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Tag: Keanu Reeves

  • Greg & Ted’s Excellent WBD Adventure With Studio Lot Tour, David Zaslav As Their Guide; Check Out The Photos

    Wasting no time checking out their potential new home away from home, Netflix‘s bosses Greg Peters and Ted Sarandos made a most awesome visit to the Warner Bros Discovery studio lot today with David Zaslav as tour guide.

    In a series of photos released late Wednesday by WBD, the Netflix co-CEOs practically announced “we are Greg and Ted and we are your future,” to paraphrase that killer quip from Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure. If not going full on Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter from the 1989 metalhead comedy, Sarandos and Peters did look a lot like guys about to get the keys to their new digs.

    Getting some very touristy shots in with Zas in front of the WB water tower, between the sound stages and chatting with the troops, the near matching white kicks wearing executives’ appearance in Burbank had all the hallmarks of a big staged F.U. to WBD bid rivals David Ellison and Paramount.

    Coming on the very day that the WBD board unsurprisingly rejected Paramount’s $108 billion hostile takeover bid for the the whole company to stick with Netflix’s December 4 sealed $83 billion offer for the studios and streaming assets, the afternoon visit and the images were a flex meant to be felt all the way down at Par’s Melrose lot.

    Neither WBD nor Netflix had a comment about the Hump Day get together. However, the images did come with a caption of “today, Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav welcomed Netflix Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters to the historic Warner Bros. Studio lot in Burbank to meet with leaders across the company.”

    In point of fact, Sarandos and Peters met around 400 members of WBD’s leadership (some of whom are going to be very very very well compensated if the deal between the iconic studio and the streamer goes through) in the lot’s Ross Theate. Hosted and, to some degree, MC’d by Zas, the co-CEO asked and took questions from the crowd. In the conversation, Sarandos and Peters offered assurances that they were interested in growing the business and had no interested in shuttering theatrical release — which WB has scheduled out until 2029 right now.

    Really though it was a lot of optics for a corporate buddy movie that just over two months ago, Peters openly scoffed at and almost everyone in town thought was a de facto done deal for David Ellison and his second richest man on the planet and Donald Trump whisperer Larry Ellison.

    Look at the smiles on their faces, look at the hope in their eyes …it’s just looking all wine, blue blazers and roses.

    Of course, even with the WBD board’s latest no thanks to Paramount and recommendations to shareholders to say the same, David Ellison still wants his second studio. No matter that Zas and gang have thrown serious shade on the Ellisons’ backstop promises and money on the table, everyone expects David and his father are going throw more money at WBD to get it before the January 8, 2026 deadline they set.

    While all that plays out, can we get some consensus here on if Greg Peters’ really is the Bill to Sarandos’ Ted? Asking for a friend…

    (L-R) Keanu Reeves & Alex Winter at 1991’s Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey Hollywood Premiere (Photo by Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

    Dominic Patten

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  • Udo Kier, striking German actor from ‘My Own Private Idaho’ and ‘Ace Ventura,’ dies at 81

    PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) — Udo Kier, the German actor whose icy gaze and strange, scene-stealing screen presence made him a favorite of filmmakers including Andy Warhol, Gus Van Sant and Lars von Trier, has died at 81.

    His partner, artist Delbert McBride, told Variety that Kier died on Sunday in Palm Springs, California.

    A longtime arthouse favorite, Kier also had an unlikely run as a character actor in Hollywood blockbusters including “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” with Jim Carrey.

    The most recent of Kier’s more than 200 credits in a nearly 60-year career was this year’s Brazilian political thriller “The Secret Agent,” which could vie for Oscars and other major awards in the coming season.

    Kier had his breakout as the star of two films produced by Warhol and directed by Paul Morrissey: 1973’s “Flesh for Frankenstein” and 1974’s “Blood for Dracula.”

    German director Rainer Werner Fassbinder put Kier in several films later in the decade, including “The Stationmaster’s Wife” and “The Third Generation.”

    Kier was introduced to many American moviegoers through Van Sant’s 1991 film “My Own Private Idaho,” starring River Phoenix and Keanu Reeves. Madonna, a fan of that film, invited Kier to appear in photos for her 1992 culture-shaking book “Sex,” and in the video for her song “Deeper and Deeper.”

    Kier credited Van Sant with getting him a U.S. work permit and a Screen Actors Guild card.

    Those documents allowed him to bring his arresting presence to several Hollywood films of the 1990s, including “Armageddon,” “Blade,” “Barb Wire” and “Johnny Mnemonic.”

    He was a constant collaborator with von Trier, starring in the Danish director’s television series “The Kingdom” and appearing in the films “Dancer in the Dark,” “Dogville” and “Melancholia.”

    Kier was born Udo Kierspe in Cologne, Germany, in 1944, as Allied forces bombed the city during World War II.

    He moved at age 18 to London, where he was discovered at a coffee bar by singer and future filmmaker Michael Sarne.

    “I liked the attention, so I became an actor,” Kier told Variety last year.

    People noticing him for his striking presence and approaching him became a lifelong pattern.

    “I have never asked a director, ‘I would like to work with you,’” he said.

    Kier had lived in the Palm Springs area since the early 1990s, and was a regular and frequent party host at its annual film festival.

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  • Keanu Reeves’ Next Movie ‘Shiver’ Has Sharks and A Time Loop

    After killing countless goons and more recently being an angel, what’s next for Keanu Reeves? Getting stuck in a time loop.

    Per the Hollywood Reporter, the John Wick star will lead the sci-fi film Shiver. Directed by Deadpool’s Tim Miller, the film reportedly sees Reeves as a smuggler who’s double-crossed by mercenaries in shark-filled Caribbean waters. If that wasn’t bad enough, he’s also caught in a time loop. So it’s up to him to break the cycle and probably die a few times trying to figure out the right way to make that happen.

    Sounds cool, if not familiar? That’s by design—THR describes the film as a mix of Edge of Tomorrow and the 2017 film The Shallows, which stranded surfer Blake Lively on an offshore rock with a hostile shark circling nearby. In addition to Reeves and Miller, who previously worked on the Prime Video series Secret Level, the other big name talent is Kingsman director Matthew Vaughn as producer.

    Shiver is the latest action movie Keanu Reeves is supposed to headline: he’s spent years trying to make a Constantine sequel happen, and he’s also supposed to be in a movie based on the BRZRKR comic he co-created with Ron Garney and Matt Kindt. He’ll also eventually be back for a fifth John Wick sooner or later, and who knows what else he’s got on his plate.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

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  • Every Keanu Reeves Movie Performance, Ranked

    Photo: Emily Denniston/Vulture and photos courtesy of the studios

    This article was originally published in 2019. It has been updated to include films that Keanu Reeves has made since then. Whoa.

    Keanu Reeves has been a movie star for more than 40 years, but it seems like only in the past decade that journalists and critics have come to acknowledge the significance of his onscreen achievements. He’s had hits throughout his career, ranging from teen comedies (Bill & Ted’s) to action franchises (The Matrix, John Wick), yet a large part of the press has always treated these successes as bizarre anomalies. And that’s because we as a society have never been able to understand fully what Reeves does that makes his films so special.

    In part, this disconnect is the lingering cultural memory of Reeves as Theodore Logan. No matter if he’s in Speed or Bram Stoker’s Dracula or Something’s Gotta Give, he still possesses the fresh-faced openness that was forever personified by Ted’s favorite expression: “Whoa!” That wide-eyed exclamation has been Reeves’s official trademark ever since, and its eternal adolescent naïveté has kept him from being properly judged on the merits of his work.

    Some of that critical reassessment has been provided, quite eloquently, by Vulture’s own Angelica Jade Bastién, who has argued for Reeves’s greatness as an action star and his importance to The Matrix (and 21st-century blockbusters in general). Two of her observations are worth quoting in full, and they both have to do with how he has reshaped big-screen machismo. In 2017, she wrote, “What makes Reeves different from other action stars is this vulnerable, open relationship with the camera — it adds a through-line of loneliness that shapes all his greatest action-movie characters, from naïve hotshots like Johnny Utah to exuberant ‘chosen ones’ like Neo to weathered professionals like John Wick.” In the same piece, Bastién noted: “By and large, Hollywood action heroes revere a troubling brand of American masculinity that leaves no room for displays of authentic emotion. Throughout Reeves’s career, he has shied away from this. His characters are often led into new worlds by women of far greater skill and experience … There is a sincerity he brings to his characters that make them human, even when their prowess makes them seem nearly supernatural.”

