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Nadia Melliti Stars in French Lesbian Drama 'The Little Sister' Trailer
Hollywood

Nadia Melliti Stars in French Lesbian Drama ‘The Little Sister’ Trailer

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Nadia Melliti Stars in French Lesbian Drama ‘The Little Sister’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
November 9, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’ve got to live, don’t you?” Madman Films in Australia has unveiled an official trailer for the film The Little Sister, an acclaimed French coming-of-age drama from filmmaker / actress Hafsia Herzi directing her fourth feature so far. This originally premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival earlier this year in the Main Competition section – it won the coveted Best Actress award for star Nadia Melliti who plays Fatima. The film just opened in French cinemas a few weeks ago after playing at festivals all year long. Fatima, 17, is the youngest of 3 daughters in a French-Algerian family. Wanting to find her own path in life, she begins university studies in Paris, where she embraces new experiences. She struggles to develop her identity and balance emerging desires, including her attraction to women, while also maintaining a sense of loyalty to her family. The cast features Nadia Melliti with Park Ji-min (also seen in Return to Seoul), Amina Ben Mohamed, Rita Benmannana, and Melissa Guers. This looks quite good! Not sure another story about life in Paris, a more meaningful coming-of-age tale of identity & honesty. Keep an eye out for this one soon.

Here’s the first international trailer for Hafsia Herzi’s film The Little Sister, direct from YouTube:

The Little Sister Film

Fatima, 17, the youngest of three daughters, treads carefully as she searches for her own path, grappling with emerging desires, her attraction to women & loyalty to her caring French-Algerian family. Starting university in Paris, she dates, makes friends, and explores a whole new world, all while confronting a timeless and heartrending dilemma: How can one stay true to oneself when reconciling different parts of one’s identity feels impossible? The Little Sister, also known as La Petite Dernière (meaning The Little Last One), is written and directed by French-Tunisian actress / filmmaker Hafsia Herzi, director of the films You Deserve a Lover, Good Mother, and La Cour previously. Adapted from the book titled “The Last One” (“La petite dernière”) by Fatima Daas. Produced by Julie Billy and Naomi Denamur. This initially premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival earlier this year. The film already opened in theaters in France starting in October this fall. Still no official US release date set yet – stay tuned for more updates. Does that look good?

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Find more posts in: Foreign Films, Indies, To Watch, Trailer

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Lesbian Comic Jessica Kirson Apologizes for Performing at Saudi Comedy Festival, While Louis C.K. Calls It a “Good Opportunity”
Music

Lesbian Comic Jessica Kirson Apologizes for Performing at Saudi Comedy Festival, While Louis C.K. Calls It a “Good Opportunity”

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The current Riyadh Comedy Festival taking place in Saudi Arabia has received major backlash, including harsh criticism from comedians who are not participating in the two-week event. Now, comedian Jessica Kirson has apologized for performing at the festival, while the embattled Louis C.K. has defended his appearance.

The festival features a who’s who of prominent comedians who earned major paychecks for their appearances, including Dave Chappelle, Sebastian Maniscalco, Kevin Hart, Chris Tucker, Bill Burr, Pete Davidson, Whitney Cummings, and more.

In recent days, fellow comedians like Marc Maron, Shane Gillis, and David Cross (who wrote a lengthy takedown of his peers) have blasted the festival and the stand-up comics on the lineup, citing Saudi Arabia’s involvement in 9/11, the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and the country’s history of oppressing women and members of the LGBTQ+ community.

Related Video

Jessica Kirson, who is openly lesbian, issued an apology after performing at the festival on September 29th. Her statement to The Hollywood Reporter reads, in part, “I hoped that this could help LGBTQ+ people in Saudi Arabia feel seen and valued. I am grateful that I was able to do precisely that — to my knowledge, I am the first openly gay comic to talk about it on stage in Saudi Arabia. I received messages from attendees sharing how much it meant to them to participate in a gay-affirming event. At the same time, I deeply regret participating under the auspices of the Saudi government.”

She added, “Most importantly, I am deeply sorry to all the fans and followers I have hurt or disappointed.”

Louis C.K., meanwhile, appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher, on Friday night, prior to his scheduled performance at the Riyadh Comedy Festival, and defended his decision to perform at the event, even referencing Kirson’s performance.

“When I’m talking to the other comedians who have been there, they’ve been really surprised by what’s going on,” said C.K. “There’s a woman who’s a lesbian and Jewish, who did a show there, and she got a standing ovation. So, there’s stuff going on that’s unexpected in this thing. People have been playing Saudi Arabia for years. Comedians have been going and playing Arab countries. There was a film festival there recently, it’s kind of opened up. But I’ve always said no to Arab countries.”

He continued, “And when this came up, they said there’s only two restrictions — their religion and their government, I don’t have jokes about those two things. It used to be when I got offers from places like that, there would be a long list, and I’d just say, ‘No, I don’t need that.’ But when I heard it’s opening, I thought, that’s awfully interesting. That just feels like a good opportunity. And I just feel like comedy is a great way to get in and start talking.”

