logo
Movie Review: Margaret Qualley shines in ‘Honey Don't!' as Philip Marlowe in red lipstick

Movie Review: Margaret Qualley shines in ‘Honey Don't!' as Philip Marlowe in red lipstick

The skies are blue, the sun unrelenting and the body count escalating in the Bakersfield, California, of 'Honey Don't!,' where Margaret Qualley's private investigator tries to get a handle on the nefarious goings-on in her city with a small-town feel.
It's the second film in Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke's so-called 'lesbian B-movie trilogy,' and while this shaggy caper might not add up to anything significant — perhaps part of the 'B-movie' point — it is fun and immensely watchable. That's thanks in large part to Qualley's turn as the smoothly confident Honey O'Donahue, kind of a Philip Marlowe, or maybe Veronica Mars, in cherry-red lipstick, high heels and silks (inspired choices for the sweltering setting by costume designer Peggy Schnitzer).
Honey is meant to be strikingly 'other' in this very downtrodden Bakersfield of eccentrics, dropouts and lost souls, where missing teeth seem to be more prevalent than pedicures. It's a carnival of very memorable, very Coen-esque misfits, like a grumpy bartender played by Don Swayze and Charlie Day's clueless police officer Marty Metakawitch. Marty is not the only man in town who has trouble accepting that Honey will never be interested in him. You could play a drinking game with how many times she has to tell hapless men, 'I like girls.'
Not only is queer literacy low in this Bakersfield, but many in town seem to have come under the influence of a church leader played by Chris Evans, the Rev. Drew Devlin, whose high-wattage smile and proclivity for flirting have made him a local celebrity. Evans, who seems to be having fun in a weirder role, plays the Rev. Drew as a charismatic creep, an ego-driven and possibly sex-addicted influencer who is also peddling drugs and arranging hits around town. He too has a boss, or bosses, known only as 'the French,' which is amusingly underexplained. And he's often completely, or nearly, naked and involved in some cringey, experimental acts with his naive followers.
Not unlike the new 'The Naked Gun,' this saga begins with a suspicious vehicular death. The deceased was an almost-client of Honey's, which sets her off poking around and looking for answers. Most of her cases are of the cheating spouse type, and this is just more interesting. Meanwhile, others start dropping dead too. Some of these deaths feel spiritually, comedically similar to the Mark Pellegrino sequence in 'Mullholland Drive' (not the only Lynchian nod). And all signs are pointing back to the church, though Honey gets a bit distracted with a new fling in Aubrey Plaza's lustful cop MG Falcone and some family drama with her wayward niece Corinne (Talia Ryder).
'Honey Don't' might play more like a pilot episode of a television series than a contained film, but it is a step up from Coen and Cooke's previous effort, 'Drive Away Dolls,' which felt constructed of comedic parts whose shelf life expired 20 years ago. This script, written by Coen and Cooke, is probably just as vintage, technically speaking, but it feels more timeless. With a stable of memorable side characters, including Josh Pafchek as the reverend's assistant and Jacnier as a skittish new drug dealer named Hector, 'Honey Don't' is gory, unapologetically sexual, quippy and dark. It also clocks in at under 90 minutes — they knew just when to get out.
Weekly
A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene.
As Ethan Coen finds his groove as a solo director, 'Honey Don't' might not be 'The Big Lebowski' or 'Raising Arizona,' but it is a swing in the right direction. At this rate, if we get the pleasure of seeing a third film, it might just be a classic.
'Honey Don't!' a Focus Features release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for 'some strong violence, language, graphic nudity, strong sexual content.' Running time: 88 minutes. Three stars out of four.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'
Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'