    In other words, the femininity of his beauty — not to mention his slightly odd cadence when delivering dialogue, as if he’s an alien still learning how Earthlings speak — has made him seem bizarre to audiences who have come to expect their leading men to act and carry themselves in a particular way. Critics have had a difficult time taking him seriously because it was never quite clear if what he was doing — or what was seemingly “missing” from his acting approach — was intentional or a failing.

    This is not to say that Reeves hasn’t made mistakes. While putting together this ranking of his every film role, we noticed that there was an alarmingly copious number of duds — either because he chose bad material or the filmmakers didn’t quite know what to do with him. But it’s clear that his many memorable performances weren’t all just flukes. From Dangerous Liaisons to Man of Tai Chi — or River’s Edge to Knock Knock — he’s been on a journey to grow as an actor while not losing that elemental intimacy he has with the viewer. With Good Fortune now in theaters, we revisit those performances — from worst to best.

    The nadir of the ’90s cyberpunk genre, and a movie so bad, with Reeves so stranded, that it’s actually a bit of a surprise the Wachowskis were able to forget about it and still cast him as Neo. Dumber than a box of rocks, it’s a movie about technology and the internet — based on a William Gibson story! — that seems to have been made by people who had never turned on a computer before. Seriously, watch this shit:

    This movie exists in many ways because of its stunt casting: James Spader as a dogged detective and Keanu as the serial killer obsessed with him. Wait, shouldn’t those roles be switched? Get it? There would come a time in his career when Keanu could have maybe handled this character, but here, still with his floppy Ted Logan hair, he just looks ridiculous. The hackneyed screenplay does him no favors, either. Disturbingly, Reeves claims that he was forced to do this movie because his assistant forged his signature on a contract. He received the fifth of his seven Razzie nominations for this film. (He has yet to win and hasn’t been nominated in 17 years. In fact, it’s another sign of how lame the Razzies are that he got a “Redeemer” award in 2015, as if he needed to “redeem” anything to those people.)

    It’s a testament to how cloying and clunky Sweet November is that its two leads (Reeves and Charlize Theron) are, today, the pinnacle of action-movie cool — thanks to the same filmmaker, Atomic Blonde and John Wick’s David Leitch — yet so inert and waxen here. This is a career low point for both actors, preying on their weak spots. Watching it now, you can see there’s an undeniable discomfort on their faces: If being a movie star means doing junk like this, what’s the point? They’d eventually figure it all out.

    As far as premises for thrillers go, this isn’t the worst idea: A team of scientists are wiped out — with their murder pinned on poor Keanu — because they’ve figured out how to transform water into fuel. (Hey, Science, it has been 23 years. Why haven’t you solved this yet?) Sadly, this turns into a by-the-numbers chase flick with Reeves as Richard Kimble, trying to prove his innocence while on the run. He hadn’t quite figured out how to give a project like this much oomph yet, so it just mostly lies around, making you wish you were watching The Fugitive instead.

    In 2013, Reeves made his directorial debut with a Hong Kong–style action film. We’ll get into that one later, because it’s a ton better than this jumbled mess, a mishmash of fantasy and swordplay that mostly just gives viewers a headache. Also: This has to be the worst wig of Keanu’s career, yes?

    Gus Van Sant’s famously terrible adaptation of Tom Robbins’s novel never gets the tone even close to right, and all sorts of amazing actors are stranded and flailing around. Reeves gets some of the worst of it: Why cast one of the most famously chill actors on the planet and have him keep hyperventilating?

    In the wake of John Wick’s success, Keanu has had the opportunity to sleepwalk through some lesser sci-fi actioners, and this one is particularly sleepy. The idea of a neuroscientist (Reeves) who tries to clone his family after they die in an accident could have been a Pet Sematary update, but the movie insists on an Evil Corporation plot that we’ve seen a million times before. John Wick has allowed Reeves to cash more random checks than he might have ten years ago. Here’s one of them.

    As far as we know, the only movie taken directly from a Soundgarden lyric — unless we’re missing a superhero named “Spoonman” — is this pseudo-romantic comedy that attempts to be cut from the Tarantino cloth but ends up making you think everyone onscreen desperately needs a haircut and a shave. Reeves can tap into that slacker vibe if asked to, but he requires much better material than this.

    To state the obvious, it would not fly today for Keanu Reeves to play Prince Siddhartha, a monk who would become the Buddha. But questions of cultural appropriation aside, you can understand what drew The Last Emperor director Bernardo Bertolucci to cast this supremely placid man as an iconic noble figure. Unfortunately, Little Buddha never rises above a well-meaning, simplistic depiction of the roots of a worldwide religion, and the effects have aged even more poorly. Nonetheless, Reeves is quite accomplished at being very still.

    Quick anecdote: We saw this Kenneth Branagh adaptation of the Bard during its original theatrical run, and when Reeves’s villainous Don John came onscreen and declared, “I am not of many words,” the audience clapped sarcastically. That memory stuck because it encapsulates viewers’ inability in the early ’90s to see him as anything other than a dim SoCal kid. Unfortunately, his performance in Much Ado About Nothing doesn’t do much to prove his haters wrong. As an actor, he simply didn’t have the gravitas yet to pull off this fiendish role, so this version is more radiant and alive when he’s not onscreen. It is probably just as well his character doesn’t have many words.

    GIFs are a cheap way to critique a performance. After all, acting is a complicated, arduous discipline that shouldn’t be reduced to easy laughs drawn from a few seconds of film played on a loop. Then again …

    This really does sum up Reeves’s unsubstantial performance as Jonathan Harker, whose new client is definitely up to no good. Bram Stoker’s Dracula is a wonder of old-school special effects and operatic passion — and it is a movie in which Reeves seems wholly ill at ease, never quite latching onto the story’s macabre period vibe. We suspect if he could revisit this role now, he’d be far more commanding and engaged. But in 1992, he was still too much Ted and not enough anything else. And Reeves knew it: A couple years later, when asked to name his most difficult role to that point, he said, “My failure in Dracula. Totally. Completely. The accent wasn’t that bad, though.” Well …

    One of the perks of being a superstar is that you can sometimes just phone in an amusing cameo in some bizarro art-house offering. How else to explain Reeves’s appearance in this stylish, empty, increasingly surreal psychological thriller from Drive director Nicolas Winding Refn? He plays Hank, a scumbag motel manager whose main job is to add some local color to this portrait of the cutthroat L.A. fashion scene. If you’ve been waiting to hear Keanu deliver skeezy lines like “Why, did she send you out for tampons, too?!” and “Real Lolita shit … real Lolita shit,” The Neon Demon is the film for you. He’s barely in it, and we wouldn’t blame him if he doesn’t even remember it.

    Reeves reunites with his Speed co-star for a movie that features a lot fewer out-of-control buses. In The Lake House, Sandra Bullock plays a doctor who owns a lake house with the strangest magical power: She can send and receive letters from the house’s owner from two years prior, a dashing architect (Reeves). This American remake of the South Korean drama Il Mare is romantic goo that’s relatively easy to resist, and its ruminations on fate, love, destiny, and luck are all pretty standard for the genre. As for those hoping to enjoy the actors’ rekindled chemistry, spoiler alert: They’re not onscreen that much together.

    You have to be careful not to cast Reeves as too passive a character; he’s so naturally calm that if he just sits and reacts to everything, and never steps up, your movie never really gets going. That’s the case in this heist movie about an innocent man (Reeves) who goes to jail for a crime he didn’t commit, then plans a scam with an inmate he meets there (James Caan). The movie wants to be a little quirkier than it is, and Reeves never quite snaps to. The film just idles on the runway.

    Following her acclaimed A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night, filmmaker Ana Lily Amirpour plops us in the middle of a desert hellscape in which a young woman (Suki Waterhouse) must battle to stay alive. The Bad Batch is less accomplished than A Girl, in large part because style outpaces substance — it’s a movie in which clever flourishes and indulgent choices rule all. Look no further than Reeves’s performance as the Dream, a cult leader who oversees the only semblance of civilization in this post-apocalyptic world. It’s less a character than an attitude, and Reeves struggles to make the shtick fly. He’s too goofy a villain for us to really feel the full measure of his monstrousness.

    Reeves isn’t the first guy you’d think of to head up a Bad News Bears–style inspirational sports movie, and he doesn’t pull it off, playing a gambler who becomes the coach of an inner-city baseball team and learns to love, or something. It’s as straightforward and predictable an underdog sports movie as you’ll find, and it serves as a reminder that Reeves’s specific set of skills can’t be applied to just any old generic leading-man role. The best part about the film? A 14-year-old Michael B. Jordan.

