Tag: noir

  • Movie Review: ‘Honey Don’t!’

    Margaret Qualley stars as Honey O’Donahue in writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Margaret Qualley stars as Honey O’Donahue in writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    Opening in theaters August 22 is ‘Honey Don’t!,’ directed by Ethan Coen and starring Margaret Qualley, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Evans, Charlie Day, Kristen Connolly, Billy Eichner, Gabby Beans, Lera Abova, and Talia Ryder.

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    Related Article: Margaret Qualley, Josh Brolin And Guy Pearce Joining Ridley Scott’s Sci-fi Dystopia ‘The Dog Stars’

    Initial Thoughts

    Margaret Qualley stars as Honey O’Donahue in writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Margaret Qualley stars as Honey O’Donahue in writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    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’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls.’ But while that was a caper/buddy road comedy that benefited (as far as it went) from the affection between Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan, ‘Honey Don’t!’ is a takeoff on the noir genre that is saved only by another great performance from Qualley and the handful of spicy sex scenes she shares with Aubrey Plaza.

    The rest of ‘Honey Don’t!’ — named after a Carl Perkins song — is even more insubstantial that ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ ended up being, with a formless script that plays like a rough draft and an overabundance of plot strands and characters that drift in and out of the picture without anything meaningful to tie them together. It’s barely a movie, making us wish that Ethan and his brother Joel would reunite.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Writer Tricia Cooke, actor Margaret Qualley and writer/director Ethan Coen on the set of their film 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Writer Tricia Cooke, actor Margaret Qualley and writer/director Ethan Coen on the set of their film ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    Story and direction: two things that ‘Honey Don’t!’ is badly in need of. Qualley plays Honey O’Donahue, a tough, queer private detective who lives and works in the arid town of Bakersfield, California, where she stays close to her sister (Kristen Connolly) – who is on the edge of poverty with her six kids – and does her best to protect and help her.

    Although local cop Marty (Charlie Day) – who refuses to accept that the glamorous Honey is a lesbian – insists that the car accident death of a potential client is an open-and-shut case, Honey has her suspicions. Those lead her to a local church called the Four-Way Temple and its pastor, the sleazy Drew Devlin (Chris Evans), who is smuggling drugs when not luring vulnerable young women into his bed and fetish gear. The investigation turns personal when Honey’s own family is dragged in, dredging up ghosts from her past even as she begins a torrid affair with an evidence room officer, MG Falcone (Aubrey Plaza).

    Charlie Day stars as Marty Metakawitch in writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 Focus Features LLC
    Charlie Day stars as Marty Metakawitch in writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 Focus Features LLC

    As with many noirs, neo or otherwise, the story is often fragmentary. But there’s nothing else beyond Qualley’s central performance to keep our interest. Most of the other cast members – except perhaps for Plaza and Day – make little to no impression, many of the jokes don’t land, and scenes meander about with little tension or vitality. The movie feels like Coen and Cooke slapped it together on the fly, and the drab, parched setting saps whatever energy the story may possess.

    There’s something in here about female empowerment and the need to stop submitting to patriarchal figures, but it’s handled so limply that any thematic concerns have no weight. And the story’s dénouement is so abrupt and baffling that one is left wondering what the hell happened. One major subplot ends up going absolutely nowhere at all – an indication of just how slipshod and lazy the entire film seems.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R( Aubrey Plaza and Margaret Qualley star in writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R( Aubrey Plaza and Margaret Qualley star in writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    Margaret Qualley is the sole reason to stick around in ‘Honey Don’t!’ Her Honey is tough, frank, and fun even if the rest of the movie around her is dismal, and she shines in Honey’s procession of brightly-colored flowered dresses. Her line readings are deliberately staccato and flat in the noir tradition, and there’s just enough revealed about her to be frustrating, because Honey is a terrific character looking for a better movie.

    Aubrey Plaza and Qualley truly sizzle in their sex scenes, but Plaza’s Falcone is too much of a cypher and is let down by the script toward the end. Chris Evans is simply miscast: the former (and future?) Captain America is too arch here and much better served by movies like ‘Materialists.’ Charlie Day earns some chuckles as the lunkheaded but sweet-natured Marty, and Gabby Beans deserves more to do as Honey’s assistant Spider, but everyone else fades into the blazing Bakersfield sun.

