Key and Peele recruit Keanu the kitten to satirise gang culture in US inner cities

SPH Brightcove Video
American comedians Key and Peele move from the small screen to the big screen with the help of a gangster kitten.
Cast members Keegan-Michael Key (left) and Jordan Peele and a kitten named Warren attend the premiere of Keanu in Los Angeles on Wednesday (April 27). PHOTO: REUTERS

LOS ANGELES (REUTERS) - Comedians Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele have satirized American culture through playing characters such as valets and President Barack Obama, but when taking on gang culture in feature film Keanu, the duo recruited the help of an unlikely ally - a tiny tabby kitten.

Out in US theatres on Friday, Keanu is the kitten who arrives on the doorstep of stoner Rell (Peele) and he suddenly finds a new lease of life caring for his little pet.

But when Keanu is stolen, Rell recruits his best friend Clarence (Key) - an upstanding married man with a penchant for the music of George Michael - to rescue the kitten.

The duo find themselves in the depths of gang life and drug culture, something both men have to quickly adapt to and be believable in.

"It's about people from the same race who come from different cultures," Key told Reuters. "There are so many things up and down the spectrum of the African American experience. We just hope we're displaying that to people."

Over five seasons of television sketch series Key & Peele on Comedy Central, the duo riffed on racial and social themes about minority communities.

The actors played an array of characters, from Peele's Obama to black Republicans, football players and a gay couple. Their comedy hinges on "a sense of surprise," Key said.

"It's all about zig-zags and the best piece of comedy is when the zag is not what you thought it was going to be but it still relates to what came before," he said. "With this movie, it's a lot of juxtaposition, this clash of contexts - cute cuddly kittens being held by superhard gangsters."

Keanu, an adorable kitten who's dressed as a gangster and often steals the show, was played by seven rescue kittens during the filming, and actually helped keep order on set.

"It makes everyone on set care," Peele said. "Everyone would be very respectful, you didn't want to make any sudden noises so it actually helped everyone focus on set."

After closing out Key & Peele, the comedians are tackling a reboot of classic 1980s comedy Police Academy.

"A lot of it is actually very similar to this movie," Key said. "It feels very contemporary and there are new subjects to tackle and we're in the midst of all that right now."

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.