The interview with Maher marked Louis C.K.’s first TV interview since admitting to sexual misconduct allegations back in 2017.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Coen's Second Lesbian Caper Doesn't Work
TV & Streaming

Ethan Coen’s Second Lesbian Caper Doesn’t Work

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. Focus Features releases “Honey Don’t” in theaters Friday, August 22.

When watching last year’s “Drive-Away Dolls,” I had the thought that, if I didn’t know this was a movie directed by one of the Coen brothers, I would think this would be from someone trying very hard to make a Coen brothers-esque film. 

The same can be said for Ethan Coen‘s follow-up to that film, “Honey Don’t!” — another lesbian caper with diminishing returns also starring Margaret Qualley. Like “Drive-Away Dolls,” Coen wrote the screenplay along with his wife Tricia Cooke. Also, like “Drive-Away Dolls,” it’s a slight work that is too enamored with its own quirkiness to amount to much of anything at all. 

'Eden'

Whereas “Drive-Away Dolls” casts Qualley as a chaotic Southern broad, here, Qualley plays Honey O’Donahue, a put-together private investigator in Bakersfield, California. Honey is a tough-talking gal who shows up to the scene of a brutal car accident in red pumps, and brushes off come-ons from a dorky cop played by Charlie Day by announcing she likes girls. (While not much about this film is fantastic, Honey’s wardrobe is to costume designer Peggy Schnitzer’s credit.)

Honey is drawn into a conspiracy of sorts when a woman who reached out to her for help ends up dead at the bottom of a cliff. Although Honey never officially started working for the victim, she’s curious enough to start digging. This leads her to sniff around a local church run by a lascivious Chris Evans as Reverend Drew, a holy man who deals drugs on the side and likes to have sex with his congregants. 

Meanwhile, Honey strikes up an affair with an unassumingly seductive cop who goes by MG (Aubrey Plaza), all the while Honey’s niece (Talia Ryder) gets into some trouble with a bad boyfriend and Honey’s sister (Kristen Connolly) is too busy with too many children to deal with that. 

This is all to say there’s a lot going on in the movie’s very short running time, and if you’re hoping the threads all coalesce, well, they don’t. Instead, “Honey Don’t!” feels like a mishmash of disparate parts that Coen and Cooke didn’t know how to fit together. The end result is an exhausting disappointment, and a waste of the assembled talent. 

Whereas “Drive-Away Dolls” was psychedelically silly — allowing it to get away with more of its slipshod plotting — “Honey Don’t!” aims for a spin on noir but has zero interest in actually developing a compelling mystery. It’s more interested in how it can reboot the aesthetics of the genre. Though it’s set in the present day — with cell phones to boot — there’s a retro sheen that hangs over the affair. Honey wears stockings with seams and uses a rolodex even though her assistant (Gabby Beans) offers to digitize her operation. 

Qualley sells the part well, affecting a weary swagger, and yet we’re never really convinced that she’s all that good at her job. She’s certainly better than the police, who are a bunch of bumbling fools, but she also never really gets to the bottom of any of the dark goings-on in her town. 

In fact, Evans’ plotline as the corrupt Reverend Drew essentially runs parallel to Qualley’s and the lack of intersection is a curious oversight. Evans is certainly relishing the chance to play a big-headed jerk and is up for some gonzo sex scenes, but by the time his character leaves the narrative you’re not sure what the point of him being there was. Even more confusing: His drug operation is overseen by a French syndicate, who has sent an alluring emissary played by Lera Abova, who wears leopard print and rides around on a scooter. Again, she looks cool, but to what end? 

I want to say that Coen and Cooke have something on their minds about the state of America these days, but the insight doesn’t really go beyond the most obvious condemnation of religious greed and right wing assholes. At one point, for example, Honey destroys a bad guy’s shotgun and then slaps a bumper sticker that reads “I Have a Vagina and I Vote” over his MAGA one. When the main villain is revealed the motivation has something to do with anger over women’s perceived submissiveness, but the screenplay could have used another pass to make any of this sound logical. 

The political commentary of “Honey Don’t!” also feels thin because Coen doesn’t have a strong grasp on his setting. Working with cinematographer Ari Wegner, he offers up visuals that showcase the barrenness of the landscape and the rundown surroundings, but we never really get a sense of the social fabric of the place. My mind couldn’t help wander over to “Fargo,” the Coens’ best known crime comedy where the setting shapes what we know about the people we’re watching. In “Honey Don’t!” when people talk about being from Bakersfield, I don’t really know what that means, exactly. 

This especially starts to grate when their respective upbringing in the place becomes a point of contention between Honey and MG. It’s a shame because, at least for a little bit, the one place where “Honey Don’t!” excels is in the chemistry between those two performers. That’s also where the twist on noir conventions becomes clever. Plaza is a particularly butch femme fatale, wooing the daintier P.I. by fingering her in public at a bar. 

But good sex does not make a relationship, and it’s not enough to sustain a movie either. 

Grade: C-

“Honey Don’t” premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. Focus Features will release it in theaters on Friday, August 22.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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