Glass Onion's world-renowned detective Benoit Blanc finds time for Among Us in the movie, but his celebrity-filled game is the real highlight and includes ...
[Poker Face](https://www.polygon.com/23425434/poker-face-rian-johnson-natasha-lyonne-detective-show), and it already looks like a great time, based on its trailer. The show ran for 264 episodes and more than a few movies, making Lansbury one of the most recognizable murder-mystery actors of all time. But when the COVID-19 pandemic hits and Blanc isn’t getting invited to the [country estates of the rich and powerful](https://www.polygon.com/2019/11/27/20985373/knives-out-review-rian-johnson-daniel-craig-chris-evans-jamie-lee-curtis-don-johnson-ana-de-armas), it turns out he doesn’t have much use for his detecting talents.
Rian Johnson and Daniel Craig deepen the mystery of Benoit Blanc and his investigations of the wealthy elite via the supremely entertaining Glass Onion: A ...
Given the film’s lengthier setup, Glass Onion is able to better sketch its suspects and players than Knives Out. So his eagerness to party with a billionaire in Glass Onion is initially surprising… Her decision to come back and face all these people who betrayed her is the real mystery of the movie, at least until the Grim Reaper visits the kooky clan. Set on an entire villa in the sun-kissed Aegean, and told across an expansive 140 minutes, Glass Onion is happy to take its time. One is a disgraced fashion guru who’s settled into the infamy of social media celebrity due to posting whatever comes into her head, and the other is a Twitch influencer who knows exactly what he’s doing when hawking “boner pills” to video gamers alongside his much younger girlfriend Whiskey (Madelyn Cline). As the collection of suspects, all the performers swing big, drawing characters who are arguably more outlandish and cartoony than the Thrombey family in Knives Out. Instead of relying on a barrage of contradictory flashbacks and anecdotes, audiences and Benoit Blanc get to observe the suspects in real time. [Knives Out](https://www.denofgeek.com/knives-out/) and Glass Onion such satisfying potboilers is they aspire to more than confound and intrigue with a case of murder and side of red herrings. This also explains the decision to invite the great gentleman of leisure and deduction, Benoit Blanc. [Janelle Monáe](https://www.denofgeek.com/janelle-monae/)), is also in surprise attendance. But like his and [Daniel Craig](https://www.denofgeek.com/daniel-craig/)’s delightful sleuthing creation, Benoit Blanc, Johnson is a keen observer of hubris, vanity, and all the other ugly human traits that can make for a toxic personality, yet also a beautiful murder mystery. One difference between Glass Onion and its predecessor though is that even Craig’s reliably “Southern” sleuth is not sure what he’s looking for in this go-round.
Glass Onion is more than just Knives Out 2, it is an equally funny, entertaining, and properly executed whodunnit from Rian Johnson and starring Daniel ...
They surprise, frustrate, and delight us in so many ways as the story is told that solving the mystery is second to the sheer fun of watching these absurd people do absurd things. When you do finally get the answers to the questions that are the foundation stones of the story, upon which everything else is built, they make sense. There has been no shortage recently of shows and films that poke fun at the uber-rich to the delight (not to mention the schadenfreude) of audiences. What gives Glass Onion its uniqueness and its entertainment value is the means by which this is explored. The first Knives Out used the Drysdale family's response to one immigrant (Ana De Armas' Marta) to highlight the broader way in which different veins of political society respond to immigration as a whole. We already know someone turns up dead — but the who, the how, and the whodunnit will all remain a mystery within this review (ie.
We'll join the action just after the flashback following Benoit Blanc and Helen-as-Andi ends, when the Distuptors realise Duke's pistol is missing and Helen's ...
And Miles' murders are the essence of what makes him such a charlatan. Like his Glass Onion building they look complex, but there's nothing in the middle of them. Eventually, they work up to destroying the one thing, as he puts it, that nobody wants destroyed: the Mona Lisa. Klear kills him, and ensures he'll get his wish to be mentioned in the same breath as the Mona Lisa. His mates smashing those artworks is, weirdly enough, a reaction that fits Miles' view of the world. It's just that the breath is going to be saying, "Miles Bron, the guy who destroyed the Mona Lisa with his incredibly dangerous fuel". She realises it's in Miles' office, but as soon as she's got it and revealed who she actually is to the group, Miles burns the napkin with his absurdly powerful lighter. This, Blanc says, is because Lionel flagged up the existence of the cocktail napkin to Miles. Just as she'd noted earlier on, Kathryn Hahn's Claire realises they're in the middle of the feared "Hindenburg". Blanc concludes that Miles did all three murders – or, at least, two murders and one attempted murder – to make sure that Andi never made public the fact that Miles stole the Alpha company from her, and that she was the actual genius behind the idea which started Alpha. Helen launches a nugget of Klear at the fireplace. We'll join the action just after the flashback following Benoit Blanc and Helen-as-Andi ends, when the Distuptors realise Duke's pistol is missing and Helen's just taken a bullet right in the diary.
"Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery" was filmed in Greece and on stage in Serbia. The Amanzoe resort near Porto Heli plays the private estate in the movie.
“There was some outdoor stuff for which we shot a few things on location last fall in Connecticut and New York, and then everything inside was built in Serbia,” Heinrichs told the “When they all arrive in Greece and are waiting for the yacht, that’s Spetses.” The vacation-based tale will surely satisfy anyone who’s desperate for another season of [The White Lotus](https://www.housebeautiful.com/lifestyle/a41352985/white-lotus-season-2-filming-locations-italy/). [Amanzoe](https://go.redirectingat.com/?id=74968X1525080&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.aman.com%2Fresorts%2Famanzoe), a luxury resort and hotel near Porto Heli, Greece. Plus, the island is riddled with impressive homes, swanky shops, and gourmet dining options. While on the island, you can expect to travel by horse-drawn carriages, bike, or on foot. “Trading the browns of New England for the blue and yellows of Greece” was a deliberate move meant to separate the sequel from its predecessor, according to writer-director-producer Rian Johnson. “It’s very epic, almost like the Colosseum, to approach the villa—which lends itself to the idea that people are about to kill each other.” [Massachusetts mansion in Knives Out](https://www.housebeautiful.com/design-inspiration/a30143056/knives-out-set/) made for an unforgettable murder mystery setting. You can stroll along the island’s The resort is comprised of cabanas, pavilions, and villas that have private pools with breathtaking views of olive groves and the Aegean sea. That estate is played by the
When asked whether he'd ever write a whodunit about the downfall of Twitter, the director joked, “Didn't I just do that?”
You’re building a little microcosm of society with the suspects and the power structure within the suspects. The opening gambit of writer-director Rian Johnson’s Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, his second in his series of Agatha Christie–style whodunits, is one of mischief. A few recent films have tried to engage with Covid-19, or include the pandemic in stories.
From Rian Johnson's 'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery' to Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot murder mysteries, we rank the best recurring plot twists in ...
It’s all the drama of a death with none of the bummer aftertaste. In this case, the knife is more of a fuck-you gesture. Sometimes it’s a very convincing disguise (The Murder of Roger Ackroyd). She (and it is usually a she) is casing the country estate when a completely unrelated murder investigation breaks out. And occasionally someone will spend years developing a tolerance to iocane powder so they can outsmart a Sicilian when death is on the line. This trope is so beloved it even shows up in the affectionate pastiche Doctor Who episode “The Unicorn and the Wasp,” in which the Doctor solves a murder with the real Agatha Christie. You offer your drink to the victim, they drop dead, and everyone thinks a killer is really after you. Maybe they’re the aforementioned jewel thief, casing the joint (A Pocketful of Rye). A classic in the many cozy mysteries of between-the-wars-era England is making one of the party secretly a notorious jewel thief. A play or movie set is the perfect place for a murder mystery. If you’re hiding something during a murder investigation, it seems like a pretty easy inference to make that what you’re hiding is you having committed the murder. There are only so many stories to tell, and after a while the savvy mystery consumer is really there to see how the various plot twists get repurposed to make a “new” story.
A criminally underrated Alfred Hitchcock flick, The Lady Vanishes is at once a thriller, a romance, and a comedy of manners. In a very Agatha Christie-esque ...
Bogart is exceedingly comfortable inhabiting a hard-boiled detective who tangles with dangerous criminals and beautiful liars. The slow-burn mystery of corruption is at turns chilling, disturbing, and sadistic. Henry Cavill is a welcome supporting player as Enola’s brother who, along with her mother, schooled her in the ways of fact-finding and fisticuffs before she grew into a young sleuth in her own right. He plays an investigative journalist who finds a dead body in the luxury townhouse his girlfriend is renting for him in Boston. Mankiewicz (of All About Eve, Cleopatra, and Guys and Dolls fame) the movie a two-hander between Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine. plays a thief posing as an actor who falls into the middle of a murder investigation. Based on the real-life investigation of a serial-killer in the Gyunggi Province of Korea in 1986, Memories of Murder centers on an ill-equipped detective squad trying to puzzle through the clues. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars a a loner teen who has to infiltrate various cliques in order to solve the murder of his ex-girlfriend. The film, set in a 1930s British manse, effectively deploys a murder to expose upstairs-downstairs dynamics, similar to the way Rian Johnson critiques class in his films. [Only Murders in the Building](https://time.com/6190642/only-murders-in-the-building-season-2-review/) episodes. In a very Agatha Christie-esque setup, a rich young playgirl (Margaret Lockwood) begrudgingly boards a train in a fictional European country to travel to England where she’ll meet up with a fiancée she’s none-too-enthused to marry. A criminally underrated Alfred Hitchcock flick, The Lady Vanishes is at once a thriller, a romance, and a comedy of manners.
