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Tag: focus features

  • Bugonia Digital, 4K, & Blu-ray Release Dates Set for Emma Stone Movie

    Universal Pictures Home Entertainment has announced the digital, 4K, and Blu-ray release dates for Bugonia, Focus Features’ newest dark comedy from acclaimed filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos. The Emma Stone-led movie was based on the South Korean movie Save the Green Planet! from 2003.

    “A wildly entertaining psychological thriller, the film follows two conspiracy-obsessed young men who kidnap a powerful CEO they believe is an alien out to destroy humanity. What begins as a paranoid act spirals into a battle of delusions and control—one as viscerally unpredictable as it is provocative,” reads the movie’s official synopsis.

    When are the digital, 4K, and Blu-ray release dates for Bugonia?

    Bugonia will be available to rent or own on digital platforms starting on November 25, 2025. Afterward, the movie will then be available for purchase on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, and DVD on December 23, 2025. Since its theatrical debut, the film has received positive reviews from critics and audiences alike. It currently holds a Certified Fresh rating of 87% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 277 reviews.

    Listed below is the bonus featurette included in its home video release:

    • The Birth of the Bees: The Making of Bugonia — Join Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, and the rest of the cast and crew as they reveal what it takes to bring a Yorgos Lanthimos film to life on screen in all its fascinating, wonderful glory.

    Bugonia was directed by Lanthimos from a screenplay written by Will Tracy, with Midsommar director Ari Aster serving as a producer. The movie also stars Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Alicia Silverstone, Stavros Halkias, Vanessa Eng, Marc T. Lewis, Momma Cherri, Cedric Dumornay, Parvinder Shergill, and more. The movie was produced by Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Lanthimos, Stone, Lars Knudsen, Miky Lee, and Jerry Kyoungboum Ko. It was a production by CJ ENM, the company behind Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite. 

    Maggie Dela Paz

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  • ‘Song Sung Blue’ Review: Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson Bring Sparkling Chemistry and Impressive Musicality to Disarming Boomer Love Story

    A sweet serve of feel-sad, feel-glad corn done right, Song Sung Blue tells the remarkable true story of a Milwaukee auto mechanic and his hairdresser wife who face hard knocks together but never let their dream die — even if it’s on life support during the toughest times. While that might sound like Hallmark treacle, Craig Brewer’s captivating retelling of the triumphs and tribulations of a Neil Diamond tribute act is grounded in real feeling and irresistibly rousing music. Most of all, it’s held aloft by winning performances from an ideally paired Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson, the latter doing her best work since Almost Famous.

    I’ll confess I was an easy mark for this movie. A key childhood memory is sitting on my aunt’s living room floor — she was groovy enough to have a “feature wall” of contrast wallpaper — playing the Hot August Night double album from start to finish while everyone else was outside digesting barbecue. By the time I hit high school, Diamond’s music had been deemed uncool, so naturally, I disavowed any fondness for it. But decades later, his songs became a time-travel vehicle; I was surprised to find I knew just about every word. I guess it was a given that Song Sung Blue would win me over.

    Song Sung Blue

    The Bottom Line

    A diamond in the rough.

    Venue: AFI Fest (Closing Night)
    Release date: Thursday, Dec. 25
    Cast: Hugh Jackman, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperioli, Ella Anderson, Fisher Stevens, Jim Belushi, King Princess, Mustafa Shakir, Hudson Hensley, John Beckwith
    Director-screenwriter: Craig Brewer, based on the documentary by Greg Kohs

    Rated PG-13,
    2 hours 11 minutes

    There’s no denying that this is a bona fide boomer movie, so it prompts questions as to whether that generation can still be nudged toward the multiplex and whether younger audiences will be even remotely curious. But this is the kind of robust entertainment — wholesome though not at all toothless, alternately joyful and heart-wrenching — that doesn’t get made much anymore, which should boost word of mouth for the Focus Features Christmas release. It’s a family movie in the best sense of the term, a crowd-pleaser with a ton of heart.

    Jackman plays Mike Sardina, a divorced Vietnam vet marking his 20th anniversary of sobriety in the late ‘80s when he meets Claire Stengl (Hudson) at a “Legends” gig at the Wisconsin State Fair. The bill includes impersonators doing Elvis, Willie Nelson, Streisand, James Brown and Buddy Holly, the latter the specialty of Michael Imperioli’s Mark Shurilla, who is also the show’s promoter.