    Final Thoughts

    Chris Evans stars as Drew Devlin in writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focu Features LLC.
    Chris Evans stars as Drew Devlin in writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Karen Kuehn / © 2025 Focu Features LLC.

    There is the hint of a far more interesting movie here, and making the classic noir detective figure into a lesbian could add a fresh new spin to the genre. But ‘Honey Don’t!’ just does not work.

    Like ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ this has the quirks, violence, and casual comedy of a Coen brothers movie, but even less of whatever magical focus the combination of Joel and Ethan brings to their best films. This feels more like self-indulgence, cheapening even what’s supposed to be a B-movie.

    ‘Honey Don’t!’ receives a score of 30 out of 100.

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    What is the plot of ‘Honey Don’t!’?

    In Bakersfield, California, female private detective Honey O’Donahue (Margaret Qualley) investigates a woman’s death and tangles with the head of a mysterious church.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Honey Don’t!’?

    • Margaret Qualley as Honey O’Donahue
    • Aubrey Plaza as MG Falcone
    • Chris Evans as Reverend Drew Devlin
    • Lera Abova as Cher
    • Charlie Day as Marty Metakawitch
    • Gabby Beans as Spider
    • Talia Ryder as Corinne
    • Kristen Connolly as Heidi O’Donahue
    • Billy Eichner as Mr. Siegfried
    • Jacnier as Hector
    • Josh Pafchek as Shuggie
    • Kale Browne as Honey’s Father
    • Kara Petersen as Mia Novotny
    Writer/director Ethan Coen’s 'Honey Don't!', a Focus Features release opens in theaters on August 22, 2025. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 Focus Features LLC
    Writer/director Ethan Coen’s ‘Honey Don’t!’, a Focus Features release opens in theaters on August 22, 2025. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 Focus Features LLC

    List of Ethan Coen Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Honey Don’t!’ Movie Showtimes

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  • Diane Kruger, Ray Nicholson and Neil LaBute Talk ‘Out of the Blue’

    Diane Kruger and Ray Nicholson in director Neil LaBute's ‘Out of the Blue.’
    (L to R) Diane Kruger and Ray Nicholson in director Neil LaBute’s ‘Out of the Blue.’

    Opening in theaters and On Demand beginning August 26th is the new thriller ‘Out of the Blue,’ which was written and directed by Neil LaBute (‘Nurse Betty,’ ‘Lakeview Terrace’).

    The film follows Connor (Ray Nicholson), an ex-convict trying to put his life back together while quietly working at a local library. His life gets suddenly complicated when he meets Marilyn (Diane Kruger), a seductive married woman who begins a dangerous affair with Connor.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with writer/director Neil LaBute, as well as actors Diane Kruger and Ray Nicholson about their work on ‘Out of the Blue.’ The director talked about crafting a noir, while Kruger and Nicholson discussed their characters and their complex relationship.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Neil, can you talk about developing the screenplay and the themes you wanted to explore with this film?

    Neil LaBute: Love, lust, and desire. Where we cross the line, how slippery that slope is, and how people incrementally can shift their moral goal posts. I’ve probably written about that a number of times in various ways, just because I find it fascinating how “regular” people can find themselves doing things that they might have never expected that they would do.

    I think this guy in the movie never imagined he’d spend time in prison. He never imagined that this kind of thing would happen to him. In fact, something we touched on that I can’t remember seeing in another film, was the device of never seeing the husband until the murder.

    So, I don’t know that you realize that while you’re watching it, but you are taking her at face value. Everything that you see, all these things that you’ve heard about this husband, you suddenly realize, “Oh my God, I have no idea if this has actually happened or not.” So, that was something I really tried to develop, how our desire for something can overtake our good sense so easily in life.

    Femme fatales sometimes come off with stilettos, and you kind of go, “Oh, I know she’s the antagonist here.” But there is not the traditional kind of “come hither’ looks and murder on her fingertips. She felt like someone who was in over her head. That this was happening, and she wanted it, but didn’t want it. So, I think that was played pretty cleverly close to the vest.

    MF: Diane, what was your first reaction to reading the screenplay and what was your approach to playing Marilyn?

