I
remember hearing about the TV show Alias.
In it, the main character’s father works for the CIA. Except he doesn’t. Except he really does. Knives out is sort of like that.
Harlan
Thrombey is a mystery writer who is found dead in a locked room. It appears to be suicide. Except his family hated him, so it had to be
murder. Except it’s impossible to prove
who. Plus, he was found dead in a locked
room. So, the police have plenty of
suspects, but no real evidence.
Benoit
Blanc, a private detective who was hired anonymously, is convinced it’s
murder. He presses the investigation
until he figures out what really happened.
I
don’t see a lot of mystery movies. I
tend to find them all very similar. We
have a few plot twists. Some, we see
coming. Some, we don’t. We have a lot of people who stood to gain
from Thrombey’s death and they all look guilty.
Then,
there’s Marta Cabrera, who is acting guilty.
She knows something. Did she
murder him? Does she know who did? Why isn’t she saying anything?
We
come to find out that guilt isn’t so clear-cut a thing. It’s almost like that riddle where a man
falls off a roof only to be shot on the third floor. Is the shooter guilty? Well, it’s more complicated than that. Yes, mistakes were made.
My
biggest complaint about this movie could have easily been the bad decisions
made. It’s always easier to come forward
(or at least get a lawyer) first thing.
At least it wasn’t overdone. We
understand that Marta is in a difficult position.
The
family also could have been overdone.
Most of them are easy to dislike.
We don’t really want to see any of them get their share of the estate.
It’s
an interesting movie that’s got an interesting set of circumstances. It almost appears to be written by someone
who dislikes a lot of the clichés I dislike, but didn’t want to necessarily
parody the genre. I wouldn’t call it
wish fulfillment, necessarily. However,
it does play out rather interestingly.
2 comments :
Good point about this hitting on cliches without parodying them, exactly. I thought it struck a good balance of feeling familiar but still managing to have the twists lead to different places than I expected.
Great rreading your post
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