    Mike, who performs as self-styled rock god “Lightning,” backs out after a disagreement with Mark, but not before exchanging some flirty banter with Claire. Just as she’s about to go on as Patsy Cline, she tells him he should be doing Neil Diamond.

    From Hustle & Flow through the brilliant Eddie Murphy vehicle Dolemite Is My Name, writer-director Brewer has shown an affinity for underdogs seeking fulfillment as performers. It’s obvious what drew him to Greg Kohs’ 2008 documentary of the same name about the husband-and-wife duo. Brewer is working in a more conventional style here than some of his earlier films, but there’s sincerity and emotional authenticity to this movie that suggest deep personal investment, not to mention hardcore music fandom.

    Composer Scott Bomar serves as executive music producer, and song after song is an uplifting knockout. Naturally, “Sweet Caroline” gets the royal treatment, but just as Mike insists there’s much more to Neil Diamond than that over-saturated, infernally catchy hit and its singalong chorus, so too does the movie cast a wide net over Diamond’s vast catalogue.

    Some of the more memorable numbers are the romantic ballad “Play Me,” the spiritual “Soolaimon,” the stirring, gospel-inflected “Holly Holy” and the even more roof-raising “Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show.” Unlike so many music biopics that shuffle frustrating song fragments just to get through all the greatest hits, Brewer gives the songs space to play out at length, editor Billy Fox’s many montages serving both to amplify and advance the narrative.

    This approach is evident from the first time Mike visits Claire with an album of Neil Diamond sheet music to kick around ideas for his act. By the time that first session is over, he has asked her to be Thunder to his Lightning and the pair have surrendered to their mutual attraction. The chemistry between Jackman and Hudson makes you root for their characters as a couple and as a music act.

    Scenes that by rights should be eye-rolling clichés somehow end up disarming. One is the first full rehearsal in Mike’s garage, with his longtime associates The Esquires on horns and keys, and Mark on guitar, after deciding he’s too old to keep impersonating Buddy Holly, who died at 22. They rip through “Crunchy Granola Suite” with such gusto, Mike and Claire sharing vocal duties, that even the crabby neighbor across the street is dancing while watering her lawn.

    Claire is also a refugee from a broken marriage, prone to bouts of depression, but singing is a great mood-elevator, as is Mike. Her tween son Dayna (Hudson Hensley) is easily won over by his new stepdad, while teenage daughter Rachel (Ella Anderson) is more resistant. But she also comes around after forming a fast friendship and sharing a joint with Mike’s daughter Angelina (indie musician King Princess), visiting from Florida where she lives with her mother.

    Mike’s dentist, Dr. Dave Watson (Fisher Stevens), who doubles as his manager, hooks the duo up with low-rent casino booker Tom D’Amato (an amusingly cartoonish Jim Belushi). He screws up their first important gig by promising a motorhome-convention audience and delivering a biker club, who are strictly ZZ Top. But out of that wreckage comes a marriage proposal and before long, Lightning and Thunder are a Milwaukee sensation, getting local news coverage and an enthusiastic following.

    Their big break comes when Eddie Vedder (John Beckwith) calls, asking them to open for Pearl Jam. (Yes, this really happened!) But just when you might be starting to wonder if there will be any significant conflict, tragedy strikes, sidelining Claire and sending her plummeting into severe depression and anger. Mike tries to make the best of things, hosting karaoke nights at a family-run Thai restaurant where the owner (Shyaporn Theerakulstit) is a massive Neil Diamond fan. But without Claire, performing loses its magic for him.

    The repeat misfortunes in these characters’ lives stir in resonant notes of pathos, even if some, like Rachel’s unplanned pregnancy, are given minimal airtime. But the movie keeps you on board through spiraling lows and resilient highs — even through three endings when one would have sufficed — in large part because the leads are just so damned charming.

    Jackman is no stranger to this kind of showman dreamer. His exuberant personality and natural humor make him an ideal fit for the performance elements, whether singing “Cracklin’ Rosie” in his underwear while practicing his Neil moves or belting out hits onstage in dagger-collared satin ‘70s shirts and sequined jackets, his hair billowing in the gust of a fan. But the actor doesn’t shortchange the soulfulness of his character either.

