Keanu Reeves: on a new path to settling down

CAP D'ANTIBES, France — Hearing Keanu Reeves imitate a Jewish grandmother might surprise you. Hearing him talk about staying in one place is downright shocking.

"Oy, you get older, you want to settle down," the famously itinerant actor says, sounding more like a bad Catskills comic.

Reeves, 41, is in a place that many of us would like to be: stinking rich — thanks to his 15 percent take of "Matrix" sequel ticket sales.

He has not worked in a year, content to watch the fruits of his labor hit the screen this summer: the time-travel romantic drama "The Lake House" on June 16 and the sci-fi adaptation of "A Scanner Darkly" on July 7.

In the meantime, he spends his days weaving his motorcycle through the canyons near his Los Angeles home and reading the likes of Thomas Pynchon. He quit his band, Dogstar, because the other members wanted to tour. He has no work planned. He doesn't need a job. The "Matrix" trilogy netted him more than $100 million.

Maybe it's the salt air wafting off the French Riviera at the Hotel Du Cap, one of the most elegant settings in the world. Or perhaps it's his pride at attending the recent Cannes Film Festival for the third time. "It's a big deal," he says.

He seems to have transcended his cosmic surfer-boy image to an even more positive plane. It is a stage that perhaps his alter-ego Ted from "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure" might never have comprehended.

He is no longer wed to a film franchise, making him free to explore and be adored and dissed all over again for what some see as stiff acting chops.

"Artistically I hope to be able to make films that entertain but also that have redemptive qualities to them," he said. "I'm anxious to see what happens next."

Which brings us to his latest. "The Lake House" reunites him with "Speed" co-star Sandra Bullock as loving pen pals who discover that they are living two years apart.

"It's a little older, a little more mature in terms of leading romances I've had in a film," he said. "It's a sweet romance. Love is good."

"A Scanner Darkly," which Reeves accompanied to Cannes, gave him another sci-fi platform.

Based on Philip K. Dick's novel, "A Scanner Darkly" chronicles the paranoid comings and goings of friends (Reeves, Robert Downey Jr., Winona Ryder, Woody Harrelson) in the drug-saturated future. Reeves plays a detective whose addiction splits his personality, compromising his ability to spy.

Reeves' approach to the role was deliberate.

"He's the kind of guy who will call you at night because he's been up thinking about it," director Richard Linklater says. "He really digs in thoroughly to what he's doing. He has two gears, and all I saw was the 'on' gear."

To some observers, Reeves has operated in neutral through much of his moviemaking life. As if he skated from his hockey-playing youth in Toronto through a few arty films such as "My Own Private Idaho" to mainstream ("Parenthood") to action hero ("Point Break") just by being Keanu.

Reeves tried to make it look that easy. He was self-deprecating to a fault and invited lunkhead perceptions.

Not these days. He says he would like to direct if the right project comes along. And he would like to return to the stage.

As for his personal life, Reeves remains a sphinx. Fleet Street gossip last year linked him with Diane Keaton after he broke up with "Lake House" cast mate Lynn Collins. (Keaton and Reeves were on-screen lovers in 2003's "Something's Gotta Give.") And murmurs about Reeves and Bullock when they attended the Oscars together in March were just murmurs.

But somewhere in the "settle down" part of the conversation was the hint of something permanent — either now or in his heart's desire.