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'How to Make a Killing' review: Glen Powell's charisma can't save this disappointment

Moira Macdonald, The Seattle Times on

Published in Entertainment News

Becket Redfellow (Glen Powell) is no ordinary convicted man on death row, and not just because he wears a satin slumber mask with his prison coveralls. The story he tells, to a visiting priest (Adrian Lukis), is an astonishing one: how he, born to a obscenely rich family yet shut out of its fortunes, schemed to bump off every relative standing in the way of a vast inheritance.

This is the premise, spelled out in its opening minutes, of John Patton Ford’s “How to Make a Killing,” and it’s a promising one; unfortunately, even Powell’s charismatic presence — this actor never met a camera he couldn’t charm; see him in Netflix’s “Hit Man” if you doubt me — can’t make up for the fact that this dark comedy/thriller needs more comedy, and more thrills.

It’s a disappointment, as on paper this one looked like a lot of fun. The cast is appealing: Ed Harris as Becket’s estranged father; Topher Grace, Bill Camp and an amusingly dim Zach Woods among the assortment of relatives on Becket’s to-do list; Margaret Qualley as a femme fatale from Becket’s past. But most of them don’t get much screen time — the structure of the story means that as soon as we get to know a character, he or she is likely to disappear, and honestly I started losing track of who was in line to go — and Qualley in particular seems as if she’s in a different movie, her very stylized, arch performance at odds with Powell’s trademark breeziness.

Powell’s charm, along with some fun rich-person interiors (there's a library near the end that gives a stellar performance), does a lot to get “How to Make a Killing” to the finish line. But you may well lose interest, as I did, before the murder countdown concludes; this one feels more like a rough draft than a truly well-thought-out movie. Throughout, there are intriguing little glimmers of what might have been. At one point, somebody asks Becket if he can keep a secret, and the sly, low-key spin Powell puts on “Surprisingly well, actually” is almost worth the popcorn price right there. He’s truly a movie star; file this one under missed opportunities.

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'HOW TO MAKE A KILLING'

 

2 stars (out of 4)

MPA rating: R (for language and some violence/bloody images)

Running time: 1:45

How to watch: In theaters Feb. 20

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© 2026 The Seattle Times. Visit www.seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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