    Filmmaker David Ayer has made smart, tough L.A. thrillers like Training Day (which he wrote) and End of Watch (which he wrote and directed). Unfortunately, this effort with Reeves never stops being a mélange of cop-drama clichés, casting the actor as Ludlow, an LAPD detective who’s starting to lose his moral compass. This requires Reeves to be a hard-ass, which never feels particularly convincing. Street Kings is bland, forgettable pulp — Reeves doesn’t enliven it, getting buried along with the rest of a fine ensemble that includes Forest Whitaker, Hugh Laurie, and a pre-Captain America Chris Evans.

    In post-Matrix mode, Reeves tries to launch another franchise in a DC Comics adaptation about a man who can see spirits on Earth and is doomed to atone for a suicide attempt by straddling the divide twixt Heaven and Hell. That’s not the worst idea, and at times Constantine looks terrific, but the movie doesn’t have enough wit or charm to play with Reeves’s persona the way the Wachowskis did.

    Reeves’s alienlike beauty and off-kilter line readings made him an obvious choice to play Klaatu, an extraterrestrial who assumes human form when he arrives on our planet. This remake of the 1950s sci-fi classic doesn’t have a particularly urgent reason to exist — its pro-environment message is timely but awkwardly fashioned atop an action-blockbuster template — and the actor alone can’t make this Day particularly memorable. Still, there are signs of the confident post-Matrix star he had become, which would be rewarded in a few years with John Wick.

    Reeves flirts with Michael Douglas territory in this Eli Roth erotic thriller that’s not especially good but is interesting as an acting exercise. He plays Evan, a contented family man with the house to himself while his wife and kids are out of town. Conveniently, two beautiful young strangers (Ana de Armas, Lorenza Izzo) come by late one stormy night, inviting themselves in and quickly seducing him. Is this his wildest sexual fantasy come to life? Or something far more ominous? It’s fun to watch Reeves be a basic married suburban dude who slowly realizes that he’s entered Hell, but Knock Knock’s knowing trashiness only takes this cautionary tale so far.

    Very few people bought tickets in 1997 for The Devil’s Advocate to see Keanu Reeves: Hotshot Attorney. Obviously, this horror thriller’s chief appeal was witnessing Al Pacino go over the top as Satan himself, who just so happens to be a New York lawyer. Nonetheless, it’s Reeves’s Kevin Lomax who’s actually the film’s main character; recently moved to Manhattan with his wife (Reeves’s future Sweet November co-star, Charlize Theron), he’s the new hire at a prestigious law firm who only later learns what nefarious motives have brought him there. Reeves is forced to play the wunderkind who gets in over his head, and it’s not entirely convincing — and that goes double for his southern accent.

    “You are like some stray dog I never should have fed.” That’s how Rupert’s older hippie pal, Carla (Amy Madigan), affectionately refers to him, and because this teen dropout is played by Keanu Reeves, you understand what she means. In this forgotten early chapter in Reeves’s career, Rupert and Carla decide to ditch their going-nowhere Rust Belt existence by taking his dad (Fred Ward) hostage and collecting a handsome ransom. The Prince of Pennsylvania is a thoroughly contrived and mediocre comedy, featuring Reeves with an incredibly unfortunate haircut. (Squint and he looks like the front man for the Red Hot Chili Peppers.) Still, you can see signs of the soulfulness and vulnerability he’d later harness in better projects. He’s very much a big puppy looking for a home.

    Every hip young ’90s actor had to get his Jack Kerouac on at some point, so it would seem churlish to deny Reeves his opportunity. He plays the best pal/drinking buddy of Thomas Jane’s Neal Cassady, and he looks like he’s enjoying doing the Kerouac pose. Other actors have done so more indulgently. And even though he’s heavier than he’s ever been in a movie, he looks great.

    Keanu isn’t quite as bad in this as it seemed at the time. He’s miscast as a tortured war veteran who finds love by posing as the husband of a pregnant woman, but he doesn’t overdo it either: If someone’s not right for a part, you’d rather them not push it, and Keanu doesn’t. Plus, come on, this movie looks fantastic: Who doesn’t want to hang around these vineyards? Not necessarily worth a rewatch, but not the disaster many consider it.

    The other movie where Keanu Reeves plays a former quarterback, The Replacements is an adequate Sunday-afternoon-on-cable sports comedy. He plays Shane, the stereotypical next-big-thing whose career capsized after a disastrous bowl game — but fear not, because he’s going to get a second chance at gridiron glory once the pros go on strike and the greedy owners decide to hire scabs to replace them. Reeves has never been particularly great at playing regular guys — his talent is that he seems different, more special, than you or me — but he ably portrays a good man who’s had to live with disappointment. The Replacements pushes all the predictable buttons, but Reeves makes it a little more enjoyable than it would be otherwise.

    A very minor but sporadically charming bauble about a radio soap-opera scriptwriter (Peter Falk) who begins chronicling an affair between a woman (Barbara Hershey) and her not-related-by-blood nephew on his show — and ultimately begins manipulating it. Tune in Tomorrow is light and silly and harmless, and Reeves shows up on time to set and looks extremely eager to impress. He blends into the background quietly, which is probably enough.

    This Lawrence Kasdan comedy — the first film after an incredible four-picture run of Body Heat, The Big Chill, Silverado, and The Accidental Tourist — is mostly forgotten today, and for good reason: It’s a farce that mostly features actors screaming at each other and calling it “comedy.” But Reeves hits the right notes as a stoned hit man, and it’s amusing just to watch him share the screen with partner William Hurt. This could have been the world’s strangest comedy team!

    This Rob Lowe hockey comedy is … well, a Rob Lowe hockey comedy, but we had to include it because a 21-year-old Reeves plays a dim-bulb, good-hearted hockey player with a French Canadian accent that’s so incredible that you really just have to see it. Imagine if this were the only role Keanu Reeves ever had? It’s sort of amazing. “AH-NEE-MAL!”

    An oddly curdled comedy about two wedding guests (Reeves and Winona Ryder) who have terrible attitudes about everything but end up bonding over their universal disdain for the planet and everyone on it. That sounds like a chore to watch, and at times it is, but the pairing of Reeves and Ryder has enough nostalgic Gen-X spark to it that you go along with them anyway. With almost any other actors you might run screaming away, but somehow, in spite of everything, you find them both likable.

    The first film from 20th Century Women and Beginners’ Mike Mills, this mild but clever coming-of-age comedy adaptation of a Walter Kirn novel has Mills’s trademark good cheer and emotional honesty. Reeves plays the eponymous thumbsucker’s dentist — it’s funny to see Keanu play someone named “Dr. Perry Lyman” — who has the exact right attitude about both orthodontics and life. It’s a lived-in, funny performance, and a sign that Keanu, with the right director, could be a more than capable supporting character actor.

    Aziz Ansari’s feature directorial debut is a mixed bag, but the one thing that’s absolutely right about it is the casting of Reeves as Gabriel, a just-okay angel who wants to do more than the menial task he’s been given of stopping dumb humans from texting while driving. And so he interferes in the life of Ansari’s struggling film editor, hoping to give him a reason to keep living. That plan goes badly, resulting in Gabriel being banished to Earth to reside among us mortals. Reeves has the perfect little twinkle in his eye as this well-meaning angel, but the actor is especially endearing once Gabriel has to get used to being a flesh-and-blood person. Watching Reeves dig on cheeseburgers and fall in love with dancing is to be reminded how giddily kid-like he can be even now at 61. We mere mortals are so lucky to have him around.

    This Nancy Meyers romantic comedy was well timed in Reeves’s career. A month after the final Matrix film hit theaters, Something’s Gotta Give arrived, offering us a very different Keanu — not the intense, sci-fi action hero but rather a charming, low-key love interest who’s just the supporting player. He plays Julian Mercer, a doctor administering to shameless womanizer Harry Sanborn (Jack Nicholson), who’s dating a much younger woman (Amanda Peet), who just so happens to be the daughter of a celebrated playwright, Erica (Diane Keaton). We know who will eventually end up with whom in Something’s Gotta Give, but Reeves proves to be a great romantic foil, wooing Erica with a grown-up sexiness the actor didn’t possess in his younger years. We’re still not sure Meyers got the ending right: Erica should have stuck with him instead of Harry.

    This is the only movie that Reeves has directed, and what does it tell us about him? Well, it tells us he has watched a ton of Hong Kong action movies and always wanted to make one himself. And it’s pretty good! It’s technically proficient, it has a straightforward narrative, it has some excellent long-take action sequences (as we see in John Wick, Keanu isn’t a quick-cut guy; he likes to show his work), and it has a perfectly decent Keanu performance. We wouldn’t call him a visionary director by any stretch of the imagination. But we’d watch another one of these, definitely.

