
“How to Make a Killing” is a loose adaptation of the 1907 novel, “Israel Rank: The Autobiography of a Criminal,” which also served as the inspiration for the 1949 comedy, “Kind Hearts and Coronets.” Writer/director John Patton Ford made a decent first impression with his work on 2022’s “Emily the Criminal,” blending unlawful entanglements and social commentary, and he returns to the same dramatic ground with his follow up effort, reuniting with the dark thoughts and actions of desperate people. “How to Make a Killing” has a solid first hour of complication facing the main character, who’s looking to get ahead in life by killing family members standing in the way of a large inheritance. Darkly comedic action doesn’t sustain for long enough, but Ford achieves an engrossing setup, and star Glen Powell delivers a fine lead performance in a part that demands a balance of good and evil for a story that takes many turns. Perhaps too many. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















