Whodunits are so synonymous with Agatha Christie that it takes a brave writer or filmmaker to attempt to gatecrash her one-woman crime spree. But Rian Johnson does just that with Knives Out, his follow-up to Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Attempting to modernise and tweak yet another most beloved of movie genres, Johnson has assembled a dream cast including Daniel Craig, Jamie Lee Curtis, Chris Evans, Lakeith Stanfield, Toni Collette, Christopher Plummer, Blade Runner 2049’s Ana de Armas and Miami Vice veteran Don Johnson. The film features all the black humour, misdirection, sleight of hand and big acting we have come to expect from the classic murder-mystery oeuvre.
The Big Issue: When did your love of whodunits begin?
Rian Johnson: It started when I was very young. I would devour any book by Agatha Christie. I remember finding one on the bookshelf at home and it just looked like the most grown-up, adult thing I had ever seen. I was not even 10 yet. I read any of them I could get my hands on. She was the master. I loved the Poirot films with Peter Ustinov. I could watch them over and over again. And I do. Whenever I get the chance. But I also liked the recent Murder on the Orient Express with Kenneth Branagh. And Then There Were None is my favourite Christie novel. But I also love Curtain, the last ever Poirot book, which has a really different tone and is barely a whodunit. Agatha Christie really was the best. I still read her books whenever I can get my hands on them.
How important is it to have an all-star cast in a murder mystery?
I had the idea for Knives Out 10 years ago. But back then I couldn’t have dreamed in a million years that we would get a cast like this. Daniel Craig was the first actor on board, and everyone wants to work with him. Then Michael Shannon joined up and everyone wants to work with him. Don Johnson is having a bit of a renaissance, not that he ever went away, Jamie Lee Curtis is spectacularly good. I think everyone had a good time – you can go quite big with your acting on a whodunit. And it is such a big ensemble cast.
I’ve never seen Daniel Craig in a role quite like this – how did that come about?