Heartbreakers
The film follows Max and Page Conners, a mother and daughter con artist team as they try to seduce a wealthy man and take his money. The con is a success but when the two are about to run away, problems starts raising.
7 March 1975, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
30 January 1930, San Bernardino, California, USA
31 May 1955, Florida, USA
11 August 1950, Riga, USSR [now Latvia]
20 April 1957, Warrensburg, Missouri, USA
18 December 1954, Newark, New Jersey, USA
December 05, 2015
After a dreadful first half, the film steadies itself once the plot mechanics start paying off; still, the end result is more exhausting than entertaining.
December 15, 2010
A funny and utterly charming romantic comedy
March 23, 2001
Heartbreakers is one of these guilty pleasures.
May 26, 2006
Mirkin keeps the humor wicked, keeps the rhythm going, and refuses to cave in to sentimentality or overt slapstick.
March 23, 2001
Hits just the right note between naughty and raunchy.
March 23, 2001
Director David Mirkin, whose Romy and Michele's High School Reunion was similarly afflicted, never gets the timing right and allows the story to drag with little internal logic.
March 23, 2001
There are not enough Hefty bags in all The Home Depots to contain the trash generated by this vulgar burlesque.
March 23, 2001
Unless you're a Hackman aficionado, there's no reason to bother with Heartbreakers.
December 24, 2010
Not terrible, it just doesn't work very well.
November 02, 2005
We can be sure that the makers of this movie know what their product and her assets are and intend to exploit them to the utmost
March 23, 2001
Great escapist fun.
December 07, 2006
The only contribution--and it's a dubious one--that Mirkin makes in his trifle of a comedy is to feminize the perennially male profession of con artists with a mother-daughter team, played by the regal Sigourney Weaver and sexy Jennifer Love Hewitt.

