How to Make a Killing – Photo Prime Video

By Susan Granger

In reviewing “How to Make a Killing,” I have to inquire: Have you ever seen a delectable British black comedy called “Kind Hearts and Coronets”? Probably not. 

Released in 1949, it starred Alec Guiness as the debonair son of a woman disowned by her aristocratic family for marrying below her social class. After she dies, he decides to acquire his ‘rightful’ inheritance by murdering the eight relatives ahead of him in the line of succession – with Guiness playing all of them!

Insipidly written and blandly directed by John Patton Ford, “How to Make a Killing” re-imagines that rudimentary concept, introducing Becket Redfellow (Glen Powell) as the disowned grandson of uber-wealthy Whitlaw Redfellow (Ed Harris). 

Much to his chagrin, genial Becket grew up poor in Belleville, New Jersey – at least that’s what he tells the prison priest in a death-row conversation, four hours before his scheduled execution for murder

Cue the flashbacks…

Propelled by his mother’s urging to get “the right kind of life,” Becket realizes that the only way he can retrieve the family fortune is to kill his way up the family tree.

That includes a Wall Street financier (Raff Law, son of Jude), an unconventional artist (Zach Woods), a corrupt megachurch preacher (Toper Grace), and a kindly uncle (Bill Camp), who fortuitously dies of a heart attack.

Meanwhile, since childhood, he’s had a crush on an ‘unattainable’ rich girl, Julia (Margaret Qualley, daughter of Andie MacDowall), with her own avaricious agenda.

After his star-making role in “Top Gun: Maverick,” followed by “Hit Man,” “Twisters,” and “The Running Man,” I suspect this is a misfire Glen Powell will bury deep in his resume. 

On the Granger Gauge of 1 to 10, “How to Make a Killing” is a flaccid, forgettable 5, streaming on Prime Video.

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Susan Granger

Westport resident Susan Granger grew up in Hollywood, studied journalism with Pierre Salinger at Mills College and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with highest honors in Journalism. In addition to writing for newspapers and magazines, she has appeared on radio and television as an anchorwoman and movie critic for many years. Read all her reviews at susangranger.com.