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Tag: Keanu Reeves

  • Hollywood Flashback: 25 Years Ago, ‘The Matrix’ Sent Audiences Down a Rabbit Hole

    Hollywood Flashback: 25 Years Ago, ‘The Matrix’ Sent Audiences Down a Rabbit Hole

    Twenty-five years ago, The Matrix’s prescient AI-centric narrative, groundbreaking visuals and oodles of leather were enough to make any viewer say, “Whoa.” Lana and Lilly Wachowski’s journey with the sci-fi epic began in 1994, when Warner Bros. exec Lorenzo di Bonaventura, impressed with their script for the thriller Assassins, signed the duo to a three-feature […]

    Lexy Perez

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  • Keanu Reeves To Win First-Ever Lance Reddick Legacy Award at the 51st Saturn Awards

    Keanu Reeves To Win First-Ever Lance Reddick Legacy Award at the 51st Saturn Awards


    The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Films will honor iconic genre actor Lance Reddick at the 51st Saturn Awards next month. Not only is the academy dedicating the awards show to Reddick, but they are also establishing an award in his name. The Lance Reddick Legacy Award “symbolizes and celebrates not only a performer’s talent, but their character; someone who’s a true goodwill ambassador in the industry,” said academy president Robert Holguin and Saturn producers Bradley and Kevin Marcus in a statement.

    The first recipient of the award will be Reddick’s friend and John Wick co-star Keanu Reeves. “From science fiction (The Matrix Trilogy), fantasy (Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure/Constantine) and horror (Francis Ford Coppola’s Dracula/The Devil’sAdvocate), Keanu has done it all — not to mention Speed and Point Break.”

    They continued, “Keanu is not just a Hollywood icon but also a shining example of humility and gratitude. Throughout his incredible career, he has never forgotten the support of his fans and the filmmakers who’ve supported him all these years. We’re thrilled to celebrate Lance’s memory with a dear friend and a genre icon.”

    Reddick tragically passed away in 2023, a week before the release of John Wick: Chapter Four. A that the time, Keanu Reeves and director Chad Stahelski released a joint statement to Variety, writing, “We are deeply saddened and heartbroken at the loss of our beloved friend and colleague Lance Reddick. He was the consummate professional and a joy to work with. Our love and prayers are with his wife Stephanie, his children, family and friends. We dedicate the film to his loving memory. We will miss him dearly.”

    In addition to starring in the John Wick films as the Continental Hotel’s concierge Charon, Reddick appeared in The Wire, Bosch, Resident Evil, and the Destiny video games. Reddick also had a cameo as Zeus in Percy Jackson and the Olympians and will appear in the upcoming John Wick spinoff, Ballerina.

    The 51st Saturn Awards will take place on February 4, with the ceremony streaming live on ElectricNow.

    (featured image: Todd Williamson/Getty Images)

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    Chelsea Steiner

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  • Big Cyberpunk Update Added A Classic Keanu Reeves Meme

    Big Cyberpunk Update Added A Classic Keanu Reeves Meme

    Cyberpunk 2077 just received a final hurrah via an update that added a number of fixes and new features, such as a working metro system. The new transit system lets V experience a bit more of pedestrian life in Night City, including a few random events on the train. One such event is a recreation of a well-known meme starring Keanu Reeves in a very sad (but relatable) pose.

    Read More: Every Change In Cyberpunk 2077’s Last Big Update

    The meme in question is known as “Sad Keanu,” and it features actor Keanu Reeves (who plays Johnny Silverhand in Cyberpunk 2077) chilling on a bench somewhere, casually eating some food while staring at the ground with a wistful expression. The original image was taken sometime around 2010 by photographer Ron Asadorian, and has since gone on to be a frequent image shared around the internet.

    How to find the ‘Sad Keanu’ meme in Cyberpunk 2077

    To find sad Keanu/sad Johnny, you need to update your game to version 2.1. After that, head to one of the newly opened metro stations (they are purple icons on the game’s map). At the metro, you have a choice of fast travel, or a first-person trip on the game’s metro system. Choose the latter by clicking “Ride metro.”

    After a quick glitched-out screen, you’ll take a seat on the metro and can look out the window as you traverse Night City. Alas, you can’t get up and walk around in the train.

    Sad Keanu is one of at least two randomly occurring events that can occur on the train (another involves someone begging for money). You can just spam the “Ride metro” option until you find him. Once you find him, you can just watch him sulk there, surrounded by some origami pigeons, sandwich in hand.

    Gif: CD Projekt Red / Kotaku

    Back in 2021, Keanu Reeves told Stephen Colbert on The Late Show that contrary to how the image looks, he wasn’t really sad when the photo was taken. “”I had some stuff going on. I was hungry,” he told the host.

    Since Johnny Silverhand can’t eat on account of being an engram and all that (and apparently there’s no smoking allowed on the transit system), I’d like to think sad Johnny is just sad that after blowing up that building the world still sucks. Maybe he really does want to get the band back together, but knows too much time has passed. Or maybe he’s just lonely watching V get all those new romance options. Right there with ya, samurai.

    Claire Jackson

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  • Francis Lawrence Teases ‘Constantine’ Sequel With Keanu Reeves: “We Have Control”

    Francis Lawrence Teases ‘Constantine’ Sequel With Keanu Reeves: “We Have Control”

    Francis Lawrence is giving an update on the development of Constantine 2 with Keanu Reeves and things are seemingly moving along.

    The sequel to the 2005 superhero horror film was stalled due to the writers strike but with writers back at work, Lawrence has been in meetings with Reeves to continue the saga.

    “So Constantine 2 got obviously held up by the writers strike,” Lawrence told Gamespot. “And we had to jump through a bunch of hurdles to get control of the character again, because other people had control of the Vertigo stuff. We have control.”

    Lawrence continued, “Keanu and Akiva Goldsman and I have been in meetings and have been hashing out what we think the story is going to be, and there’s more meetings of those that have to happen–the script has to be written–but really hoping that we get to do Constantine 2, and make a real rated R version of it.”