    Le Chevalier Raphael Danceny is merely a pawn in a cruel game being played by Marquise de Merteuil and Vicomte de Valmont, so it makes some sense that the young man who played him, Keanu Reeves, is himself a little outclassed by the actors around him. This Oscar-winning drama is led by Glenn Close and John Malkovich, who have the wit and bite to give this 18th-century tale of thwarted love and bruised pride some real zest. By comparison, Danceny is practically a boy, unschooled in the art of manipulation, and Reeves provides the character with the appropriate youthful naïveté. He’s not a standout in Dangerous Liaisons, but he acquits himself well — especially near the end, when his blade fells Valmont, leaving him as one of the unlikely survivors in the film’s ruthless battle.

    In this incredible showcase for Robin Wright, who plays a woman navigating a constrictive, difficult life with more grace and intelligence than anyone realizes, Reeves shows up late in a role that he’s played before: the younger guy who’s the perfect fit for an older woman figuring herself out. He hits the right notes and never overstays his welcome. As a romantic lead, less is more for Reeves.

    If you were an uptight suburban dad, like Steve Martin is in Ron Howard’s ensemble comedy, your nightmare would be that your beloved daughter gets involved with a doofus like Tod. Nicely played by Keanu Reeves, the character is the embodiment of every slacker screwup who’s going to just stumble through life, knocking over everything and everyone in his path. But as it turns out, he’s a lot kinder and mature than at first glance. Released six months after Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Parenthood showed mainstream audiences a more grown-up Reeves, and he’s enormously appealing — never more so than when advising a young kid that it’s okay to masturbate: “I told him that’s what little dudes do.”

    A very lovely and sad movie that’s nearly forgotten today, Permanent Record, directed by novelist Marisa Silver, features Reeves as the best friend of a teenager who commits suicide and, along with the rest of their friends, has to pick up the pieces. For all of Reeves’s trademark reserve, there is very little restraint here: His character is devastated, and Reeves, impressively, hits every note of that grief convincingly. You see this guy and you understand why everyone wanted to make him a star. This is a very different Reeves from now, but it’s not necessarily a worse one.

    Just as Reeves’s reputation has grown over time, so too has the reputation of this loopy, philosophical crime thriller. Do people love Point Break ironically now, enjoying its over-the-top depiction of men seeking a spiritual connection with the world around them? Or do they genuinely appreciate the seriousness that director Kathryn Bigelow brought to her study of lonely souls looking for that next big rush — whether through surfing or robbing banks? The power of Reeves’s performance is that it works both ways. If you want to snicker at his melodramatic turn, fine — but if you want to marvel at the rapport his Johnny Utah forms with Patrick Swayze (Bodhi), who only feels alive when he’s living life to the extreme, then Point Break has room for you on the bandwagon.

    Before there was Beavis and Butt-Head, before there was Wayne and Garth, there were these guys: two Valley bozos who loved to shred and goof off. As Theodore Logan, Keanu Reeves found the perfect vessel for his serene silliness, playing well off Alex Winter’s equally clueless Bill. But note that Bill and Ted aren’t jerks — watch Excellent Adventure now and you’ll be struck by how incredibly sunny its humor is. Later in his career, Reeves would show off a darker, more brooding side, but here in Excellent Adventure (and its less-great sequel Bogus Journey) he makes blissful stupidity endearing.

    This Sam Raimi film, with a Billy Bob Thornton script inspired by his mother, fizzled at the box office, despite a top-shelf cast: It’s probably not even the first film called The Gift you think of when we bring it up. But, gotta say, Reeves is outstanding in it, playing an abusive husband and all-around sonuvabitch who, nevertheless, might be unfairly accused of murder, a fact only a psychic (Cate Blanchett) understands. Reeves is full-on trailer trash here, but he brings something new and unexpected to it: a sort of bewildered malevolence, as if he’s moved by forces outside of his control. More of this, please.

    Gus Van Sant’s landmark drama is chiefly remembered for River Phoenix’s nakedly anguished performance as Mike, a spiritually adrift gay hustler. (Phoenix’s death two years after My Own Private Idaho’s release only makes the portrayal more heartbreaking.) But his performance doesn’t work without a doubles partner, which is where Reeves comes in. Playing Scott, a fellow hustler and Mike’s best friend, Reeves adeptly encapsulates the mind-set of a young man content to just float through life. Unlike Mike, he knows he has a fat inheritance in his future — and unlike Mike, he’s not gay, unable to share his buddy’s romantic feelings. Phoenix deservedly earned most of the accolades, but Reeves is terrific as an unobtainable object of affection — inviting, enticing but unknowable.

    Years later, we still contend that Speed is a stupid idea for a movie that, despite all logic (or maybe because of the utter insanity of its premise), ended up being a total hoot. What’s clear is that the film simply couldn’t have worked if Reeves hadn’t approached the story with straight-faced sincerity: His L.A. cop Jack Traven is a ramrod-serious lawman who is going to do whatever it takes to save those bus passengers. Part of the pleasure of Speed is how it constantly juxtaposes the life-or-death stakes with the high-concept inanity — Stay above 50 mph or the bus will explode! — and that internal tension is expressed wonderfully by Reeves, who invests so intently in the ludicrousness that the movie is equally thrilling and knowingly goofy. And it goes without saying that he has dynamite chemistry with Sandra Bullock. Strictly speaking, you probably shouldn’t flirt this much when you’re sitting on top of a bomb — but it’s awfully appealing when they get their happy ending.

    This film’s casting director said she cast Reeves as one of the dead-end kids who learn about a murder and do nothing “because of the way he held his body … his shoes were untied, and what he was wearing looked like a young person growing into being a man.” This was very much who the early Reeves was, and River’s Edge might be his darkest film. His vacancy here is not Zen cool … it’s just vacant, intellectually, ethically, morally, emotionally. Only in that void could Reeves be this terrifying. This is definitely a performance, but it never feels like acting. His magnetism was almost mystical.

    If they hadn’t killed his dog, none of this would have happened. Firmly part of the “middle-aged movie stars playing mournful badasses” subgenre that’s sprung up since Taken, the John Wick saga provides Reeves with an opportunity to be stripped-down but not serene. He’s a lethal assassin who swore to his dead wife that he’d put down his arms — but, lucky for us, he reneges on that promise after he’s pushed too far. Whereas in his previous hits there was something detached about Reeves, here’s he locked in in such a way that it’s both delightful and a little unnerving. The 2014 original was gleefully over-the-top already, and the sequels have only amped up the spectacle, but his genuine fury and weariness felt new, exciting, a revelation. Turns out Keanu Reeves is frighteningly convincing as a guy who can kill many, many people.

    In hindsight, it seems odd that Keanu Reeves and Richard Linklater have only worked together once — their laid-back vibes would seemingly make them well suited for one another. But it makes sense that the one film they’ve made together is this Philip K. Dick adaptation, which utilizes interpolated rotoscoping to tell the story of a drug cop (Reeves) who’s hiding his own addiction while living in a nightmarish police state. That wavy, floating style of animation nicely complements A Scanner Darkly’s sense of jittery paranoia, but it deftly mimics Reeves’s performance, which seems to be drifting along on its own wavelength. If in the Matrix films, he manages to defeat the dark forces, in this film they’re too powerful, leading to a pretty mournful finale.

    “They had written something that I had never seen, but in a way, something that I’d always hoped for — as an actor, as a fan of science fiction.” That’s how Reeves described the sensation of reading the screenplay for The Matrix, which had been dreamed up by two up-and-coming filmmakers, Lana and Lilly Wachowski. Five years after Speed, he found his next great project, which would become the defining role of his career. Neo is the missing link between Ted’s Zen-like stillness and John Wick’s lethal efficiency, giving us a hero’s journey for the 21st century that took from Luke Skywalker and anime with equal aplomb. Never before had the actor been such a formidable onscreen presence — deadly serious but still loose and limber. Even when the sequels succumbed to philosophical ramblings and overblown CGI, Reeves commanded the frame. We always knew that he seemed like a cool, left-of-center guy. The Matrix films gave him an opportunity to flex those muscles in a true blockbuster.

    Grierson & Leitch write about the movies regularly and host a podcast on film. Follow them on Twitter or visit their site.

    Or almost every film role; we’ve omitted some of his most obscure limited-release films, movies that went straight to VOD or streaming, documentaries, cameos, and voice-only roles. (Apologies to Toy Story 4’s Duke Caboom and Shadow the Hedgehog.)

