MOVIES
BY RICK LEVIN
THIS TIME THE CHICK AIN’T LOSING
A portrait of the vigilante as grieving mother in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
I
f, by some Christmas miracle, I were granted the pow-
ers of Prospero, suddenly capable of conjuring a perfect
movie out of thin air, here’s what I might do.
First, I would assemble my dream cast, which would
certainly include the likes of Sam Rockwell (Moon),
Frances McDormand (Fargo), Woody Harrelson (True
Detective) and John Hawkes (Winter’s Bone), four of my
favorite character actors in modern cinema.
And then, all things being possible, I would enlist Irish
author Martin McDonagh (The Pillowman, In Bruges) to
pen a script, and I’d let him direct the thing, too, because
surprising things happen when you bestow a preponder-
ance of creative control on an artist who may, indeed, be
possessed by genius.
Finally, I would ask McDonagh to tell a story that de-
livered tears and laugher and anguish and enlightenment in
almost equal measure, and to do so in his trademark way —
with the slice-and-dice brutality of a satirist who can scarcely
conceal his own heartbreak over a world gone mad.
Apparently, Christmas came early this year. Three Bill-
boards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is a tour-de-force, a blister-
ing dark comedy that finds McDonagh, now 47, operating at
the peak of his creative powers.
The film tells the story of Mildred Hayes (McDormand),
a mother whose ferocious grief over her daughter’s rape and
murder drives her to rent three billboards along a rural high-
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scalpel, performing an autopsy on everything we purport to
hold dear. The results are emetic, and the laughter you experi-
ence comes with a wince of recognition, not just for your own
falsities but also for the deeper humanity that lurks beneath
the confusion.
Three Billboards poses what would seem a fairly straight-
forward question: What does it mean to seek justice? Of
course, this question grows infinitely more complicated when
you start tossing in subsidiary issues like vengeance, forgive-
ness and acceptance. McDonagh plays with such motiva-
tional dynamics in surprising and revealing ways, upending
and inverting and tangling our expectations as each character
trudges forward in the tragic aftermath of an unsolved crime.
At the center of this drama stand Mildred and Deputy
Dixon, refracted images of each other. McDormand, with
her withering stare and sly gamesmanship, is fantastic as the
mother who refuses to let her tragedy slip into the dustbin of
history; it’s an Oscar-worthy performance.
But this is equally Rockwell’s movie. A combination of
loutish swagger and bumbling insecurity, his deputy is a kind
of embryonic everyman, easy to condemn but impossible not
to like just a little bit. His arrogance and his vulnerability are
inseparable. The pathos of Rockwell’s performance is the
strangled soul of this film, and his slouch toward redemption,
however deplorable, is a wonder to witness. (Bijou Art Cin-
emas)
way outside town; the billboards bluntly confront the town’s
police chief, Bill Willoughby (Harrelson), on his failure to
solve the crime.
Mildred’s bulldog intensity (a kind of maternal inversion
of McDormand’s Oscar-winning turn as Marge Gunnerson in
Fargo) puts her at odds not only with Chief Willoughby, a
good man dying of cancer; it sets her against the entire town
of Ebbing, and especially deputy Jason Dixon (Rockwell),
a loose cannon of a man whose scattershot bigotry and bur-
geoning rage mask a deep and abiding pain.
McDonagh takes this premise and runs it to its utmost
extreme, and it’s amazing how much action and comedy he
packs into what is, at bottom, a classic morality play set in the
insular confines of small-town America.
And yet, rather than simply mocking rural hypocrisies,
the film upends our pieties at every turn, revealing the hidden
humanity of its characters. And, as usual, McDonagh does
this without any concern for whom he offends; in fact, he’s
so good at what he does that he wrings hilarity from language
and situations that move beyond taboo into a divine egalitari-
anism, as when Mildred kicks a girl right in the crotch or gives
a priest a foul-mouthed dressing down that might be the final
word on church hypocrisy.
This is what McDonagh does so well: By taking what
might seem the low road, he actually levitates slightly above
the corrosive din of modern life, and from here he swings his
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