'Glass Onion' has a character played by Edward Norton that seems to be a direct send-up of Elon Musk, the billionaire head of Twitter.
All the people who, at best, happened to be in the right at the right time. Not to get at the core of American capitalism, but if we acknowledge that the people with all the power and money might not be the smartest all the time...then where does that leave our meritocracy? Glass Onion does a good job of showing how sometimes the "brilliant" folks are just the ones willing to hurt others to climb up the social hierarchy. It's that if you can scam and claw your way to the top, then you are too big to fail. Bron represents all the people in power we should question. No, no, no Elon is a free speech absolutist, and sure he [bans journalists](https://mashable.com/article/twitter-suspends-journalists-elon) and [reinstates hateful right-wingers](https://mashable.com/article/elon-musk-reinstated-banned-twitter-accounts-list) but he's not red-pilled. Hell, Bron is willing to risk total destruction to power the world with a dangerous energy source. Be willing to break the thing that nobody wants you to break? But what's more important is what the film has to say about people like Bron and Musk. [bullied](https://www.wired.com/2009/06/eberhard/) [his way](https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-sep-22-fi-tesla22-story.html) [into power](https://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-twitter-ultimatum-failed-workers-arent-tolerating-aggressive-leadership-2022-11) and [formed](https://parade.com/1364075/jessicasager/elon-musk-net-worth/) his massive wealth off valuations of his companies. And it relates to current events so well, I'd argue, the film understands someone like Musk at his core. [people posting on Twitter](https://twitter.com/search?q=elon%20musk%20miles%20bron&src=typed_query) — where else – that they saw the similarities as well.
It's crazy to think that Rian Johnson's Knives Out sequel was written before the billionaire's takeover of Twitter.
They look from one to another, and realise that despite his promises of a future built on Klear, they had the power all along. Like I say, there have been a lot of tech bro bad guys in the last 10 years, and most of them have an Icarus-style fable comeuppance. On top of that, though, there’s subtler Musk mockery and satire here, and it’s built into the finale through the people who cling to him. So, for me, the job was with Rian to pick and choose the perfect characteristics to send up a particular type of person." That’s where the cautionary tech bro tale takes a turn. He’s so hopped up on his own genius and hung up on his legacy he’s willing to the entire world into a bomb with his magic but nowhere near safe fuel, Klear. Riz Ahmed did a specifically Muskish turn in Venom as Carlton Drake, a man obsessed with jumping ship from this ailing world and colonising the stars. "The fact that Bron’s a tech billionaire – which made a lot of sense for the story – became an obstacle in the writing,” Johnson told Deadline. And so, disconnecting him from that, and trying to build him as his own kind of clownish character, became a challenge." That’s the bit of him that’s captured most clearly in Miles. Edward Norton plays the Alpha Industries co-founder with a mixture of quasi-spiritual solemnity, a particularly fragile kind of self-belief and sick-making smugness that feels very familiar. "My take on this was really to know that Miles is a character cut from a very specific species," Edward Norton added.
Glass Onion is a different kind of movie to the original: here the emphasis is very much on offbeat humour, much of it derived from Ed Norton's delicious ...
One of the best gags in 'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery,' debuting December 23 on Netflix, is a celebrity hot sauce. But what would Jeremy Renner's ...