    Constantine is loosely based on the DC Comics/Vertigo Comics’ Hellblazer. Kevin Brodbin and Frank Cappello wrote the script based on a story by Brodbin. Reeves gives life to John Constantine, a chain-smoking cynic with the ability to perceive the true visage of half-angels and half-demons.

    Also starring in the film are Rachel Weisz, Shia LaBeouf, Tilda Swinton, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Djimon Hounsou, Gavin Rossdale, Peter Stormare, Max Baker, Francis Guinan, José Zúñiga, Jesse Ramirez, April Grace and Tanoia Reed.

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  • Doom’s Iconic Super Shotty Looks Right At Home In Call Of Duty

    Doom’s Iconic Super Shotty Looks Right At Home In Call Of Duty

    Call of Duty’s collaborations this year have cast a wide net, ranging from putting rapper Nicki Minaj in as a playable character to adding cosmetics that are based on the Diablo series. Next month, the series is leaning into all things spooky and hellish, and that includes a tribute to Doom, the landmark 1993 first-person shooter. The Doom bundle, available on October 9 for Warzone and Modern Warfare II, includes a shotgun and chainsaw stylized to look like they did in the original game, and the visual effect is pretty cool.

    If you equip the gun or melee weapon, your character wields it like the space marine hero of the original game did, complete with a lower framerate that looks pretty distinct compared to the rest of Warzone. It’s nostalgic for fans of the original Doom, but it doesn’t seem to actually get in the way of the functionality of the shotgun or chainsaw, even when the game runs at 60FPS. Your character’s animations stutter a little bit when using either weapon, but it’s a pretty faithful recreation of how Doom looked 30 years ago. It rules.

    Buy Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop

    The weapons are definitely the standout, but the Doom bundle comes with a few other homages to the series, as well. The full bundle includes the following:

    • DOOM Weapon Charm
    • Cacodemon & Slayer Stickers
    • DOOM Loading Screen
    • Super Shotgun Weapon Blueprint
    • Chainsaw Melee Blueprint
    • Doomguy Gunscreen

    Call of Duty isn’t the only game paying tribute to the original Doom these days. Cyberpunk 2077 added a mini-game in the Phantom Liberty expansion based on shooters of the time starring Keanu Reeves’ Johnny Silverhand. Even with so many games paying tribute to the 1993 classic, it’s always a good idea to revisit the OG whenever you can, as it’s pretty foundational to the first-person shooter genre. If you do decide to play it, though, maybe play it on something simple like a PC or console, rather than one of the weirder devices people have ported the game to over the years. Like a tractor or potato-powered calculator.

    Kenneth Shepard

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  • 17 Essential Cyberpunk 2077 Side-Quests To Find In Night City

    17 Essential Cyberpunk 2077 Side-Quests To Find In Night City

    Screenshot: CD Projekt Red / Kotaku

    Unlike Panam, Judy, and Kerry, River is the one companion you have to go out of your way to meet. Finding the Night City cop and helping him sort through a local mystery that weaves in and out of his family life makes for one of the most interesting breaks in Cyberpunk 2077’s usual action. Expect a little combat and chatter, but also light adventure game mechanics and some pretty horrifying Night City lore.

    This questline does, however, unmask Cyberpunk 2077’s weird, inconsistent framing of cops and law enforcement, even weaponizing the ACAB saying in a particularly tacky lift that I’m not wild about. But if nothing else, these quests offer, for your inspection, a layer of the game’s inherent worldview that’s worth examining and dissecting.

    Available in: Act 2 after Life During Wartime

    How to acquire: Phone call from Elizabeth Peralez

    Kenneth Shepard

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  • Cyberpunk 2077 Now Contains A Hidden Doom Clone Starring Keanu Reeves

    Cyberpunk 2077 Now Contains A Hidden Doom Clone Starring Keanu Reeves

    Cyberpunk 2077 players have discovered a new arcade cab hidden in an abandoned church just outside Night City. This new arcade machine, added as part of Cyberpunk 2077’s free 2.0 update, lets you play a Doom-like retro shooter starring Keanu Reeves’ character, Johnny Silverhand.

    Cyberpunk 2077’s 2.0 update and its massive Phantom Liberty expansion have added a lot of new content and features to the already-huge first-person RPG. But who cares about that stuff? (Editor’s note: A lot of people, actually.) Personally, I’m more excited to see that even in the horrible dystopian future of Cyberpunk 2077 people are still making and playing Doom clones. Some things never change, I guess.

    To play this new arcade machine, you’ll need to go into the badlands outside Night City and head south to find a lone, abandoned church just north of a protein farm, which is also a fast-travel point. So if you’ve already unlocked the farm for fast travel, feel free to zip over to save yourself a drive into the badlands.

    Regardless of how you get there, enter the church, and on the right you’ll find an Arasaka Tower 3D playable arcade machine.

    Buy Cyberpunk 2077: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop

    Sam Bram II / CD Projekt Red

    Arasaka Tower 3D is very clearly an homage to classic id Software shooters like Wolfenstein 3D and Doom. You play long-dead rockerboy Johnny Silverhand fresh off his historic bombing of one of the world’s most powerful megacorps’ headquarters as he tries to escape the tower, blasting numerous guards as he ambles—surprisingly slowly—toward freedom. Aside from the lack of speed the gameplay looks surprisingly retro, including the fact that you can’t look up or down, as was the case in many classic ‘90s shooters. The full game is about 10 minutes long or so and includes five levels complete with secret doors.

    Read More: Every Change In Cyberpunk 2077‘s Massive 2.0 Update

    Do you think people in the Cyberpunk 2077 universe have modded Arasaka Tower 3D to death and got it running on ATMs and other weird devices, like how Doom is playable on just about anything in our world today? I hope so. I hope some nerds have made it fully open-source at this point and created whole new levels for it, too.

    I guess once you’re done playing Araska Tower 3D you can go and play the rest of Cyberpunk 2077, including the new expansion. I hear it’s like Doom but you can look up and down now. Wild stuff!

