Monday, 18 September 2017

Sign O' The Times: Review of Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri

TIFF EXCLUSIVE

Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri

Director: Martin McDonagh

By Alex Watson



Walking home with the Viewer's Choice prize at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival, Martin McDonagh's Three Billboards outside Ebbing Missouri was a worthy winner. Blending some wicked dark humour with such raw emotion makes this an unforgettable experience. A stand-out cast lead by the amazing Frances McDormand brings this tale of small-town vengeance brilliantly to life.

Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand) is a grieving mother whose daughter was previously raped and murdered. Angered at having no arrests made over seven months since the murder, Mildred resorts to a drastic action. She arranges to have three billboards advertising her disgust at the police's lack of effort towards finding the killer. Doing this immediately increases tension in the town, particularly for Chief Willoughby (Woody Harrelson) and dim-witted officer George Dixon (Sam Rockwell).

Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri is an experience so unique that it's difficult to describe. Anyone who has watched McDonagh's first two features 'In Bruges' and 'Seven Psychopaths' will be aware just how skillfully he blends sheer belly laughs with heartbreaking realism. Mildred Hayes is what drives the movies rage, a mother simply out for vengeance in a cruel world. The whole case and the apathy surrounding it has driven her to her last nerve. There was no DNA and no witnesses so the case when cold pretty fast. McDonagh's script is excellently written and those expecting a straightforward affair are in for a surprise. The identity of Angela's killer is the furthest thing on the mind of this film. Channelling her anger into standing up for herself amidst town rage, Mildred is just hoping to keep her daughter's fate in the public eye.

It has to be said, McDonagh is a master when it comes to expressing character flaws. Mildred is our heroine but she never once attempts to play herself as likeable. A cussin', punch throwing and permanently furious woman, messing with her is ill-advised. Then there's the added problem of her abusive ex-hubby Charlie (John Harkes) whose new 20-year-old mistress is a never-ending source of amusement. Willoughby while an honest down to earth man is also nursing an inner torment that will soon become a life and story changing turn. There is a sense of injustice to her targeting this man personally as he cannot physically make her killer appear. However, there is a wonderfully blunt scene in which he confesses his big secret, only to be hilariously shrugged off. Dixon is the movie's ticking time bomb, an incompetent and homophobic officer, the writing is on the wall from the moment we meet him. Constantly harassing local ad-man Red (Caleb Landry Jones), you can sense that soon enough he will do something dumb. Continually browbeaten by his domineering mother, McDonagh superbly switches character arcs midway and turns this dumb cop into an unlikely hero.

Continually throughout Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri we find ourselves questioning what we see. Are the actions Mildred takes really the right ones? Should she just let this one go and leave town? Is George really the big jerk that we imagine? What about the cold and sinister stranger who pays a visit to Mildred's shop? This movie is one where we are never sure whether to laugh or cry, McDonagh invests such a poignant feel in this picture but it also hits upon some bitter truths. Life isn't fair and each character feels they've been hard done by in life. All the petty squabbles to get even only increase the tension and hilarity. What would have happened if Mildred hadn't said her fateful last words to her daughter? Every time we think we know a character, McDonagh smartly blows out the water again. In this town, no one is free from sin but no-one is below settling scores either.

Frances McDormand emerges as the front-runner for the best actress Oscar. After this kind of performance, few others will be able to deny her. A whirlwind of suppressed rage, only McDormand can play angry this brilliantly. Her tongue is so acid it would probably make a Xenomorph from Alien retreat- during one brilliantly acted scene she savagely cuts her local priest down to size. McDormand shows just why she is one of Hollywood's elite talents and this kind of role is her bread and butter. Woody Harrelson equally deserves credit for his quiet brilliance as the frustrated Willoughby. Few actors can stare someone down quite like this man, but it's how he masks his characters inner fears that marks him out. Sam Rockwell is a revelation as the drunken and impulsive George Dixon. A man who truly hates how his life has turned out, Rockwell somehow finds charm among the hostile and casual hate this character spews. His transformation in the movie's final act is nothing short of remarkable.

Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri is one of those films that makes you fall in love with cinema again. Martin McDonagh is a director who never fails to make us sit up and pay attention. It may have beaten I, Tonya and Call Me by Your Name to the big prize but no other film deserved this honor quite as much. 

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