    The real surprise, however, is Hudson, giving a vanity-free performance that makes her entirely believable as a Midwestern hairdresser and loving mother whose happiness when performing is infectious and her devastation heartbreaking.

    Her versions of Patsy Cline evergreens “Walkin’ After Midnight” and “Sweet Dreams” are rich and warm and full-bodied. She also matches Jackman note for note in wonderful performance interludes, in which Mike and Claire’s love radiates over the audience, and she soars in a solo on Diamond’s soft rock ballad “I’ve Been This Way Before.”

    Imperioli, Anderson, Stevens and Belushi ably lead the appealing ensemble in a film that’s sugary but never sickly, even when it borders on schmaltz. Brewer’s direction is polished and fuss-free, trusting in the strength of the characters and their stranger-than-fiction story to do the work, always anchored in bittersweet real-life experience.

    David Rooney

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  • ‘Anemone’ Review: Daniel Day-Lewis Makes a Commanding Return to the Screen in a Drama That Seldom Approaches His Earth-Shaking Force

    The first thing to note about Anemone is that it marks a magnificent emergence from eight years of retirement for the great Daniel Day-Lewis, who stepped away from acting following 2017’s exquisite chamber piece, Phantom Thread. Looking lean and strong, with a shock of silver hair and a thick walrus mustache that might make Sam Elliott feel threatened, the three-time Oscar winner’s magnetic intensity remains undimmed. Playing a brooding, taciturn man living in self-imposed exile for two decades, Day-Lewis’ rugged performance provides a semblance of narrative weight in a drama that’s otherwise lacking.

    Co-written by the actor with his son Ronan Day-Lewis, making his feature directing debut, Anemone shows a young filmmaker with a boldly textured visual sense and a sharp eye for composition. Cinematographer Ben Fordesman’s arresting widescreen images of the Northern English landscapes and dense woodlands create a sweeping canvas, even if the self-consciously enigmatic story becomes dwarfed by the physical settings.

    Anemone

    The Bottom Line

    A riveting performance in an underpowered vehicle.

    Venue: New York Film Festival (Spotlight)
    Release date: Friday, Oct. 10
    Cast: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, Samantha Morton, Samuel Bottomley, Safia Oakley-Green
    Director: Ronan Day-Lewis
    Screenwriters: Daniel Day-Lewis, Ronan Day-Lewis

    Rated R,
    2 hours 5 minutes

    Focus Features will release the Plan B Entertainment production in October, following its world premiere as a New York Film Festival Spotlight selection.

    Intergenerational trauma is fast becoming the most over-trafficked theme of 21st-century indie cinema — second only to the journey of self-discovery. Despite the political specificity of the family history unearthed here, the script presumes a level of profundity that’s just not there in the movie’s ponderous silences and woozy montages. You can feel the director straining for poignancy in closing scenes that point toward possible reconciliation, but the drama remains unaffecting.

    Ray Stoker (Day-Lewis Sr.) has lived the life of a hermit for 20 years in a primitive cabin deep in the woods, hunting, cooking meals on a wood-burning stove, washing his clothes in water from a nearby river and running to keep fit. The only sign of him having made this lonely place a home beyond bare-bones essentials is a patch of delicate white flowers that give the film its title, later revealed to be the same bloom cultivated by his father.

    Ray’s solitude is interrupted by the unannounced arrival of his brother Jem (Sean Bean), whom he greets without warmth, using more grunts and gestures than actual words. While Ray seems divorced from any sense of spirituality, Jem is a devoutly religious man, as evidenced by the words “Only God Can Judge Me” tattooed across his shoulders as he prays for strength to face the tasks ahead. Jem brings a letter from his partner Nessa (Samantha Morton), outlining a family crisis with their boy Brian (Samuel Bottomley), whose bloodied knuckles indicate a violent nature that has prompted his withdrawal.

    From early on, the tortured family dynamic becomes clear, explaining Nessa’s reasons for turning to Ray for help. But the screenplay rejects clean narrative lines, as if withholding its truths will lend the pared-down story more complexity.

    This pays off to some extent because Day-Lewis is such a mesmerizing presence, Ray’s gruff manner and terse communications hinting at dark mysteries to be revealed. But although Bean is a strong actor, his role is mostly reactive, creating an imbalance in the two-character scenes that dominate the movie, and a slight staginess in a structure built around chewy monologues.

