As a public figure, almost every word and deed is under the eyes of the public, and it may be really difficult to find an artist who has no negative reviews at all, but Keanu Reeves may be the closest one. Not only in the eyes of fans, but also from the crew and friends around the good reviews. Like the heartwarming heart of Lance Reddick, the rival actor of "John Wick 3" that year; last year's movie, giving the engraved Rolex to the dangerous stuntman; and the pair of ceremonial hands that always "borrowed" the photo with fans. The reason why Keanu Reeves can become a warm male representative is not only because of all these years, but because he has always been so affectionate.
More than two decades after Keanu Reeves, another good deed that the public has only discovered is that when "The Matrix" was released in 1999, Keanu Reeves gave him a 70% share of the film, equivalent to $31.5 million, all of which was donated to fund leukemia research. The impetus behind this came from Keanu Reeves' sister Kim, who had suffered from blood cancers, and kept a low profile like him, and in the following years he founded a private foundation, cooperated with several children's hospitals, and continued to work on cancer-related research, but never revealed the name of the foundation:
"I don't like my name to be associated with the foundation, just let the foundation do what it has to do."
For the sake of goodness is not to be known, perhaps the most suitable metaphor for Keanu Reeves.