Reef Hawk as Keanu Reeves, or is it Keanu Reeves as Reef Hawk? On the surface, Outcome, co-written and directed by Jonah Hill, may seem like an inspired representation of its lead actor, Keanu Reeves — a man whom the world, and the internet at large, loves.

Reef Googles himself for personal validation and every Instagram, Facebook, blog post and news item says the same thing: he is a swell guy. In fact, he may probably be the nicest person on the planet! But — and there’s always a but — like every man and woman on earth, there is a flip, more human and fallible side to Hawk.

A child actor whose career took off when he sang and tap-danced on Johnny Carson’s late-night show, Reef lived a typical Hollywood story of immense success, drugs and a lack of empathy. Then, five years before the events of this film, an overdose threw that fleeting lifestyle aside. Reef went on a sabbatical, cleansing the bad from his mind and body.

Now poised for a big return, Reef feels things couldn’t be better: he is happy and has the love and support of his two best friends, Kyle and Xander (Cameron Diaz and Matt Bomer, both quite good). Until — and there’s always an ‘until’ — his erratic, semi-bonkers, annoying crisis lawyer, Ira (Hill, nearly unrecognisable), receives an extortion call targeting Reef.

Outcome, which has Keanu Reeves playing a Hollywood star who retraces his past mistakes in a search for redemption, is as profound as it is understandable

In a twist that’s given the matter-of-fact treatment in the screenplay — for this is not an action movie, nor is it a comedy — Reef sets out to apologise to everyone he’s ever wronged.

At first, it may sound like a small enough task to accomplish, because the list seems negligible, since Reef has always been a good guy at heart. The three key people in his circle are: his first manager, Richie ‘Red’ Rodriguez, whom he left when he hit the big time (Martin Scorsese in a good, emotionally driven role); his mum Dinah Hawk (Susan Lucci), now a ‘Real Housewife’ who wants to exploit this moment for her show; and his old girlfriend, Savannah (Welker White).

But, as his assistant Sammy (Ivy Wolk) tells him, there are others: the four dogs he left, the pool guy, the people who worked in the industry — you know, the many little people one conveniently forgets about. These are ancillary characters to whom apologies will matter only if Reef manages to clear the air with his manager, his mum and his former girlfriend — all of whom stand at their own junctures in life.

This is where Hill and co-writer Ezra Woods’ screenplay cuts a little deeper. Reef, from his first scenes, is conscious and apprehensive of the only life he knows. He wants to return to his big Hollywood days but, internally, he is shaking, as if this house of cards will be toppled at any moment by an invisible force.

Reeves, with his limited acting talent and a few really well-acted scenes, cuts through his universally accepted good-guy persona by delivering Reef as a character. Because of him — and Hill’s preference to play the film as a character catharsis — Outcome is as profound as it is understandable.

It is a what-if Hollywood story with star cameos (Drew Barrymore playing herself and David Spade as Reef’s neighbour Buddy), but without showbiz’s glitz and pomposity, where the premise of a superstar’s apology frames a story about coming to terms with the last remnants of one’s tumultuous, fragile former life.

By the climax, right along with Reef, you get it: the apology — not the threat of blackmail and disclosure — is a part of realising who has been there for you. And recognising that is what really matters.

Released by and streaming on Apple TV+, Outcome is a swell, well-acted little film that is rated R for adult language and sexual references

The writer is Icon’s primary film reviewer

Published in Dawn, ICON, April 26th, 2026

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