[nonalcoholic version](https://twitter.com/BoronTheFloor/status/1601300348429250561) to various critics’ groups. [nepo babies](https://www.vulture.com/tags/the-year-of-the-nepo-baby/). This Vanity Fair [video interview](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqVj10Yz8i8), in which Renner breaks down his filmography, doesn’t offer clues either, just a story about how Renner got food poisoning from eating lettuce in Beirut. [this interview](https://www.thegentlemansjournal.com/article/jeremy-renner-talks-weinstein-wind-river-and-fighting-back/) with Gentlemen’s Journal. But a sauce aged in oak barrels to nod at his woodworking and carpentry skills? With deep umami and a touch of barbecue to nod at his love of fire trucks? And this Men’s Health piece about what Renner “eats to maintain his Hawkeye muscle” includes typically wholesome stuff — egg whites, avocado, tuna, broccoli — but lacks specifics about what he wishes he was eating. Would anyone like a dash of Renning Hot, the condiment with such a fiery kick that Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc evoked unfazed [Hot Ones](https://www.vulture.com/tags/hot-ones/) champion [Halle Berry](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwHwq5W18uY) after his first taste? What might help me understand what Renner would put into a sauce with his name and face on it? But rare is a multi-hyphenate who experiments as erratically as Jeremy Renner: actor ( [The Hurt Locker](https://www.vulture.com/2022/12/inside-avatars-failed-battle-for-best-picture.html), the [Marvel Cinematic Universe](https://www.vulture.com/tv/hawkeye/), [Mayor of Kingstown](https://www.vulture.com/2021/09/watch-mayor-of-kingstown-trailer-with-jeremy-renner.html), all-around-great [supporting guy](https://www.vulture.com/2016/07/jeremy-renner-is-a-great-negotiating-tool.html)), [singer](https://www.vulture.com/2020/03/jeremy-renner-release-his-brand-new-ep-the-medicine.html), [failed app](https://www.vulture.com/2020/10/jeremy-renner-files-podcast.html) designer, [house flipper, and fire-truck refurbisher](https://www.menshealth.com/entertainment/a38188420/jeremy-renner-mayor-of-kingstown-hawkeye-interview/). Celebrity profiles sometimes take place at restaurants and allow journalists to share what their subjects ate; no such luck with Renner, who drank only coffee during And so, as Benoit splashes Helen (Janelle Monáe) with blood-red helpings of Renning Hot, then dabs his own eyes with it to make himself weep, I wondered, What would Renning Hot taste like?
Partway into “Glass Onion,” the new sequel to 2019 murder mystery “Knives Out,” tech billionaire Miles Bron (Edward Norton) excitedly outlines the “murder ...
Of course, when Bron’s foolishness culminates in the destruction of the “Mona Lisa,” it’s just a movie. And even when Blanc lays out the crudeness of Bron’s plan, his friends still cling to the myth of his genius. Just as for much of the movie, Blanc and the viewer doubt Bron would be so stupid as to kill the woman he just had a very public court battle with, so many people believed that His island is only accessible via a glass dock that looks impressive, but is only accessible at low tide, with the local police referring to it as a “piece of s---.” He brushes aside warnings that his hydrogen fuel is too unstable — heedlessness that literally blows up in his face. Blanc — and the viewer — wants the solution to be more complicated, to contain some sort of hidden brilliance. He’s destroyed his reputation, exposed himself as a murderer and incinerated his house — and the “Mona Lisa” to boot. And, most prominently, many believed Musk had a plan when he massively [ overpaid](https://www.barrons.com/articles/elon-musk-twitter-deal-price-51664920306) for [have left many small investors wiped out, wondering if they'll ever be made whole](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/05/business/cryptocurrency-investors-ftx-blockfi.html). But, [ as Norton has noted](https://www.slashfilm.com/1101648/edward-nortons-glass-onion-character-was-inspired-by-a-number-of-real-unnamed-billionaires/), he and writer-director Rian Johnson based Bron on multiple (unnamed) real-life billionaires and tech figures, not one specific person. [Thanks](https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/12/elon-musk-twitter-ceo-billionaire-social-media/672542/) to [recent headlines](https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/tesla-shares-tumble-track-worst-month-ever-2022-12-22/), for many viewers, Bron’s mixture of bluster, hubris and half-baked ideas will likely bring to mind Twitter owner and part-time car enthusiast Elon Musk. The movie’s root conflict — Bron’s ouster of Helen’s sister Cassandra (Monáe) from the company they co-founded based on Cassandra’s idea — evokes [Mark Zuckerberg’s battles](https://www.businessinsider.com/how-mark-zuckerberg-booted-his-co-founder-out-of-the-company-2012-5) in [building Facebook](https://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3391856&page=1). Partway into “Glass Onion,” the new sequel to 2019 murder mystery “Knives Out,” tech billionaire Miles Bron (Edward Norton) excitedly outlines the “murder mystery” game he has devised for his guests.
A fan of musical theater, Rian Johnson had long hoped to land the two stars. But he was already in the editing phase when they agreed to take part.