    Tim Grierson,Will Leitch

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  • Keanu Reeves Reveals His Brief Name Change as a Young Actor: “Welcome to Hollywood”

    There once was a time when Keanu Reeves wasn’t Keanu Reeves. 

    During a Wednesday appearance on the New Heights podcast, the Good Fortune star recounted the early years of his career when he was working with a manager who had the idea to change his name.

    “I was in Toronto, Canada, and then I got a manager who lived in Los Angeles,” he began. “At 20 years old, I drove in my car to Los Angeles. Got out of my car and my manager said, ‘We want to change your name.’ And so that’s like, a welcome to Hollywood [moment].”

    “And I remember I was walking on the beach and I was just like, ‘My name? What if I change my name? What?’” he added. Despite being initially taken back by the idea, Reeves came up with a few alternative name options.

    “My middle name is Charles, so I was like, ‘Chuck?’ And I grew up on a street called Spadina, Chuck Spadina,” he said. “And then I was something Templeton. So then I became K.C. Reeves. I was credited as K.C. Reeves.”

    The John Wick actor is, in fact, credited as K.C. Reeves for an episode of the 1986 anthology series The Magical World of Disney. He did not explain why his then-manager prompted him to make the change. But the name didn’t last for long.

    “And then I couldn’t do it. So then I would be in auditions and they would go, ‘K.C. Reeves.’ And I wouldn’t even answer,” Reeves added. “Six months later, I was like, ‘I’m not doing this.’ That’s a Hollywood moment.”

    Like Reeves, Leonardo DiCaprio and Benicio del Toro recently opened up about how they were encouraged to change their names. The One Battle After Another star said, similarly on the New Heights podcast, that an agent told him his name was “too ethnic.”

    “I finally got an agent and they said: ‘Your name is too ethnic,” I go, What do you mean?’ They go, ‘No, too ethnic. They’re never going to hire you. Your new name is Lenny Williams,” DiCaprio said. “‘What’s Lenny Williams?’ ‘We took your middle name and made it your last name and now [your first] name is Lenny.’ And my dad saw [the headshot photo the agent took], he ripped it up, and said, ‘Over my dead body.’”

    McKinley Franklin

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  • Keanu Reeves Pays Tribute to Diane Keaton: “She Was a Very Special Artist and Person”

    Keanu Reeves is remembering Something’s Gotta Give co-star Diane Keaton following the news of her death on Saturday.

    While premiering his new film Good Fortune in New York, Reeves reflected on their time together, telling The Hollywood Reporter, “I had the wonderful opportunity to work with her and she was a very special artist and person. Very unique and just what a wonderful artist.”

    The two starred together in Nancy Meyers‘ 2003 rom-com, with Keaton’s playwright Erica Barry juggling the affections of both a charming young doctor (Reeves) and a wealthy record company owner (Jack Nicholson). Keaton was nominated for an Oscar for the role, and the pair also reunited as presenters at the 2020 Academy Awards.

    Reeves’ comments come just a few hours after Meyers took to social media for her own tribute, writing on Instagram after the outpouring of reactions, “As a movie lover, I’m with you all — we have lost a giant. A brilliant actress who time and again laid herself bare to tell our stories. As a woman, I lost a friend of almost 40 years — at times over those years, she felt like a sister because we shared so many truly memorable experiences. As a filmmaker, I’ve lost a connection with an actress that one can only dream of.”

    The filmmaker also specifically referenced Something’s Gotta Give in her post, remembering, “When I needed her to cry in scene after scene in Something’s Gotta Give, she went at it hard and then somehow made it funny. And I remember she would sometimes spin in a kind of goofy circle before a take to purposely get herself off balance or whatever she needed to shed so she could be in the moment.”

    “She was fearless, she was like nobody ever, she was born to be a movie star, her laugh could make your day and for me, knowing her and working with her — changed my life,” Meyers continued. “Thank you Di. I’ll miss you forever.”

    AMC Theatres is also bringing back Annie Hall and Something’s Gotta Give to 100 cinemas across the U.S. in Keaton’s honor.

    Kirsten Chuba

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  • Extended interview: Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter

    The actors who first teamed up in the 1989 comedy “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure” are now appearing on Broadway in a revival of Samuel Beckett’s iconic play “Waiting for Godot.” In this web exclusive, Tracy Smith talks with Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter about their friendship, their artistic collaboration, and the meaning of Beckett’s language and characters to their own lives.

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  • 9/28: Sunday Morning

    Hosted by Jane Pauley. Featured: The friendship between the Unabomber’s brother and one of his victims; Jennifer Lopez on “Kiss of the Spider Woman”; Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter on Broadway in “Waiting for Godot”; Eli Sharabi, who was held hostage by Hamas terrorists for 491 days; the ‘60s British rock group The Zombies; and previews of arts and culture in the New Season.

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  • Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter on

    In 1989, actors Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter played Bill and Ted, two friend who undertook an “excellent adventure.” Now, they’ve reteamed on Broadway as Estragon and Vladimir, two friends examining the absurdity of life in Samuel Beckett’s masterpiece “Waiting for Godot.” They talk with Tracy Smith about their own friendship; how Alex, at the height of his fame, walked away from acting; and what Keanu finds risky about live theater.

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  • Keanu Reeves & Seth Rogen’s Good Fortune Gets Hilarious New Trailer

    Lionsgate has released a brand new trailer for Good Fortune, its newest comedy from Master of None star Aziz Ansari. Following its world premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival, the movie is now scheduled to arrive in theaters on October 17.

    “In the film, a well-meaning but rather inept angel named Gabriel meddles in the lives of a struggling gig worker and a wealthy venture capitalist,” reads the official synopsis.

    Check out the new Good Fortune trailer below (watch more trailers):

    What happens in the Good Fortune trailer?

    The video features John Wick star Keanu Reeves as an angel who tries to show Ansari’s Arj that money won’t solve his problems. However, this ultimately fails, leading Reeves’ Angel Gabriel to lose his wings and turn into a human. The trailer highlights how Gabriel must navigate his new life as a human with the help of Seth Rogen‘s Jeff, whose life changes after Gabriel mistakenly switches Arj’s life with Jeff’s. Additional cast includes Keke Palmer as Elena, Sandra Oh as Martha, Stephen McKinley Henderson as Azrael, and more.

    Good Fortune is written, directed, and produced by Ansari in his feature directorial debut. The movie is produced by Anthony Katagas and Alan Yang, with Aniz Adam Ansari, Jonathan McCoy, Christopher Woodrow, and Connor DiGregorio serving as executive producers. The creative team also includes director of photography Adam Newport-Berra and composer Carter Burwell. It is a production by Lionsgate.

    Maggie Dela Paz

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  • Festival of futility: Beckett’s big fall in New York theater | amNewYork

    On Broadway, director Jamie Lloyd’s starry revival of “Waiting for Godot,” with Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter (yes, Bill and Ted reunited), is currently in previews at the Hudson Theatre.

    Photo by Andy Henderson/Provided

    Is New York ready for a Beckett binge? This fall, the city will be flooded with futility, repetition, and existential dread as three classic Samuel Beckett plays—”Waiting for Godot,” “Endgame,” and “Krapp’s Last Tape”—all arrive at once.

    On Broadway, director Jamie Lloyd’s starry revival of “Waiting for Godot,” with Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter (yes, Bill and Ted reunited), is currently in previews at the Hudson Theatre.

    Off-Broadway, Stephen Rea will perform “Krapp’s Last Tape” at NYU Skirball, and the Irish theater company Druid will celebrate its 50th anniversary with Garry Hynes’ production of “Endgame” at Irish Arts Center. The only full-length Beckett play missing is “Happy Days.”

    Reeves and Winter join this tradition of marquee casting designed to make audiences who might never otherwise buy a ticket to Beckett feel at ease. In 1988, Robin Williams and Steve Martin famously tried their hand at Vladimir and Estragon at Lincoln Center. In 2009, Nathan Lane and Bill Irwin paired with John Goodman in a revival that remains one of the rare productions to win over skeptics. Soon after, Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen gave their double act to Broadway.

    man in beckett's Krapp's Last Tape acting
    Stephen Rea will perform “Krapp’s Last Tape” at NYU Skirball.Photo by Patricio Cassinoni/provided

    Beckett’s plays are often frustrating: slow, cryptic, and seemingly about nothing. You often leave irritated, wondering if you “got it” at all. I usually fall into that camp myself. But under the right conditions, the plays can work brilliantly.

    And those conditions might be right for today.

    “Godot” could easily be set in America 2025, where people keep waiting for political renewal, social healing, or some savior who never arrives. It mirrors the endless news cycle and the sense that nothing ever truly changes.

