Site icon The Thrilling Detective Web Site

Benoit Blanc (Knives Out)

Created by Rian Johnson

“When people get desperate, the knives come out.”

Screenwriter and director Rian Johnson has already seriously mucked around with the mystery genre back in his feature film debut Brick, which transported the classic hard-boiled/film noir detective flicks of the forties to a contemporary high school in the endless sun-bleached suburban sprawl of Southern California.

Now, with Knives Out (2019), he takes on private investigators from the other end of the spectrum: the film is nothing more than a cock-eyed Valentine to the classic, Golden Age mystery, where some colourful, gentlemanly sleuth (Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot immediately springs to mind) attempts to solve a seemingly impossible murder by interrogating a large, unruly bunch of well-mannered but equally colourful suspects, before ultimately rounding them all up to name the villain.

And so we have “renowned” private investigator BENOIT BLANC, he of the biscuits-and-gravy Southern accent, king-sized ego (delightfully played by Daniel “Shaken, not Stirred” Craig) and slightly foppish mannerisms. He’s got a whole roomful  of suspects in a large country manor somewhere in Massachusetts to annoy, with his odd pretensions and his in-your-face questioning. It seems that world famous mystery writer Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer) has slit his own throat the evening after his 85th birthday party, an apparent suicide, after dumping on all his “loved ones” at dinner. And what a bunch of “loved ones”! This band of relatives, in-laws and outlaws is played by a stellar cast that includes Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Shannon, Don Johnson, Toni Collette and Chris Evans. Plummer, even in his limited screen time, is always a joy to watch, and Ana de Armas, as Marta, the old man’s nurse, is a hoot–as is her inability to tell a lie without vomiting.

Enter the local police and the piano-tinkling Blanc, who’s been hired by persons unknown to investigate the strange death. Suffice it to say that everyone is a suspect, that the zingers and bon mots fly back and forth (Blanc is quickly dismissed by one of the suspects as “CSI KFC”), and a considerable amount of scenery is chewed as the red herrings and lies pile up. But it’s the attention to detail, Johnson’s obvious affection for the genre and the absolute glee the entire cast seems to be having that really brings this puppy home.

I liked it.

Of course, it wasn’t completely logical, and there are plot holes even Reed Farrel Coleman’s cat could spot, but these types of convoluted country house murder mysteries rarely make much sense, anyway (“Let’s give murder back to the people who commit it for a reason.”). And it was nice to see any “mystery” movie that actually contained a mystery of any sort.
So, top-loaded with A-listers and sparked along by Johnson’s cheeky direction, it’s no surprise it was a crowd-pleaser. Which also means it’s no surprise that a sequel was almost inevitable. Glass Onion, which made its debut Christmas Day in 2022 on Netflix, sported an entirely fresh wave of big names for Blanc to baffle and bamboozle, including Ethan Hawke, Edward Norton, Janelle Monae, Dave Bautista, Kathryn Hahn, Leslie Odom Jr., Jessica Henwick, Kate Hudson and Madelyn Cline.

UNDER OATH

THE EVIDENCE

TRIVIA

INSPIRED BY

FILMS

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

 

Exit mobile version