then, she grabbed a new bond repair Epres product called ePhD to help repair the natural nail.

“Think of it as a spa treatment for your nails—creating a resilient, healthy foundation for your polish,” she explained in her caption. “I love how it creates the perfect canvas for Ana’s stunning manicure!”

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With the nail all ready to go, she applied a smoothing base gel and painted on Aprés Nails Light and Shadow Gel Polish in First Touch, “a dreamy, sheer pinky-lavender shade that builds beautifully.” After adding a top coat, she finished with a “magic white chrome” to bring everything together “for that luminous, ethereal glow.”

Take a curtsy, Ana. And applaud your artist! These nails deserve a standing ovation, and I want to see how they catch the stage lights when you clap.



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