When director Rian Johnson introduced the new Knives Out film on the third day of TIFF 2025, he exclaimed: โweโre going back to church.โ
By that he meant that Wake Up Dead Man, the latest Benoit Blanc mystery, would harken back to the origins of the whodunit, and in particular the gothic vibes of Edgar Allan Poe. And now that Iโve seen it, I have to say that Johnson pulled it off: the new movie has a darker and more spiritual feel than its predecessors, and yet itโs still distinctly Knives Out, which is to say twisting and hilarious. I gasped a few times, as did the rest of audience, at the many reveals. Iโll have a full review in the coming days, but you can read my initial thoughts below.
In addition to that, I managed to watch a tense German film about the dark side of being an influencer, a Saudi crime thriller with a deflating twist, a hilarious dark comedy about how terrible kids can be, and the best pure action flick Iโve seen in some time. It was a hectic and eclectic day to say the least. (Unfortunately most of these movies donโt currently have premiere dates for a wider audience, but Iโll let you know if that changes.)
And if you missed them, you can read my previous dispatches from this yearโs TIFF as well, covering films like Exit 8 and No Other Choice.
Benoit Blancโs (Daniel Craig) third outing is the darkest and most complex yet. It covers a murder in a small church community in New York, as Blanc pairs up with a young priest (Josh OโConnor) and the local sheriff (Mila Kunis) to figure out whatโs going on. Of course itโs not so simple; in fact, Blanc constantly calls the case โimpossible.โ But that complexity allows the film to build up an incredible cascade of twists and turns that seems to just keep going up until reaching a powerfully emotional crescendo. And donโt worry: even though the tone is more dire and serious at times, this also might be the funniest Knives Out has ever been
In select theaters on November 26th, before streaming on Netflix on December 12th.
An absolutely unrelenting and bone-crunching action movie starring Xie Miao and Joe Taslim as two men fighting to take down an underground child-trafficking ring. Each fight sequence is as brutal as it is balletic, and yet thereโs an inventiveness and playfulness to it as well. Nearly everything can be part of the choreography, whether itโs duelling with bicycles as if they were swords, or downed foes becoming a human pyramid to climb. If you want an idea of how extra this movie can be, imagine a classic hallway fight just teeming with bad guys, and then add a motorcycle. The final sequence, between five men with different aims, is chaotic, exhausting, and impossible to look away from.
No word yet on a wider theatrical release.
As an only child, Luca (Maja Bons) is the centerpiece of a wildly successful influencer family. Nearly every important moment in her life has happened in front of a camera; she learned about periods from her mom on a podcast. Sheโs rich but alone, and when her parents move ahead with plans to have another child โ spurred, it seems, primarily by the content opportunities โ Luca starts to question the life sheโs been forced into. Early on the movie feels suffocating in a good way, mirroring how Luca feels. But it never quite figures out how to direct that energy, and the story meanders to a conclusion while mostly wasting a subplot about Lucaโs AI avatar.
No word yet on a wider theatrical release.
It really seems like everything would be OK for school teacher Maria (Saoirse Ronan) if she didnโt have to deal with the one problem child in her class. And then, one day he does really go away โ I wonโt spoil the why or how โ and her life does get better, as does the rest of the class, who thrive once they have a teacher who isnโt stressed all day. But the unhinged twist in Bad Apples lingers, and the film becomes such a funny romp as Maria tries to balance doing the right thing with working towards the greater good.
No word yet on a wider theatrical release.
This movie starts out well, before blowing it with a twist that feels cheap and implausible. Nawal (Mila Alzahrani) is a receptionist for the police, but also a true crime addict, so when sheโs asked to help out with a case of a murder girl, she becomes obsessed. The complications that arise from an unauthorized woman trying to solve a crime in Saudi Arabia add an interesting twist to the genre, and the mystery is enjoyable right up until the ending, which I wonโt spoil, only to say that it undoes the goodwill the rest of the film creates.
No word yet on a wider theatrical release.
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