
Margaret Qualley's sleazy crime caper ‘Honey Don't!' is a hot mess — just as intended
The second film co-written by Ethan Coen and his collaborator and wife Tricia Cooke (the first was 2024's 'Drive-Away Dolls'), it's less preoccupied by the challenge of who's responsible for that corpse than by its own overarching question: Why not? Why not let Margaret Qualley prove she has the electricity to power an audience through any plot? Why not pivot from 'The Big Lebowski' and 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' to an announced trilogy of tatty lesbian exploitation pictures? Why not, when a couple has earned the industry clout to shoot the script they want with the cast they want, make exactly the movie they want, even if this pulpy B-picture isn't very good? Who's going to tell them, honey don't?
To be clear, there's enough to like in 'Honey Don't!' to get you through its 89-minute running time. I'd watch Qualley stride around barking at people for twice as long and her supporting cast, which includes Aubrey Plaza as Honey's latest lover and Chris Evans as an oily pastor, is delivering at top level, i.e., Coen-worthy. (Newer talent Josh Pafchek pockets his scenes as a moronic Australian brute.) The script has several zingers that are so good you want to applaud right in your seat, particularly an insult Honey slings at her estranged daddy (Kale Browne). Even the extended intro credits have a witty energy that makes you forgive that they're tap dancing to pad the length.
Still, as with the sillier 'Dolls,' which also starred Qualley as a hot-to-trot queer queen, the film is so shaggy that it feels longer than it is. I finished both movies double-checking my watch in astonishment that they really were under an hour and a half.
Qualley's Honey is a headstrong investigator who is so independent, she refuses to let her secretary (Gabby Beans) make her a cup of coffee. Frankly, she's not that impressive as a private dick. Honey is only passingly curious why a client died before their first meeting and so predominately distracted by tangental side quests — her troubled teen niece (Talia Ryder), her dalliances with Plaza's husky lady cop — that the resolution doesn't involve much brilliant deduction. We know from the first scene that Honey needs to keep a close eye on a mysterious stranger named Cher (Lera Abova). Ultimately, the French femme fatale catches her attention for other reasons.
Across town, the corrupt Reverend Drew (Evans) is swaying his parishioners to sleep with him in the name of godly submission. 'I want to see your bosoms jouncing during fellowship,' he commands a member of his flock. The preacher is one of the biggest sinners in Bakersfield, not merely because both he and Honey may as well be using the phone book as a checklist of conquests. A normal thriller would frame their dynamic as cat versus mouse. Here, it's more like plague and vaccine. Honey is immune to his sales pitches for heterosexuality and holy salvation.
Honey is a brazenly preposterous creation: a 21st century woman who insists on using a Rolodex, something that was headed toward extinction before Qualley was even born. Striding through brush in seamed stockings and high heels — and changing wardrobe multiple times a day just because she can — she's the only character who never breaks a sweat (except in the bedroom).
Qualley keeps her cool from head to toe: eyebrows stern, line deliveries cucumber-crisp. Like a brassy classic dame, she says exactly what she means. When the local homicide officer, Marty (Charlie Day), makes a pass at her, she bluntly replies, 'I like girls.' The guy doesn't listen — he just keeps pestering her — which makes their dynamic play like some sort of clunky runner about how men are dense.
Marty's pursuit is that. But Honey's retort is also how the real-life Cooke shot Coen down the first time her future husband asked her out on a date. More than anything, it's evidence that 'Honey Don't!' primarily exists as the couple's own affectionate in-joke. 'Tricia's queer and sweet and I'm straight and stupid,' Coen said last year in an interview with the Associated Press. Both describe their three-decades-plus marriage as 'nontraditional.' Both also insist that they're making these pulp flicks as a unit and don't care who gets credit for what, claiming that Coen is cited as the director of 'Honey Don't!' simply because he's the one in the DGA.
Coen is, of course, half of another twosome with his brother Joel that also enjoys defying labels. Their filmography zigzags between thrillers and comedies, lean exercises and awards heavyweights, never making the same movie twice. It's as though their guiding compass is to stay ahead of audience expectations. The pair has been on a creative break since 2018's 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs' and it's been tempting to use their separate projects as an opportunity to examine who each sibling is as an individual. If you watched Joel Coen's black-and-white 'The Tragedy of Macbeth' in a double feature with 'Honey Don't!' you'd leave convinced that the elder Joel was the stylist and the younger Ethan the wit — that Joel wears a monocle and Ethan a grease-painted John Waters mustache.
