Aubrey Plaza and Margaret Qualley in "Honey Don't" (Focus Features) Ethan Coen, Tricia Cooke and Margaret Qualley are teaming up once again, this time for “Honey Don’t!”, in theaters this week. The ...
American neo-noir dark comedy, Honey! Don’t, which releases on August 22, is all set to serve some major detective skills this season. Directed by Ethan Coen and written by the duo of Ethan along with ...
Margaret Qualley swans through “Honey Don’t!” like a movie star who might have been born in the wrong era, but she’s going to make the most of it. Regally tall, in red heels and a white-flowered red ...
Ethan Coen's neo-noir dark comedy caper Honey Don't! entertainingly blends B-movie detective tropes with a cohort of kooky characters to produce a twister narrative with a blood-soaked conclusion.
The second chapter in a proposed lesbian B-movie trilogy dreamed up by director/writer Ethan Coen and his wife, writer/editor Tricia Cooke, ‘Honey Don’t!’ follows up the pair’s first installment, 2024 ...
If you loved Drive-Away Dolls, I have good news for you: There’s another lesbian comedy directed by Ethan Coen and starring Margaret Qualley coming to movie theaters this weekend, and it’s called ...
Honey Don't! is a breezy little black comedy, and while it doesn't overstay its welcome and has excellent performances and even individual scenes, none of it comes together in any way that makes ...
Discover What’s Streaming On: Let’s go lesbians: Honey Don’t, the new Margaret Qualley lesbian detective movie, is coming to digital platforms to buy and rent tomorrow. Directed by Ethan Coen, who ...
If Ethan Coen keeps making movies as bad as “Honey Don’t! ,” people are going to start saying that Joel Coen is the real talent behind the Coen Bros. movies. The best that can be said for the neo-noir ...
“Honey Don’t!” is a smutty desert mystery in which the detective, Honey O’Donohue (Margaret Qualley), never gets around to solving the central crime. She’s too busy seducing women and swatting down ...
In 2024, married filmmakers Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke posed a cheeky question with their screwball caper “Drive-Away Dolls” — what if crime comedies could be way less masculine, and way more sapphic ...