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    Movie Review

    Filmmaker Ethan Coen returns with lesbian road-trip caper Drive-Away Dolls

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 22, 2024 | 3:10 pm

    Joel and Ethan Coen, aka the Coen Brothers, have made for a fantastic filmmaking partnership over the past 40 years, winning four Oscars together. But following their last film, 2018’s The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, they went their separate ways, with Joel saying Ethan didn’t want to make movies anymore. Ethan appears to have revived his passion, though, as he’s back as a solo director with Drive-Away Dolls.

    Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan in Drive-Away Dolls

    Photo by Wilson Webb / courtesy of Working Title and Focus Features

    Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan in Drive-Away Dolls.

    The new film, written by Coen and his wife, Tricia Cooke, is – of all things – a wacky comedy about two lesbians, Jamie (Margaret Qualley) and Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan), who unwittingly get caught up in a criminal enterprise. Jamie is a free spirit who will sleep with any woman who crosses her path – much to the chagrin of her girlfriend, Sukie (Beanie Feldstein) – while Marian is uptight and only willing to have sex with someone she knows well.

    Looking to get away, the two young women take a job transporting a car from New York to Tallahassee, Florida. Unfortunately, that car happens to contain a couple of cases with ill-gotten goods meant for a powerful senator, and two goons (Joey Slotnick and C.J. Wilson) are soon on their trail to recover the cases. But since Jamie and Marian take many detours to find lesbian hangouts along the way, they prove harder to find than anticipated.

    Looked at a certain way, the film has many of the same hallmarks of classic Coen Brothers comedies. The sensibility is off-kilter enough that many of the laughs come from how unusual the characters are behaving. That idea starts with Jamie, with her insatiable sexual appetite and comically broad Texas accent, whose friendship with Marian – her polar opposite in almost every way – is odd, if somewhat endearing.

    But Coen and Cooke put their own unique stamp on the film, especially in the sexual nature of the story. The sex is played mainly for laughs, both in the actual scenes and the things characters use to help with the sex. None of it seems exploitative, although there will certainly be some who raise an eyebrow at a movie about lesbians being made by a straight couple and portrayed by two straight actors. (EDIT: Cooke gave a recent interview revealing she identifies as a lesbian.)

    The comedy and a few big-name cameos make the movie fun, but even at only 84 minutes, it feels like Coen and Cooke aren’t exactly sure what to do with the story they started. With so many of the scenes being over-the-top, usually in the acting department, there don’t seem to be any real stakes. The film, set in 1999 for unknown reasons, ends with a joke that would have been great in that year, but now makes almost zero sense.

    No matter what you think of her Texas accent, it’s hard to say that Qualley doesn’t give her all to her role. She and Viswanathan making for an appealing pair, with Viswanathan’s deadpan acting being a great complement to Qualley’s hamminess. Feldstein matches Qualley’s pitch in their scenes together, while Slotnick, Wilson, and others find ways to fit in well with the film’s overall tone.

    It’s no replacement for the classic partnership of the Coen Brothers, but Drive-Away Dolls shows that Ethan Coen still knows how to make a good, if flawed, movie. And get ready for more, as Coen and Cooke apparently have a whole lesbian B-movie trilogy planned if this one is successful enough.

    ---

    Drive-Away Dolls opens in theaters on February 23.

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    Movie Review

    Ryan Gosling tries to save the universe in Project Hail Mary

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 19, 2026 | 10:00 am
    Ryan Gosling in Project Hail Mary
    Photo by Jonathan Olley
    Ryan Gosling in Project Hail Mary

    The reasons behind the success of 2015’s The Martian, which earned over $630 million worldwide and got nominated for seven Oscars, had as much to do with the novel written by Andy Weir as it did with star Matt Damon and director Ridley Scott. Weir’s commitment to making an entertaining story that was also scientifically accurate proved to be easy to translate into a blockbuster movie.

    The same is true for Weir’s 2021 novel, Project Hail Mary, now a film starring Ryan Gosling. Gosling plays Dr. Ryland Grace, who opens the film waking up from an induced coma, alone on an interstellar spaceship named the Hail Mary. As his foggy mind clears, he - and the audience - learn that he was recruited to help an initiative to save the world after it’s discovered that a mysterious phenomenon is causing the sun to cool down, threatening all life on Earth.

    The film toggles back and forth between Grace’s time on the ship and his whirlwind journey of scientific discovery on Earth, with revelations coming on both sides. On Earth, he mostly deals with Eva Stratt (Sandra Hüller), the unflappable and unstoppable leader of the international coalition dedicated to solving the problem. And in space, orbiting the far-off star known as Tau Ceti, he encounters another being he names Rocky, a five-limbed creature that looks like a boulder which teams up with him to try to save both of their worlds.

    Directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, and written by Drew Goddard (who also wrote The Martian), the film melds multiple genres into an astonishingly great whole. It starts off as a mystery, morphs into science fiction, transitions into actual science, becomes a thriller, adds in plenty of drama, and - for good measure - features plenty of comedy along the way. Shifting tones like this film does is tricky for many filmmakers, but Lord and Miller prove to be masterful at knowing just how much of each to include before it becomes too much.

    One of the biggest keys to the story is the fact that Grace is not a hero in the movie sense of the word. He’s very smart, but he’s also an everyman, teaching middle school science after being shunned from academia. The circumstances of how he ended up on the Hail Mary are doled out in pieces over the course of the film, but it’s clear from the start that Grace’s talents are not the ones found in your typical astronaut. Ironically, it’s him being forced to do heroic stuff that imbues him with an atypical type of bravery.

    The relationship between Grace and Rocky is unique, and Rocky ends up being as endearing an alien that’s been featured in movies despite the fact that he has no face and speaks only in musical tones. The film does a very effective job of putting the audience in Grace’s shoes, having to figure out ways to communicate with Rocky at the same time as he’s trying to figure out how to complete a mission he wasn’t trained to do.

    Gosling is the ideal actor to portray a man like Grace. Essentially alone for much of the film, his innate charm and humorous delivery keep the film from feeling like an extended monologue. The flashback scenes to his time on Earth feature solid performances from people like Hüller (Anatomy of a Fall), Lionel Boyce (The Bear), and more, who fill in the pieces of the story without feeling out of place.

    Project Hail Mary is a crowd-pleaser in all the right ways, delivering plenty of thrilling action and funny moments while also digging deep into science nerd elements. With a movie star like Gosling in the lead and successful filmmakers like Lord, Miller, and Goddard behind the scenes, the film makes an early case for being one of best of the year.

    ---

    Project Hail Mary opens in theaters on March 20.

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