London Film Festival launches with Daniel Craig鈥檚 third Knives Out movie

LONDON 鈥 Daniel Craig鈥檚 third outing as the charismatic detective Benoit Blanc in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery opened the London Film Festival on Wednesday, kicking off 12 days of red carpets, screenings and talks with the likes of Oscar winners Daniel Day-Lewis and Chloe Zhao.
Mr. Craig led co-stars including Glenn Close, Josh Brolin and Mila Kunis on the red carpet for the latest Knives Out whodunit, which has a more gothic and darker tone than 2019鈥檚 Knives Out and Glass Onion released in 2022.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e all different from each other, which is what I think we set out to do … we wanted them all to be standalone so that each one had a different flavor,鈥 Mr. Craig told Reuters of the three films.
Asked what it was like to take on the role once again, he added: 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 do it unless I had fun doing it.鈥
In the murder mystery, which also stars Josh O鈥機onnor, Jeremy Renner, Daryl McCormack, and Cailee Spaeny, Mr. Brolin鈥檚 small-town priest Monsignor Wicks is killed, with suspicion turning to one of his parishioners.
Writer-director Rian Johnson, also behind the earlier Knives Out movies, said he and Mr. Craig started talking about ideas for Wake Up Dead Man right after screening Glass Onion at the London Film Festival.
鈥淭he idea of doing something a little more grounded seemed like it could be a good challenge … hopefully it鈥檚 still funny, hopefully it鈥檚 still entertaining and a really fun ride for audiences,鈥 he said.
Some 247 titles will feature during the 69th edition of the BFI London Film Festival, with famous names including George Clooney, Julia Roberts, and Paul Mescal expected in town to promote their respective movies Jay Kelly, After the Hunt, and Hamnet.
Also on the line-up are Guillermo del Toro鈥檚 Frankenstein, Emma Stone鈥檚 latest collaboration with Yorgos Lanthimos, Bugonia, as well as Anemone for which Mr. Day-Lewis came out of retirement for his son鈥檚 feature-film directorial debut.
Mr. Lanthimos and Mr. Day-Lewis will also take part in talks about their work alongside Ms. Zhao, who will discuss her Hamnet adaptation.
Forty-two percent of the works on the schedule were made by female or nonbinary filmmakers, organizers say.
鈥淲e really want the program to reflect the city that we鈥檙e in so we鈥檙e really looking for an enormous geographic diversity and we鈥檙e also just looking for the program to represent the world around us,鈥 London Film Festival Director Kristy Matheson said.
The London Film Festival runs until Oct. 19. 鈥 Reuters


