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List Price: $9.98 | | Label: Allumination
Salesrank: 149591
Released: August 17, 2004 |
| Our Price: $2.28 |
| Used Price: $1.80 |
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MPAA Rating: R (Restricted) Media: DVD |
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Editorial Review:
John Portenza is a hit man and baseball card collector, working on his anger management. His little sister Vicky, works alongside her brother in the people removal business. Their lives are turned upside down when John loses his cool and kills Vicky's boyfriend, Dutch who turns out to be the godson of Johns crime lord boss, Vince. Counterfeit money, a mouthy undertaker and a twice-killed cadaver are clues that lead the crime boss to believe that the siblings are no longer employees - but now the targets!
Warm Blooded Killers Reviews:
A Great Ride Through Lesser Los Angeles 
2002-02-05 - "Warm Blooded Killers" is a fast-moving ride through the less glamorous side of Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley. Freelance hitman John (Mick Murray), who is partnered up with his sister, tries to keep his difficult customers satisfied, while at the same time juggling errands for his upcoming wedding (to a stripper) and chasing a rare baseball card he remembers from his childhood.
Mick Murray's light touch playing a workaday, clock-punching criminal will make you wonder why this guy isn't a star yet; the dialogue is fresh, quick, and rings true. The brother-and-sister assassin team is a new spin on the hitman genre and their realistic bickering is laugh-out-loud funny. The story never falters and keeps you on your seat to the last; and in the best noir tradition, seems to be about one thing (a valuable baseball card) while it's really about another (watch the movie and see what).
A Great Ride Through Lesser Los Angeles 
2002-01-26 - "Warm Blooded Killers" is a fast-moving ride through the less glamorous side of Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley. Freelance hitman John (Mick Murray), who is partnered up with his sister, tries to keep his difficult customers satisfied, while at the same time juggling errands for his upcoming wedding (to a stripper) and chasing a rare baseball card he remembers from his childhood.
Mick Murray's light touch playing a workaday, clock-punching criminal will make you wonder why this guy isn't a star yet; the dialogue is fresh, quick, and rings true. The brother-and-sister assassin team is a new spin on the hitman genre and their realistic bickering is laugh-out-loud funny. The story never falters and keeps you on your seat to the last; and in the best noir tradition, seems to be about one thing (a valuable baseball card) while it's really about another (watch the movie and see what).