    Buy Cyberpunk 2077: Amazon | Best Buy | GameStop

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    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Alexandra Grant Gets Candid On What She ‘Loves’ About Boyfriend Keanu Reeves And How They ‘Inspire’ Each Other

    Alexandra Grant Gets Candid On What She ‘Loves’ About Boyfriend Keanu Reeves And How They ‘Inspire’ Each Other

    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Alexandra Grant spoke highly of her relationship with Keanu Reeves as she opened up about the pair’s union in a rare interview.

    While chatting with People on Friday at the Los Angeles Beverly Arts Icon Awards, the accomplished visual artist shared a thoughtful answer while commenting on whether it is harder or easier to take on the red carpet alone, given that Grant attended the event solo.

    “The good news about falling in love as an adult is that I had built my own career by the time that my relationship had begun,” she told the outlet. “I feel very confident in the relationship on the red carpet. I feel confident on it alone.

    “It’s interdependent and independent in the best ways,” she gushed.


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves Kisses Girlfriend Alexandra Grant On The Red Carpet In Rare PDA Moment

    Since Grant, 50, and Reeves, 59, went public with their relationship in 2019, they’ve supported one another numerous times at a variety of events and red carpets.

    Speaking of how the pair cooperate with each other’s different professional environments, Grant — who was an honouree at the ceremony, held at L.A.’s Four Seasons Hotel — recounted a time she was creatively inspired by Reeves.

    “In a moment of frustration in my life, I once said, ‘Sometimes I feel like a Maserati stuck in traffic,’ that I have this big engine, but, for a variety of reasons, that I couldn’t ever go,” she explained. “And I know a lot of people feel frustrated in their lives, that they’re not able to run their engine.

    “I think every creative person feels that way,” she noted.

    “What I love about Keanu and our exchange is that we’re pushing each other to build new roads,” she continued. “Seeing the other person’s problem-solving is inspiring, like, ‘Oh, well, okay, this one, that’s a cul-de-sac. How do I try this other thing?’

    “He’s such an inspiration to me,” she spoke fondly of her partner. “He’s so creative, he’s so kind. He works so hard.”

    Despite their different forms of art, Grant went on to chat about how “storytelling is at the heart” of both her and Reeves’ work.


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves & Alexandra Grant Enter NFT & Metaverse To Support Artists From Disadvantaged Backgrounds

    “My work is much more of a private performance, but I have a text that I interpret in the studio into a painting, into an object,” she said. “He takes the text in private and then turns it into a performance in public. There’s a relationship. We’re both at the heart readers and researchers. We both care about people and we care about characters.”

    The artist then recited a metaphor to compare the couple’s creative worlds.

    “I think there’s a lot of similarities,” she declared. “Sometimes I feel like, to make a film, as we’re seeing now in the strike, that it’s a cruise ship. Everyone is dependent on everyone else. You can’t go off and— being an artist, maybe at the beginning of my career, I was in a kayak on the sea of creativity. Now maybe it’s a small speedboat, but it’s still a lot more nimble.

    “I think that is very inspiring for him,” she said of how Reeves perceives the “cruise ship”-like nature of creating a film.

    “To make a film, you require hundreds of people. To be an artist, you don’t. You require one,” she elaborated. “You require a community to get the work into the world, but not to actually make it. I think part of the inspiration is the differences of scale.”

    Speaking of her art, Grant claimed that it has “absolutely” changed since she and Reeves began dating.

    “I had a studio visit a few years ago, and this very kind, very high-level person said, ‘I can see that your work has gotten happier,’” she recalled. “That’s real. We’re all human beings. We’re animals. We’re expressing from where we are and certainly feeling happier. I think the work is happier.”

    Addressing Reeves’ absence, Grant shared that her boyfriend couldn’t attend the Arts Icon Awards due to a performance he had with his band Dogstar.


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves And Girlfriend Alexandra Grant Seen Holding Hands While Out In NYC

    “I’m really proud. I am a huge Dogstar fan,” Grant gushed. “I had the great pleasure of going to their first public show and because I’ve been listening to the latest album for quite some time, I was one of the only people in the audience who knew all the lyrics. That was really cool. It’s fun. It’s beyond fun.

    “I was dancing to all the lyrics and then I looked around and I was like, ‘Nobody has heard the album except for me and a few people.’ It’s been a real pleasure to see the guys come back together, to be so creative and supportive of one another,” she shared, emphasizing how “proud” and “happy” she is for Reeves and his bandmates.

    Earlier this year, the alternative rock band reunited for the first time in 20 years.

    “I’m glad they’re able to do it,” Grant told People, noting that it’s “really great that Keanu has the ability to pivot to being a musician” amid the ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.

    “They had been playing music and rehearsing and they had already recorded most of the album before the strike,” she said. “What it opened up was more time to go on the road.”

    Dogstar’s upcoming full-length album Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees is set to release on October 6.

    Melissa Romualdi

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  • ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Reveals Streaming Premiere Date

    ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Reveals Streaming Premiere Date

    Those who didn’t get a chance to see John Wick: Chapter 4 in theaters have been eagerly waiting, and now it’s finally hitting streaming. According to critics, the latest John Wick was yet another movie triumph, delivering everything you’d expect out of a John Wick movie and more.

    It’s difficult to talk about the movie too much without getting into spoiler territory, but rest assured that it’s filled with excellent gun-fu, expertly choreographed fight scenes, and some extremely high stakes. When we last left John (Keanu Reeves) at the end of John Wick: Chapter 3, it was clear that there were going to be some seriously messed-up bureaucratic nightmares afoot.

    READ MORE: How John Wick Pulled Off One of the Greatest Action Scenes Ever

    After the events of the third John Wick movie, Wick is defeated and on the brink of death. He’s secreted away to the Bowery King, where the pair come up with an idea to take down the High Table and exact revenge. In Chapter 4, Bill Skarsgård plays the Marquis, a high-ranking member of the High Table. When he catches wind of what Wick has planned, he orders him dead.