“I hope they would have enjoyed the little scene and gotten a laugh out of it.” “And so she was very patient in letting me describe the rules of Among Us, up to a point. For children of the 1980s, that show “was actually pretty pivotal in installing a love of whodunits and murder mysteries into all of our brains,” said Johnson, who also slipped a few seconds of a Spanish-dubbed “Murder, She Wrote” episode into the original “Knives Out.” [Getting Away With Murder,](https://www.nytimes.com/1996/03/18/theater/theater-review-a-most-sinister-gathering-of-not-so-usual-suspects.html)” which he wrote with George Furth and which ran for just over a month in 1996. “I have alibis for both.” “But still, it felt really nice to tell them that I wouldn’t be here doing this if it weren’t for them.” “She couldn’t have been lovelier and more generous,” Johnson said, adding that Lansbury was perfect for the scene in every way except one: “Not a gamer,” he explained. In Sondheim’s case, Bergman said, “I wasn’t really sure how to get to him. As Johnson explained in a recent video interview, he wanted the Sondheim and Lansbury cameos to stand as tributes to two of his favorite artists — and to give him an excuse to interact with these cultural greats whose paths he might not otherwise have crossed. [wordplay, games and crossword puzzles](https://slate.com/culture/2021/12/stephen-sondheim-crossword-puzzles-cryptic-west-side-story.html), and he enjoyed orchestrating murder-mystery parties with his friend Anthony Perkins. Lovett](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqapHRAqnfk) in the original Broadway production of “Sweeney Todd,” as well as a filmed version that played frequently on Johnson’s television. Now, Johnson said, his experience in securing the involvement of his personal heroes has taught him never to take such opportunities for granted.
The 'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery' director walks VF through the scene that set everything in motion, highlighting the importance of color and ...
“I think we all knew some version of this person,” he says. “I wrote this movie in 2020. [Best Books](https://www.vanityfair.com/style/photos/2022/12/best-books-of-2022?itm_content=footer-recirc&itm_campaign=more-great-stories-122022)of 2022 Johnson’s decision to have each film exist in a completely unique universe goes back to the “original source of [his] inspiration for all of this,” his love of Agatha Christie. The first meetup of the starry ensemble was “day one, shot one” for the hit sequel, says Johnson, which premiered in theaters on November 23 for a limited theatrical release and is now available to stream on Netflix. [VF’s Most-Read Stories](https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2022/12/most-read-vanity-fair-stories-2022?itm_content=footer-recirc&itm_campaign=more-great-stories-122022)This Year This is going to be amazing.’ She shows up and she walks past the racks of clothes, and there’s Kate’s rack and it’s glimmering colors, and there’s Daniel’s rack that’s all these fabulous outfits. [Prince William Won’t Speak to](https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2022/12/why-prince-william-wont-speak-to-prince-harry?itm_content=footer-recirc&itm_campaign=more-great-stories-122022)Prince Harry [Kamala Harris](https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/12/kamala-harris-molly-jong-fast-interview-roe-immmigration?itm_content=footer-recirc&itm_campaign=more-great-stories-122022)on a Very Turbulent Year in America I wanted it to be the sad trumpet noise of costumes in this movie.” I wrote it during lockdown, which is probably part of the reason why it takes place on a Greek island,” Johnson said. “I just wanted her in sad tans and beige…. “We’re going to have them be totally new deals every single time,” Johnson says of the films in the Knives Out franchise.
The Knives Out sequel takes its name from a song on the White Album, but there's more to it than that.
Miles’ Glass Onion explodes and takes all the Disruptors with it, wrapping the fate of all of them together despite their last-minute conversion to Helen’s cause. Miles likes to think of himself and his fellow Disruptors as something like a Beatle-esque cabal of future-moulders. It’s off the White Album, the one where they were all getting a bit sick of each other and what other people thought the Beatles should be. Johnson has said he “was always surprised, when I was showing the script around, how many people didn’t know it was a Beatles song,” so let's do a little background. Is it a glass castle? Usually with a good murder mystery, you realise at the dénouement that all the clues you needed were left in plain sight all along.
Jessica Henwick as Peg, left, Daniel Craig as detective Benoit Blanc and Janelle Monáe as Andi in “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery.” (John Wilson / Netflix).