    Admittedly, some of those monologues are bracing, notably Ray’s vivid account of his revenge — real or fabricated — against the priest who sexually abused him as a child. Mentions of Ray and Jem’s disciplinarian father point to a corresponding environment of physical violence at home. It emerges that the brothers served with different branches of the British military during the Northern Ireland conflict, and Ray’s direct experience with IRA violence has left him psychologically scarred.

    Morton has moments of stirring vulnerability as Brian’s careworn mother, whose history with Ray makes her fear that her son could go down a comparably bleak path. Bottomley plays the bruised, angry young man with conviction, but the script never puts enough meat on the bones of his conflict to make Brian much more than a generic casualty of a troubled family. Anemone ends up being too distancing to solicit much emotional involvement in any of them.

    The director’s handling of mystical visions that haunt Ray is less than seamless, but his embrace of elemental forces is effective, particularly a hailstorm of near-biblical proportions that proves cathartic. The extensive embellishment of a score by Bobby Krlic (the English musician who records as the Haxan Cloak), drenched in moody synths and guitar, fits the tone but also adds to the nagging sense that the younger Day-Lewis’ storytelling too often mistakes padding for atmosphere.

    What lingers as the end credits roll is Daniel Day-Lewis’ noble face — full of sorrow, resentment, guilt and shame, emotions that Ray spends much of the early action masking in hardened indifference. Regardless of the film’s shortcomings, it’s a thrill to have this giant of an actor back on a movie screen, hopefully next time with a more satisfyingly fleshed-out screenplay.

    David Rooney

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  • ‘Honey Don’t!’ Filmmakers Ethan Coen & Tricia Cooke On Detective Genre Gender Norms, Next Female Rowing Crew Pic & Potential Joel Coen Reteam – Crew Call Podcast

    Why haven’t the Coen Brothers worked together for seven years?

    “He borrowed the lawnmower, brought it back and never cleaned the blades. This is bullsh*t!” jokes Ethan Coen. Joel and Ethan Coen’s last movie together was the Netflix multi-story feature, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, which for the latter was an epic project to shoot up there with the scope of True Grit and No Country for Old Men.

    Actually, life is what happens when two brothers are making their own projects, separately. Actually, Ethan Coen nearly retired from the craft while Joel Coen continued on making movies like The Tragedy of Macbeth starring Denzel Washington. However, Ethan was then pulled back into filmmaking by his spouse and longtime Coen editor Tricia Cooke with the documentary Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind. They tried to make the caper they co-penned, Drive Away Dolls (Ethan prefers the original title Drive Away Dikes), over 20 years ago with Gas Food Lodging filmmaker Allison Anders. Ultimately, husband and wife took on the production themselves.

    Honey Don’t! their second movie with Focus Features, reteams the duo with Drive Away Dolls‘ star Margaret Qualley. The comedy, which closed the Cannes Film Festival, hits theaters this Friday. Qualley plays lesbian private eye Honey O’Donahue, a small-town private investigator, who delves into a series of strange deaths tied to a mysterious church led by Chris Evans’ sex crazed preacher.

    “There aren’t enough lesbian genre movies,” says Cooke, who looked at Honey Don’t! as a way to “switch the gender norms” in the detective movie and have the lead be a “classic femme fatale, kind of sultry, very seductive detective. We wanted to do a butch femme thing playing around with the gender norms of classic detective stories.”

    Cooke and Ethan Coen have a third collaboration in the works which they’re penning: the ten-year reunion of a women’s crew team.

    Coen teases that the project is about “the wilderness of life, roll down the river, which is life — ya, get it?”

    “…meets horror film” adds Cooke.

    We also talk with the duo about their writing shorthand, the state of moviegoing and their approach to testing movies.

    And don’t worry, the Coen Brothers will assemble once again behind the camera.

    Says Ethan, “We’ve written one to do together. I’m sure we’ll do. We got to kind of get on the same schedule page again.”

    Our conversation can be heard here:

    Anthonypauldalessandro

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  • Daniel Day-Lewis Sets Acting Return for ‘Anemone’ With Son Ronan Directing

    Daniel Day-Lewis Sets Acting Return for ‘Anemone’ With Son Ronan Directing

    Daniel Day-Lewis is making his return to feature acting with his son at the helm.