But they might just be tricking us again. It's just as valid to say the brains behind those two movies are William Shakespeare and Tricia Cooke, especially the latter as she seems to have had the stronger hand in shaping the two sexy Qualley capers we've seen thus far. (The third already has a title: 'Go Beavers.')
As sloppy as it is, there's no denying that 'Honey Don't!' works as a noir with a pleasant, peppery flavor. Yet, there's a snap missing in its rhythm, a sense that it doesn't know when and how its gags should hit. When a playboy (Christian Antidormi) swaggers up to a bar and orders a shot of cinnamon schnapps, the line clangs like it landed better on the page. A few scenes later, a low-level drug dealer goes home to his Bolivian grandmother (Gloria Sandoval) who is such a caricature — bowler hat, lap full of dried chili peppers — that you suspect the character was designed to get more of a laugh. I did giggle when Honey visited her sister, a worn-out hausfrau named Heidi (Kristen Connolly), and kids kept popping out of the corners of her home one after another like rabbits from a hat.
The majority of the townsfolk that Honey encounters are such incurious mouth-breathers that the humor can feel hostile. The film's worldview is that most people are, as Coen describes himself, straight and stupid. That's worked out well enough for him. He's won four Oscars and, more importantly, the ability to do whatever he darned well pleases.
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Los Angeles Times
11 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
What should you see this weekend? 'Honey Don't!' or 'Lurker?'
Two new films hit movie theaters this weekend, 'Lurker' and 'Honey Don't!' Los Angeles Times film critic Amy Nicholson gives you quick reviews on both and recommends what to see this weekend.


Los Angeles Times
13 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Margaret Qualley's sleazy crime caper ‘Honey Don't!' is a hot mess — just as intended
'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 randy men. I'd call the opening murder a red herring except it's really more like a fish left to cook in the blinding Bakersfield sun. The second film co-written by Ethan Coen and his collaborator and wife Tricia Cooke (the first was 2024's 'Drive-Away Dolls'), it's less preoccupied by the challenge of who's responsible for that corpse than by its own overarching question: Why not? Why not let Margaret Qualley prove she has the electricity to power an audience through any plot? Why not pivot from 'The Big Lebowski' and 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' to an announced trilogy of tatty lesbian exploitation pictures? Why not, when a couple has earned the industry clout to shoot the script they want with the cast they want, make exactly the movie they want, even if this pulpy B-picture isn't very good? Who's going to tell them, honey don't? To be clear, there's enough to like in 'Honey Don't!' to get you through its 89-minute running time. I'd watch Qualley stride around barking at people for twice as long and her supporting cast, which includes Aubrey Plaza as Honey's latest lover and Chris Evans as an oily pastor, is delivering at top level, i.e., Coen-worthy. (Newer talent Josh Pafchek pockets his scenes as a moronic Australian brute.) The script has several zingers that are so good you want to applaud right in your seat, particularly an insult Honey slings at her estranged daddy (Kale Browne). Even the extended intro credits have a witty energy that makes you forgive that they're tap dancing to pad the length. Still, as with the sillier 'Dolls,' which also starred Qualley as a hot-to-trot queer queen, the film is so shaggy that it feels longer than it is. I finished both movies double-checking my watch in astonishment that they really were under an hour and a half. Qualley's Honey is a headstrong investigator who is so independent, she refuses to let her secretary (Gabby Beans) make her a cup of coffee. Frankly, she's not that impressive as a private dick. Honey is only passingly curious why a client died before their first meeting and so predominately distracted by tangental side quests — her troubled teen niece (Talia Ryder), her dalliances with Plaza's husky lady cop — that the resolution doesn't involve much brilliant deduction. We know from the first scene that Honey needs to keep a close eye on a mysterious stranger named Cher (Lera Abova). Ultimately, the French femme fatale catches her attention for other reasons. Across town, the corrupt Reverend Drew (Evans) is swaying his parishioners to sleep with him in the name of godly submission. 