... I had no idea what it was going to be like in the movie. “They cut just before I go, ‘I’m so f— sorry.’” “‘Let’s make sure we get it right because after the third day, we won’t have any left.’ So to me that was the stress ... “I’m like, ‘I know this is fun, but we have to time this out a little bit.’” But when it happened, and everybody was really good ... In a desperate move, Miles — who co-founded Alpha with Andi before cutting her out of the company and persuading their mutual friends to testify in court that he wrote the idea for Alpha on a napkin — sets Helen’s only shred of physical evidence on fire. “It felt like a rage room,” she said. “So everybody was so primed to want to smash that s—, I didn’t have to tell them anything. “You were always nervous,” Bergman added. Soon the rest of the vacationers — including those who previously defended Miles and betrayed Andi under oath — join in. Until, of course, it came time to shoot the climactic scene in which Miles’ esteemed guests turn against him and smash To avenge the murder of her identical twin, Helen (Janelle Monáe) presents the authentic bar napkin upon which her sister, Andi (also Monáe), penned the original plan for Alpha Industries.
The second installment in Rian Johnson's Knives Out franchise features Daniel Craig as Detective Benoit Blanc once more and a twisty whodunnit murder mystery.
Is it a glass man?' The first thing that came up, because I’m a huge Beatles fan, is 'Glass Onion.'" Before joining T&C, she was the deputy managing editor at [Hey Alma](https://www.heyalma.com/), a Jewish culture site. Benoit proclaims at one point during the film, which is why he struggled to solve the murder: It was so dumb and obvious. Is it a glass castle? They also sing "Looking through the bent-backed tulips /To see how the other half live / Looking through the glass onion." First, director Johnson was inspired by a 1968 Beatles song, and plays the song over the end credits of the film.
(Spoiler alert: Stop reading now if you haven't yet seen the film!) Benoit Blanc is canonically married and/or in a long-term romantic relationship with Hugh ...
Helen clearly has caught Grant in the middle of baking—his face is covered in flour, he’s rocking a pink tie-dye apron, and he’s clutching a jar of brown sugar. “And there’s nobody in the world I can imagine in bringing me more joy for Benoit Blanc to be with.” But to me, this is the perfect amount of backstory for our cartoonish, investigative hero. But it’s not detective Blanc who answers the door, because Blanc is busy taking a bath and playing Among Us with his friends Angela Lansbury, Stephen Sondheim, Natasha Lyonne, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Benoit Blanc receives a knock on his door from a stranger named Helen (Janelle Monae), who is seeking his help to prove that her sister was murdered. [Glass Onion](https://decider.com/movie/glass-onion-a-knives-out-mystery/)—which is now streaming on [Netflix](https://www.netflix.com/title/81458416)—finally gave us just a hint of backstory for everyone’s favorite Southern detective.
Following up on his hit first, the sequel in his Hercule Poirot-esque mystery sent Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) to the private island of billionaire tech bro ...
When asked how he decides who to scrutinize with his characters, he emphasized that he was merely holding up a mirror to our current cultural zeitgeist: Rather than creating characters that take classic whodunit tropes to their extremes, he wanted to capture the extremes of our world: He has that same bravado and unwillingness to admit to a foolish decision. That said, because he wrote Glass Onion amid the pandemic and not in 2022, Musk wasn't his exact target when writing Miles: He also still has the gadgets and intellect to back up his credentials. [Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery](https://collider.com/tag/knives-out-2/) finally peeling back its secrets on Netflix today, [Rian Johnson](http://collider.com/tag/rian-johnson) is doing the rounds to discuss his latest success.
The cast is full of A-listers like Daniel Craig, Edward Norton, Janelle Monáe, Kate Hudson and Kathryn Hahn.
[the 2023 SAG Awards nominees through January 10](https://www.goldderby.com/leagues/) [Make your predictions](https://www.goldderby.com/leagues/) at Gold Derby now. See our [latest prediction champs](https://www.goldderby.com/best-prediction-scores/awards/league-data/). [Netflix](https://www.goldderby.com/t/netflix/) movie among its nominations, going back to “Beasts of No Nation” in 2015. Can “Glass Onion” now shake up the important precursor race of [Best Film Ensemble](https://www.goldderby.com/odds/graph/sag-awards-film-nominations-2023-predictions/best-film-ensemble/) at the [SAG Awards](https://www.goldderby.com/t/sag-awards/)? A good example of that is when we see the influence SAG has had on the academy with “CODA” last year and “Parasite” two years prior. Speak up and share your huffy opinions in our [famous forums](https://www.goldderby.com/forums/) where 5,000 showbiz leaders lurk every day to track latest awards buzz. Download our free and easy app for [Apple/iPhone devices](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id1460576753) or [Android (Google Play)](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pmc.goldDerby) to compete against legions of other fans plus our experts and editors for best prediction accuracy scores. Viola Davis’ “The Woman King” is also in the mix in fifth place, but other movies like “Top Gun: Maverick” and even “Avatar: The Way of Water” could theoretically get in, though neither of those original movies were nominated by the actors guild. received two SAG nominations for 2020’s “One Night in Miami.” The cast also includes former wrestler and “Guardians of the Galaxy” star Dave Bautista, and many more. Janelle Monáe was a member of the ensemble-winning cast for “Hidden Figures” in 2016, and Kate Hudson has been nominated for three SAG Awards, two for Cameron Crowe’s “Almost Famous” and one for the musical “Nine.” Two-time Emmy nominee Kathryn Hahn has been a part of two SAG Ensemble-nominated casts, once for the series “Transparent” in 2014 and two years later for the film “Captain Fantastic,” and Leslie Odom, Jr. the 10 for the Best Picture Oscar. He’s joined by Edward Norton, a SAG Ensemble winner for “Birdman” (2014) who was also nominated for a solo bid for that movie, plus as part of the cast of “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (2014).
