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Craig's New Mystery: Faith, Murder, and Absurdity
26 Nov
Summary
- Daniel Craig returns as Benoit Blanc investigating a priest's murder.
- The film blends religious themes with a deadpan-absurdist ensemble comedy.
- A cast of troubled parishioners provides potential motives for the crime.

Daniel Craig returns as the droll detective Benoit Blanc in Rian Johnson's latest murder mystery, which delves into religious themes. Blanc arrives at a Catholic church in upstate New York to investigate the murder of its presiding priest, Monsignor Jefferson Wicks, played by Josh Brolin.
The situation is complicated by a close-knit group of troubled parishioners, hilariously portrayed, each with a potential motive. Among the suspects are a junior priest, an ailing cellist, a novelist, a lawyer, an influencer, a doctor, and the church housekeeper.
While the film references classic "locked room" mysteries, it ultimately leans into deadpan-absurdist comedy rather than a traditional whodunnit. The enjoyment peaks before the murder, with escalating bizarre and convoluted revelations rather than a simple twist and counter-twist.




