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$28 billion inheritance. 7 relatives standing in the way.
Disowned at birth by his obscenely wealthy family, blue-collar Becket Redfellow will stop at nothing to reclaim his inheritance, no matter how many relatives stand in his way.
Avis de la communauté (12)
I came in just looking for a good time. Nothing fancy - just good stupid fun and that's what I got.
good way to spend time watching someting. ending was not my favorite and dosent make sense.. at least to me.
It was good watch. Nothing practical plot, but a plot that’ll hook you up, yeah ending wasn’t the one I was expecting but still better.
There’s a solid hook here. How to Make a Killing (2024) leans into a darkly playful premise where death feels almost level-based, jumping from one family member to the next like a morbid video game. Each kill has its own flavour, its own tone, and for a while, that structure keeps things ticking along nicely. You can feel the filmmakers having a bit of fun with it, like they’re winking at the audience rather than trying to horrify them. But the problem is it never decides what it actually wants to be. It’s not horror, not sharp enough to land as a proper thriller, and nowhere near bold enough to satisfy as an action piece. It just sits in this weird middle ground, pulling from all three without committing to any. That “identity crisis” feeling creeps in fast, and once you clock it, you can’t unsee it. Glen Powell does what he always does now. Charming, confident, slightly flawed, very watchable. But you’re not getting anything new. He’s drifting into that safe zone where you know exactly what you’ll get, and here it works… but doesn’t elevate the material. You’re waiting for either the script or the performance to take a swing, and neither really does. Still, it’s not a write-off. There’s enough dark humour, inventive kills, and momentum to carry it through a relaxed evening. You just wish it had picked a lane and gone harder. Right now, it feels like a near-miss that could’ve been something sharper, nastier, or smarter. If you liked. . . Hitman, Ready or Not, The Menu
Frothy and light dark comedy that moves with pace and never lingers for too long. Not your usual whodunnit, but it's all the better for it. Finale is certainly bleak but I had fun nonetheless.