From lamebrained teenage time traveler to metaphysical sci-fi Superman,
Keanu Reeves has portrayed just about every character type imaginable in his
sometimes wildly fluctuating career. Frequently lambasted by critics and often
polarizing audiences suspicious of his talent's true extent, Reeves has
nevertheless managed to maintain his lucrative career by balancing his lesser
efforts with intermittent direct hits at the box office.
Born Keanu Charles Reeves in Beirut, Lebanon, in September of 1964 and named
for the Hawaiian word that means "cool breeze over the mountains," the future
actor was a world traveler by the age of two, thanks to his father's career as a
geologist. His mother, Patricia Taylor, worked as a showgirl and later a costume
designer of film and stage, and after his parents divorced, Reeves followed his
mother and sister to live in New York; the trio would later relocate to Toronto
-- where Reeves' interest in ice hockey and acting took a substantial precedence
over academics. His formidable presence in front of the goal eventually earned
Reeves the nickname "The Wall," and it wasn't long before all interest in school
waned and the talented goalie decided to pursue acting.
Later working as a manager in a Toronto pasta shop, Reeves soon began turning
up in small roles on various Canadian television programs, making his feature
debut in the 1985 Canadian film One Step Away before American audiences got
their first good look at him in the 1986 Rob Lowe drama Youngblood. Subsequently
going back to television and garnering favorable notice for his role in 1986's
Young Again, it was the release of Tim Hunter's The River's Edge later that year
that would provide Reeves with his breakthrough role. A harrowing tale of teen
apathy in small town America, The River's Edge provided Reeves with a perfect
opportunity to display his dramatic range, and the film would eventually become
a minor classic in teen angst cinema.
Appearing in a series of sometimes quirky but ultimately forgettable efforts
in the following few years, 1988 found Reeves drawing favorable nods for his
role in director Stephen Frears' Dangerous Liaisons. It was the following year's
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, however, that would transform the actor
into something of an '80s icon. Reeves' performance of a moronic, air guitar
wielding wannabe rocker traveling through time in order to complete his history
report and graduate from high school proved so endearingly silly that it spawned
both a sequel (1991's Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey) and a Saturday morning
cartoon. In an odd twist of fate, Reeves and co-star Alex Winter had initially
auditioned for the opposite roles from those in which they were ultimately cast.
Though he would later offer variations of the character type in such efforts as
Parenthood (1989) and I Love You to Death (1990), it wasn't long before Reeves
was looking to break away from the trend and take his career to the next level.
After drawing favorable reviews for his turn as a rich kid turned street
hustler opposite River Phoenix in Gus Van Sant's 1991 drama My Own Private
Idaho, Reeves battled the undead in Francis Ford Coppola's lavish production of
Dracula (1992). Showing his loyalty toward fellow Bill and Ted cohort Winter
with a hilarious extended cameo in Freaked the following year, Reeves once again
teamed with Van Sant for the critically eviscerated Even Cowgirls Get the Blues
before surprising audiences with an unexpectedly complex performance as
Siddhartha in Bernardo Bertolucci's Little Buddha (1993).
Just as audiences were beginning to ask themselves if they may have
underestimated Reeves talent as an actor, the mid-'90s found his career taking
an unexpected turn toward action films with the release of Jan de Bont's 1994
mega-hit Speed (Reeves would ultimately decline to appear in the film's
disastrous sequel). Balancing out such big-budgeted adrenaline rushes as Johnny
Mnemonic (1995) and Chain Reaction (1996) with romantic efforts as A Walk in the
Clouds (1995) and Feeling Minnesota (1996), Reeves spooked audiences as a moral
attorney suffering from a major case of soul corrosion in the 1997 horror
thriller The Devil's Advocate. The late '90s also found Reeves suffering a
devastating personal loss when his expected baby girl with longtime girlfriend
Jennifer Syme was stillborn, marking the beginning of the end for the couple's
relationship. Tragedy stacked upon tragedy when Syme died two short years later
in a tragic freeway accident. His career in fluctuation due to the lukewarm
response to the majority of his mid-'90s efforts, it was the following year that
would find Reeves entering into one of the most successful stages of his career
thus far.
As Neo, the computer hacker who discovers that he may be humankind's last
hope in the forthcoming war against an oppressive mainframe of computers,
Reeves' popularity once again reached feverish heights thanks to The Wachowski
Brothers' wildly imaginative and strikingly visual sci-fi breakthrough, The
Matrix. Followed by such moderately successful films as The Replacements (for
which he deferred his salary so that Gene Hackman could also appear) and The
Watcher (both 2000), Reeves took an unexpectedly convincing turn as an abusive
husband in Sam Raimi's The Gift before returning to familiar territory with
Sweet November and Hardball (both 2001). With the cultural phenomenon of The
Matrix only growing as a comprehensive DVD release offered obsessive fans a
closer look into the mythology of the film, it wasn't long before The Wachowski
Brothers announced that the film had originally been conceived as the beginning
of a trilogy and that two sequels were in the works. Filmed back to back, and
with both scheduled to hit screens in 2003, excitement over The Matrix Reloaded
and The Matrix Revolutions began to reach feverish heights in the months before
release, virtually ensuring that the films would become two of the year's
biggest box-office draws.
Famously playing bass for the band Dogstar in his cinematic down time,
Reeves' other personal interests include motorcycles, horseback riding, and
surfing. When he's not filming, Reeves still maintains residence in Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide