In this video playlist, you will learn how to simplify complex numbers under a radical as well as raised to a higher power. You will learn to add, subtract, multiply and divide complex numbers to ...
Margaret Qualley, Ed Harris and Topher Grace also appear in John Patton Ford's reimagining of the classic 'Kind Hearts and Coronets.' By Frank Scheck Trying to find your niche as a movie star isn’t ...
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 ...
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 ...
“How to Make a Killing” boasts an opening so strong that it buys enough audience goodwill to coast through nearly its entire running time. That’s priceless in a screwball murder movie in which ...
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — It’s time to chop down the family tree! Written and directed by John Patton Ford, How to Make a Killing is based on Roy Horniman’s 1907 novel Israel Rank: The Autobiography of a ...
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 ...
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 ...