    Diane Kruger: I remember getting the script and I was on page eight, thinking, “Wow, this is like a film noir.” I’ve never gotten a script like that in my career. They just don’t make these kinds of films anymore, right? It had that plot that you’re sort of familiar with, because we’ve all seen those great old movies with that great twist at the end. So, I did love that, and I think it has a very particular tone, just because Neil is a very particular writer and director.

    So, it was intriguing enough that I was like, “Why not? This seems like an impossible movie to make these days. When am I ever in my life going to get that opportunity again?” So, that’s really why I wanted to be part of it. Then Ray came on board and he’s just so impossibly enthusiastic and charming, and it made it so easy. It was fun.

    Diane Kruger in director Neil LaBute's ‘Out of the Blue.’
    Diane Kruger in director Neil LaBute’s ‘Out of the Blue.’

    MF: Was it challenging to play such a mysterious character?

    DK: It wasn’t challenging in the sense of, “Oh, I didn’t want to give that ‘come hither’ look,” because to be honest, that’s not what I wanted to play at all. I really tried to keep wardrobe, everything modern, and not to fall into that trap of what Neil just said, the perfect stiletto shoe. We give a nod to it, but it’s not that campy. It’s not meant to be that campy.

    MF: Ray, can you talk about Connor’s struggle to put his life back together, and how things go off the rails when he meets Marilyn?

    Ray Nicholson: I really kind of loved this character. He was somebody that didn’t really know how to shoot the mark as a man. The one opportunity that he had to protect somebody that needed protecting, something went horribly wrong. Since then, he didn’t want to make any noise, and so he hides himself in this library.

    Depending on how you look at the film, this person could have been picked out or it could have been happenstance. It leaves those things open for interpretation, which I think is really fun.

    That to me was really fun and putting my own secrets into the character, and just letting it develop. Ultimately, what I needed most, going into working with Neil and Diane, was trusting my choices because they trusted me. That was really important for me. It was just such a wonderful experience. Truly.

    MF: Diane, how would you describe the relationship between Marilyn and Connor?

    DK: Well, inevitable that he would fall for me, that was a given. That’s so fun to play, the sureness. In hindsight, that put-on sensibility that she has, the put-on insecurities. I just think it’s fun to play a character is so zeroed in, and then playing those nuances. I love a movie where you go back, and you say, “Wow, I can’t believe she did that” and “Oh, that’s why she did that.” I do think that she genuinely likes him, but there was never a moment in her mind that she was going to go for him, for real.

    MF: Neil can you talk about some of the stylistic choices you made as a filmmaker, including the use of title cards before each act?

    NL: I mean, once you go on the ride, you have to say, “We’re doing it all the way.” It would be really strange for you if suddenly it was a handheld movie halfway through. It’s framed very tightly, with a lot of long takes. There was very little coverage because it’s nice to watch actors act.

    So, I’m very comfortable finding a pretty shot and sitting with that. We had beautiful locations, and a lot of phone calls, times in cars, those kinds of classic locations that you would have in this kind of whispered relationship behind closed doors. Even down to the sex scenes. I tried to shoot from afar for a lot of that stuff, and then punch in close. But we didn’t overshoot anything, we really let the actors get the work done, and didn’t try and grab every angle that’s there. If you find a good angle, that’s what to go with.

    So, the title cards came as something that I had always liked in movies. I’d never used any to this number in a film. I’ve used them before a couple of times. It felt like it gave us chapters almost for the film. We used old title font for the titles, and the sound, I think this has a really great soundtrack. That’s sort of a throwback as well. So, I think you kind of have to go all in for those things. I tried from beginning to end, to make it feel like something old, something recognizable, but obviously current.

    Ray Nicholson and Diane Kruger in director Neil LaBute's ‘Out of the Blue.’
    (L to R) Ray Nicholson and Diane Kruger in director Neil LaBute’s ‘Out of the Blue.’

    MF: Are there any noir films in particular that inspired you to make this movie?

    NL: I mean, I love ‘Body Heat.’ I definitely love ‘The Postman Always Rings Twice,’ both versions. I love ‘Out of the Past,’ ‘Double Indemnity,’ and ‘Sunset Boulevard.’ One of my favorites is very colorful, which is surprising for film noir, which is ‘Leave her to Heaven.’ It has as bad a femme fatale as you can probably find in movies. Gene Tyranny really rips it up in that movie.

