The greatest mystery of Rian Johnson’s ‘Knives Out’ movies? Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc

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The greatest mystery in Rian Johnsonโ€™s โ€œKnives Outโ€ movies might be Benoit Blanc. Over the course of three films, Johnson and Daniel Craig have stingily dropped clues to Blancโ€™s past and personal life. Since Blanc first introduced himself in โ€œKnives Outโ€ as โ€œa respectful, quiet, passive observer โ€ฆ of the truth,โ€ following the breadcrumbs has been a sport of its own. Every โ€œKnives Outโ€ movie is a wholesale change. New setting. New case. New cast of characters. But Craig and Johnson are the mainstays. Together, theyโ€™ve turned Blanc, the gentleman sleuth, into one of the greatest protagonists in recent movies.

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” The greatest mystery in Rian Johnsonโ€™s โ€œKnives Outโ€ movies might be Benoit Blanc.

Over the course of three films, Johnson and Daniel Craig have stingily dropped clues to Blancโ€™s past and personal life. Since Blanc first introduced himself in โ€œKnives Outโ€ as โ€œa respectful, quiet, passive observer โ€ฆ of the truth,โ€ following the breadcrumbs has been a sport of its own.

There are, for instance, the vague, offhand references to cases heโ€™s cracked before: something with a tennis champion, another with a ballet dancer and, in the latest chapter, โ€œWake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery,โ€ we hear about something dastardly at the Kentucky Derby that he solved.

Blanc has been profiled in The New Yorker and a guest on โ€œThe View.โ€ He appears to live with Hugh Grant. He dislikes the board game Clue. Having been caught singing Sondheim and, in the new one, humming โ€œSkimbleshanks: The Railway Cat,โ€ from โ€œCats,โ€ we know he loves musical theater.

Over the course of the โ€œKnives Outโ€ trilogy, Johnson and Craig have colored in Blanc with sporadic and comic revelations, adding subtle, and sometimes personal, characteristics.

โ€œIโ€™m not as much into musical theater as Rian,โ€ Craig says, sitting beside his director in a recent interview.

โ€œSo he claims in front of a microphone,โ€ adds Johnson.

Every โ€œKnives Outโ€ movie is wholesale change. New setting. New case. New cast of characters. But Craig and Johnson are the mainstays. Together, theyโ€™ve turned Blanc, the last of the gentleman sleuths, into one of the greatest โ€” โ€œHalle Berry!โ€ โ€” protagonists in recent movies.

In โ€œWake Up Dead Man,โ€ which opens in theaters Wednesday and hits Netflix on Dec. 12, Blanc takes up the case of a monsignor (Josh Brolin) who dies mysteriously in the middle of a church service. Of the movieโ€™s many delights โ€” among them, Josh Oโ€™Connorโ€™s co-leading performance as a priest under suspicion and a cast of parishioners including Andrew Scott, Jeremy Renner and Glenn Close โ€” is seeing Craig continue to find new little wrinkles to Blanc.

Rather than being set in stone, Blanc has evolved. Take that accent. The first script, Johnson recalls, described โ€œthe slightest hint of a Southern lilt.โ€ But Craig, taking inspiration from Tennessee Williams and Shelby Foote, pushed the accent closer to, as Chris Evans' character says in โ€œKnives Outโ€: a โ€œKentucky-fried Foghorn Leghorn drawl.โ€ In โ€œGlass Onion,โ€ he laid it on even thicker, part of a scheme revealed only later into the film.

โ€œMy biggest fear was that it would devolve,โ€ Craig says, chuckling. โ€œIf it ever becomes pastiche, itโ€™s like, โ€˜Whoa, letโ€™s get out of here.โ€™ God knows Iโ€™m not comparing myself to Gene Wilder, but the way Gene Wilder did comedy was: Itโ€™s all through truth. As long as youโ€™re as truthful as you can get in that situation, the funny comes out.โ€

As thoroughly established in the role as Craig is, he very nearly missed out on Benoit Blanc. Craig was initially unavailable for โ€œKnives Outโ€ due to production on โ€œNo Time to Die.โ€ Johnson sought other possible actors.

