Forget the stoic hitman dodging bullets in neon-lit shadows or the brooding lover unraveling in rainy noir tales—Keanu Reeves, the eternal everyman of Hollywood, is poised to shatter expectations once more. At 61, the actor synonymous with quiet intensity and motorcycle-rumbling charisma has plunged into a rigorous training regimen that’s equal parts physical grind and existential deep dive. This isn’t prep for another high-octane sequel; it’s for a role that demands he embody the divine in all its bungled glory: Gabriel, a bumbling angel in Aziz Ansari’s directorial debut, Good Fortune. Set for wide release on October 17, 2025, via Lionsgate, the film marks a whimsical pivot for Reeves, blending fantasy, comedy, and sharp social commentary in a way that could redefine his legacy beyond the action fray.

Reeves’ journey to this heavenly misadventure began amid the whirlwind of his post-John Wick: Chapter 4 slate. Fresh off the 2023 blockbuster that grossed over $440 million worldwide, he faced a scheduling crunch that tested his legendary work ethic. Filming kicked off in early 2024, but just two weeks in, Reeves suffered a knee injury during a stunt-heavy sequence—ironic, perhaps, for a man about to play a celestial being grounded by his own good intentions. Undeterred, he powered through reshoots later that year, emerging with a performance that’s already buzzing in festival circuits. Premiering to acclaim at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2025, Good Fortune has earned a solid 77% on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics praising Reeves’ “heavenly comedic timing” as the film’s secret sauce.

In the story, Gabriel is no avenging seraph; he’s a well-meaning but utterly inept guardian angel stripped of his wings after a botched intervention. Tasked with steering a struggling gig worker (Seth Rogen) toward enlightenment by swapping his life with a smug venture capitalist (Keke Palmer), Gabriel’s meddling spirals into chaotic body-swaps and moral reckonings.

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It’s a modern riff on A Christmas Carol meets Trading Places, laced with Ansari’s signature awkward humor and timely jabs at inequality. Reeves, drawing from his own Zen-like philosophy—honed through decades of loss and reinvention—infuses Gabriel with a poignant vulnerability. “Keanu brings this quiet authenticity to the absurdity,” Ansari shared in a CinemaCon panel earlier this year, noting how Reeves improvised angelic pratfalls that had the room in stitches.

The training? A far cry from John Wick‘s gun-fu marathons at Taran Tactical. For Good Fortune, it was months of cardio circuits, flexibility drills, and even Butoh-inspired movement sessions to capture ethereal grace undercut by human clumsiness. Reeves, ever the method actor, dove into theological texts and clowning workshops, channeling influences from Samuel Beckett—fitting, given his concurrent Broadway run in Waiting for Godot opposite Alex Winter, where years of physical theater prep left him “bruised but enlightened,” as he quipped in a rare interview. This dual immersion underscores Reeves’ versatility: one moment dodging existential despair on stage, the next fumbling halos on screen.

As 2025 unfolds, Reeves’ calendar overflows—Ballerina drops June 6, expanding the Wick universe with Ana de Armas’ lethal ballerina, while whispers of John Wick 5 and a mysterious Sandra Bullock reunion swirl. Yet Good Fortune stands out, proving the Sad Man of Cinema can laugh at the cosmos too. In an industry craving reinvention, Reeves isn’t just training bodies; he’s reshaping souls. Will Gabriel’s flubs redeem us all? One awkward flap at a time, it seems he just might.