Despite the always topical "kill the rich" plot, How to Make a Killing is a surprisingly old-fashioned film, and not just because it's an off-brand remake of 1949's Kind Hearts and Coronets. It's a done-in-one story built around the charm of its leading man, with the kind of plot that appeals to people worried about making a living rather than slashers or alien invasions; whatever its failings, just having it in cinemas is cause for celebration.
Beckett Redfellow (Glen Powell) should be living a life of luxury and ease. Unfortunately, while his mother was born into the insanely wealthy Redfellow family, he was born out of wedlock, his mother disowned by the family patriarch (Ed Harris), his father a musician who died of shock at the birth.
Before his mother died she tried to bring him up right - or at least, able to walk amongst the wealthy without disgracing himself - and with a drive to make something of his life. While that hasn't really happened (as an adult, he's a suit salesman) there's still hope. The Redfellow fortune is held in a trust, and Beckett is still in line to inherit everything... just so long as the rest of the family die ahead of him.
This seems somewhat unlikely, until a chance encounter with former crush Julia (Margaret Qualley) reminds him that money can buy happiness and that his own personal happiness is only a string of seemingly accidental deaths away.
Seeing a number of idle rich idiots being stuffed in the family mausoleum keeps things ticking along nicely, while there's just enough actual emotion going on away from the murders to provide some stakes beyond "will he get away with it" - because, as the film opens with Beckett on death row, it seems somewhat unlikely he will.
A kindly uncle provides both a leg up and some family guidance, while a seemingly heartfelt romance between Beckett and one of his dead cousin's exes (Jessica Henwick) gives Beckett a lot more to lose, and a reason to maybe hit the brakes - which the cash-strapped Julia may not be on board with.
Powell is once again a charming leading man playing a character who doesn't quite give him enough to work with. He's never quite convincing as a multiple murderer - which is fair enough, as his character is meant to have doubts pretty much from the start - but the lack of real steel in his performance does weaken things just a little.
Likewise, the "kill the rich" plot delivers when it comes to comical chumps (one-scene standouts include Zach Woods and Topher Grace), and Beckett's encounters with his feckless relatives are some of the best scenes in the film. But a tiny bit more venom wouldn't have gone astray either: these are the parasites that ruined his life (and no doubt many others) after all.
But overall this delivers plenty of old-style entertainment in a slick modern package, a nicely dark-hearted tale with plenty of twists and turns and a cast that's easy on the eye. There may not be a lot beneath the surface, but How to Make a Killing is more than just a way to kill time.
- Anthony Morris






