As per discussing films, Rian Johnson has said that he will make Benoit Blanc movies until Daniel Craig “blocks me on his phone.”

Due to the Toronto International Film Festival, which opens today, the world is set to receive its first glimpse at Rian Johnson’s eagerly awaited whodunit sequel Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery. Those who couldn’t attend the event can still watch a preview of the upcoming movie because it will be shown as part of a packed schedule. After months of anticipation, Netflix has finally released the movie’s first trailer, officially announcing Daniel Craig’s comeback as the supersleuth with a southern drawl Benoit Blanc.

Following the massive success of Johnson’s first mystery in Knives Out, the sequel switches focus from Johnson to Blanc as he travels to Miles Bron’s private island in the Mediterranean to “peel back the layers of intrigue” in a fresh mystery. After one of Bron’s friends dies at a party, Blanc is once again forced to use his detective abilities to track down the murderer amid a diverse new group of individuals that includes a YouTube star, a fashionista, and a senatorial candidate.

Detective Benoit Blanc appears in the new trailer on an opulent island populated by the strange individuals portrayed by the film’s all-star cast. Blanc’s narrative is accompanied by a sequence of images exhibiting various puzzles, indicating that whatever mystery is going on on this island isn’t necessarily a game for everyone involved. The motive for Blanc’s arrival is underscored by a menacing shot from an elaborate gun.

More About Rian Johnson

American film director and writer Rian Johnson, whose full name is Rian Craig Johnson, was born on December 17, 1973, in Silver Spring, Maryland.

He bought a Super-8 camera and started filming shorts with his pals. Johnson joined the University of Southern California after graduating from high school in 1992, finally being accepted to the institution’s School of Cinema-Television (now School of Cinematic Arts), where he received a degree in 1996. In that location, he produced the brief comedy-horror film Evil Demon Golf Ball from Hell! (1997).