    ScreenCrush critic Matt Singer had this to say about John Wick: Chapter 4 in his review (he also named it one of the best films of the first half of 2023):

    I am certain people will complain that the movie is absurd, that it’s got too much stuff, that it doesn’t need half this many action scenes. To which I would reply: Go see another movie that is not John Wick. These movies take their craft as seriously as John Wick takes his. One series of shots in Chapter 4 I will not spoil made me happier than any sequence I have seen in a movie theater in months and months. (It involves John Wick and a stairwell, but that is all I will say.) I go to the movies for a living chasing the high; the kind of cinematic ecstasy only a unique moment can give you. For a couple seconds, John Wick achieved that euphoric state of action nirvana. John Wick may be looking for a way into heaven. Action fans don’t need to look any further for that than this movie.

    John Wick: Chapter 4 will be streaming on September 15 on Starz.

    The Best Action Movie Posters in History

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • This John Wick-Inspired Killer Bean Game Looks Pretty Cool, Ridiculous

    This John Wick-Inspired Killer Bean Game Looks Pretty Cool, Ridiculous

    There’s a trailer taking X, formerly Twitter, by storm of a coffee bean armed with two pistols engaging in acrobatic shootouts that’s giving Max Payne meets Just Cause with a bit of GTA sprinkled in, and I’m totally obsessed.

    Dubbed Killer Bean, the game is billed as a first-/third-person shooter with procedurally generated elements that affect everything from the characters to the story itself. Based on the Steam description, the project sounds ambitious.

    “You are Killer Bean, a rogue assassin who takes out the trash in this world, one bullet at a time. The procedurally generated story changes every time you start a new campaign in this first-person/third-person, roguelike shooter,” the description reads.

    Killer Bean

    Playing as Jack “Killer” Bean, you were betrayed by the Shadow Agency. Thirsting for revenge, you set out to murk the people who backstabbed you, employing bullets, punches and kicks, and acrobatic slow-motion moves to get your vengeance. It’s like John Wick, but instead of playing as Keanu Reeves, you’re…Keanu Bean. Pun aside, Killer Bean uses procedural generation in an exciting way: Everything changes when you play, according to its description.

    “Every time you start a new single-player campaign, everything changes. The locations change, the missions change, the characters change, the bosses change, and most of all, the story changes. Characters who you trusted before, may turn against you. Enemies who tried to kill you, may end up helping you. Simple missions can turn into deadly traps. No two campaigns are the same.”

    That sounds fascinating if it’s executed well, especially considering its GTA/Max Payne/Just Cause vibes. I mean, watch that above trailer one more time. Killer Bean starts by butterfly twisting into a James Bond-looking sports car and immediately finds himself in a shootout with motorcycle-riding beans before jumping out in slow-motion to blast up another bean. It’s amazingly ridiculous, especially as you watch Killer Bean windmill to dodge bullets then take control of an attack helicopter to destroy some industrial-looking bridge. I’m not totally sure what’s happening here, but I’m all for it regardless.

    While this may be the first big-budget Killer Bean game, it isn’t the first to come out. Based on two short animations from 1996 and 2000, as well as a feature-length film from 2008, the franchise saw the side-scrolling action platformer Killer Bean: Unleashed release in 2012 for Android and iOS devices. I played a little bit of it, and yeah, it’s pretty ridiculous. It’s got in-app purchases (that you can circumvent by watching ads), clunky touchscreen controls, and a plethora of levels to shoot through. It isn’t exactly an enjoyable experience, but it does provide a semblance of an idea of what the big Killer Bean game might play like.

    Killer Bean doesn’t have a release date, but you can wishlist it on Steam now.

     

    Levi Winslow

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  • Keanu Reeves’ Grunge Band Announce Their First Show in Over 20 Years

    Keanu Reeves’ Grunge Band Announce Their First Show in Over 20 Years

    UPDATE (May 11, 2023): Dogstar, actor Keanu Reeves‘ ’90s alt-rock/grunge band, have announced their first show in over 20 years, as Spin reported.

    Dogstar, which includes singer-guitarist Bret Domrose and drummer Rob Mailhouse, will make their first public appearance since 2002 this May 27 at the 2023 BottleRock Festival in Napa, California.

    Read the original post on their comeback below.

    Dogstar, Keanu Reeves’ band, is back together, writing new material and planning their first gigs in two decades. They announced a comeback last summer.

    The last time Dogstar issued a song was in 2003 with their cover of Mr. Big’s “Shine” for a tribute album. But they haven’t released their own material since their 2000 album, Happy Ending. In 2022, they said they were reuniting, and they have now offered an update.

    “Thank you everyone for the kind comments,” Dogstar said in an April comment on their latest Instagram post regarding their current activities. “We are overjoyed to see such a response!” they added. “Didn’t expect this. It makes us want to play out even more.”

    As for new Dogstar material and upcoming concerts, the group said they will be “rolling out some new music this summer, followed by some gigs. As soon as it’s all figured out we will let everyone know immediately.”

    READ MORE: The Best Fictional Movie Bands

    They continued, “Much to do, but rest assured, we are on it and have assembled a fantastic team.”

    Dogstar also said, “We are also going to make a music video to support our first tune. That’s all I can say now. Can’t wait to share our new music with everyone. It’s the most satisfying and meaningful batch of songs we’ve ever done. Thanks again for being so patient with us. We truly have the best, most loyal fans!”

    Dogstar History

    Dogstar, despite limited initial success, loom large in ’90s rock lore. Fellow alt-rockers Weezer decided their band name before opening for Dogstar in 1992.

    Dogstar formed in Los Angeles in 1991 and featured Reeves on bass guitar, Robert Mailhouse on drums and Gregg Miller on guitar. The band played alternative rock with influences from punk and grunge, becoming known for their energetic performances.

    Keanu Reeves in a Band?