LONDON (AP) — Only a few people know what it's like to stand outside 10 Downing Street and address the world's media. Suranne Jones and Julie Delpy aren't politicians, but they got that opportunity playing rival stateswomen in thriller miniseries 'Hostage.' No. 10 is where the British prime minister lives and works and it's at the heart of Matt Charman's new Netflix show releasing Thursday. During a tense Anglo-French summit, Jones power-dresses as Prime Minister Abigail Dalton, while Delpy wears the red lipstick of the pristinely presented French President Vivienne Toussaint. Also starring Ashley Thomas, Corey Mylchreest and Lucian Msamati, both women wrestle with power and their personal lives when Dalton's husband is kidnapped and Toussaint is threatened with a career-ruining scandal. 'The speeches is the hardest thing to do in the show,' says Delpy, who stood at a podium on the set of an impressive recreation of Downing Street. 'I had the same anxiety as if I was doing it for real.' Jones also had to address the House of Commons, with everyone shouting at her. It's a common sight in British politics, with politicians yelling and making noise over the top of a rival to drown them out in Parliament. Once everyone started braying at her, Jones 'couldn't remember anything' she was saying. Then they'd retake it without the extras shouting, which threw her after she'd got used to the all the noise. And words are weapons in this thriller, as negotiations veer between solidarity and betrayal. 'Every word is being scrutinized, like if you use a term instead of another, it's going to be judged by the press. And I mean, it happens a little bit in our business, but nothing compared to a politician,' adds Delpy. Delpy and Jones sat down with The Associated Press to talk about politicians and power pants. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity. AP: How do you think France will feel about you being president? DELPY: I think they might get upset, I don't know, at my representation — no I'm joking — of a French president with a sex scandal and all that. I don't know, French are not very big on judging sex scandals with people. I don't think it works in France, like it works everywhere else, but not in France so much. Like they don't care when a president has an affair. It's more the politics. AP: These aren't specific politicians, but you did research and speak to female politicians. What did you learn? JONES: I wanted to talk to loads of women that were in it and from lots of different parties as well. So some on the phone, some were in person. I interviewed a couple of people high in power. We went to the Commons, watched the PMQs (Prime Minister's Questions), felt the atmosphere, walked the halls, talked to the speaker. And it was all, it was all so … to be in the world that I know nothing about. I've been invited as a creative or a celebrity, but to actually talk to people about the balance and the cost of what it takes and what it does to your kids … that was really helpful. DELPY: I've listened to a lot of politicians about their life, about what it's been like after they were in power and stuff and the pressure and stuff, but I didn't want to inspire myself on someone specific so there's no reference. It's like, 'Oh, she's like the blah blah blah or she's like so.' I made her different than some French women politician that would be the obvious persons to be inspired by. AP: These characters are in power and they are holding on to it. How do you use your own power in your life? JONES: I feel like I sometimes put power pants on, do you know what I mean? Because actually I also quite like to hide away. So I like the duality of power, which Abigail doesn't have that choice really. But, so I like to go, 'Right today. … I'm going to use it for good.' Or I need it as energy, so I have power pants, but I like to take them on and off. AP: Can I establish, when you say pants — do you mean English pants (underwear) or American pants (trousers)? JONES: Big knickers. Yeah, power knickers, what about you? You got any power pants? DELPY: No, I don't know. It's funny. I was thinking of a joke I made years ago about like how when women are directors, they have to wear fatigues, not like literal, you know. If you go direct a movie wearing a dress, people don't take you as seriously. But it's kind of a joke on, you know, the power thing. JONES: But it's the same thing, isn't it? DELPY: Yeah and I think I've noticed that … if you give a vibe that's more in charge, I think people have a certain respect. Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. AP: So you both, like your characters, put a lot of thought into what you are wearing? JONES: What you're wearing emotionally that day, what you're giving out, what you're putting on. … And wearing the heels to make yourself taller, wearing the shoulders to not feminize yourself in that historically masculine situation. So yeah, all of that comes into play. DELPY: Toussaint, for me, it was important that she was really pristine all the time. And we talk about the white coat, that she has never put lipstick on a white coat. I would put lipstick on my white coat in 10 seconds. But she's like really the kind of person they will never be, you know, she'll never be walking like this (folds over her lapel) into a room… JONES: With a lapel up! Julie on the other hand, definitely. DELPY: And I'll step in a hole and fall.

