Heir-Raiser
Glen Powell is an heir willing to do whatever it takes in a riotous dark-comedy thriller where fortune favours the ruthless.
Words Lee Curtis
Top Gun: Maverick, Twisters, and The Running Man have crowned him the new prince of action, but Glen Powell is trading popcorn blockbuster for prestige as another wicked game begins.
Redfellow is a name that carries weight… at least for those who weren’t disowned at birth. Technically, Powell’s Becket is heir to an unimaginable fortune. Practically, there’s one problem, well… seven. Seven relatives that stand between him and billions.
Becket has accepted his life far from the luxury that should’ve been his birthright. At least until Margaret Qualley’s alluring Julia slips back into his life and sparks a
terrible idea: maybe he doesn’t have to wait.
It’s a real murderer’s row of assorted Redfellow relations awaiting an untimely end. Bill Camp, Topher Grace, and Alexander Hanson play uncles Warren, Steven, and McArthur; Bianca Amato is aunt Cassandra; and Zach Woods and Raff Law are cousins Noah and Taylor. Towering above them all, top of his hit list, screen legend Ed Harris is his grandfather Whitelaw, the fearsome head of the family who won’t go down without a fight.
Along for this wild ride is Jessica Henwick’s Ruth, Becket’s girlfriend and Julia’s moral opposite, forming the angel-and-devil duo perched on Becket’s shoulders.
As branches of the family tree fall, pressure mounts, suspicions rise, and the question shifts. It’s not just How To Make A Killing – but how to get away with seven!
Eat The Rich
Inequality shapes the cultural mood; film and tv respond with sharpened satirical knives. From major motion pictures to small-screen juggernauts Succession and The White Lotus, “each the rich” is today’s flavour.
Saltburn
An Oxford student obsesses over his wealthy classmate’s world of privilege. One summer, at the family’s estate, he goes to any – and we mean any – length to taste it.
Glass Onion
A private island. A billionaire host. A murder mystery only Benoit Blanc could solve. Rian Johnson’s whodunnit puts wealth, ego, and excess into a perfectly engineered puzzle box.
The Menu
Taking the theme deliciously literal, Ralph Fiennes is a one-of-a-kind chef with the most exclusive guest list imaginable – one people would kill to get on. Sweet revenge is served.
