Knives Out
Let's start with what Knives Out is, because it is genuinely very good at what it does.…
Full analysis belowThis film draws you in for a significant portion of its runtime with traditional or neutral content before springing its woke agenda. Know before you go!
NOT A WOKE TRAP despite the woke lean. Knives Out's immigration politics and class critique are embedded in the premise from the start. The protagonist is an undocumented immigrant's daughter. The villain is an entitled wealthy family who talks progressive but acts exploitative. Rian Johnson has publicly stated that the film is a deliberate commentary on Trump-era immigration politics. None of this is hidden. Conservative audiences who engage with the film knowing its politics will find a craftsman's whodunit with an agenda, not a neutral mystery that ambushes them.
Our Verdict on Knives Out
Let's start with what Knives Out is, because it is genuinely very good at what it does. It is a modern Agatha Christie whodunit with a $40 million budget, an all-star cast, and a director smart enough to subvert the genre's conventions in ways that feel earned rather than clever for cleverness's sake. Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer in his final major film role) is found dead on the morning after his 85th birthday party. His dysfunctional family are all suspects. A genteel Southern detective named Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig, having enormous fun) has been anonymously hired to investigate.
The twist, delivered in the first act rather than the third, is that Marta Cabrera (Ana de Armas), Harlan's nurse and genuinely the most decent person in the room, saw everything. She knows what happened. And the mystery shifts: not whodunit, but how does Marta survive a family of wolves who will destroy her to protect themselves?
Daniel Craig's Benoit Blanc is a genuine creation. A Southern gentleman detective who speaks in elaborate metaphors about doughnuts and donuts, whose apparent bumbling conceals precise intelligence. Craig attacks the role with obvious delight and creates a character distinctive enough to sustain two sequels. The ensemble is uniformly good: Chris Evans playing against type as a sneering entitled heir is particularly sharp.
Now for the politics, because they are impossible to avoid.
Knives Out is explicitly, by Rian Johnson's own statement, a film about Trump-era immigration politics. Marta is the daughter of an undocumented immigrant. Every member of the wealthy Thrombey family claims to support immigrants while treating Marta as furniture and scheming to deport her mother the moment it becomes convenient. The message is about as subtle as the chair made of knives that dominates the Thrombey study: rich liberals say they support immigrants, but when their inheritance is at stake, they'll call ICE themselves.
This critique is fair enough as far as it goes. The Thrombey family's hypocrisy is consistently portrayed and the film doesn't pretend their progressive posturing is sincere. But the film's solution, giving the house and all the wealth to Marta, is a wish-fulfillment fantasy. The virtuous immigrant inherits from the corrupt native-born family. The moral architecture is designed to make a specific political point, and it does so without ambiguity.
The film's ideological frame is also worth noting: the entire conflict is between Marta (good, immigrant, working-class) and the Thrombey family (corrupt, wealthy, native-born). There is no character who is both wealthy and good, both native-born and principled. The class and immigration politics are baked into every character's moral valence. This is a progressive morality tale wearing a mystery's clothing.
For VirtueVigil: Knives Out is a well-crafted film with openly progressive politics about immigration and class. The politics are the point. You can enjoy the film while disagreeing with its conclusions. Many conservatives do. But pretending the politics aren't there is not possible.
Woke Tropes & Content Analysis
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immigration as Central Moral Frame (Protagonist as Immigrant Daughter) | 4 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 5.04 |
| Wealthy White Family as Uniformly Corrupt | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Progressive Hypocrisy Satire (Cuts Both Ways) | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 1.4 |
| Entitled White Male Villain | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Female Character With Unusual Bodily Function as Plot Device | 2 | 1 | 0.5 | 1 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 11.6 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-Made Man Ethic Honored (Harlan Thrombey) | 4 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.8 |
| Virtue Rewarded (Marta's Integrity Wins) | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Detective as Moral Authority | 3 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 1.05 |
| Deception Exposed and Punished | 3 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 1.05 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 7.0 | |||
Score Margin: -5.4 WOKE
Director: Rian Johnson
PROGRESSIVE / LEFT. Johnson is one of Hollywood's most openly political filmmakers. His most controversial work, Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017), was accused by large segments of the franchise's fanbase of prioritizing progressive identity politics over coherent storytelling. Johnson has been vocal on social media in support of left-wing causes and openly hostile to conservative critics. Knives Out was explicitly designed, by Johnson's own account, as a response to Trump-era immigration politics. He is a skilled craftsman whose ideological commitments are woven into his narratives.Rian Johnson broke through with Brick (2005), a neo-noir set in a high school, followed by The Brothers Bloom (2008) and the acclaimed science fiction film Looper (2012). The Last Jedi remains his most divisive work, beloved by critics and a portion of audiences and deeply resented by another large portion. Knives Out was received as a return to form: funny, clever, and entertaining enough that its politics were mostly absorbed without controversy. He has since made Glass Onion (2022) and is developing a third Benoit Blanc film, both for Netflix.
Content Breakdown
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative adults who love the mystery genre will find Knives Out highly entertaining despite its politics. Daniel Craig's Benoit Blanc is one of the great comic-detective creations of recent cinema, and the structural subversion of the genre is genuinely clever. The film's critique of progressive hypocrisy, while directed at anti-immigrant conservatives, actually cuts both ways: the Thrombey family is a gallery of wealthy liberals whose progressive values evaporate the moment their money is at stake. Conservative audiences can enjoy that critique even while disagreeing with the film's immigration thesis. Highly watchable.
Parental Guidance
Is Knives Out Safe for Kids?
Rated PG-13 for some language and violence. Parents should know that Knives Out contains scattered profanity including a few uses of mild to moderate language, though nothing extremely graphic. The film includes several scenes of violence, primarily a stabbing death that occurs early in the plot, though the violence is not gratuitous or gory given the mystery genre context. There are brief depictions of blood related to the central plot point, presented in a clinical rather than exploitative manner. The film contains moderate alcohol use, primarily in social settings at a mansion party and throughout the mystery investigation. A character's drug use is referenced and becomes plot-relevant, though depictions remain relatively mild. There are a few sexual references made in dialogue, but no sexual content or nudity is shown on screen. Spiritual content is minimal, with no significant religious themes or references. The film's tone is lighthearted and comedic despite its murder mystery premise, with the violence serving the plot rather than being sensationalized. The PG-13 rating is appropriately assigned. Most teenagers aged 13 and up should be able to handle the content without difficulty. Younger viewers around age 10-12 might find certain elements mildly intense, particularly the stabbing scene and the overall darker plot elements, though the comedic framing reduces the impact. Families should consider individual child maturity levels before viewing.
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