Behind ‘Splitsville,' the year's funniest relationship comedy
Behind ‘Splitsville,' the year's funniest relationship comedy

Winnipeg Free Press

time6 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Behind ‘Splitsville,' the year's funniest relationship comedy

There's only so much directing you can do when you send your lead actor, who is holding several bags of goldfish, in water, on a roller coaster with a 35 mm camera strapped to the front. You just have to trust. 'Splitsville' director and actor Michael Angelo Covino knew he could count on his friend and cowriter Kyle Marvin to deliver on the performance side for their slapstick comedy about messy relationships and messy people that opens in theaters Friday. The two also made the wildly funny friendship movie 'The Climb,' which they cowrote and co-starred in with Covino directing. 'He's like a modern-day Charlie Chaplin,' Covino said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. 'It's just all intuitive slapstick. He has it in his bones.' But there were a lot of other variables at play: Would they run out of light? Would it be as funny in execution as it was in theory? Would they regret fighting for the 35 mm camera? A lot was riding on the scene and reshoots were not in the cards. Independent films can't just go around shutting down amusement parks and mounting expensive film cameras on roller coasters whenever they want. 'It was sort of a powder keg moment on set,' Marvin said. The most stressful thing, however, was they wouldn't even know for sure that they got the shot for a few days. Something had malfunctioned with the camera, and they didn't have a digital recording. It was also the weekend, so they had to wait for the lab to process the film and send it back to them. 'I called the lab and I was like, 'Please, please don't (expletive) this up,' Covino said. How and why this brilliant, absurd sequence fits into their film, a comedy about open relationships, divorce and human mistakes, in which they star opposite Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona, is probably better left for audiences to discover themselves. But it's the kind of comedy that Covino and Marvin specialize in. Leaning into unlikable characters The premise for 'Splitsville' arose from conversations with friends who just seemed a little too confident in their worldviews. 'Nothing is funnier than someone with a lot of confidence, because they're generally wrong in some way, shape or form,' Marvin said. 'One thing that we love is to put a character's feet on an inevitable journey and then just make it harder and harder for them.' 'Splitsville' starts with a big moment and continues escalating from there. The film begins with Arjona's character Ashley telling her husband Carey (Marvin) that she's unfaithful and wants a divorce. Distraught, he continues on to his married friends' house where he finds that Paul (Covino) and Julie (Johnson) are happily non monogamous — that is until Carey and Julie hook up. They had noticed in French and Italian films from the 70s, from the likes of Claude Sautet and Lina Wertmüller, the characters just state 'the thing,' like 'I'm in love with your fiance,' right out of the gates. 'There's a efficiency of story and character. It charges the film,' Covino said. 'We just gravitate toward movies where things happen and characters do crazy things.' This meant, in part, not being too worried about their characters being 'likable' or sending them on redemptive arcs that we might expect in a more mainstream romantic comedy. They're not out to punish the cheater. Nor are they out to make a hero out of the one who didn't. 'There's things not to like about all of them in some ways,' Covino said. 'But that's, to me, what makes them human. People do bad things, but if we can understand why there's something more there. There's humor to mine.' Adding the movie star element Unlike 'The Climb' which featured actors who weren't exactly household names, 'Splitsville' has recognizable stars in Johnson and Arjona. In the film, there are more than a few jokes made about the 'beauty gap' between the characters. They heard the same off camera too. 'There were a lot of notes about, 'How are we gonna get people to buy that these two guys are with these two women?'' Covino said with a laugh. 'We were like, 'Hey guys, we're right here. We are the guys.'' They consider themselves 'extremely lucky' that Johnson and Arjona wanted to make 'Splitsville.' Not only did they bring the characters to life in ways that they couldn't have imagined on the page, but their star quality adds something intangible as well. 'They hold the screen,' Covino said. 'Dakota can just sit there and when you fix the camera on her face, it's mesmerizing. When she's on screen, it takes a lot of the pressure off of the story and all the other things because she's so captivating. I think there's something really beautiful about that especially given what this story is trying to do with these two idiot guys who are orbiting around these women.' Not being afraid of dumb jokes Covino and Marvin didn't set out to tackle issues of relationships and marriage. If conversations emerge after the fact, that's gravy, but ultimately they have one goal: Make an entertaining film. Often times, that means not shying away from the dumb jokes. Their films are cinematic and they know all the auteurs to reference, but they're also silly and slapstick. They draw as much from Blake Edwards, Elaine May and Mike Nichols as they do from 'Dumb and Dumber' and 'Me, Myself & Irene.' In other words, they're making comedies for everyone, not just cinephiles. Occasionally they doubt themselves and worry that something is just too dumb to print. But then they remember the bit with the dog's name in 'The Jerk,' a movie they find both cinematic and one of the dumbest movies ever. 'It's a dumb joke, but there's brilliance in it,' Covino said. 'Independent film is so in flux. The more entertaining we can make these films, the like better chance all of this has.' So, when your story gives your character bags of goldfish, sometimes you just have to put him on a roller coaster.