    Dogstar was a project for Reeves while he worked in acting. Their EP Quattro Formaggi emerged in 1996. It has guest spots from River Phoenix and John Frusciante. Dogstar disbanded in 2002.

    The Worst X and NC-17 Rated Movies

    These movies were rated X and NC-17 — but not even adults should endure them.

    Philip Trapp

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  • No One in Movies Knows How to Swallow a Pill

    No One in Movies Knows How to Swallow a Pill

    There are two ways of taking pills—two and only two.

    You pinch the pill between your thumb and index finger, pick it up, and place it on your tongue. You take a drink of water. This method is the tweezers.

    Or else: You place the pill in your palm and launch it toward your mouth, as if your teeth were battlements and your arm a siege machine. Don’t bother with the water. This method is the catapult.

    In real-world situations, many people—let’s say most—make a habit of the tweezers. In the movies, the opposite is true. An on-screen pill bottle works like Chekhov’s gun: Eventually, its contents will be fired at an actor’s mouth, or smashed between his lips, or hurled into his gullet.

    Think of Austin Butler as the lead in Elvis, alone in his hotel room: He slaps those quaaludes in, liquid-free, sideburns tilted toward the ceiling. It’s a textbook movie swallow, the Stanislavski Fling. Butler got an Oscar nomination; so did Ellen Burstyn, popping diet pills in Requiem for a Dream. On Succession, Jeremy Strong and Kieran Culkin, each a two-time Emmy nominee, gobble meds on-screen. Going catapult is everywhere in cinema; it’s a gesture that befits the biggest stars. Angelina Jolie shoots her pills in Girl, Interrupted. So does Brittany Murphy. Jake Gyllenhaal catapults a pill in Donnie Darko. Albert Brooks in Modern Romance. In Goodfellas, Ray Liotta does it twice.

    I love the movies! But it’s time we had a public-health announcement: The catapult is not, in fact, how a person should be taking pills. The act of swallowing a medication is so pervasive—and so intimate—that one easily forgets it is a skill that must be learned. In the U.S., roughly three-fifths of all adults are on prescription drugs; perhaps one-sixth will falter when they try to gulp it down. Twenty years ago, Bonnie Kaplan, a research psychologist at the University of Calgary, devised a new technique for helping people overcome this problem. Her method, as laid out in a mesmerizing video, suggests that you turn your head to make a pill go in. (No one has ever done this in a movie and no one ever will.) The turning motion helps open your upper esophageal sphincter, Kaplan says, though she does admit that more familiar postures have their own advantages. Some people like to raise their chins: “They say it is easier for the pill to slide down their throat, as if their tongue is a ski jump and it is a straight shot down the hill.” Others tip their heads the other way, chin-to-chest, “because they say it is more relaxing in the neck.”

    But on the all-important matter of the hand, Kaplan’s messaging is very clear: You pick up the pill between your fingers; then you place it on your tongue. Which is to say, you do the tweezers. Other training methods are consistent with this rule. One approach for teaching children, published in 1984, describes “correctly placing” a pill on the back of the tongue—which clearly cannot be accomplished via a whole-hand toss; another, from 2006, says to “place the pill on your tongue towards the back of your mouth.”

    That’s how people ought to take their pills. But how do people really do it, in real life? At the start of her research, Kaplan told me, she wasn’t telling takers what to do; she spent time observing how they liked to swallow medications on their own. The cinematic catapult was simply nonexistent in the wild, she said. “I never saw anyone just throw it back.” Never? Anyone? I asked Kaplan to describe the way she swallows pills herself, and she paused before she answered, as if she’d never really thought this through. “My husband and I both turn our heads to the right,” she said at last. First she’ll place the pill on the back of her tongue, and then she’ll twist and swallow. “But you know what?” she said. “I do often clap my hand to my mouth with my last pill or two.”

    “It’s very individual,” Cindy Corbett, a nursing-science professor at the University of South Carolina, told me. She’s on a team that uses smartwatch accelerometers to track patients’ adherence to their medication regimen. Their system knows when someone moves a hand up to their face, she told me, but it won’t distinguish how a pill is being held, or whether it is placed or flung into the mouth. (Indeed, the study’s four-step “protocol-guided medication-taking activity” includes this ambivalent instruction: “Place/toss pill to mouth.”) When I asked Corbett what she’s seen herself in this regard, as a clinician, she drew a blank. “I’ve never thought about it that much.”

    Maybe this is it: If you even have to think about the way you swallow pills, then you’re almost certainly someone who has trouble taking pills; and if you’re someone who has trouble taking pills, then you really should be taking pills in tweezer mode. In the off-screen world, to catapult is a privilege reserved for those with floppy throats. It’s the difference between the gags and the gag-nots. That inequality is only reinforced by the movieland fantasy of universal tossing, which sets up (as only Hollywood knows how) an impossible and unhealthy standard for behavior. Look, Elvis gobbles benzos; why can’t I? “People’s preconceived notions of how they’re supposed to swallow pills does lead to mental barriers,” says Marissa Harkness, a co-creator of the Pill Skills training kit, a case of sugar-based placebos made in different shapes and sizes.

    When actors catapult on camera, they get the benefit of looking more dramatic: bigger gestures, more to see. But something more important is going on in movie swallows, a deeper meaning to the movement—an implied relationship of power. Taking pills by catapult suggests that you’re a victim, that your body and your mind are under siege. A hand that’s driven by compulsion fires drugs into the face. A teenage boy is pelted by his Prozac. But some stories need to have this flipped, so the pill can be a tool instead of an affliction. In Taxi Driver, Robert De Niro tweezers bennies. He’s a man on a mission. And the most famous pill-taking scene in movie history, from The Matrix, has Keanu Reeves pinch a pill between his thumb and index fingers in dramatic close-up, and deposit it into his mouth. Then he drinks a glass of water. (Is that a movie first?) A character who tweezers is going on a journey, the film director John Magary told me. He’s curious. He’s in control. (From Magary’s films to date: two catapults, zero tweezers.)

