Subscribe NOW  
The Lowdown

 Navigate  
Movies

Cinema

 Tomorrow When The War Began



 Father Of My Children



 Vampires Suck



 Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World



 The Expendables



 Cairo Time



 Matching Jack



 The Ghostwriter



 Splice



 Step Up 3d



 Inception



 Killers



 Greenberg



 Creation



 Knight And Day



 Eclipse



 The Karate Kid



 Toy Story 3



 City Island



 Shrek Forever After



 The Secret In Their Eyes



 The A-team



 Animal Kingdom



 The Losers



 Sex And The City 2



 The Stoning Of Soraya M



 A Nightmare On Elm Street



 Leap Year



 Harry Brown



 The Back-up Plan



 New York I Love You



 Legion



 I Love You Too



 Iron Man 2



 44 Inch Chest



 Triangle



 Beneath Hill 60



 When In Rome



 The Book Of Eli



 Clash Of The Titans



 Kick Ass



 She's Out Of My League



 The Vampire's Assistant



 Green Zone



 The Rebound



 Remember Me



 Dear John



 Alice In Wonderland



 The Blind Side



 Shutter Island



 From Paris With Love



 The Wolfman



 Valentine's Day



 Shutter Island



 Daybreakers



 The Road



 Bran Nue Day



 Up In The Air



 Sherlock Holmes



 Avatar



 The Princess And The Frog



 The Lovely Bones



 Planet 51



 Cold Souls



 Where The Wild Things Are



 The Informant!



 Zombieland



 New Moon



 Paranormal Activity



 Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs



 The Box



 The Boys Are Back



 The Brothers Bloom



 2012



 Michael Jackson - This Is It



 The Time Traveller's Wife



 The Twilight Saga: New Moon



 Coffin Rock



 Saw 6



 Daniel Stern



 Whip It



 Mao's Last Dancer



 Final Destination



 Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen



 Quantum Of Solace




 
 

 
 
 Movies  

Killers



Director: Robert Luketic.

Starring: Ashton Kutcher, Katherine Heigl.

Reviewed By Clint Morris.

Killers couldn’t be a more appropriate a title for this harmful blunt weapon that, quite frankly, isn’t doing much for keeping the lines on the cinematic ECG meter up.

There’s an audience for a light and fluffy Rom-com, even those starring Katharine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher, but no audience exists that wants to pay twenty bucks to see an uninspired errant mess that doesn’t so much encompass a storyline as it does a teaser for a pretty one-sheet.

Each and every year there’s two films released that tackle similar subjects - be it Robin Hood, Wyatt Earp, asteroids hurtling towards Earth, Truman Capote or  -  this year, it’s the battle of the super-agent meets goofy-blonde action/comedy.

In the recent
Knight and Day, Tom Cruise played a mysterious action hero super-agent that scores an improbable subordinate (and love interest) in a dippy blonde that looks as if she’s never held a beer can, let alone a gun.

Substitute the name Cruise for Kutcher, Diaz for Heigl, and remove the ridiculously fun stunts and dialogue that keep
Knight and Day afloat and you’ve got Killers. Yep, more fun to be had in the kitchen with a bottle of Morning Fresh and scrubbing brush!  

Spencer Aimes (Ashton Kutcher) is an undercover government-hired assassin who, while on assignment in a flashy exotic locale, meets bubbly computer-tech Jen Kornfeldt (Katherine Heigl). They, of course, fall in love and Spencer’s priorities suddenly change, thus an early retirement from the spy field is in store for the hotshot.

Three years later, Spencer and Jen are living a life of marital bliss. Her uncompromising father (Tom Selleck) and doting mother (Catherine O’Hara) have just about accepted him into the family, and they’re friends with everyone on their quiet, suburban street. But the day after his 30
th birthday, Spencer learns he’s the target of a multi-million dollar hit, and worst of all, he and Jen have been stalked for years. Not only is it now time for Spencer to tell Jen about the life he left behind for her, but together they have to try and work out which of their friends and co-workers are undercover assassins.

Knight and Day, though not the best film, packed much more punch than this torturous effort - in fact, Killers’ knuckles are seemingly so infused with arthritis, it never even attempts a swing. Nobody’s making much effort at all to keep this one buoyant. It’s a pity director Robert Luketic couldn’t have squeezed more out of this dry sponge than what’s on offer - after all, he’s made some perfectly acceptable Rom-Com’s in the past (Legally Blonde, Win a Date with Tad Hamilton) by sprinkling their canvasses with witty dialogue and adding a touch of realism to their somewhat unbelievable plots. But Luketic seems to have set himself to autopilot on this one - there’s no fun dialogue, nothing plays real, and Heigl and Kutcher’s performances are so all over the place you’d suspect Luketic just left them a sticky note in their dressing rooms at the start of each day letting them know they were "free to try anything" because he was going shopping.

If there’s one reason to watch
Killers - and it’s likely the only reason - it’s to see 80’s icon Tom Selleck back on the big screen. He’s your grandpa’s age now, but still looks a treat and, unlike anyone else onboard the film, seems to be attempting to salvage it. Hopefully he’ll be back in a better vehicle shortly.

Ashton Kutcher’s fans likely won’t bother reading this review because, well, it’s more than 140 characters. For their sake, I’ve summarized my review to Twitter-length:

"@aplusk Dude, You owe me 90 minutes! #2010sworstmovies #killers"

Killers in cinemas 29 July.

ENDS