An absolute gem of Australian comedy. This film is a testament to the power of a brilliant premise executed with wit and heart. Chris Wilson delivers a career-best performance, transforming a potentially one-note joke into a deeply human…
The World’s Worst Hitman
A hopelessly unlcucky hitman is interrogated by 2 detectives, but there's a problem. He hasn't actually killed anyone.
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As a genre exercise, 'The World's Worst Hitman' is a solid B-grade effort. It understands the assignment: take a simple, funny idea and mine it for consistent laughs. The dynamic between the incompetent hitman and his increasingly frustrated…
This is a wonderfully subversive and surprisingly thoughtful comedy. By inverting the hitman trope, the film asks witty questions about identity, expectation, and the stories we cling to. The interrogation is less a legal process and more a…
A promising high concept is let down by a lack of directorial flair. The idea of a hitman who hasn't killed anyone is ripe for sharp satire or dark comedy, but the film feels content to merely state…
Chris Wilson carries 'The World's Worst Hitman' with a performance of sublime, bewildered failure. The film's single-location premise is a tightrope walk between claustrophobia and comic revelation, and it largely succeeds. Wilson's hitman is a figure of profound…
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It certainly fits a promising trend of Australian films taking a well-worn international genre and injecting it with a distinctively local sense of humour and character. By focusing on a failure within a typically hyper-competent profession, it subverts expectations in a way that resonates with audiences tired of formulaic hits. If executed well, it could join other successful local genre-benders, using its high-concept premise to explore universally relatable themes of inadequacy with a uniquely Aussie inflection.