Let's break down the many twists and turns of Rian Johnson's "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery."
He all but handed Miles the idea of the lights going out and someone getting shot. In short, Miles has to gaslight, gatekeep, and girlboss his way out of this. Throughout his stay on the island, Duke kept hinting that he saw Miles leaving Andi's — the word "pancake" does a lot of heavy lifting here — and trying to leverage Miles for a spot on Alpha News. There's truly a moment where it looks like Miles is going to get away with his crimes. Then, all he has to do is convince everyone that Duke simply made a mistake in picking up Miles's glass, shut off the lights, and shoot Helen (who he believes to be Andi) with the pistol he stole from Duke. Everyone who received Andi's e-mail rushed to find her, but only Duke saw Miles speeding away from the scene of the crime in his iconic Baby Blue car. When the news of Andi's death breaks online, Duke points it out to Miles in secret and forces his hand. Does Miles concoct an elaborate poison in order to dispatch of Duke? In the ensuing lawsuit, Miles shut her out of Alpha completely, claiming he had come up with the main idea of Alpha. The bullet lodged itself in one of Andi's journals that she was carrying around, allowing her to survive the murder attempt. As Benoit points out, it's almost too obvious, but it makes the most sense: Who stands to lose more from Miles being exposed than Miles himself? Miles may have invited his friends to his island to solve his murder, but he is not our victim.
Rian Johnson's "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery" is yet another murder mystery that bluntly states, "Eat the rich." It has an all-new cast of characters,
In addition to all that, it’s amusing that Miles thinks (or at least claims) that the seawater that Klear has been made of or will be made of in the foreseeable future is abundant in nature. I mean, this is a 500-year-old painting that has been conserved with so many factors in mind, and then there’s this douchebag who is flouting all of that just so that he can flex in front of his friends. One is supposed to be transparent, and the other is supposed to be layered to conceal what’s at its center. And although Musk has dismissed hydrogen fuel as an alternative to oil and gas, his plans to revolutionize transportation have been unaffordable and impractical. His only achievement is hijacking the brainchild of a Black woman (Andi) and putting the future of the company created by her, and the futures of everyone associated with it atop an untested hydrogen-based fuel called Klear. His “efforts” to avoid traffic congestion led to, well, traffic congestion, and that too in an inescapable tube. He thinks his name should be uttered “in the same breath as Mona Lisa” because of his “scientific prowess.” But what he fails to comprehend is that da Vinci and the Mona Lisa have acquired this depth and popularity after years of work, passion, restoration, and analysis. So, despite all his adulation for the Mona Lisa, Bron fails to see his fundamental flaw, while Rian Johnson exposes our preference for instant fame over long-lasting greatness. FYI, the (ugly) artistic representation of Miles sits right across the painting of Mona Lisa. They call themselves “disruptors” because they are destroying everything that’s synonymous with the status quo in order to create a new norm. So, Miles loaned it to them, and in exchange, he moved the Mona Lisa from the Louvre to the Glass Onion. It’s filled to the brim with relevant social commentary and cameos (Ethan Hawke, Hugh Grant, Serena Williams, Natasha Lyonne, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Stephen Sondheim, Angela Lansbury, Yo-Yo Ma, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the Hourly Dong).
Rian Johnson's "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery" is set during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Here's how the film addresses the health crisis.
