On Sunday, as she returned to his hotel in Berlin to finish filming The Matrix 4, Keanu Reeves was spotted giving his girlfriend Alexandra Grant a passionate kiss good-bye.
Following their weekend getaway at her rented house, the 56-year-old Hollywood actor was seen getting out of his 47-year-old partner’s automobile in the heart of Berlin, Germany.
Keanu moved over to kiss the artist and philanthropist Alexandra as she sat in the driver’s seat while she was dressed in a double layered coat, worn trousers, and brown boots.
Before saying farewell and returning to her rental home, where Keanu spends every weekend while he’s not filming the much awaited movie, Alexandra and the couple had a brief conversation.
Months after filming had been put on hold due to the new coronavirus outbreak, Alexandra was spotted hanging out with Keanu, his co-stars Neil Patrick Harris, and Carrie-Ann Moss in June as they shot sequences.
The Matrix 4 will be released in 2021, and filming on it stopped in Berlin in March. However, the cast would return to the city in June. Lana Wachowski served as co-writer and director once again.
In a statement on the news of the new film, Lana said: “Many of the concepts Lilly and I explored about our reality 20 years ago are much more pertinent now…
“I’m grateful for another opportunity to work with my brilliant friends and am overjoyed to have these characters back in my life,” the author said.
Together with Wachowski, Aleksandar Hemon and David Mitchell wrote the Matrix 4 script. With Carrie-Ann also returning, Keanu is reprising his role as Neo.
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, best known to viewers as Black Manta in 2018’s Aquaman, will also appear in The Matrix 4.
When Reeves and Grant originally started dating has been the subject of much conjecture ever since they went public in November.
Some media outlets claimed that their relationship had barely lasted a few months, although Jennifer Tilly later told Page Six that they had been together for “years.”
Grant, an artist and philanthropist from Ohio, has engaged in the arts ever since receiving a BA in history and studio art from Swarthmore College in 1994.
The artist is renowned for incorporating language and conversations with authors into her sculpture, painting, drawing, and video works as a source of images.