Movies

'Knives Out' is a whodunit done well — movie review

On his 80th birthday, Harlan Thrombey is found dead and sets off a classic whodunit where all the suspects have their knives out for each other

One-sentence review: Knives Out creates one of the great movie families with the ridiculous Thrombeys and puts them in a murder mystery that's as compelling as it is relevant.

Details: ? Rian Johnson // ⏳ 130 minutes // ? 2019

The cast: Ana de Armas, , Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Shannon, Don Johnson, , Lakeith Stanfield, Katherine Langford, Jaeden Martell, Christopher Plummer

Though Ready or Not is a horror, Knives Out is a whodunit mystery, and Parasite is… well, Parasite, they all center on a character (or characters) spending time around people in another class. In Knives Out, that character is Marta (Blade Runner 2049's breakout Ana De Armas) and the people of another class is the Thrombey Family. And while the movie is packaged as a neat, tidy, and ridiculous sendup of the classic murder mystery, director and writer Rian Johnson has a lot more on his mind and the movie is all the better for it. 

However, Johnson isn't opaque about his point-of-view, the fun of the movie is that you know exactly what he's talking about. You see, the Thrombeys are the kind of rich people that think they're entitled to being rich. Something the recently passed patriarch and famed crime novelist Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer) is keenly aware of. During the reading of his will you can tell what each character wants — his publishing business, the house, his money. However, Harlan's untimely demise — which is initially ruled a suicide — means there's more in the way of the Thrombeys and their money. 

Knives Out poster. Credit: Lionsgate.

That's because someone hired famed private investigator Benoit Blanc (), a heavily southern Hercule Poirot-type that Harlan's grandson Ransom (Chris Evans) refers to as “CSI: KFC,” to investigate whether Harlan's death was truly a suicide. The suspects are largely his family. There's his son Walt (Michael Shannon), who is bent on getting control of the publishing business so he can sell film rights to .  Then there's his daughter and Ransom's mother Linda (Jamie Lee Curtis), a “self-made” business woman who just needed $1 million of daddy's money to get her business off the ground — her husband Richard (Don Johnson) is being towed along. And best of all, there's Joni (), a Gwyneth Paltrow-inspired lifecycle blogger who runs a website called Flam. 

Each of them — and the people connected to them — has a reason for wanting Harlan dead. And at the center of it all is Marta. Blanc takes a shining to her because she has a very unique “superpower.” She cannot help but throw up violently when she tells a lie. He sees that as an asset. But like everyone in this movie, she has something to hide.

Leave it to Johnson, who managed to piece together one of the most compelling Star Wars movies with The Last Jedi, to construct a nearly perfect murder mystery. Despite the many twists and turns, all the pieces to solve the mystery are always there. He doesn't insert any out of nowhere surprises. You can truly solve the puzzle. That doesn't stop him from presenting it in an interesting way. 

The first act is largely comprised of interviews with each family member who gives their account of the night in question — Harlan's 80th birthday party. However, each of them twists the facts to make themselves look innocent. Hilariously, all their terrible sides are uncovered. In one of my favorite small details, each family member says a different country the Marta immigrated from despite them constantly saying she's “part of the family.” In another, Richard praises Marta for immigrating “correctly.” As integrated she is into their lives, she's still a class visitor.

It's those small microaggressions that elevate Knives Out past its premise. Not that its premise isn't already great. Like Get Out, Johnson is careful to make the movie work as a genre pic as well as a social commentary. It's just what gives it that extra push past being crowd-pleasing popcorn fare. Admittedly, it's great crowd-pleasing popcorn fare. 

The mystery, the characters, and the humor are all spot on. Craig is a standout as is Evans, who plays Ransom as the typical New Englander heir who probably just bought a boat. Then there's Collette who nails it with the line, “I read a Tweet about a New Yorker article about you,” referencing Blanc. If anything, I wish we spent more time with the Thrombeys. Though, Craig, de Armas, plus Lakeith Stanfield and Noah Segan as a pair of not-so-helpful detectives are certainly fun to watch.

As I'm thinking back to watching the movie there isn't a singular moment that stands out — perhaps the stellar final shot. But I think that's a testament to the sheer consistency of it all. The movie is built around character and story instead of just finding the next gag. It's so refreshing and so effective. It's easily one of the best times I had in a theater this year.

Karl Delossantos

Hey, I'm Karl, founder and film critic at Smash Cut. I started Smash Cut in 2014 to share my love of movies and give a perspective I haven't yet seen represented. I'm also an editor at The New York Times, a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, and a member of the Online Film Critics Society.

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