Please leave your simple human logic at the door.
No, do not bring it in here. There is no place for it in this movie.
The idea for the post-apocalyptic world here is that corporations became so powerful that they eventually went to actual war with each other, destroying most of the planet. Now, the executives of the corporations live in luxury while everyone else is in squalor. Well everyone except for the Bounty Killers who compete with each other for fame and fortune by hunting down the CEOs.
It has a Mad Max feel to it while reflecting a bit of Elysium with the dramatic separation between the haves and have nots. Elysium went out of its way to explain the financial situation and how exactly order is kept, money is still able to be used to buy things, and what the social structure is. In this movie, we get no explanation, so the massive amounts of cash that the Bounty Hunters earn can't actually be used for anything, as there is nothing backing up the currency. With no faith in the money itself, the CEOs can't actually pay anyone with anything to have their many, many armed guards.
So, we follow our hero, played by Matthew Marsden, as he stomps through life going from one dead guy to the next. His competition/girl/trainee is played by the lovely Christian Pitre. She's naturally (or at least usually) a blond, but she really rocks the brunette in this movie.
There is gratuitous violence and grotesque amounts of blood in the style of Quentin Tarantino. I'm not sure why this style has become so popular. It seems like even Quentin can only get it right every now and then.
So there are mild twists and turns, they add a guy for comic relief, and Gary Goddamn Busey shows up. Seriously, Gary has a complete nothing character, and it's a good thing, because he does a very bad job of it.
The action was decent enough
Directing was moderate
Acting was B movie quality
Effects were over the top, as stated above
Story was alright, I guess
Concept was flawed
1.5/5