So, legendary fighter has "retired" to a simple life when someone he cares about is threatened, forcing him to regain his former self. Person he is saving doesn't recognize the they need saving by him (at least it's a kid this time, so the contrived distrust is slightly less stupid), leading to shenanigans and danger, wherein the fighter proves himself. How... original.
Look, Star Wars made itself by reframing traditional tropes (though there's a bit more power to the archetypical Hero myth than... this), so that's not necessarily a bad thing. But if you are going to walk where many have tread before, your "hero" needs to, at the very least, carve his own path. Do something original. But the only selling point here (besides the pathetical, self-doubting Luke Skywalker... er, I mean Obi-Wan Kenobi... is this a pattern with Disney?) is the fact that Disney dares to have a hypercompetent, don't-need-no-man, (poorly-acted) black woman villain (does this mean Disney hates black people and women? Isn't the main villain of the Mandalorian black, too? Disney = KKK confirmed!). Bravo.
I mean, if given the option to rewatch one or the other, I'd pick John Wick over Obi-Wan every time. At least John Wick is no brooding wuss...