'I want to see your bosoms jouncing during fellowship,' he commands a member of his flock. The preacher is one of the biggest sinners in Bakersfield, not merely because both he and Honey may as well be using the phone book as a checklist of conquests. A normal thriller would frame their dynamic as cat versus mouse. Here, it's more like plague and vaccine. Honey is immune to his sales pitches for heterosexuality and holy salvation. Honey is a brazenly preposterous creation: a 21st century woman who insists on using a Rolodex, something that was headed toward extinction before Qualley was even born. Striding through brush in seamed stockings and high heels — and changing wardrobe multiple times a day just because she can — she's the only character who never breaks a sweat (except in the bedroom). Qualley keeps her cool from head to toe: eyebrows stern, line deliveries cucumber-crisp. Like a brassy classic dame, she says exactly what she means. When the local homicide officer, Marty (Charlie Day), makes a pass at her, she bluntly replies, 'I like girls.' The guy doesn't listen — he just keeps pestering her — which makes their dynamic play like some sort of clunky runner about how men are dense. Marty's pursuit is that. But Honey's retort is also how the real-life Cooke shot Coen down the first time her future husband asked her out on a date. More than anything, it's evidence that 'Honey Don't!' primarily exists as the couple's own affectionate in-joke. 'Tricia's queer and sweet and I'm straight and stupid,' Coen said last year in an interview with the Associated Press. Both describe their three-decades-plus marriage as 'nontraditional.' Both also insist that they're making these pulp flicks as a unit and don't care who gets credit for what, claiming that Coen is cited as the director of 'Honey Don't!' simply because he's the one in the DGA. Coen is, of course, half of another twosome with his brother Joel that also enjoys defying labels. Their filmography zigzags between thrillers and comedies, lean exercises and awards heavyweights, never making the same movie twice. It's as though their guiding compass is to stay ahead of audience expectations. The pair has been on a creative break since 2018's 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs' and it's been tempting to use their separate projects as an opportunity to examine who each sibling is as an individual. If you watched Joel Coen's black-and-white 'The Tragedy of Macbeth' in a double feature with 'Honey Don't!' you'd leave convinced that the elder Joel was the stylist and the younger Ethan the wit — that Joel wears a monocle and Ethan a grease-painted John Waters mustache. But they might just be tricking us again. It's just as valid to say the brains behind those two movies are William Shakespeare and Tricia Cooke, especially the latter as she seems to have had the stronger hand in shaping the two sexy Qualley capers we've seen thus far. (The third already has a title: 'Go Beavers.') As sloppy as it is, there's no denying that 'Honey Don't!' works as a noir with a pleasant, peppery flavor. Yet, there's a snap missing in its rhythm, a sense that it doesn't know when and how its gags should hit. When a playboy (Christian Antidormi) swaggers up to a bar and orders a shot of cinnamon schnapps, the line clangs like it landed better on the page. A few scenes later, a low-level drug dealer goes home to his Bolivian grandmother (Gloria Sandoval) who is such a caricature — bowler hat, lap full of dried chili peppers — that you suspect the character was designed to get more of a laugh. I did giggle when Honey visited her sister, a worn-out hausfrau named Heidi (Kristen Connolly), and kids kept popping out of the corners of her home one after another like rabbits from a hat. The majority of the townsfolk that Honey encounters are such incurious mouth-breathers that the humor can feel hostile. The film's worldview is that most people are, as Coen describes himself, straight and stupid. That's worked out well enough for him. He's won four Oscars and, more importantly, the ability to do whatever he darned well pleases.