    Day-Lewis is set to star in the film Anemone from first-time director Ronan Day-Lewis. Hailing from Focus Features and Plan B, the movie marks Daniel Day-Lewis’ first acting role since 2017’s Phantom Thread, which the Oscar-winning performer had said would be his final project before retiring.

    The father and son duo co-wrote the script that explores family bonds, specifically those involving fathers, sons and brothers. Sean Bean, Samantha Morton, Samuel Bottomley and Safia Oakley-Green round out the cast.

    “We could not be more excited to partner with a brilliant visual artist in Ronan Day-Lewis on his first feature film alongside Daniel Day-Lewis as his creative collaborator,” Focus Features chairman Peter Kujawski said in a statement. “They have written a truly exceptional script, and we look forward to bringing their shared vision to audiences alongside the team at Plan B.”

    Among the creative team are director of photography Ben Fordesman, costume designer Jane Petrie and production designer Chris Oddy. 

    Universal Pictures International will distribute internationally for Focus.

    Ronan Day-Lewis, 26, is a filmmaker and painter whose upcoming solo exhibition debuts in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

    Daniel Day-Lewis is a three-time Oscar-winning actor who is considered among the best of his generation. He won the Academy Award for best actor for My Left Foot, There Will Be Blood and Lincoln.

    He also earned Oscar nominations for his roles in In the Name of the Father, Gangs of New York and Phantom Thread.

    In a statement issued in 2017, Day-Lewis announced his retirement from the craft. “Daniel Day-Lewis will no longer be working as an actor,” the message read at the time. “He is immensely grateful to all of his collaborators and audiences over the many years.”

    Ryan Gajewski

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  • Need to Binge ‘Downton Abbey’? Here Are all the Movies, in Order

    Need to Binge ‘Downton Abbey’? Here Are all the Movies, in Order

    A new Downton Abbey movie is on its way! Does that mean it’s time for a rewatch of the previous Downton Abbey movies? If so, here’s your watch order.

    If you’re just interested in the movies, then you don’t have too much homework. Before the upcoming Downton Abbey movie, there have only been two previous films.

    However, if you dive right into the first Downton Abbey movie, you may be in for a rude awakening, since it picks up where the TV show left off. The Downton Abbey TV series ran for six seasons from 2010 to 2025, and had a total of 52 episodes. Although the quality of the series can get a little spotty at times, with ham-fisted storylines and recycled ideas, there are some pretty incredible highlights during the show’s run. Plus, the series introduces audiences to the main characters in the films. The show is definitely worth a watch, if you’re familiarizing yourself with the world of Downton Abbey.

    What is Downton Abbey about?

    Downton Abbey follows the exploits of the people who live in an English estate at the turn of the 20th century. The show and films follow the Crawleys, the aristocratic owners of the estate, as they deal with issues like marriage proposals and a volatile economy. Meanwhile, the Crawleys’ staff, consisting of maids, manservants, cooks, a butler, and other service professionals, form close-knit relationships with each other and strike out on their own in searches for prosperity and fulfillment. Both storylines—the family and the servants—are equally engrossing.

    If you’re down with the premise and you’ve seen at least some of the original series, here are the Downton Abbey films in order!

    Downton Abbey (2018)

    (ITV)

    Downton Abbey, which came out after the TV series concluded, picks up where the show left off with the Crawleys preparing for a visit from the Queen.

    Downton Abbey: A New Era (2022)

    Elizabeth McGovern and Laura Carmichael in Downton Abbey: A New Era (2022) as Lady Cora and Lady Edith

    Downton Abbey: A New Era takes place in 1927, at the dawn of the film era. A production crew comes to the estate to use it as a setting for a silent movie.

    Downton Abbey 3 (forthcoming)

    The cast of Downton Abbey walk across the grass wearing tennis outfits.
    (Focus Features)

    We don’t know the plot of Downton Abbey 3 yet. However, we do know that Paul Giamatti will be reprising the role of Cora’s brother Harold, the American playboy. Looks like drama is afoot!


