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KEANU Movie Review

KEANU

KEANU (R)

Released by Warner Brothers
Reviewed by Adam Mast


How much entertainment value you get out of the new comedy KEANU will largely be dependent on how you feel about its stars, Key and Peele. If you dig this hilarious, energetic and undeniably likable duo than chances are, this crazy, loose, and irreverent fusion of JOHN WICK and NEW JACK CITY–with a cute kitty  thrown in for good measure–should be right up your alley.

Unlucky in love Rell Williams  (Jordan Peele) finds solace in the form of an adorable kitten he finds on his doorstep. Unbeknownst to him, this sweet little feline–which he affectionately names Keanu–has ties with a negative inner city element. No matter though because Keanu gives Rell an entirely new outlook on life.

Shit gets real when Rell  returns home from an evening on the town with bestie, Clarence Goobril (Keegan- Michael Key), and discovers that Keanu has been kidnapped. Rell  and Clarence  immediately spring into action in an effort to find the little guy and return him  home to safety. Their inner city adventure brings them face to face with a nutty pot dealer, a gang of lovable drug-slinging hoods, and a mythical pair of cold blooded killers (played by two actors you may or may not recognize.)

If you hadn’t guessed already, KEANU is a Key and Peele vehicle in every sense of the term. This is a loosey goosy movie to say the least and it doesn’t so much as coast along by way of a solid plot structure (there really isn’t much of a script to speak of) as it does on  sheer star appeal and the genuine rapport generated between its immensely likable leads. Seriously, even when Rell and Clarence are throwing each other under the bus, you’ll never doubt their love for one another.

KEANU
Courtesy of Warner Bros

As a happily married George Michael-loving goofball,  Clarence is a supremely nice–if a tad clueless–guy but when it comes to helping his best friend, he has no problem going full on gangster. Peele is a bundle of infectious energy here and he’s a joy to watch. As love torn lost soul Rell, Peele is equally hilarious and whereas his Keanu is concerned, he gives entirely new meaning to the word, “unhinged.”

The idea that these two nerds could successfully infiltrate the seedy, criminal plagued underground of the city is a patently ludicrous one but Key and Peele are so engaging, so energetic, and so appropriately goofy that the last thing a viewer will want to do as they watch the absurdity of it all, is question the lack of realism at the heart of this  outlandish inner city adventure.

This is a comedy, but it’s punctuated by spontaneous bursts of violence and scenes of drug use that would be perfectly at home in a movie like PINEAPPLE EXPRESS.  There are certainly scenes that lull and a handful of jokes that fall flat and furthermore, a weird and seemingly unnecessary reveal during the climax sort of cheapens a surprisingly ballsy moment that happens earlier in the film. Still, there are plenty of jokes that stick (a 2 for 1 lap dance and an all you can eat buffet at the same classy joint? Sign me up!)

More importantly though, a lively Key and Peele are endearing and have chemistry to spare. They pepper KEANU with a ton of film references, and their love for the likes of all things Keanu Reeves proves to be pretty darn irresistible. This creative duo have the same sort of love for geek culture that take the wonderful collaborations between Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg, and Nick Frost (SHAUN OF THE DEAD, HOT FUZZ,  THE WORLD’S END) to such colorful heights.  KEANU isn’t as clever or as cohesive as those particular films, but it bristles with the same sort of affection.  In short, Key and Peele are a ton of fun to watch and whatever shortcomings this film might have, they manage to rise above most of them. Translation: Bromance conquers all! Of course, the inclusion of an adorable little fur ball goes a long way to help make the movie more appealing, too.

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