    “Endgame” evokes the claustrophobia of lockdowns and climate dread, with characters unable to escape their dysfunctional arrangements, much like a nation resigned to doomscrolling.

    “Krapp’s Last Tape” eerily resembles scrolling through one’s own digital archive, confronting younger, more optimistic versions of ourselves. In the age of artificial intelligence and permanent online memory, revisiting the past feels as much like torment as nostalgia.

    Beckett’s influence extends far beyond the stage. It is unmistakable in the television series “Severance,” where office workers endlessly repeat meaningless tasks, stripped of personal history and identity. Like the tramps in Godot or the figures in Endgame, they exist in a bleak loop.

    Even “The Matrix,” the film that made Keanu Reeves an icon, shares Beckett’s DNA: barren landscapes of futility, characters questioning reality, and endless waiting for liberation that may never arrive. For audiences coming to “Godot” because of Reeves, the world may feel oddly familiar.

    Broadway may get the glitz with Reeves and Winter. But taken together, the three plays underscore Beckett’s unity of vision: characters waiting, remembering, circling endlessly, never escaping. For theatergoers, it is both a challenge and an opportunity. And perhaps a bold producer or theater company will complete the cycle by staging “Happy Days” with a famous actress gamely buried in sand, reciting Beckett’s longest monologue.

    Then New York could claim the rarest of feats: all four Beckett masterpieces onstage at once, transforming the city into a veritable festival of futility.

    Matt Windman

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  • ‘Good Fortune’ Review: Keanu Reeves’ Brainless Angel Runs Away With Aziz Ansari’s Clever Directing Debut

    It wasn’t meant as a joke when a Hollywood studio cast Nicolas Cage as an emo angel who risks his wings to save Meg Ryan, a mortal with dark thoughts and great hair. But Aziz Ansari must have been smiling when he chose Keanu Reeves to play a similar character, an angel named Gabriel who oversteps his duties with a “lost soul,” in his feature directing debut, “Good Fortune.” It’s a fun idea, whether or not Gen-Z audiences know “City of Angels,” the late-’90s remake of “Wings of Desire,” or the even earlier John Landis classic “Trading Places.”

    In what amounts to a slightly ironic but mostly sincere homage to late-20th-century high-concept studio movies (the body-swap comedy in particular), Ansari plays Arj, a gig economy worker with an understandably exasperated view of life in Los Angeles. Running errands for rich people on Taskrabbit, he barely earns enough to eat, and lacks the self-confidence to flirt with Elena (Keke Palmer), a formidably idealistic co-worker at his Home Depot-style second job.

    Arj wonders why he went to college as he spends most nights sleeping in his beat-up car, which eventually gets towed for too many unpaid parking tickets. For Gabriel, Arj’s many humiliations add up to someone badly in need of his help. And besides, Gabriel’s bored of his low-ranking angel duties, which amount to stopping Angelenos from texting and driving (he doesn’t realize just how many lives he’s saving).

    Coaching the L.A. angels, Gabriel’s boss (Sandra Oh) warns him that he has no business intervening, but Gabriel’s not so bright — Reeves plays the character with much the same blank stare he brought to “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure” all those years back — and appears to Arj anyway. (No one else can see him.) When Arj doesn’t seem thrilled by brief visions of what his life has in store, Gabriel lets him temporarily trade places with Jeff (Seth Rogen), a rich tech bro he’d met a few days earlier.

    There’s just one problem: Arj doesn’t want to go back. Would you, if offered the choice between scraping by (as so many barely can these days) and planning parties from the private sauna of your Hollywood Hills mansion?

    It’s funny that Gabriel didn’t anticipate this problem — that Arj might not agree “how superficial a life of wealth and success really is” — and funnier still when you see Gabriel’s incredulous expression. No question that Reeves, who has made self-aware cameos in everything from “Toy Story 4” to “Always Be My Maybe” of late, is this movie’s MVP. The surest sign of the good-sport star’s intelligence is his willingness ow endearingly he can play a “dum-dum.”

    Ansari understands that the whole angel thing was corny back when Warren Beatty and John Travolta tried it (in “Heaven Can Wait” and “Michael,” respectively), but uses it the way an “SNL” sketch might, as shorthand for the point he really wants to make: Beneath the jokes, “Good Fortune” serves as a working-class critique of contemporary capitalism, as seen from the perspective of those juggling various side hustles just to make ends meet. The comedian might not be this generation’s Frank Capra, but it’s still nice to see a celebrity who recognizes what normal folks are going through and uses his platform to address it (à la Cheech Marin’s newly relevant “Born in East L.A.”).

    The rules of how Arj and Jeff change places, and what it’ll take to switch back, are sort of a moving target in “Good Fortune,” which gives Rogen’s character an Ebenezer Scrooge-like crash course in how to be a better billionaire by forcing him to work for his own food-delivery app. But after making the joke that Arj kinda likes being rich, Ansari’s screenplay never really presents a convincing reason why this selfish guy would return to how things were before — unless you count Palmer’s union-organizing love interest, whose texting-and-driving mishap Gabriel was somehow supposed to prevent (one of several plot holes).

    The movie features a weird mix of acting styles, from Rogen’s appropriately showboaty performance (his character is privilege personified, at first, then later made relatable as he’s forced to break into his own home) to Ansari’s weirdly self-conscious character, who looks uncomfortable on camera, whether Arj is rich or poor. And then there’s Reeves’ amusingly stiff take on Gabriel, who starts to relax once he’s fired from angel duty and forced to get a dishwashing job on earth.

    Gabriel discovers the little things other people take for granted — namely, cigarettes, dancing and “chicken nuggies” — but it’s street tacos he’ll miss most if he ever gets his wings back. Even though it’s fairly obvious where “Good Fortune” is headed, Ansari manages to surprise in how he gets there. Like his character, the writer-director-producer-star seems to be juggling one too many jobs here, and yet, it’s that very connection to overworked, undercompensated Americans that makes his movie so right for this moment.

    Peter Debruge

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  • Don’t Hold Your Breath for John Wick 5

    Don’t Hold Your Breath for John Wick 5

    In every successful box office franchise, there comes a moment of conclusion that feels satisfying to nearly all involved—that is, until producers pocket-watching said film’s box office success come knocking, asking, “What are next?” Take, for example, Keanu Reeves’ career-reviving action series John Wick. Although the series’ hype is at an all-time high, its co-creator is firmly against allowing a potential fifth film to diminish the ending of John Wick: Chapter 4.

    In a recent interview with the Hollywood Reporter, series co-creator Chad Stahelski reiterated that fans should temper their expectations of seeing Reeves return in a fifth film in the franchise. His reasoning? John Wick’s story is over. Bookended, even. What’s more, Stahelski (rightfully) believes Wick’s ending was so poignant that continuing the franchise by bringing him back would cheapen the film’s picture-perfect send off. For Stahelski, the idea of a fifth movie serves more as a creative exercise than a genuine artistic pursuit.

    “The honest truth is you don’t [top John Wick: Chapter 4]. You simply don’t. There’s no topping what we did. That’s the end. That’s the deal. That’s what we found closure for. Look, sometimes, we’ll keep things in development. Sometimes, we’ll use development as an exercise, but is there an opportunity to do [John Wick 5]? Of course, there is, whether it’s for money or for creativity,” Stahelski told THR. “Jesus, in the last three years, I’ve already had three or four versions of a John Wick 5. They were different ways to crack the story, but it’s almost a mental exercise for me.”

    Although Stahelski has spun narrative yarn over where he could take the franchise next, he’s pretty comfortable in saying wherever the numbered continuation goes, it won’t follow any element of John’s story arc.

    “It would not be part of that [John Wick: Chapter 4] storyline. It would not be what you would think it is. As far as [John Wick: Chapter 4], we’ve peaked. At least I have. That’s my apex. We ended it. It’s a complete story,” Stahelski continued. “I watch it now, and I feel very happy about it, but we wouldn’t try to outdo it. We wouldn’t try to add on to that. It’d have to be a completely different storyline.”

    Now that Stahelski has made it irrefutably clear that he doesn’t plan on pulling a Deadpool & Wolverine by bringing the Baba Yaga back, there are some John Wick projects coming down the pipeline that hope to expand its mythos. Aside from the prequel tv show The Continental, fans can look forward to Ana de Armas staring in the clunkily titled John Wick Presents: Ballerina.