    The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more

    Julia Glassman

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  • Riley Keough, Focus Vice Chairman Jason Cassidy Join The Gotham Film & Media Institute Board (Exclusive)

    Riley Keough, Focus Vice Chairman Jason Cassidy Join The Gotham Film & Media Institute Board (Exclusive)

    Riley Keough and Focus vice chairman Jason Cassidy have joined the board of The Gotham Film & Media Institute, the group behind the Gotham Awards.

    The pair join existing board members Nancy Abraham, Anthony Bregman, Jeb Brody, Gerry Byrne, Alina Cho, Dan Crown, Mark D’Arcy (director emeritus), Amy Emmerich, Philipp Engelhorn, Kai Falkenberg, James Janowitz, Franklin Leonard, Stephanie March, Soledad O’Brien, Dee Poku, Hanna Rodriguez-Farrar, John Schmidt, Lisa Taback, Teddy Schwarzman, Drew Wilson and Celia Winchester.

    Actress-producer-director Riley Keough most recently starred in the Amazon Prime Video series Daisy Jones & the Six, which earned nine Emmy nominations, including a lead actress in a limited series nod for Keough. (The Emmys were postponed from their traditional September date due to the writers and actors strikes and are set to be presented in January.) Keough’s other credits include Zola, The Runaways, The Girlfriend Experience and American Honey.

    And Keough made her directorial debut with the 2022 film War Pony, which she co-directed with producing partner Gina Gammell. The critically acclaimed project, which Keough’s production company Felix Culpa developed and produced won the Camera d’Or award at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. Other Felix Culpa projects include the Jesse Eisenberg starrer Manodrome and Hulu limited series Under the Bridge, based on the Rebecca Godfrey book of the same name.

    Cassidy, along with Focus chairman Peter Kujawski received the industry tribute at last year’s Gotham Awards, where Focus’ Tár led that year’s nominations. Cassidy became vice chairman in 2019 after joining the studio as president of marketing in 2016.

    Focus projects scored four Gotham Awards nominations this year.

    Prior to Focus, Cassidy, who has 25 years of experience marketing films, worked as chief marketing officer at Open Road, leading the Oscar campaign for 2016 best picture winner Spotlight. Prior to Open Road, he ran the marketing department at Miramax, leading the Oscar campaigns for best picture winners Chicago and No Country for Old Men.

    “We are so excited to add Jason, one of the most respected and innovative film executives, and Riley, an extraordinarily talented actress and critically acclaimed filmmaker, to The Gotham’s already incredible board of directors,” Gotham Film & Media Institute executive director Jeffrey Sharp said in a statement. “With their genuine passion for championing independent creatives, we are confident that the organization will amplify its positive impact on the media industry through their expertise and perspectives.”

    In addition to the Gotham Awards, The Gotham supports independent film and media creators as they seek to advance their careers and achieve wider recognition.

    The 2023 Gotham Awards are set for Nov. 27 at Cipriani Wall Street in New York.

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  • ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Trailer: Ethan Coen‘s First Solo Film

    ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Trailer: Ethan Coen‘s First Solo Film

    Drive-Away Dolls is a road-trip comedy directed and written by Ethan CoenWhile the future of the Coen brothers future in filmmaking seemed uncertain — the pair have not collaborated on a movie together since 2018’s The Ballad of Buster Scruggs — each has begun making films separately. Drive-Away Dolls is Ethan Coen’s first feature as a solo director. Apparently, he and his writing partner (and wife) Tricia Cooke, wrote the film over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The film stars  Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein, Pedro Pascal, Colman Domingo, Bill Camp, and Matt Damon. Take a look at the trailer below:

    READ MORE: Jeff Bridges Would Do a Big Lebowski Sequel – On One Condition

    The official synopsis of the film is as follows:

    Written by Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke, this comedy caper follows Jamie, an uninhibited free spirit bemoaning yet another breakup with a girlfriend, and her demure friend Marian who desperately needs to loosen up. In search of a fresh start, the two embark on an impromptu road trip to Tallahassee, but things quickly go awry when they cross paths with a group of inept criminals along the way.

    It seems that Jamie and Marian get a little bit more than they bargained for when they take their road trip. Unbeknownst to them, there were some valuable goods in the trunk of the car. Whoever owns that briefcase really wants to get their hands back on it. Unfortunately, most of the hired guns they send after the briefcase aren’t particularly skilled at their job.

    Drive-Away Dolls is scheduled to open in theaters on September 22.

    Cody Mcintosh

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