    My mom showed me that movie years ago. We used to wait for the TV guide to come and circle movies, because that was how you would find a movie. It took months and years sometimes for them to come on. When she showed me ‘Leave her to Heaven,’ I mesmerized by this woman, she was so beautiful, and she did such rotten things. It really stuck, and I’ve always loved those characters. Like Jane Greer in ‘Out of the Past’ is one of my favorite performances in anything. She’s mesmerizing. So, I think that tradition of female characters was definitely something I tried to get in the script.

    MF: Ray, you have some great scenes with Hank Azaria, who plays your character’s parole officer. He starts off very aggressive with Connor but is eventually sympathetic towards him. Can you talk about their complex relationship?

    RN: Hank was so wonderful to work with. He was so giving. He talked about his process, and his way of acting. I even tried out some stuff that he gave me. He was like, “I see you’re doing this thing. That’s cool.” We had a really great time just chopping it up, chopping up the story with Neil. I think that’s kind what you find in those relationships, is that there is this harshness in of fraternal relationships, male relationships.

    But ultimately underneath there is this love of, “I am trying to pull you towards this solution that I know is good. I see something in you. Maybe I see that you’re not a bad kid.” Maybe as a parole officer, there’s so many people that aren’t good people. Then he sees that this kid is just in a bad situation that just gets worse and worse. So, it was fun to explore that with him, to work with him, and to talk to him and hear him do impersonations. It was awesome.

    MF: Finally, Neil can you talk about casting Diane and Ray in these roles?

    NL: I’ve been lucky for 25 years or so to work with really good actors. I think part of that is that I like actors. It’s that I genuinely want to collaborate with them and don’t want to just tell them how I think they should play the part, and hopefully they respond to that. Most have, and you just get lucky sometimes.

    It wasn’t written for Ray and Diane. It was ideas that came from casting and from myself. You put people together and you never know. Especially when it’s going to get intimate. This is going to be difficult.

    It’s hard enough to stand in front of a camera and know that people really want to have their lunch break. But first you have to cry. It’s a tough job. We make it worse when we make movies, because it’s all about economics. It’s not about what would work best for them in terms of what they’re doing. If they have a bed scene on their first day, they do simply because we need to be in that hotel room. Not because that’s how they want to do it.

    So, I’m sympathetic to that. I say, “Hey, let’s create this little cocoon and work together, and do the best we can do.” But that doesn’t make chemistry. That doesn’t make what happens on the screen with them work. Somehow, they click, and I don’t know why. Why do people work individually on the screen? Why do they work together? I hope these guys make more movies together because I like watching them.

    It was a pleasure to watch putting together, not just on the day, but editing the movie. I feel for them both, even though I know what’s going to happen and I know what calculations she’s making. Even going into it, the kind of movie that it is, something’s happening, and it’s about figuring it out. It’s not necessarily even who done it, it’s why, and all those kinds of things.

    So, casting is a great part of it. I hate the audition process. It’s hard on me, so I know it’s terrible on them. So, it’s nice when you can go to somebody and say, “Hey, would you like to do this thing,” rather than make them stand up there and read the lines. If you get lucky, you have people like this, and that makes you happy. So, it was great to work with them.

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  • Charlie Hunnam and Cast Talk ‘Last Looks’

    Charlie Hunnam as Charlie Waldo in 'Last Looks'
    Charlie Hunnam as Charlie Waldo in ‘Last Looks’

    Opening in theaters On Demand, and digital beginning February 4th is the new mystery-action-comedy ‘Last Looks,’ which is based on the novel of the same name by author Howard Michael Gould.

    Directed by Tim Kirkby (‘Action Point’), the movie stars Charlie Hunnam (‘The Gentlemen’), Morena Baccarin (‘Deadpool’), Lucy Fry (‘Bright’), Rupert Friend (‘The French Dispatch’), Dominic Monaghan (‘The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring’), Clancy Brown (‘The Shawshank Redemption’), Method Man (‘Garden State’), and Academy Award winner Mel Gibson (‘Braveheart’).

    The movie follows disgraced LAPD detective Charlie Waldo (Hunnam), who is now living life as a recluse in the woods. But when eccentric TV star Alastair Pinch’s wife is murdered, he is convinced to investigate the murder as a private investigator, and all signs are pointing to Pinch (Gibson) as the killer.

