Times Colonist

Knives a cutting comment on wealth

- REVIEW KATIE WALSH

It’s hard to imagine having more fun at the movies than with Rian Johnson’s delectable murder mystery Knives Out, a sparklingl­y wordy delight of fascinatin­g faces, cosy sweaters, fireplaces and a delectably depraved wealthy family fighting over the massive estate of their dearly departed patriarch. But within the tightly crafted and finely embossed package, Johnson has smuggled a deceptivel­y radical and empathetic message of acceptance, tolerance and wealth redistribu­tion. It’s Murder, She Wrote with a side of political activism, two great tastes that taste great together.

We meet the tony Thrombey clan upon the unlikely demise of their patriarch, Harlan (Christophe­r Plummer), a wildly successful mystery novelist who has built a publishing empire off which his good-for-nothing children leech. By all appearance­s, it seems Harlan has killed himself, with a knife, in his study. Yet, an inquisitiv­e detective (Lakeith Stanfield), his hapless partner (Noah Segan) and a mysterious private investigat­or (Daniel Craig) just have a few questions for the family, several of whom were financiall­y cut off by Harlan on the night of his birthday party and death. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to put two and two together, but it will take a keen mind to deduce the different probabilit­ies each family member presents.

Benoit Blanc (Craig), the flamboyant, honey-accented Southern investigat­or, soon latches on to Marta (Ana de Armas), the goodnature­d nurse and daughter of an undocument­ed mother, who became Harlan’s closest friend and confidant in his final years. Blanc trusts in Marta’s “kind heart,” as well as her extreme physical reaction to telling any lie (she upchucks). In a clan of smarmy charmers with varying motivation­s, Marta becomes our North Star, our moral compass. But she also knows far more than she wants to let on.

Johnson’s screenplay is like origami art, folded up upon itself in what seems a nearly impossible situation: Harlan’s body in his study, no discernibl­e motive for suicide, a house full of grifters posing as loved ones and the sweet Marta. How does this equation work out? Along the way, Johnson unfolds parts of the mystery, revealing the workings before completely rearrangin­g everything, transformi­ng it into a completely different beast, working the details and corners just so, lining it all up perfectly.

But at the heart of Knives Out is a message about the corrosive, corrupting nature of inherited wealth and what it means to be deserving of the riches a single person accumulate­s over a lifetime or more. What renders someone more deserving, their bloodline or the way they treat others? What would the world be like if the daughters of immigrants, if women of colour held economic power? It’s a cunning, stunning little moral Johnson tucks away in his star-studded mystery movie, one that makes it that much more interestin­g and worth watching.

That’s not to say the other elements pale in comparison. Nothing could be more visually potent than Chris Evans in a soft sweater, drinking an Old Fashioned in a cosy tavern. Add to that Michael Shannon hurling insults, Toni Collette’s pitch perfect vocal fry, Jamie Lee Curtis sternly smoking cigarettes and Don Johnson casually dropping offensive dad jokes, and it’s an embarrassm­ent of riches. It’s the class warfare picture by way of Agatha Christie that we never knew we needed, but we do, now more than ever.

Knives Out opens in Victoria today.

 ??  ?? Daniel Craig stars as a private detective in the murder mystery Knives Out.
Daniel Craig stars as a private detective in the murder mystery Knives Out.

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