KXAN sat down with a member of the Austin AI Alliance and discussed results from one of the alliance's recent polls revealing ...
What would you do if you had a few siblings standing in the way of you being a billionaire? Definitely not kill them, right? But that’s the story in “How to Make a Killing,” and we’re here with all ...
Money drives people nuts. So can families. Together they are combustible, need and greed mixing with primal resentments and rivalries. This is why, like the “marriage plot”, the inheritance plot is ...
Seven are people and one is done-dirty source material. The blood. So much blood. Writer-director John Patton Ford has misguidedly modernized “Kind Hearts and Coronets,” the classic Alec Guinness ...
It's a watchably weird reimagining of "Kind Hearts and Coronets," though with a lot more than homicide on its mind. The new version, written and directed by John Patton Ford, who made a minor indie ...
Ross Bonaime is the Senior Film Editor at Collider. He is a Virginia-based critic, writer, and editor who has written about all forms of entertainment for Paste Magazine, Brightest Young Things, ...
"Emily the Criminal" filmmaker John Patton Ford loosely adapts "Kind Hearts and Coronets" for a star-packed outing hobbled by an oddly dull script and a tone that (unfortunately) matches it. There are ...
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 ...
As seen from his previous feature, “Emily the Criminal,” filmmaker John Patton Ford knows how to dive into the nastiness of income inequality, and the necessary ruthlessness to get ahead in the rigged ...
Glen Powell tests the limits of his considerable charisma as a serial murderer in “How to Make a Killing.” It helps that the audience is rooting for this dude from the jump in a darkly comedic ...