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Hardball is a 2001 American sports comedy-drama film co-produced and directed by Brian Robbins and starring Keanu Reeves in the main role, Diane Lane and D. B. Sweeney. The screenplay by John Gatins is based on the book Hardball: A Season in the Projects by Daniel Coyle. The original music score is composed by Mark Isham.
Keanu Reeves as Reef Hawk, a damaged Hollywood star who must look into his past to confront demons and make amends after he is extorted with a mysterious video clip. [2] Jonah Hill as Ira Slitz, Hawk's crisis lawyer who informs him of the extortion and works to solve it. [2] Cameron Diaz [3] Matt Bomer [3] Susan Lucci [4] David Spade [4]
An unnamed (fictional) professional football league is hit with a players' strike with four games left in the season. Washington Sentinels [3] [4] owner Edward O'Neil calls a former coach of his, Jimmy McGinty, telling him that the league's going to finish the regular season with replacement players, and asks McGinty to return to coach the Sentinels the rest of the season, adding that winning ...
4) Speed. Keep it above 50, baby. Reeves plays a rookie cop who ends up on the wrong bus at the wrong time, tasked with making sure it doesn’t blow up via the bomb rigged to it.
Keanu Reeves has crafted a career of fascinating personalities. In honor of "Sonic the Hedgehog 3," we're ranking the actor's 10 best movie roles. Keanu Reeves' 10 essential movie roles (from John ...
Keanu Reeves is back on set -- and rocking a new look!The actor was seen shooting his latest film, Outcome, with director Jonah Hill, and he's said goodbye to his signature long tresses. The 59 ...
Reeves in 2019. Keanu Reeves is a Canadian actor who has appeared in films, television series and video games. He made his film debut in the short One Step Away in 1985. [1] The following year, Reeves appeared in the crime film River's Edge, and the television films Babes in Toyland, Act of Vengeance, and Brotherhood of Justice.
Reeves plays Conor O'Neill, a troubled young man who agrees to coach a Little League team from the Cabrini Green housing project in Chicago as a condition of obtaining a loan. Film critic Roger Ebert noted the film's desire to tackle difficult subjects and baseball coaching, but felt it lacked depth, and Reeves's performance was "glum and distant".