Honey Don’t
Honey Don’t! is a dark comedy whodunit directed by Ethan Coen, co-written by his wife Tricia Cooke, starring Margaret Qualley as a Bakersfield private investigator who stumbles into a mystery involving a religious cult after investigating a local woman’s death. The film is described as a neon noir with a visually distinctive, old-school crime film aesthetic and features a score by Carter Burwell. While praised for its entertaining aspects like strong performances and dialogue, some critics found the narrative disjointed, thin, and less complex than the Coen brothers’ earlier works.
Honey O’Donahue (Margaret Qualley), a hard-boiled private investigator in Bakersfield, California and handles infidelity cases but gets drawn into a more significant mystery involving the death of a local woman. She investigates the strange deaths, which become linked to a mysterious church and a religious cult. The film has a dark, neon noir aesthetic set in the present day but reminiscent of older
Honey Don’t! is a dark comedy whodunit directed by Ethan Coen, co-written by his wife Tricia Cooke, starring Margaret Qualley as a Bakersfield private investigator who stumbles into a mystery involving a religious cult after investigating a local woman’s death. The film is described as a neon noir with a visually distinctive, old-school crime film aesthetic and features a score by Carter Burwell. While praised for its entertaining aspects like strong performances and dialogue, some critics found the narrative disjointed, thin, and less complex than the Coen brothers’ earlier works.
Honey O’Donahue (Margaret Qualley), a hard-boiled private investigator in Bakersfield, California and handles infidelity cases but gets drawn into a more significant mystery involving the death of a local woman. She investigates the strange deaths, which become linked to a mysterious church and a religious cult. The film has a dark, neon noir aesthetic set in the present day but reminiscent of older crime films, complete with a signature score.
crime films, complete with a signature score.