    Perhaps the movies have this figured out. There are two ways of taking pills—two and only two. The tweezers or the catapult; self-knowledge or oblivion. In the end, the choice is yours.

    Daniel Engber

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  • Matthew Perry Vows To Take ‘Stupid’ Keanu Reeves Diss Out Of His Memoir

    Matthew Perry Vows To Take ‘Stupid’ Keanu Reeves Diss Out Of His Memoir

    Matthew Perry says the comments about Keanu Reeves will be removed from future editions of his book, “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing.”

    The “Friends” actor admitted he’d done a “stupid thing” by slighting “The Matrix” star in his memoir, which was published in November 2022.

    During an appearance at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books on Saturday, Variety reported Perry telling audiences, “I said a stupid thing. It was a mean thing to do.”

    Matthew Perry speaks during the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books on Saturday.

    Dania Maxwell via Getty Images

    Offering some explanation, he added, “I pulled his name because I live on the same street. Any future versions of the book will not have his name in it.”

    In the memoir, which chronicles Perry’s struggles with stardom and substance abuse, the actor clumsily muses about stars who left the world too soon.

    “Why is it that the original thinkers like River Phoenix and Heath Ledger die, but Keanu Reeves still walks among us?” it reads.

    Perry returns to the thought again while writing about Chris Farley’s 1997 death in the book.

    Keanu Reeves arrives at the Oscars on Feb. 9, 2020, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.
    Keanu Reeves arrives at the Oscars on Feb. 9, 2020, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    Jordan Strauss via Associated Press

    After publication, the sitcom star made a quick about face, telling the media, “I’m actually a big fan of Keanu. I just chose a random name, my mistake. I apologize. I should have used my own name instead.”

    At the event, Perry revealed he has only “publicly” said sorry to the “John Wick” actor.

    “If I run into the guy, I’ll apologize. It was just stupid,” he reasoned.

    The “17 Again” actor said writing his story was a cathartic process.

    “It came pouring out of me, the painful stuff, hospitals, rehabs, all of this stuff, it poured out of me,” he said. “It went really quickly.”

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  • Matthew Perry Promises To Delete Keanu Reeves Insults From Future Editions Of Memoir: ‘I Said A Stupid Thing’

    Matthew Perry Promises To Delete Keanu Reeves Insults From Future Editions Of Memoir: ‘I Said A Stupid Thing’

    By Brent Furdyk.

    Matthew Perry is continuing to express regrets for insulting Keanu Reeves in his recent memoir, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing.

    In his book, the “Friends” alum took a shot at Reeves while expressing his admiration for the late River Phoenix, who died of a drug overdose at the age of 23.

    “Why is it that the original thinkers like River Phoenix and Heath Ledger die,” wrote Perry, “but Keanu Reeves still walks among us?”


    READ MORE:
    Matthew Perry Apologizes For Taking A Swipe At Keanu Reeves In His New Memoir: ‘I’m Actually A Big Fan’

    While Perry has previously admitted he made a “mistake” by singling out Reeves, admitting he “chose a random name,” he’s now revealing he’s prepared to go even further to make things right by removing all references of the “John Wick” star in future editions of the memoir.

    “I said a stupid thing. It was a mean thing to do,” Perry said while appearing at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, reported Variety.


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves Was Surprised By Matthew Perry’s Insults: Report

    “I pulled his name because I live on the same street,” Perry continued. “I’ve apologized publicly to him. Any future versions of the book will not have his name in it.”

    According to Perry, he hasn’t yet offered a personal apology to Reeves, but will do so if the opportunity were to present itself.

    “If I run into the guy, I’ll apologize,” Perry added. “It was just stupid.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdoKRcsLlp8

     

    Brent Furdyk

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  • Dark City: The Matrix’s Underappreciated Precursor

    Dark City: The Matrix’s Underappreciated Precursor

    For some reason, Dark City remains little revered or appreciated not only as a standalone film, but as something of the unwitting source material for The Matrix. While the plotlines are theoretically “different,” ultimately the Wachowskis borrowed heavily (even if unintentionally) from the themes explored by Dark City director Alex Proyas (who co-wrote the script with Lem Dobbs and David S. Goyer). Granted, Dark City was released just one year prior to The Matrix, so it could have been sheer coincidence that each “team” happened to have a similar style and narrative thread.

    After all, it’s often believed that the collective consciousness is tapped into the same zeitgeist at the same moment. And in the late 90s, the internet was becoming an increasingly prevalent and insidious force to be reckoned with (as no one could better attest to than Pamela Anderson). Whether they were fully aware of it or not, that “new reality” seemed to be weighing on both Proyas and the Wachowskis in various ways (not to mention Andrew Niccol, whose The Truman Show [released in 1998 as well] also mirrors Dark City at a particular moment when the protagonist reaches the end of the “city’s” limits). This being showcased through their brooding “anti-heroes,” John Murdoch (Rufus Sewell) and Thomas “Neo” Anderson (Keanu Reeves) as they navigate through a world that, quelle surprise, proves to be a simulation.

    In Dark City’s case, the simu is created by a group of Hellraiser-looking aliens who want to understand if memories are what make a human, well, human—or if they’re fundamentally who they are no matter what memories they have. This experiment is conducted by swapping out each human’s “memory set” every night at the stroke of midnight via inducing a mass slumber (in such a world, Taylor Swift might never have created her concept album, Midnights). This means that no matter where a person is, or what they’re doing, they’ll fall asleep so that “the Strangers” (as the extraterrestrials are called) and their go-to human henchman, Dr. Daniel Schreber (Kiefer Sutherland, getting as close to playing Igor in Young Frankenstein as he ever will), can “imprint” them with a new memory a.k.a. a new identity. For who are we if not the sum total of our memories?

