Regina Leader-Post

REEVES HAS KEANU-SSANCE

But the veteran actor was never really far from the action, Travis M. Andrews writes.

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Ahh, the comeback.

Hollywood blogs and gossip rags are filled with stories of actors making these supposed things. Everyone from Matthew Mcconaughe­y to Tom Cruise to Robert Downey Jr. have had their late-stage careers described by some modified version of the word “renaissanc­e.” But there’s a slight difference with Canadian actor Keanu Reeves.

Mcconaughe­y graduated from breezy rom-coms to gritty character acting in projects such as Mud, Killer Joe and True Detective. Cruise overcame his unflatteri­ng public persona as an ardent Scientolog­ist to earn the reputation of the hardest-working man in Hollywood, pushing himself to the limit to be a top action star (forgoing the tough Oscar-bait films of his youth). Downey walked the path of sobriety and kick-started the biggest film franchise in Hollywood history: the Marvel Cinematic Universe and all the superhero movies it entailed.

Reeves, on the other hand, just continued doing the things in which he always excelled. There was no big controvers­y. No tarring and feathering by an outraged internet mob. No public descent into addiction. Just a string of forgettabl­e movies that slowly faded his star. Until now.

The reason? John Wick. The 54-year-old’s latest film, John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum, debuted at No. 1 a couple weeks ago when it opened. The third instalment in the kung fu-inspired action series, in which he plays the titular character, began in 2014 and made the once-beloved actor relevant — and lucrative — again (Parabellum pulled in $ 57 million in its first few days).

Lebanon-born Reeves nabbed his breakout role in 1986’s disturbing River’s Edge, which is about a group of teenagers dealing with the aftermath of their friend killing his girlfriend. His performanc­e led to a series of hits, cracking open the gates of stardom. Soon, Reeves was starring in many of the most popular films of the late 1980s and early 1990s, spanning genres from comedy (Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure and Parenthood) to drama (My Own Private Idaho and Dangerous Liaisons) to action (Point Break).

By the time he became the face of Speed with Sandra Bullock in 1994, Reeves was a bona fide star and an unstoppabl­e force in Hollywood. But his stardom achieved supernova in 1999 with the beginning of The Matrix trilogy.

The idea of him ever needing a Keanu-ssance might have seemed insane.

However, things started to slowly change. He played in a series of forgettabl­e indie movies (Thumbsucke­r and Ellie Parker), some well-received ones (A Scanner Darkly), some silly rom-coms (the much-maligned The Lake House) and a few big swings that mostly missed (Constantin­e).

Then came the internet.

Stills of Reeves’ films — and even candid shots of him — were turned into memes. While the sudden “memeficati­on” of everything, particular­ly all things Hollywood, proved to be a particular boon to some actors (they helped distil Jeff Goldblum’s quirkiness in a way that delighted fans, for example), memes about Reeves often positioned him at least partially as the butt of the joke. His facial expression­s, which generally run the gamut between bewildered and stoic, were played for laughs.

There was a still of a shocked Reeves from Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure that became known as Conspiracy Keanu. It was usually accompanie­d by text exploring fake conspiraci­es so ridiculous that they’re funny. One reads, “What if the CIA invented dinosaurs to discourage time travel?”

Another, called Sad Keanu, came from a paparazzi shot of a sorrowful-looking Reeves sitting on a bench, eating a sandwich. People often Photoshopp­ed him out of the shot and into other absurd situations, such as sitting on the edge of a cliff or on the Mcdonald’s golden arches.

While these images proliferat­ed, Reeves starred in another large-budget film, 2013’s 47 Ronin, but it was a box office bomb. Mostly, though, he focused on personal projects, such as his directoria­l debut, the Chinese-american martial arts film Man of Tai Chi. He also released the “grown-up picture book”

Ode to Happiness, produced the documentar­y Side by Side and continued his various philanthro­pic efforts.

The result was that the largely out-of-sight actor was supplanted by the meme in the cultural consciousn­ess.

The memes didn’t really bother Reeves personally, though they might have changed how a younger generation viewed him. As Alex Pappademas wrote in GQ recently: “He regards his own meme-ification from a disinteres­ted distance. Actually participat­ing further in the process is not for him, but he’s also not judging anybody who does play along. ‘People doing dances, people doing mannequin stuff or whatever — those people, they look like they’re having fun and doing some cool (stuff ),’ he says politely. To actively seek further meme-ification — hey, it’s Sadder Keanu — wouldn’t feel like a creative act, he doesn’t think.”

But the John Wick series transforme­d him into an action star once again. The franchise is predicated on a simple but absurd story. It follows Wick, the world’s best assassin in a universe full of them; they operate out of a global chain of hotels called The Continenta­l. The first film opens with Wick in retirement, having finally got out to marry a woman with whom he fell in love.

But now he’s a widower, and he receives one last parting gift: a puppy. Not long after receiving the furball, though, a Russian mobster kills the dog in a petty act of insolence, forcing the principled Wick out of retirement. After that — and for three movies now — he kills everyone who tries to do him in, with anything at his disposal. The result is pure, beautiful, balletic action.

Now Reeves’ late-night press tour appearance­s, rather than memes of him sadly eating a sandwich, are going viral. A clip of Reeves stunning Stephen Colbert and his audience on The Late Show earlier this month became social media’s topic of the week.

After a generally humorous conversati­on about the actor’s new action thriller, Colbert asked his long-haired guest, “What do you think happens when we die, Keanu Reeves?” The question, clearly meant to be a setup for a clever quip, saw Reeves lean back, take a deep breath and think as a sombre look spread across his face.

“I know that the ones who love us will miss us,” he finally responded, silencing the host, who smiled in appreciati­on.

Reeves’ thoughtful answer was clipped and passed around the internet for days after as fans watched the sweet moment in preparatio­n for his ultraviole­nt movie. And if we had to bet, there are likely many more sweet moments to come, as we’re not done with that bloody world just yet. The third John Wick film sets up a clear cliffhange­r that begs for a fourth, and its expanded universe will spread to television with the upcoming Starz series The Continenta­l.

All of which is to say: Keanu Reeves is back, baby. But then again, he never really went anywhere.

 ?? ENTERTAINM­ENT ONE ?? The John Wick franchise put Canadian actor Keanu Reeves back in Hollywood’s spotlight. And he’s been killing it at the box office ever since.
ENTERTAINM­ENT ONE The John Wick franchise put Canadian actor Keanu Reeves back in Hollywood’s spotlight. And he’s been killing it at the box office ever since.

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