That seems to be why he's pushing for the launch of Klear, his form of clean energy that also happens to be incredibly volatile. They just have to get mysterious liquid sprayed in their mouths courtesy of Ethan Hawke ( Later in the film, we get another subtle shout-out to a hobby many took up during the first months of the COVID pandemic: baking. When Benoit's partner Philip (Hugh Grant) answers the door to their apartment, he's wearing an apron and covered in flour. Do they have to self-quarantine and get tested? But the award for the wildest mask — if we can even call it that — goes to the glamorous and gonzo Birdie Jay (Kate Hudson), who swans into Greece wearing a bedazzled mesh mask that certainly isn't protecting anyone from the spread of an airborne virus. Nowhere is this clearer than with schoolteacher Helen (Janelle Monáe), who tells Benoit about the difficulties of educating her young students in virtual classrooms. Business on the top, Birdie's sweatpants on the bottom. [Tweet may have been deleted (opens in a new tab)] And then there's Birdie, who's hosting a lavish party full of people she claims are in her pod — including famous cellist Benoit Blanc's (Daniel Craig) stylish silk mask scores well on both fashion and function, emphasizing his smart desire to follow COVID safety protocols. From face masks to ill-advised parties, here are all the ways Glass Onion addresses COVID-19.
The new movie is a murder mystery — but it's also about why we all willingly submit to the rules of billionaires.
At some point, all of these men accrued enough capital that they found themselves surrounded by people who fanned their egos in the hopes of a kickback. [artists in New York City](https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/josephbernstein/peter-thiel-anti-woke-film-festival-trevor-bazile) and [politicians in Arizona](https://www.axios.com/2022/10/12/peter-thiel-arizona-blake-masters-mcconnell) because he thinks they’ll influence culture and politics toward his vision of a new right. A simple explanation of a phenomenon (or a murder), stated out loud, is often the truest. They travel to the island ostensibly to solve the (fake) murder of Bron himself. For all of the artifice, Bron is not playing 4D chess. After some running around the house and an attempt on Helen’s life, Blanc brings everyone together and declares his findings: It was Bron who murdered Andi and Cody, the former because she knew a new invention of his was dangerous and she had information that could allow her to take back his company; the latter because he’s the only one who saw Bron leaving Andi’s house after committing the murder. The more billionaire-skeptical among the audience might not like him, but on first viewing it’s unlikely that they catch all of his verbal stumbles because of the confidence with which he delivers them. Under direct scrutiny from the clever Blanc, though, all of the myths that Bron’s friends and followers build up around him quickly vanish. The result is an allegory for all of us living with the omnipresent Elon Musk, Donald Trump and Jeff Bezos. All of these people have known Bron for years, and many of them quickly make reference to his brilliance while solving puzzles inside the package, which ultimately reveal an invitation to his private island in Greece for a murder mystery party. The other significant entrant into this quickly growing canon came this year in the form of Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, Rian Johnson’s sequel to 2019’s Knives Out. Johnson also adds a new dynamic to the satire: The rich are not only evil; many of them are preternaturally stupid, their legitimacy propped up only by the deference of those around them.
Glass Onion, Daniel Craig's Knives Out sequel, is streaming on Netflix now - and viewers are raving about the movie's biggest cameo: Hugh Grant.
[wrote](https://twitter.com/RileyHaven2/status/1606251794245439488). “WAIT HUGH GRANT,” another [tweeted](https://twitter.com/bongsfilm/status/1606231410372710400). And I feel like in general, if you think about Poirot, for example, I feel like getting glimpses of the detective’s life outside of the scope of the case is interesting. “And also, as I said at the LFF, who wouldn’t want to live with the human being that he happens to live with? “The less of a song and dance we make about that, the better, really, for me, because it just made sense,” he said. Also love how they got Ethan Hawke and Hugh Grant to appear in cameos, I think that’s hilarious,” a third [tweeted](https://twitter.com/inudens/status/1606249009219194881).
From the other members of Benoit Blanc's 'Among Us' crew to his recognizable romantic partner, here's what you should know about all the biggest celebrity ...
His presence in Glass Onion doesn’t extend past his brief appearance early in the Netflix film, either, but that doesn’t make his cameo any less fun. In addition to her role in Glass Onion, Lyonne is set to reteam with writer-director Rian Johnson on the upcoming Peacock murder mystery series, Poker Face. In addition to Sondheim, Angela Lansbury also appears in Glass Onion as one member of Benoit Blanc’s socially distanced Among Us crew. Grant’s voice can also be heard earlier in Glass Onion when he calls out to Craig’s Blanc while the latter is playing Among Us in the bathroom. Orange is the New Black and Russian Doll star Natasha Lyonne also appears in Glass Onion during Benoit Blanc’s Among Us Zoom call. With that in mind, here are all the major celebrities who briefly appear in Glass Onion, including one or two that even the most keen-eyed of viewers might have missed.