    Unfortunately for Schreber, he’s dealing with an anomaly of a human in John, who wakes up in the middle of being imprinted with the identity of a murderer, prompting Schreber to flee. Coming to fully in a bathtub, John has no clear memory at all thanks to the interruption of the procedure. In this way, he becomes a “glitch in the matrix” that is the Strangers’ universe. Or rather, their patch of city in an infinite universe, as we eventually come to find out. With John in the Neo role in terms of taking on a sinister entity that wishes to keep humans in the dark (very literally in this scenario) about the true nature of their (non-)reality, both Dark City and The Matrix effectively remake the allegory of the cave from Plato’s Republic. Fittingly, that allegory is placed after the analogy of the sun. As for the cave allegory, it essentially speaks to what Plato’s mentor, Socrates, said at his trial: “The unexamined life is not worth living.” To remain in the dark might feel comfortable (in a comatose sort of fashion), but, in the end, it’s a vegetative state. This allegory was repurposed by the Wachowskis in the form of red pill/blue pill, with the former color leading one out of the darkness of their ignorance, no matter how painful it might be to deal with the knowledge they had previously been able to block out.

    John and Neo are both “inconsistencies” in the world that’s been built for their kind by the overlords that control it all. As such, they differ from their fellow humans in that the latter has no desire to leave their prison, just as the people chained in the cave, because they have no idea that another form of existence can be possible. This is the only “reality” they’ve ever known, so why would they try to alter it? Once the knowledge of the false reality is gleaned, however, one can start to make their way out of the cave and into “the light.” For John, that light is realizing that they’re in a manufactured city floating in the ether of space and, for Neo, that light is realizing his body has been marinating in a pod while being harvested for bioelectric power by artificially intelligent machines as his mind is placated with the false reality (“the matrix”) shared by all the other humans in their pods. Again, the cave dwellers in the allegory might argue that remaining in the dark is preferable. To this end, one might say The Matrix isn’t an unintentional rip-off of Dark City, so much as both movies are riffing on what Socrates and Plato were saying centuries ago.

    As for the similarities in theme and aesthetic, Peter Doyle, the visual effects colorist who worked on both films, laughingly recalled, “…I do remember sitting with [the Wachowskis] after they had just been shown Dark City. Because when they came through town with Barrie Osborne, the producer, the film hadn’t quite been released yet, so they’d set up to have a look. And then everyone just sitting around laughing, realizing that they’re just about to make Dark City again but called The Matrix instead.” So yes, they did see the movie while in the process of making The Matrix, but no one thought much of it. After all, a genre like that was so niche, the assumption was that nobody would complain about having another film of that “breed” added to the scant pile (“beefed up” in 1999 with David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ and Josef Rusnak’s The Thirteenth Floor, released in rapid succession right after The Matrix). As it turned out, no one in the U.S. would really complain, for Dark City was destined to become an obscure 90s gem compared to the blockbuster status The Matrix would achieve in said country, parodied and copied ad nauseam over the next decade.

    In addition to the aforementioned titans of Greek philosophy, the influence of The Twilight Zone on Dark City can’t be underestimated either, with said show often presenting narratives where the reality experienced by the lead character was a fabrication of some kind (including the very first episode, “Where Is Everybody?”). As for the fabrication that is Dark City, Schreber explains to John and Inspector Frank Bumstead (William Hurt), “When they first brought us here, they extracted what was in us, so they could store the information. Remix it like so much paint, and give us back new memories of their choosing… Your entire history is an illusion, a fabrication—as it is with all of us.”

    With this in mind, the set design was key to giving audiences that “remixed memory” feel the population is experiencing. Per production designer Patrick Tatopoulos, “The movie takes place everywhere, and it takes place nowhere. It’s a city built of pieces of cities. A corner from one place, another from someplace else. So, you don’t really know where you are. A piece will look like a street in London, but a portion of the architecture looks like New York, but the bottom of the architecture looks again like a European city. You’re there, but you don’t know where you are. It’s like every time you travel, you’ll be lost.” In other words, since everyone is everyone (with “memory sets” being swapped back and forth all the time), then everywhere might as well be everywhere, too. As it increasingly is in “real life” thanks to the unremitting effects of globalization. Perhaps that’s how the Wachowskis also chose to view the similarities between their film and Proyas’ precursor to it: “every late 90s sci-fi neo-noir is every late 90s sci-fi neo-noir.” And yes, as though to highlight that point, they used some of the same “everywhere is everywhere” sets from Dark City for The Matrix.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Keanu Reeves Raves About Canadian Group Alvvays: ‘I Love That Band’

    Keanu Reeves Raves About Canadian Group Alvvays: ‘I Love That Band’

    By Becca Longmire.

    Keanu Reeves loves Canadian indie pop band Alvvays.

    The Canadian actor recently spoke about listening to the band during a Reddit AMA, before he was asked about being a fan of them in a chat with NME.

    He told Alex Flood, “I don’t have their new record. I bought it digitally but I don’t have it on vinyl,” when asked what his favourite album was at the moment.

    “So it’s your favourite album to-be?” Flood questioned of Blue Rev.

    Reeves responded, “Yeah. Can I say that? Because I love that band.”

    “THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JIMMY FALLON” — Episode 1774 — Pictured: Musical guest Alvvays performs on Tuesday, January 10, 2023 — (Photo by: Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty Images)
    — Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty Images


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves Had His Dialogue In ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Cut Down To Just 380 Words

    Flood then asked, “What is it about them that you love?” to which the “Matrix” star replied, “I like me a good pop song, and I like me a kind of inventiveness in it.

    “I think the lead singer [Molly Rankin], she’s great, and the textures of it. I mean, I love bass guitar and drums and I like their energy.”


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves Reveals He ‘Cut A Gentleman’s Head Open’ During ‘John Wick 4’ Stunt

    Reeves has a lot of love for Canada, with him recently having the most Canadian and humble response to being “royalty” in his home country as he chatted to ET Canada’s Keshia Chanté.

    “First of all, you are Canadian royalty,” she insisted, as Reeves proclaimed, “No, I’m not… No!”

    The actor, who has been promoting his latest flick “John Wick: Chapter 4”, sweetly added, “That’s kind.”

    At the end of the interview, Chanté couldn’t resist calling him royalty one last time while thanking him for the chat.

