Keanu Reeves & Co-star Ladies At “Knock Knock” Premiere in L.A.
Photo Credit: Pacific Coast News; FameFlynet Pictures; Pictured: Lorenza Izzo, Keanu Reeves, and Ana de Armas
Here’s actor Keanu Reeves sandwiched between two sexy costars from his latest film “Knock Knock,” which hits theaters later this weekend. According to Wikipedia, this is Chilean-American erotic horror film which is directed by Eli Roth, so go in the theater prepared to freaked out.
Here’s more about the film:
Architect and happily married husband Evan Webber (Keanu Reeves) has the house to himself on Father’s Day weekend (due to a shoulder injury) while his wife and children go on a family-planned beach trip. His wife Karen (Ignacia Allamand), a successful artist, leaves their assistant Louis (Aaron Burns) in charge of her sculpture that needs to be moved to an art gallery. Alone in his beautiful and expensive home, Evan works on renderings for an ongoing house project.
That evening, two women, Genesis (Lorenza Izzo) and Bel (Ana de Armas) knock on his door. He opens the door and they apologize, revealing that they are looking for an address of a party, but since their phone died, the taxi driver dropped them off. As they have no means of communication, Evan allows them in to use the Internet and get a hold of the party’s host. Once they find the right address, Evan offers to call an Uber cab for them, but the closest driver will take 45 minutes to arrive. Meanwhile the girls make themselves at home, and Evan plays a few of his old vinyl records he has from when he was a disc jockey. The conversation quickly turns into their opinions about human polygamy and they tell Evan about their jobs as cabin crew as well as how they engage in sexual activity with a new man in every city they fly to. They then disappear to the bathroom and when their cab finally arrives, a circumspect Evan finds them in the bathroom, naked and lusting for him. Outraged, Evan tries to convince them to leave, but as they start seducing him, he gives in and has a threesome with both of them. Source