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    Moviefone recently had an opportunity to speak with actors Charlie Hunnam, Morena Baccarin and Lucy Fry about their work on ‘Last Looks.’ You can read a full transcript of the interviews below, or watch the interviews in the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Charlie, can you talk about your character and where we find him at the beginning of the movie?

    Charlie Hunnam: He is in exile. He’s serving his penance up a mountain in Idlewild, which is a mountainous area outside of Los Angeles. What led him there is a mistake that he made while he was a LAPD detective.

    The backstory is that he was this wonderkid detective who had this meteoric rise through the ranks of the LAPD detective unit and then realized he’d made a mistake. It’s very hard to undo mistakes in the judicial system. He can’t forgive himself for this mistake he’s made. So, he has a little bit of a nervous breakdown and goes up the mountain to try to put his life back together.

    MF: Morena, can you talk about your character’s backstory and why she seeks out Waldo’s help?

    Morena Baccarin: Well, she was a big part of his life before he decided to ghost her and go up into the mountains. These two have a long history of just being crazy in love, but also having a very complicated relationship where their biggest vulnerabilities is the distrust they have for each other, that is not always founded in anything other than their own issues. So, she just can’t let it rest.

    I think it’s both for selfish reasons and also for him. I think this case is a big deal and could really send her into PI stardom. I think also, she has this nagging feeling that something is wrong with him and that she needs to get him out of this crazy situation he’s gotten himself into. So, she won’t take no for an answer. She comes knocking on his door and even when he does say, “No,” she does not let it happen.

    Lucy Fry as Jayne White in 'Last Looks'
    Lucy Fry as Jayne White in ‘Last Looks’

    MF: Lucy, when we meet your character she is working as a teacher not because she wants to be but because her parents want her to. Can you talk about that?

    Lucy Fry: There was part of the story where her father is the principal of the school. Her backstory is that she has had addiction problems in the past. Her dad’s tried to get her back on her feet and get her working again.

    So, she’s this kindergarten teacher because she wasn’t actually fully qualified, but she has the family-ins to teaching at the school. But that isn’t her passion, and she’s looking for that thrill in whatever way she can get it.

    MF: Charlie, what was your reaction to the noir elements of the screenplay when you first read it?

    CH: I think that was designed by Howard Gould, the writer of this. He’s a huge neo-noir fan, and he really has encyclopedic knowledge. There’s not a film made in that genre that he doesn’t intimately know. So, this was steeped in that.

    It was interesting, how this actually happened. Howard wrote this as a spec screenplay, which means that he just wrote the idea speculatively; he wasn’t writing it for a company. Then, he fell in love with Charlie and this world so much, that he actually went and wrote a novel, which bloomed into a series of novels.

    So, he’s now written three and is in the middle of writing the fourth novel. But I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a novel adapted from a screenplay before. It’s always a screenplay adapted from a novel.

    So, it’s interesting that this character just grew inside of Howard in that way, and he decided to change his profession from screenwriter to novelist so that he could pursue writing more of this world. So, if people like this film, hopefully we’ll be able to go back and make another one of these; adapted from one of the other novels.

    Morena Baccarin as Lorena Nascimento in 'Last Looks'
    Morena Baccarin as Lorena Nascimento in ‘Last Looks’

    MF: Morena, did you have a chance to speak with Howard Gould about the script and was he able to give you any insight to your character?

    MB: Yeah, we talked quite extensively, and especially on set, he was there a lot. I really enjoyed speaking to him about it. I think at one point, correct me if I’m wrong, Charlie, maybe he was developing it as a series as well; a TV series.

    There were a lot of incarnations of these characters. He just was really helpful discussing tone and how to in the book, when you’re reading, it’s just right there on the page, and it’s so easy to imagine the film noir aspect of it.

    But when you’re doing it adapted, and it’s also present day, and you’re dealing with Hollywood and all these things, you can lose some of that grittiness. So, it was really helpful to have him around to discuss the tone of the piece.

    Then, he paid me the biggest compliment ever, because he was starting to write his other book and he said, “I can’t get you out of the character now.” I’m like, great. It means I’ve done my job. So, it was a really nice marrying of the two worlds. I very much dove deep, read all the books and really enjoyed getting to know the character.

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