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18 Films Keanu Reeves Says Everyone Should See

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Sun, Jan 2, 2022 04:03 PM

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From 'Raising Arizona' to 'The Outlaw Josey Wales', these are Neo's new classics. Keanu Reeves Share

From 'Raising Arizona' to 'The Outlaw Josey Wales', these are Neo's new classics. [View in Browser]( [Esquire Sunday Reads]( [Keanu Reeves Shares His List of the Movies Everyone Should Watch]( Keanu Reeves Shares His List of the Movies Everyone Should Watch Keanu Reeves is, both famously and undeniably, one of the nicest guys in Hollywood. Or anywhere. No favor is too small for Neo. Just peep our winter cover story (in which he stars), where, during a conversation in Paris, Reeves went through a scroll-hunt on his phone, sifting through years of texts in search of something important: a list. The list is a movie recommendations collection between friends—it just so happens both friends are megawatt movie stars. Carrie-Ann Moss, the actress who breathed life into The Matrix's Trinity, goes back nearly 20 years with Reeves. And as the story goes, Moss asked her co-star if he could throw out a couple movies that she should watch with her teenaged kids. Reeves, who has a tendency to take the requests of his friends quite seriously, didn't rattle off a couple personal favorites like most of us would. He went all in and created not one list, but two. A first pass of favorite films, and then, an updated collection. We present to you, the latter. [Read the Full Story]( [MORE FROM ESQUIRE]( [All 63 Celebrity Liquors and Spirits, Ranked]( All 63 Celebrity Liquors and Spirits, Ranked By the time you read this, five more celebrities will launch their own spirits companies. Colin Jost will release a lo-cal tequila. Steven Segal will get into the Japanese whisky game. TikToker Dixie D’Amelio will start a coconut rum brand. In fact, there are so many celebrity spirits it’s hard to keep track. Luckily, there’s an app, GrapeStars, specifically designed to help consumers identify any and all celebrity alcohols on the market. The question many people would rather know the answer to, however, is: Are any of these any good? Surprisingly, yes. 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We just prefer to do it on our own terms, and—here's where it gets tricky—we often don't know how to articulate what those terms are. So, to all you therapy skeptics, you on-the-fencers, and you true believers alike: Join us as we knuckle-drag our way on this fifteen-step tour across the therapeutic landscape. [Read the Full Story]( [15 Travel Books That Will Inspire You to Get Going]( 15 Travel Books That Will Inspire You to Get Going For many of us, books were our first way to travel the world. As children, we went to imagined locations like Narnia and the land of wild things; as teenagers, we went to real life destinations like East Egg and the Salinas Valley. Every one of us owes some small part of the savvy adult travelers we are today to the traveling we did in our mind’s eye, way back when. Now that shots are in arms, many of us are eager to resume traveling—the real kind, that is. If you haven’t decided which parts unknown to explore just yet, or you’re still socking away funds for the trip of a lifetime, we're here to help. We’re encouraging you to get back to basics by turning to those trusty books once again. We’re here with a rough and ready syllabus of travel reading for anyone looking to travel responsibly, imaginatively, and exuberantly. [Read the Full Story](    [Parenting Is the Worst–Except When It's the Best]( Parenting Is the Worst–Except When It's the Best I can pinpoint the moment our daughter began transforming into a stereotypical girl. She was two, and her mother and I took her to Ariel’s Grotto, in Disneyland. The restaurant traffics in so-called character dining, meaning the tables are careered by marquee Disney characters—princesses, in our case. Since well before we had a child, my girlfriend and I considered ourselves enlightened on the subject of gender binaries. The notion that boys are naturally one way and girls another seemed like bullshit, to use a technical term. “Naturally,” “natural”: these are words designed not to explain but compel. Not every boy loves pointing an imaginary M-16 and not every girl squeals when a tiara is placed on her head. To insist that any child behave in ways that to them feel wrong is to lay the first bricks of what will become an adult prison cell. [Read the Full Story]( [James {NAME}: How to Cool It]( James {NAME}: How to Cool It In Esquire's July 1968 issue, published just after the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., the magazine talked to James {NAME} about the state of race relations in the country. We've republished the interview in full—and his words are incredibly relevant today. [Read the Full Story]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice/Notice at Collection]( esquire.com ©2022 Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Hearst Magazines, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019

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