    Beyond Ballerina‘s June 6, 2025 release date, fans can look forward to a prequel anime featurette that’ll showcase John Wick completing the “impossible task” that let him retire from contract killing (for a time). There’s also a spin-off series in development by Robert Levine called Under the High Table that will follow the series’ supporting characters.  A spin-off for Donnie Yen’s Caine is also being written. So yeah, there’s a lot more Wickverse stuff in store.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Isaiah Colbert

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  • Keanu Reeves Speeds Around the Indy 500 Racetrack

    Keanu Reeves Speeds Around the Indy 500 Racetrack

    Keanu Reeves, the Matthew Perry-maligned actor known for (among other things) his respect for his stunt team, isn’t immune to a bit of daredevilry himself. The John Wick star has felt the need for speed for decades, and we’re not just talking about that 50+ mph bus trip. The custom motorcycle shop owner is also a regular spectator at Formula 1 and MotoGP events, and this weekend he’s taking it to the next level, driving in a set of races at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS), one of the most famous racetracks in the world.

    The event is the final stop in the Toyota Gazoo Racing GR Cup series, which runs from Thursday through Sunday at the home of the Indianapolis 500 (among other races). The set of professional runs along the 2.439-mile, 14-turn course will see scores of drivers, many of whom are well-known within the professional motorsports community. There’s 27-year-old Gresham Wagner, who has already locked in the series’ top slot, or 20-year-old Westin Workman and Spike Kohlbecker (age 21), battling for second place this weekend.

    Actor Keanu Reeves attends the 2010 Toyota Pro Celebrity Qualifying Race at the Grand Prix of Long Beach on April 16, 2010 in Long Beach, California.

    Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

    Then there’s Keanu Reeves, who made his GR Cup debut on Saturday at the age of 60—but this isn’t his first time on a competitive race track. The man in the Matrix, also a longtime Vanity Fair photoshoot standby, came in first in his class at the 2009 Long Beach Grand Prix Pro/Celebrity Race. While he’s put pedal to the metal onscreen many times since, Saturday was his first time back behind the wheel in a real-life, pro-level sense since he competed in Long Beach that next year, in 2010

    Reeves looked relaxed and happy as he hopped into his spec GR86, a Saturday tweet from the IMS shows. But in the day’s first race, which opened at 9:50, Reeves spun out into the grass, the Associated Press reports.

    His vehicle, known as the No. 92 BRZRKR car in a nod to his 2020 comic book, BRZRKR, was unscathed in the non-collision crash. The same was true of its driver, who lost control at the exit of Turn 9, which is near the midpoint of the 45-minute race. After returning to the track, Reeves finished 25th after a race where he ran as high as 21st and avoided at least one crash near Turn 14.

    The actor will hit the bricks again on Sunday, but that’s not the only time the actor will be under intense circumstances that week. Reeves is expected to reteam with director Jan de Bont and actor Sandra Bullock on Tuesday for a special 30th-anniversary screening of Speed in Los Angeles, a film in which the young “hot shot” Reeves played was still years older than his competitors on the race track this weekend. Efforts by this correspondent to determine how Reeves manages not to age were unsuccessful as of publication time, but I started to develop a theory based on this conversation Reeves had with Vanity Fair last year.

    Instagram content

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    “Keanu, are you online?” the actor was asked. “I’m not, no.” “Not on Twitter?” the interviewer pushed. “No,” he said. Correlation isn’t causation, but Reeves certainly provides some food for thought.

    Eve Batey

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  • Keanu Reeves spins out of control in racing debut at Indianapolis Motor Speedway – National | Globalnews.ca

    Keanu Reeves spins out of control in racing debut at Indianapolis Motor Speedway – National | Globalnews.ca

    Hollywood star Keanu Reeves made his professional auto racing debut on Saturday in an event in which The Matrix star spun out at famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    Reeves spun into the grass without a collision on the exit of Turn 9 a little more than halfway through the 45-minute race. He re-entered and continued driving, signaling he was uninjured.

    Reeves, who qualified 31st out of the 35 cars, ran as high as 21st and successfully avoided a first lap crash in Turn 14. Reeves finished 25th.

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    Reeves, who grew up in Toronto, is competing at Indianapolis in Toyota GR Cup, a Toyota spec-racing series and a support series for this weekend’s Indy 8 Hour sports car event. He has a second race Sunday.


    Keanu Reeves drives during the GR Cup Series auto race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, in Indianapolis.


    AP Photo/Darron Cummings

    Reeves, 60, is driving the No. 92 BRZRKR car, which is promoting his graphic novel The Book of Elsewhere. He is teammates with Cody Jones from Dude Perfect.

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    Reeves has previous racing experience as a former participant in the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach in the celebrity race. Reeves won the event in 2009.

    He is scheduled to attend a 30th anniversary screening of Speed on Tuesday in Los Angeles alongside his co-star Sandra Bullock.


    &copy 2024 The Canadian Press

    Globalnews Digital

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  • Gotta Be Faster Than That! Our Favorite Hedgehog Gets Choke-Slammed To Oblivion By Formidable New Foe Shadow In Long-Awaited ‘Sonic 3’ Trailer

    Gotta Be Faster Than That! Our Favorite Hedgehog Gets Choke-Slammed To Oblivion By Formidable New Foe Shadow In Long-Awaited ‘Sonic 3’ Trailer

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    After months of growing anticipation, the trailer for Sonic The Hedgehog 3 finally dropped and wastes no time showing formidable new villain Shadow the Hedgehog (played by the impossibly cool Keanu Reeves) beating the rings out of our favorite hedgehog, Knuckles, and Tails–uh oh!

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 asset

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    Completely outmatched in every way, Team Sonic must seek out an unlikely alliance in hopes of stopping Shadow and saving the planet. Whew, good luck!

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 asset

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    Check out the buzzy trailer below:

    For months, fans speculated on whether Keanu Reeves would actually be joining the franchise after loud whispers circulated across the internet.

    But now, with him wreaking havoc in the Sonicverse, the hype surrounding the film couldn’t be more apparent as we head into Hollywood’s holiday season.

    To build on the momentum, Paramount projected images promoting the trailer release on buildings across the globe.

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 assets

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 assets

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 assets

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    Directed by Jeff Fowler, the buzzy threequel boasts an all-star ensemble cast including Jim Carrey, James Marsden, Tika Sumpter, Idris Elba, Natasha Rothwell, Shemar Moore, Adam Pally, and newcomers Alyla Browne and Krysten Ritter.

    Primed to become one of 2024’s biggest box office hits, Sonic 3 is “probably the most exciting thing that we’ve done in the franchise” according to Producer Toby Ascher who serves as Showrunner on Paramount+’s Knuckles series.

    In an interview with GamesRadar+, he confirmed that the upcoming blockbuster is taking ‘a lot’ from classic Sonic Adventure 2 video game.

    “It’s going to be this giant, fun, incredible movie that obviously takes a lot from Sonic Adventure 2 and some of the games that I know the core Sonic Team grew up loving,” Ascher told the outlet.

    Sonic The Hedgehog 3 zooms into theaters Dec. 18, 2024.

    Alex Ford

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  • Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter Set ‘Bill & Ted’ Reunion on Broadway With ‘Waiting for Godot’

    Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter Set ‘Bill & Ted’ Reunion on Broadway With ‘Waiting for Godot’

    Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter are reuniting for a new Broadway production of Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot,” directed by Jamie Lloyd.

    Reeves will play Estragon and Winter will play Vladimir in the show, which will open at an ATG theater in fall 2025.

    “We’re incredibly excited to be on stage together and work with the great Jamie Lloyd in one of our favorite plays,” the “Bill & Ted” co-stars said in a joint statement.

    “Waiting for Godot” is produced by The Jamie Lloyd Company, ATG Productions, Bad Robot Live and Gavin Kalin Productions. 101 Productions will serve as general manager. 

    Reeves and Winter’s on-screen history began in 1989 with the comedy adventure “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure.” They followed up the madness with 1991’s “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey” and reunited once again nearly three decades later, in 2020’s “Bill & Ted Face the Music.”

    More to come…

    Ethan Shanfeld

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  • Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi – 247 News Around The World

    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi – 247 News Around The World

    • Keanu Reeves, 59, and his girlfriend Alexandra Grant, 51, were spotted on a date night at the popular Italian restaurant Giorgio Baldi.
    • The couple, who have been linked since 2019, exuded style with Reeves wearing a dark jacket, jeans, brown shoes, and a gray scarf.
    • Before making their relationship public, Reeves and Grant founded X Artists’ Books and collaborated on two books, with Reeves penning the texts and Grant providing the illustrations.

    Keanu Reeves, born Keanu Charles Reeves on September 2, 1964, in Beirut, Lebanon, is a Canadian actor known for his versatile roles in various film genres.