Boston Globe
16 hours ago
- Boston Globe
‘Honey Don't!' wastes Margaret Qualley and her eye-catching attire
Margaret Qualley stars as Honey O'Donahue in writer/director Ethan Coen's "Honey Don't!", a Focus Features release. Karen Kuehn/Focus Features Most of the male characters in 'Drive-Away Dolls' were dumb. All the sex was explicit, and solely between women. And the violence was the gnarly kind you'd expect from a Coen brother. For example, one person was murdered with a corkscrew. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up I liked 'Drive-Away Dolls,' which put me in the critical minority. 'Honey Don't!' is such a steep drop in quality that I questioned if my review of that film was wrong. Turns out it wasn't. But that revisit also made the similarities between the two films more glaring. Instead of a road movie, 'Honey Don't!' is a sunshine neo-noir — that is, it takes place in the bright sunlight rather than noir's usual dark alleys and nights. The men are still stupid, the women are still having great sex with each other, and the violence is even gnarlier. Silverware is yet again involved in a murder. Advertisement Aubrey Plaza as MG Falcone and Margaret Qualley as Honey O'Donahue in "Honey Don't!". Focus Features There's even a butch cop, MG (Aubrey Plaza), who gets involved with Qualley's character, Honey O'Donahue. Yes, the Honey in 'Honey Don't!' is a name, not a term of endearment. And yes, the title comes from Carl Perkins's classic rockabilly song. Additionally, the family values leader this time is Reverend Devlin (a jockstrap-wearing Chris Evans), a Southern-accented preacher whose church advertisements are on billboards and buses all over Bakersfield, Calif. Coen and Cooke add something extra to their formula by staging some intentionally absurd heterosexual sex scenes with Devlin to highlight his hypocrisy. Like the best detective fiction, there's a twisty mystery at the center of 'Honey Don't!'. Honey is investigating the death of Mia, a woman who drove off a small cliff just after hiring Honey. In the opening scene, an ominous woman with an extreme bob haircut, and an even more extreme French accent, snatches a ring off Mia's finger. Chris Evans stars as Drew Devlin in "Honey Don't!". Karen Kuehn/Focus Features Both the French woman and the insignia on Mia's ring will show up multiple times during Honey's investigation. The latter is the trademark symbol of Devlin's church; the former is not the film's femme fatale. In an intriguing twist that goes absolutely nowhere, the detective's appearance fits the standard-issue femme fatale description better than the actual femme fatale does. Honey also has an unnamed office assistant played by Gabby Beans. Beans does wonders with her limited screentime. You get the sense she's not just a receptionist; she's also the Miles Archer to Honey's Sam Spade. In between having lots of sex — and bearing the brunt of a funny sex toy joke — Honey has to deal with her family and another, lesser case. Her sister, Helen (Kristen Connolly) has more children than the Old Lady Who Lived in a Shoe; she's too busy to see that her eldest, Corinne (Talia Ryder), is involved with an abusive boyfriend. Dealing with him is just one more task on the detective's Honey Do list. Advertisement The other case is a movie gumshoe's bread and butter — the infidelity stakeout. This one has a queer twist: The client ( Charlie Day stars as Marty Metakawitch. Focus Features Lest I forgot, Charlie Day co-stars as a cop who can't get through his thick skull that Honey is not interested in dating him. 'I like girls,' she tells him. This unfunny joke is repeated several times. I get what 'Honey Don't!' is trying to accomplish. Like 'Drive-Away Dolls,' this film injects an unapologetic queer sensibility into genre movie proceedings. Cooke, an out lesbian, said as much during the Q&A that followed my screening of the film. But, unlike the previous Qualley collaboration, this one doesn't do anything with the concept. Devlin's plotline ends abruptly, and the movie's true villain feels written in at the last minute just to prove a point. As an bona fide noirista, I admit that a noir plot is filled with wrong turns, dead ends, and unanswered questions. Remember that the director Howard Hawks once asked Raymond Chandler to clarify a plot point in 'The Big Sleep.' Chandler responded 'I don't know' — and he wrote the damn book! But at least those digressions contributed to the overall story. Advertisement The one thing 'Honey Don't!' does well is evoking a real sense of its location. Starting with a clever opening-credits sequence that puts the names of the cast and crew on buildings, the film brings its Bakersfield setting to life. (It was shot in Albuquerque.) You can feel the hot desert sun beating down on you. Such a waste of a great mise en scene. ★ HONEY DON'T! Directed by Ethan Coen. Written by Coen and Tricia Cooke. Starring Margaret Qualley, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Evans, Charlie Day, Gabby Beats, Kristen Connolly, Billy Eichner, Talia Ryder. At AMC Boston Common, Landmark Kendall Square, Alamo Drafthouse Seaport, AMC Causeway, suburbs. 89 min. R (on the Honey Do list: sex, violence, profanity) Odie Henderson is the Boston Globe's film critic.