    He smiled and said, “I’m not a Canadian royal!”

    See more in the clip below.

    Becca Longmire

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  • Box Office: John Wick 4 emerges number 1; Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar and Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway remain steady

    Box Office: John Wick 4 emerges number 1; Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar and Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway remain steady

    The new week at the box office began with a new film emerging as the most preferred film choice for Indian moviegoers. Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar held the top spot for 2 consecutive weeks and now it is the second most preferred film on its third Friday. John Wick 4 is the box office leader this Friday and it seems so for the rest of the week too, before the release of Bholaa and Dasara. Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway took the third spot, comprehensively netting over this week’s new release Bheed. Most of the other releases of last week have been discontinued at most centres due to a poor show.

     

    John Wick 4 Emerges As The Most Preferred Movie Option For Indian Moviegoers

    John Wick 4 had a very good Friday of Rs 6 crore nett. The Thursday night previews that netted around Rs 2.5 crores already gave an indication of a box office breakout and it has successfully managed it now with a first day collection of Rs 8.50 crores including premieres. It will not just emerge as the highest grossing John Wick film in India tomorrow but will also trump the net box office total of the first three John Wick films in the country. John Wick has never been a big franchise in India from a box office perspective but with John Wick 4 running so comprehensively in Indian theatres, the future of the franchise looks very bright. It is the box office leader this Friday in India and it will remain so till the release of Bholaa and Dasara next weekend.

    The Day Wise Box Office Collections Of John Wick 4 Are As Follows:

    Premieres – Rs 2.50 cr

    Day 1 – Rs 6 cr

    Total – Rs 8.50 crores

     

    Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar Remains Steady On Third Friday

    Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar recorded collections similar to Thursday and this is what the film really required. It collected Rs 1.80 crore nett on its 17th day and this takes the total collections of the film to over Rs 108 crores. The steady collections on Friday ensure a good growth in the numbers this weekend, pushing the film closer to the Rs 125 crore nett India figure. The box office performance of the film can be termed as reasonably good. It is currently the second highest grossing Indian film this year.

    The Day Wise Box Office Collections Of Tu Jhoothi Main Makkaar Are As Follows:

    Extended 2 Weeks – Rs 106.50 cr

    3rd Friday – Rs 1.80 cr

    Total – Rs 108.30 crores

     

    Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway Sees Growth In Collections On Second Friday

    Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway saw a 10 percent growth on Friday vis-à-vis Thursday. The film collected around Rs. 90 lakhs on day 8 and it ensures that the film will have a nice second weekend, just around 40 percent lower than the first weekend. The steady nature of the film’s collections guarantee that the film will cross Rs 20 crores nett in its full run. Coupled with a solid international performance, the makers will get a net theatrical share of around or over Rs 15 crores. For a film that has recovered its costs from non-theatricals alone, it’s a very pleasant result. From a box office perspective, the numbers are still just about fair, but you take that when similar looking films don’t even survive through the first weekend.

    The Day Wise Box Office Collections Of Mrs Chatterjee Vs Norway Are As Follows:

    Week 1 – Rs 10.15 cr

    2nd Friday – Rs 90 lakh

    Total – Rs 11.05 crores

     

    Bheed had an unmentionably low opening day number.

    You can watch all these films at a theatre near you.

    ALSO READ: John Wick 4 Thursday Previews Box Office: Keanu Reeves’ actioner takes a solid Rs 2.50 crores opening in India

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  • Video: ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Mekado Murphy

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  • Actor and martial arts star Scott Adkins on his role in

    Actor and martial arts star Scott Adkins on his role in

    Actor and martial arts star Scott Adkins on his role in “John Wick” film franchise – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Martial artist and actor Scott Adkins joins “CBS Mornings” to discuss his role in the new film “John Wick: Chapter 4.” Adkins plays Killa. He discusses wearing a fat suit for the role, a special gift he received from Keanu Reeves, and his extensive martial arts background.

    Be the first to know

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  • Keanu Reeves And The Cast Of ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Step Out For The New York Premiere 

    Keanu Reeves And The Cast Of ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Step Out For The New York Premiere 

    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Keanu Reeves is gearing up for the release of “John Wick: Chapter 4”.

    The Canadian star, who’s starred as the titular John Wick in all four instalments, stepped out in New York City on Wednesday night for the premiere of the upcoming film.

    Reeves arrived to AMC Lincoln Square IMAX, where the special screening hosted by Lionsgate took place, wearing a black suit, white shirt, striped tie and brown shoes.


    READ MORE:
    Keanu Reeves Has The Perfect Response To Impromptu Fan Proposal

    Keanu Reeves attends the New York Premiere of “John Wick: Chapter 4” – 3/15/23 .
    — PHOTO: Marion Curtis /StarPix

    The 58-year-old was joined by co-stars Ian McShane, Rina Sawayama, Bridget Moynahan, Shamier Anderson and Marko Zaror, plus director Chad Stahelski, producers Basil Iwanyk and Erica Lee and additional guests, including Kelly Rizzo.

    Chad Stahelski, Marko Zaror, Keanu Reeves, Rina Sawayama, Shamier Anderson and Ian Mcshane at the New York Premiere of “John Wick: Chapter 4” – 3/15/23 .
    Chad Stahelski, Marko Zaror, Keanu Reeves, Rina Sawayama, Shamier Anderson and Ian Mcshane at the New York Premiere of “John Wick: Chapter 4” – 3/15/23 .
    — PHOTO: Marion Curtis /StarPix


    READ MORE:
    ‘No New Sequel For ‘John Wick’ In Our Minds, Keanu Reeve And I Are Done For The Moment,’ Says The Director

    In the latest “John Wick” instalment, Reeves’ iconic character “uncovers a path to defeating The High Table. But before he can earn his freedom, Wick must face off against a new enemy with powerful alliances across the globe and forces that turn old friends into foes,” as per the official synopsis.

    “John Wick: Chapter 4” hits theatres on March 24.

    Melissa Romualdi

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