    Reeves was born to an English mother, Patricia, a costume designer and performer, and an American father, Samuel Nowlin Reeves Jr., of Native Hawaiian, Chinese, English, Irish, and Portuguese descent.

    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi | WION

    His parents divorced when he was young, and Reeves was raised primarily by his mother in Sydney, New York City, and Toronto. He attended four different high schools, including the Etobicoke School of the Arts, and left school at 17 to pursue acting.

    Reeves made his acting debut in the Canadian television series “Hangin’ In” in 1984 and his feature film debut in “Youngblood” in 1986. His breakthrough role came in the science fiction comedy “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” in 1989, which he reprised in its sequels.

    He gained critical acclaim for his role in the independent drama “My Own Private Idaho” in 1991 and established himself as an action hero with leading roles in “Point Break” in 1991 and “Speed” in 1994.

    Also Read: Chrissy Teigen And John Legend Take Kids To Natural History Museum

    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi

    In recent weeks, Keanu Reeves and his girlfriend Alexandra Grant were seen dining together in Los Angeles, specifically at the Italian restaurant known as Giorgio Baldi located in Santa Monica.

    The 59-year-old movie star famous for his roles in movies such as The Matrix and the John Wick series wore a simple black jacket, black denim, and a grayish-black scarf, while his 51-year-old artist partner, Alexandra Grant, stunned in a black sequin mini dress, gold accessories, black sportswear leggings.

    This outing comes as Reeves is currently in the middle of shooting his upcoming movie titled Outcome, directed by Jonah Hill, starring Matt Bomer, Kaia Gerber, and Cameron Diaz. The movie revolves around the Hollywood movie star called Reef, portrayed by Reeves, and a secret that he needs to face from his past.

    Reeves and Grant started to publicly acknowledge each other in 2019 but had met in 2009 at a mutual friend’s dinner party. The couple has been involved with various projects after they went public; they started the X Artists’ Books publishing house, and the two contributed to two books.

    Some of the sources reveal that the relationship between Reeves and Grant could be considered the most happy and positive in the actor’s life, and the woman is said to be a “pearl” described as adorable, sweet, caring, and funny. The couple revealed more of a preference to host at home with friends than to partake in mainstream events, however, they do make appearances for occasions, for example, the MOCA Gala 2024 in Los Angeles.

    Though they have been in the spotlight for quite some time now, Reeves and Grant were recently spotted having a lovely dinner date night at the famed Giorgio Baldi restaurant which proves how much their love is still going strong. Despite his intense filming and other activities that a successful actor may have, the couple can be deemed to be quite balanced and supportive of each other in all aspects.

    Keanu Reeves And Alexandra Grant Relationship Timeline

    Keanu Reeves and Alexandra Grant had an intimate relationship for a long time. What started as a professional working together has turned into love over the years. According to reports, the pair met at a dinner party in 2009 and immediately connected on an artistic level.
    In 2011 they collaborated on his debut book ‘Ode to Happiness’ where Alexandra provided illustrations for some poems written by Keanu Reeves himself. This initial project marked the beginning of many more successful collaborations between them which eventually led to them starting their own publishing company called X Artists’ Books.

    Although their association began as strictly business, it gradually evolved into something more. Sources say that they didn’t start dating until 2017 which is well over eight years since they met each other for the first time.

    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi
    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi | Info Nation

    Keanu Reeves and Alexandra Grant attended the MOCA Benefit as a couple publicly announced in May 2019 when they appeared together during the event held in Los Angeles. This was notable because it served as the duo’s official coming out s bonafide lovers before the eyes of people who matter most to them – fans!

    They continued to show up in public gatherings as a pair throughout the year thereby solidifying their romantic love affair. For example; On June 7th, 2019 Keanu Reeves and Alexandra Grant were seen at Saint Laurent’s fashion show (held in Malibu, California) where they even posed while holding hands before cameras captured this beautiful sight forever!
    Finally, on November 2nd, 2019 this information became known when Alexandra Grant accompanied Keanu Reeves for the LACMA Art+Film Gala red carpet event marking yet another significant milestone in their relationship which has since been a subject of intense public scrutiny from different quarters.

    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi
    Keanu Reeves Spotted On Date Night With Alexandra Grant At Giorgio Baldi

    During an interview with Vanity Fair in 2020, Grant talked about the public reaction to her relationship with Reeves, claiming that “everybody I’ve ever met called me in the first week of November.” She also discussed her future projects and shared her views on love and marriage while explaining why she chose not to dye her hair back.

    Despite becoming more well-known and attracting greater attention from the media after this time, Keanu Reeves and Alexandra Grant still prefer to keep their personal lives out of the public eye as much as possible. The couple “love entertaining friends,” an insider said to Entertainment Tonight back in March 2020, adding that at the LACMA event Grant “had a friend take a picture of them together.”

    Over the past few years, they have occasionally been seen in public together – attending events or making appearances – but it wasn’t until recently that they made their first red-carpet appearance at MOCA Gala 2022 where he was seen holding hands with her while walking through New York City streets. All his co-stars praise his beautiful relationship calling them wonderful people who make an amazing couple; according to sources close to Keanu Reeves.

    247 News Around The World

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  • Keanu Reeves Joins ‘Sonic 3’ as Shadow

    Keanu Reeves Joins ‘Sonic 3’ as Shadow

    Keanu Reeves is speeding along to another franchise, with the John Wick star heading to Sonic the Hedgehog 3. He will be voicing the popular character named Shadow, multiple sources tell The Hollywood Reporter.

    The news comes on the heels of a jam-packed CinemaCon presentation from Paramount last week, when the studio debuted the first footage for Sonic 3. This included the revelation that Dr. Robotnik, played by Jim Carrey, was depressed and out of shape after the events of Sonic 2, but gets his groove back thanks to creating Shadow the Hedgehog, a character first introduced in the video games in 2001’s Sonic Adventure 2. The character is in many ways the anti-Sonic, dark and edgy while mirroring the hero’s powers.

    Paramount’s Sonic franchise dates back to 2020’s Sonic the Hedgehog, which overperformed with $319 million globally, becoming a breakout hit in the video game space, a genre that had struggled at the box office. Sonic 2 followed in 2022 and grossed $404 million globally. Director Jeff Fowler is behind all three installments, which voice star Ben Schwartz as Sonic opposite James Mardsen as Tom Wachowski, a human pal of Sonic’s.

    Reeves has been in blockbuster mode for the last several years now, last starring in John Wick: Chapter 4 and before that reprising his iconic role of Neo for 2021’s The Matrix: Resurrections. Coming up, he has roles in Aziz Ansari’s Good Fortune, in which he plays a guardian angel, and has a small part as assassin John Wick in John Wick Presents: Ballerina, a spinoff starring Ana De Armas.

    The John Campea Show first reported Reeves’ casting.

    Aaron Couch

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  • Lori Loughlin Recalls Working With Keanu Reeves on 1988’s ‘The Night Before:’ “He’s Just a Dream”

    Lori Loughlin Recalls Working With Keanu Reeves on 1988’s ‘The Night Before:’ “He’s Just a Dream”

    While taking a trip down memory lane, Lori Loughlin recalled the positive experience of working with Keanu Reeves on their 1988 film The Night Before.

    The Full House actress recently opened up about the teen comedy on her former co-stars Jodie Sweetin and Andrea Barber’s How Rude, Tanneritos! podcast. The Thom Eberhardt-directed film follows Reeves’ character, Winston, who takes the popular high school girl, Tara (Loughlin), to prom, but wakes up with no memories and Tara missing.

    “[Reeves] was the nerdy guy?” Sweetin asked as Loughlin confirmed, “He was the nerdy guy. Could you imagine?”

    The When Calls the Heart actress added that The Matrix star “was so wonderful. … What a lovely, lovely man.”

    Sweetin admitted that she has wanted to “meet him so bad” because of all the “awesome” things she’s heard about Reeves, and Loughlin confirmed it all to be true, adding, “He’s just a dream” and “so sweet.”

    Elsewhere during their conversation, Loughlin talked about filming the “funny” movie, The Night Before, which she described as a “quirky black comedy.”

    Though she said her overall filming experience “was fun” and “loved it,” there was one frightening moment when they were shooting some scenes in “downtown Los Angeles at night.” She remembered returning to set after leaving for “lunch one night,” and someone “had been murdered in the alleyway where we were just shooting.” 

    Loughlin, who later served two months in prison for her involvement in the 2019 college admissions scandal, added, “I was like, ‘Oh my goodness.’ We were in the thick of it.”

    Carly Thomas

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