Andie MacDowell's actress daughter tries to set her up with Groundhog Day co-star Bill Murray
Andie MacDowell's actress daughter tries to set her up with Groundhog Day co-star Bill Murray

Toronto Sun

time2 days ago

  • Toronto Sun

Andie MacDowell's actress daughter tries to set her up with Groundhog Day co-star Bill Murray

Margaret Qualley poses for photographers at the photo call for the film 'Honey Dont!'' at the 78th international film festival in Cannes, southern France, Saturday, May 24, 2025. Photo by Scott A Garfitt / AFP Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. Andie's a dandy. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account So says Andie MacDowell's daughter, Margaret Qualley, who is trying to set up her mom with her Groundhog Day co-star, Bill Murray. Qualley, the 30-year-old Honey Don't! Star, revealed on a recent episode of The Tonight Show that she crossed paths with Murray backstage 'just now' and offered to connect him with her mom after learning that they live in the same city. 'Literally tonight. Bill Murray, he pops into my backstage dressing room,' Qualley remarked to host Jimmy Fallon last Thursday, per Entertainment Weekly. 'Just now. This is breaking news.' Qualley, who is featured in the Happy Gilmore 2 movie and is married to musician and producer Jack Antonoff, said that she and Murray bonded backstage over the Piggly Wiggy shirt that he was wearing. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Andie MacDowell poses for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film 'Case 137' at the 78th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 15, 2025. Natacha Pisarenko. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'Then cut to I found out he's living in Charleston. My mom's living in Charleston,' Qualley said. The actress paused when someone in the audience 'ooh'd' over the development. 'I know! OK, you know what, I'm gonna give you the tea.' Qualley then revealed that, during their chat, Murray said that he and MacDowell 'didn't get along so good' while they were filming Groundhog Day . 'He was like, 'You know, she took a long time to get her hair done and she didn't know her lines this one time,'' Qualley said. 'And I was like, 'Yeah, well, I heard a different story, sir.'' Qualley was not deterred. 'He's living in Charleston. She's living in Charleston. They've got this kind of rage towards each other, but maybe he's trying to make amends,' she said. 'And I'm like, she's single, he's single, they're both crazy, let's get it together!' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Bill Murray at The Phoenician Masterstroke movie premiere in Berlin. Qualley said that she's already started with a plan. 'I said come circle back and get my number if he wants me to connect (him) with my mom,' Qualley said. 'And if he's got any sense at all, he'd be the luckiest guy in the world! We'll see!' Read More Both MacDowell and Murray have been married in the past. Murray was previously married to wife Margaret Kelly from 1981 to 1996. He later tied the knot with Groundhog Day costume designer Jennifer Butler, whom he remained with from 1997 until 2008. MacDowell was married to Paul J. Qualley, with whom she had three children — including Margaret — from 1986 until 1999. She was later married to entrepreneur Rhett Hartzog in 2001, before they ultimately went their separate ways in 2004. RECOMMENDED VIDEO Toronto Blue Jays NHL World Sunshine Girls Canada

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store