The greatest of all Ealing comedies, the 1949 masterpiece Kind Hearts And Coronets, really should be left to rest in eternal peace and everlasting appreciation. Instead, in How To Make A Killing, it ...
Glen Powell tries his best as a desperate serial killer in this update of Kind Hearts and Coronets, but it’s a mere pretender to the original’s throne Remaking Robert Hamer’s 1949 British classic Kind ...
The 1949 inspiration for How to Make a Killing remains a tantalising fantasy of class war By Lillian Crawford “It is so difficult to make a neat job of killing people with whom one is not on friendly ...
Ealing Studios was one of Britain’s premiere movie studios having been founded in the early 1900s. There were some golden nuggets, but the studio really engendered its cachet in the post war years ...
Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Paul Thomas Anderson’s ...
BOTTOM LINE Despite solid work from Powell, this black comedy lacks bite. Partway through "How to Make a Killing," newly minted Wall Street bro Becket Redfellow (Glen Powell) has a date with young ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. It’s likely that 95 percent of the people who go to see “How to Make a Killing” will never have seen, or even heard of, “Kind ...
This Glen Powell-led remake of the Ealing Studio classic ‘Kind Hearts and Coronets’ can’t hold a candle to the original Remaking an Ealing Studios comedy is dangerous business. Just ask the Coens.
Dramatising the life of Jesus was a first for television drama, but BBC producers had to tread carefully around some sensitive and difficult concerns. The BBC’s relationship with religion has often ...
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