"Drive-Away Dolls" stars Margaret Qualley, left, and Geraldine Viswanathan as Jamie and Marian, platonic pals who find themselves on the wrong side of love.
Drive-Away Dolls
✩✩✩ (out of 4)
Starring Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein, Colman Domingo, Pedro Pascal, Bill Camp, Joey Slotnick, C.J. Wilson and Matt Damon. Written by Ethan Coen and Tricia Cooke. Directed by Ethan Coen. Opens Friday at theatres everywhere (with some Thursday previews). 84 minutes.
Lesbians-on-the-lam farce “DriveAway Dolls” will not be mistaken by anybody as an intellectual pursuit, even though two characters are seen reading the erudite novels of Henry James.
Ethan Coen’s new film may in fact be the most knuckleheaded thing he’s ever put his name to, either solo or with his brother Joel.
This screwball comedy/queer road movie is rude, raunchy and ramshackle, with large amounts of nudity and sex, and the most absurd MacGuffin since the Dude’s urine-soaked rug in “The Big Lebowski.”
I intend no insult. “Drive-Away Dolls” is mostly a hoot, and also a reassuring wink from Ethan that at least one of the Coen Bros. hasn’t forgotten fans of the Minnesota siblings’ acerbically eclectic cinema.
Ethan and Joel have been awfully serious since they set out on separate artistic paths in 2018, following the release of their western anthology “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.”
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