How to Make a Killing is a dark comedy thriller led by Glen Powell, who plays Becket Redfellow, a blue-collar outsider who was disowned from his extremely wealthy family before he was even born, and ...
Each month, How to Do It columnists Jessica Stoya and Rich Juzwiak ask readers for their thoughts on the letters they’ve received. In this edition, Jessica replies to readers’ comments and suggestions ...
More than a century ago, a scratched-up slab of limestone was excavated in the modern-day Netherlands and later deemed an ancient Roman game board. Since then, the mysterious game has eluded ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Olivia Singh is a reporter covering TV and film. Glen Powell returns to the big screen with a new thriller that’ll keep audiences ...
Margaret Qualley, Ed Harris and Topher Grace also appear in John Patton Ford's reimagining of the classic 'Kind Hearts and Coronets.' By Frank Scheck Trying to find your niche as a movie star isn’t ...
Discover What’s Streaming On: If you loved Emily the Criminal, then you should know that the Emily the Criminal writer/director has a new movie in theaters this weekend starring Glen Powell, called ...
The actor stars in this comedy with a high corpse count, but the movie’s lightness soon becomes forced. By Manohla Dargis When you purchase a ticket for an independently reviewed film through our site ...
Seven are people and one is done-dirty source material. The blood. So much blood. Writer-director John Patton Ford has misguidedly modernized “Kind Hearts and Coronets,” the classic Alec Guinness ...
“How to Make a Killing” boasts an opening so strong that it buys enough audience goodwill to coast through nearly its entire running time. That’s priceless in a screwball murder movie in which ...
"Emily the Criminal" filmmaker John Patton Ford loosely adapts "Kind Hearts and Coronets" for a star-packed outing hobbled by an oddly dull script and a tone that (unfortunately) matches it. There are ...
It's a watchably weird reimagining of "Kind Hearts and Coronets," though with a lot more than homicide on its mind. It’s likely that 95 percent of the people who go to see “How to Make a Killing” will ...
Ross Bonaime is the Senior Film Editor at Collider. He is a Virginia-based critic, writer, and editor who has written about all forms of entertainment for Paste Magazine, Brightest Young Things, ...