โ€œIt was literally five weeks later we were shooting. We didnโ€™t think you were available,โ€ Johnson says. โ€œThen something happened where suddenly you guys got delayed for three months and we had a window.โ€

โ€œI read it and I was shocked that someone would send this to me,โ€ Craig says. โ€œOverjoyed. I saw it from the off-go. I read it and I visualized it. Itโ€™s a testament to his writing. I mean, come on. Benoit Blanc.โ€

In forming the role, Craig took inspiration from Jacques Tatiโ€™s debonair but bumbling Monsieur Hulot and Cary Grantโ€™s elegant panache in โ€œTo Catch a Thief.โ€ He combed through out-of-print books of Southern expressions. (One that got cut: โ€œButter my buns and call me a biscuit.โ€)

Along the way, Craig has improvised some of Blancโ€™s best expressions. In โ€œWake Up Dead Man,โ€ he suddenly blurts out, as if moved by the swelling whodunit hijinks: โ€œScooby Dooby Doo!โ€ A sip of Jeremy Renner-sponsored hot sauce in โ€œGlass Onionโ€ led to the infamous โ€œHalle Berry!โ€

โ€œAll of the best lines in there are things Daniel just brings,โ€ says Johnson. โ€œHe says, โ€˜What about this?โ€™ and I start laughing. And itโ€™s the best line in the movie.โ€

โ€œI have a security team and thereโ€™s a guy that says it,โ€ Craig says of the etymology of โ€œHalle Berry.โ€ โ€œI stole it. I said, โ€˜Can I have that?โ€™ and he said โ€˜Yep.โ€™โ€

For Craig and Johnson, Blanc has been an ongoing conversation. โ€œWake Up Dead Man,โ€ the most sincere of the three mysteries, deals significantly with matters of faith and religion. The two worked to sharpen Blanc's perspective. In the film, he declares himself โ€œa proud heretic. I kneel at the altar of the rational.โ€

Then there are the ornate flourishes of dialogue Johnson pens for Blanc. Modeled on Agatha Christieโ€™s Hercule Poirot, Blanc is the knowing product of a rich literary tradition, dusted off for modern times. In contemporary satires, Blanc is the retro lynchpin.

That means Craig delivering lines like โ€œI suspect foul playโ€ silhouetted against a fireplace, and vowing to uncover โ€œwhat this flock of wicked wolves is hidingโ€ while framed in a stained-glass window.

โ€œDelicious,โ€ Craig says with a grin.

Itโ€™s ironic that, on the heels of their own experiences with iconic film series, Johnson and Craig have built a franchise all their own. Johnson released โ€œKnives Outโ€ two years after the much-debated โ€œStar Wars: The Last Jedi.โ€ As he exited the James Bond films, Craig donned the suit of another justice-seeker, albeit one with much different swimwear.

โ€œI donโ€™t think either of us really thought about it that way,โ€ Johnson says. โ€œItโ€™s just been making one movie after another, just trying to keep it challenging and fresh for ourselves. It feels almost accidental that suddenly weโ€™ve made three. It definitely wasnโ€™t setting out to build, God forbid, the filthiest word in the universe, IP. Weโ€™re just trying to make movies.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve been doing this for long enough that as soon as you start counting your chickens on a job, itโ€™s all over,โ€ adds Craig.

Yet itโ€™s now possible, especially as the two contemplate a fourth โ€œKnives Outโ€ film, that there are young moviegoers who know Craig more as Benoit Blanc than they do that other B-name. If Johnson and Craig do keep โ€œKnives Outโ€ going, even as a two-film deal with Netflix concludes, it will allow Johnson the chance to restock his whodunit cupboard. But it will just as surely offer the opportunity to relaunch, and play with, Blanc.

โ€œI really love, in my mystery detectives, for them to be kind of enigmas. It pointedly doesnโ€™t work when you start digging into backstory with the detective,โ€ says Johnson. โ€œThatโ€™s always kind of boring because character is only revealed through action and the action of a detective is such a strong thing. Heโ€™s there to solve the case.โ€

In some ways, Blanc is like a movie star. He shows up, dazzles and goes home to his largely unseen private life. Craig likes it that way.

โ€œGoing back to โ€˜Death on the Nileโ€™ and โ€˜Evil Under the Sun,โ€™ Petey (Ustinov) turns up looking glorious from somewhere โ€” who knows where, some party in the South of France,โ€ says Craig. โ€œAnd he ends up leaving in the end and going off somewhere. Heโ€™s sort of alienated from the rest of the people. He has to be because heโ€™s the guy who suspects everybody.โ€

Every few years, Benoit Blanc comes and goes. Everything in between is a riddle.


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