Rian Johnson’s Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery returns with detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) in what is billed as his darkest, most personal case yet. The film opens in a small upstate New York parish when a young priest, Rev. Jud Duplenticy (Josh O’Connor), arrives to assist Monsignor Jefferson Wicks (Josh Brolin), a charismatic and controversial figure within his congregation. Almost immediately after arriving, Jud is drawn into a baffling and grotesque event: during a service, Wicks gives a sermon, walks into a sealed concrete box, and thirty seconds later he is discovered dead, a knife in his back. The crime is “impossible” in the classic locked‑room mystery sense: no visible entrance or exit to the box, no immediate suspects.

From there the mystery unspools among a cast of suspicious and eccentric townspeople. There is Martha Delacroix (Glenn Close), the devout church lady who has long served Wicks; Samson Holt (Thomas Haden Church), the quiet and circumspect groundskeeper; Vera Draven (Kerry Washington), a tightly‑wound lawyer; Cy Draven (Daryl McCormack), an aspiring politician; Nat Sharp (Jeremy Renner), the town’s physician; Lee Ross (Andrew Scott), a bestselling author; Simone Vivane (Cailee Spaeny), a former concert cellist; and Geraldine Scott (Mila Kunis), the local police chief. As you might expect in a Benoit Blanc story, each character carries secrets, hidden motives, and complex relationships with faith, power, and community.
As the death of Monsignor Wicks sends shockwaves through the parish, Blanc teams up with Chief Geraldine Scott to investigate. What emerges is more than just a whodunit: the idea of myth, belief, radicalization, and the construction of religious authority all come under scrutiny. Blanc must not only untangle physical clues—a locked room, the knife, who might have had opportunity—but also deal with spiritual, moral, psychological dimensions of the case. What is the role of faith, not only for the priests, but for the congregation, for the community, and perhaps for Blanc himself?

Stylistically, the film leans darker than its predecessors in the Knives Out series. Whereas Knives Out and Glass Onion combined bright satire, comedic detours, and puzzle‑mysteries, Wake Up Dead Man promises a more ominous tone: religious overtones, gothic elements, atmospheric tension, and what trailers suggest may be touches of horror or at least unsettling suspense. This tonal shift serves the plot: when a murder happens in the context of a sermon and in the symbolic space of a church, the stakes feel heavier.
Despite its seriousness, the film retains the hallmarks of the Benoit Blanc mysteries: a large ensemble of suspects, unexpected turns, and a detective who must peer beyond surface appearances. Blanc’s investigation is as much about human failing, hypocrisy, and fear as it is about crime. We can expect revelations that pull back the curtain on what the congregation trusts, what individuals hide, and how power and faith can collide.
In conclusion, Wake Up Dead Man is shaping up to be a rich, layered mystery: more than just “who did it,” the film seems to ask “why do we believe what we believe,” and “what happens when those beliefs are betrayed.” It pushes director Rian Johnson’s series into new moral and spiritual territory, with Benoit Blanc facing not only impossible physical puzzles but also ethical and existential ones. As audiences follow the clues, they may find that the true mystery lies not just in solving a crime, but in what it means to be human — to hold faith, to doubt, to conceal, and to confront mortality.





