‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’ movie review: A deliciously-engaging Christmas present
The Hindu
There are enough twists and turns in Rian Johnson’s ‘Knives Out’ follow-up to keep all sharp-eyed viewers of all kinds engaged, and the location is the best kind of eye candy
What is it about beautiful people waiting at a pier to be taken to an exclusive getaway that grabs one’s eyes and keeps it? There was The Menu just a couple of weeks ago. Maybe it is the joy of knowing that there is a whodunit around the corner just waiting to be unwrapped by the eccentric detective who will hold you by the hand and take you through the labyrinthine corridors of red herrings, clues, false trails and guilty looking suspects to reach you to the shining truth of who, where, what, why and how.
It is no surprise that in these unsettling times, there is a leaning away from big budget CGI-stuffed superhero capers towards cozy crime, where a bunch of not-so-nice people are stuck in a remote location and begin to die. A detective solves the crime, and we can go back to our lives happy at finding out the reason for the disruption in the natural order of things.
And so it is with Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, Rian Johnson’s follow up to 2019’s jolly Knives Out, featuring Daniel Craig as the greatest detective Benoit Blanc, complete with bizarre Southern accent, solving an Agatha-Christie style mystery of the death of a wealthy patriarch and successful crime writer, Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer).
Glass Onion finds an odd group of frenemies wait at a pier at the invitation of the eccentric tech billionaire Miles Bron (Edward Norton) to visit him on his Grecian island for a weekend of fun, which apart from the usual things, includes playing a murder game. Memories of Agatha Christie’s Dead Man’s Folly, in which a murder hunt as part of a summer fete turns horribly real, are entirely justified.
The group includes Miles’ friends who knew him from before; Claire (Kathryn Hahn), the Governor of Connecticut, Lionel (Leslie Odom Jr.), Miles chief scientist who tries to execute all Miles’ revolutionary ideas, Birdie (Kate Hudson), a former supermodel who made a killing with her designer sweatpants, and Duke (Dave Bautista) a men’s right activist.
Also in the group are Birdie’s assistant Peg (Jessica Henwick), who is constantly fighting fires as Birdie shoots off her mouth on social media, and Duke’s girlfriend Whiskey (Madelyn Cline). There is a slacker floating around the island, Derol (Noah Segan), who Miles assures has nothing to do with the murder hunt.
The odd one out is Andi (Janelle Monáe), Miles’ ex-business partner, who lost a case against Miles and Blanc. From the invitation which involves puzzles within puzzles and includes clues hidden in pieces of music and the Fibonacci Sequence, to the murder game written by Gillian Flynn (it was Ariadne Oliver in Dead Man’s Folly), no less, Glass Onion offers unalloyed joy.