What is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note?

What is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note? - Music Sheet on Organ

In Knives Out, when the detectives start investigating the family, Benoit Blanc just keeps hitting a single note on the piano, which builds tension.

I remember there was such technique in other thriller.

What is the reference for using this technique?



Best Answer

From the IMDB trivia page, and having just watched it, the piano is a cue to ask a specific question:

When Benoit Blanc is first seen by the audience, he is sitting in the study listening to Lieutenant Elliot question the Thrombey family members, playing the same note on the piano at seemingly random intervals. This was not random at all; after Blanc hits the piano key Lieutenant Elliot always asks the same question; "What time did you arrive at the house?" The piano key was Blanc's signal to Elliot to ask the question.

Edit:

Director Rian Johnson also addressed it in an interview with The Verge. It seems to link with the idea that the piano is a prompt to ask a specific question, but also that it breaks up a long scene:

What’s the purpose of Daniel Craig’s character hitting the piano keys during the interview scenes?

It’s just a weird goofy thing. I had written in the script that originally Blanc was going to tap the back of Detective Elliot’s chair with his foot every time he wants him to ask a specific question. And when I worked out the geography of it, I saw that Daniel was going to be too far away for his foot to reach, but there was going to be a piano back there. And so just on the day I said, “This is kind of weird, maybe plink the piano.” And Daniel kind of blinked at me and said, “Well, okay.” It’s also very intentionally odd, it’s meant to have you say, as Don Johnson says, “who the fuck is this guy?” And because it is a long scene, it’s a scene where you could easily get in a lull of question, question, question. So just to throw a couple of drum hits in there that are offbeat, I think there was a benefit to it there.




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What is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note? - Black and White Piano Keys
What is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note? - Photo Of Music Notes Leaning On Wooden Piano
What is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note? - Photo of Man Taking Down Notes



What is the significance of the piano note in knives out?

Every time Benoit Blanc hits the piano key, it's a cue to the Detective to ask them about the time they arrived at the party, in order to find out if they had any motives. Rian Johnson's first time producing one of his movies.

What was the piano in knives out?

From the IMDB trivia page, and having just watched it, the piano is a cue to ask a specific question: When Benoit Blanc is first seen by the audience, he is sitting in the study listening to Lieutenant Elliot question the Thrombey family members, playing the same note on the piano at seemingly random intervals.

What is it called when you play all the piano keys?

Glissando. That's the term for any sweep including a regular set of in-between notes (they may be diatonic, namely just white keys, or pentatonic, just black keys, or chromatic which works only on some instruments or with serious skill). So it would be a full-range glissando.

What do you call the piano notes?

The 12 notes are C, C-Sharp (D-Flat), D, D-sharp (E-Flat), E, F, F-Sharp (G-Flat), G, G-Sharp (A-Flat), A, A-Sharp (B-Flat), and B. Many beginners think that a sharp or flat means a black key. All black keys are either a sharp or flat, but not all sharps and flats are black keys.



Learn Piano Keys And Notes - Piano Keyboard Diagrams




More answers regarding what is the significance/reference of a character repeatedly hitting a piano note?

Answer 2

It seemed to be he hit the piano each time he suspected the one being questioned was lying. If I remember correctly it occurred after the flashbacks to what actually happened and to what the person says.

It also got a reaction from the person being questioned, making them nervous.

Answer 3

To be honest, he was hitting the keys (or rather that one particular key) to indicate his lieutenant (Lakeith Stanfield) to ask a specific question. He just seems to enjoy the theatrics of it.

Though initially, I thought he was hitting the key whenever the investigation got derailed from the main objective. It was an annoyingly, polite way to tell the lieutenant to get back to the point.

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