McDormand Triumphs

Writer-director Martin McDonagh could not have foreseen that his new film, “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” would be released at a time when we are bombarded with stories of female abuse by important men in entertainment and government, of rampant racism, of law enforcement improprieties; a time when moral reckoning is being demanded.

The justice-seeking hero of “Three Billboards” is one Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand, in a performance of blazing ferocity and courage). Her daughter was sadistically raped and murdered seven months ago, and no culprit has yet been caught. She advertises her fury by renting three billboards for a naming and shaming campaign against the local police chief, William Willoughby (Woody Harrelson),  asking why the case is still unsolved.

The domino effect of Mildred’s action affects not only Willoughby (played by Harrelson with great honesty and pathos; we miss him when he leaves the movie early) but his dumber-than-a-doorknob deputy, Dixon, played against type by Sam Rockwell as a homophobic, racist, idiotic mama’s boy who represents unearned, privileged power opposite Mildred’s extreme sense of fairness.

McDonagh, an award-winning playwright, gave up the theater for film a few years ago. His first hit, “In Bruges,” mixed terror, horror, sadism and comedy delivered by believable characters delivered in fine performances (the movie reignited Colin Farrell’s career). Perhaps only McDonagh could mix funny suicide notes, racism, lust for vengeance, even a pool-playing town dwarf into a caustic, funny, profane and, at times, tender brew in “Three Billboards.”

McDonagh, a child of Irish parents living in London, has the Irish gift for language and hyperbole. The dialogue in “Three Billboards” is volatile, exaggerated and propulsive. Characters careen down verbal highways, turn back sharply and streak in a different direction. They curse continually, either for comic effect or from anger. The actors gnaw on this feast of words like starving guests at a banquet.

“Three Billboards” never trades in shock at the expense of the story. The scabrous humor and deep sadness coexist with genuine emotions: anger, scorn, love, and especially vengeance. McDonagh wants us to root for Mildred despite her increasingly violent actions. But he also shows us the price of vengeance, how it consumes the woman who seeks it. (McDonagh has really written an American Western; Mildred’s snarling outcast is descended from John Wayne’s Ethan Edwards in “The Searchers.”)

That the film’s other outcast, Dixon, has the potential for change and can actually do so is the film’s surprise: humanity and vulnerability lie beneath his toxic facade. In many ways, he and Mildred are two of a kind. And they will find justice and redemption together in the movie’s satisfactory ending.

 

“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” is playing in limited release. It is rated R.

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