Nicely put and certainly a valid take.
Maybe I'd appreciate the satire more on a rewatch. As it stands I was looking forward to something more realistically horrifying and was bummed that it didn't provide that but I can understand what it did bring to the table (ha ha) for you and others.
On a somewhat side note what did you think of Glass Onion? I loved the first Knives Out but thought that RJ leaned too heavily on caricature for this new one as well and I felt the same about Starship Troopers back in the day so maybe I'm just not the right audience for these types of flicks, lol.
A lot of times, expectations alone will dictate enjoyment versus apathy/disappointment. On that front, and to answer your question... I consider
Knives Out superior on many different levels, but I found
Glass Onion equally entertaining and even more rewatchable. And, yes, that has almost everything to do with my awareness of tone going in and my willingness to grant RJ satirist conceit. By doing so (particularly on rewatch), I can sit back and just enjoy without being bothered by the departure from the first film. I knew it was coming. The "caricatures" don't bother me because I wasn't expecting anything else.
Perfect that you brought it up in a thread about
The Menu because I've seen much of the same reaction and discourse. Some of the best laughs I've had recently were the criticisms of
Glass Onion for not being realistic. The interpretation that RJ intended for it to be a conventional murder mystery whodunit with realistic portrayals and plot logic is so hilarious to me. It could not have been more obvious from the opening minutes that this *wasn't* going to be that, and was never meant to be. It's pure farcical satire with a whodunit structure in bones only.
But, on the earlier point of a movie failing to work on two levels, I can relate to your view because of how I perceive
The Babadook. That movie is supposed to be a horror film on one level and an allegory on the other, but it just doesn't work *at all* on the litaralist level. It only works as a metaphor for grief/depression/postpartum. For it to work as a horror, the "monster" would have to be literally viable as an actual real-world entity. But the ending undoes that so completely that it doesn't work on both levels. For most people who think the film is a triumph, they value just the metaphor and don't worry about the logical integrity as a straightforward narrative. I only allow that grace to satire, however. But I do get how/why some people apply it more broadly. After all, anything positive (be it food for thought or pure enjoyment) is what movies are meant for, IMO.