Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

'Glass Onion' Creator Weighs In On Comparison Between Edward Norton's Character And Elon Musk

Elon Musk; Twitter screenshot of Edward Norton as Miles in "Glass Onion"
Saul Martinez/Getty Images; Netflix

Rian Johnson, the director and writer of 'Knives Out', says it was a 'horrible accident' the film debuted during Musk's Twitter takeover.

Speaking to Wired, Glass Onion director and writer Rian Johnson said it was a "horrible accident" that the film debuted amid controversy over billionaire Elon Musk's stewardship of Twitter.

Johnson wrote the companion film to his 2019 hit Knives Out at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and it features a scene-stealing performance by actor Edward Norton in the role of Miles, an egotistical tech billionaire who lures an eccentric cast of characters to a Greek island for help solving the mystery of his own murder.


Miles is the tech bro who "refuses to acknowledge when his big ideas are bad—or even dangerous," as Wired wrote in a tweet, which underscores the film's kicker he is far from a genius and more of a lucky moron.

Conservative commentators like Daily Wire founder Ben Shapiro have responded negatively to the character.

Shapiro in particular accused Johnson of taking inspiration from Musk to write the character.

However, Johnson notes he started writing the film well before Musk acquired Twitter and generated controversy for using the platform to silence his critics and peddle misinformation.

He told Wired he never wrote Glass Onion—which is currently streaming on Netflix—with Musk in mind.

“It’s so weird. It’s very bizarre. I hope there isn’t some secret marketing department at Netflix that’s funding this Twitter takeover.”
“There’s a lot of general stuff about that sort of species of tech billionaire that went directly into [the movie]. But obviously, it has almost a weird relevance in exactly the current moment."
"A friend of mine said, ‘Man, that feels like it was written this afternoon.’ And that’s just sort of a horrible, horrible accident, you know?”

But accident or not, timing could not be more perfect as far as Twitter users were concerned.


Johnson did tell Wired that he used the archetype of a tech billionaire to write "the type of friends that they would have," which helped the "tenor of everything came together."

He said his "intent was to accurately reflect what it’s been like to have our heads in the middle of the cultural sphere" since 2016, saying the present moment is "a pretty nightmarish kind of carnival, Fellini-esque inflated reality right now."

Musk himself has not commented on the similarities between him and the Miles character even as conservative news outlets like Fox News continue to claim that Glass Onion is a "veiled dig" at him.

More from People

Truth Social logo; Donald Trump
Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images; Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Trump's Truth Social Platform Has A New AI Tool—And Trump's Not Gonna Like What It Has To Say

President Donald Trump regularly uses his social media platform Truth Social to attack his opponents and lie profusely, but the site's new "Truth Search AI" tool is unlikely to win his favor because it actually—get this—tells the truth about him and his policies.

A test conducted by the center-right news and commentary site The Bulwark found that the tool, which Truth Social debuted shortly after Trump signed an executive order to counter the use of “Woke AI” in the federal government, actually tells the truth about everything from his widely unpopular tariffs to the 2020 election results.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Laura Ingraham in the Oval Office
Fox News

Trump Just Bragged That Everything In The Oval Office Is 'Real Gold'—And Even Laura Ingraham Isn't Buying It

President Donald Trump received a dubious reaction from Fox News personality Laura Ingraham after he touted the Oval Office's gold decor as "real gold" while giving her a tour.

The Oval Office has been significantly revamped since Trump took office in January—it features, among other things, fireplace adorned with gold cherubs and medallions, surrounded by portraits of American statesmen in ornate gold frames and shelves filled with gilded figurines, urns, and freshly installed Rococo mirrors.

Keep ReadingShow less
man giving two thumbs down gesture
Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

Questions That May Sound Innocent But Are Actually Offensive

Humans in general tend to be curious creatures. We seek information about the world around us.

But sometimes it's best to rein that desire in a bit.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elon Musk; Joyce Carol Oates
Tom Brenner For The Washington Post via Getty Images; Rosdiana Ciaravolo/Getty Images

Elon Musk Rages After Author Joyce Carol Oates Calls Him 'Uneducated' And 'Uncultured' In Epic Takedown

You'd have to be a "chronically online" user of X, aka Twitter, to know just how prolific a tweeter author Joyce Carol Oates is, but to those who are, her takedowns have become legendary.

And recently, the 87-year-old award-winning writer set her sights on the owner of X himself, Elon Musk. And the gazillionaire babyman is FURIOUS about it.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sydney Sweeney channels boxer Christy Martin
Black Bear Pictures

Sydney Sweeney Speaks Out After 'Christy' Biopic Has One Of Worst Box Office Openings Of All Time

Sydney Sweeney can land a punch, but maybe not at the box office. Her latest film, Christy, a biopic about trailblazing boxer Christy Martin, landed a hard blow but barely connected with the audience, opening to a paltry $1.3 million.

That’s not just a loss; it’s a technical knockout in the “worst wide release openings ever” category, according to Box Office Mojo. For films debuting in over 2,000 theaters, Christy ranks at No. 12 overall and No. 9 when excluding rereleases.

Keep ReadingShow less