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Film review: Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri

Linda Marric says Martin McDonagh's new movie deserves its Golden Globe triumph

January 10, 2018 16:16
PA-34142743
1 min read

Martin McDonagh’s Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri had well-deserved success at the Golden Globes over the weekend.

The film is a return to form for the critically acclaimed director and writer whose most recent offering Seven Psychopaths sadly failed to live up to his brilliantly anarchic debut feature In Bruges.

Starring Frances McDormand as a woman hellbent on seeking the truth about her daughter’s brutal rape and murder, Three Billboards is the kind of expletive-laden black comedy which strikes just the right balance between gut-wrenching despair and hilarious comic timing.

After waiting for months for her daughter’s killer to be caught and brought to justice, Mildred Hayes (McDormand) names and shames those whom she believes have failed her and her family. Placing three billboards on the the side of the road leading into her small town of Ebbing, Mildred has a message for chief of police William Willoughby (portrayed with playfulness and reserve by Woody Harrelson) demanding to know why the culprit is still at large. Things are exacerbated when Willoughby’s idiotic deputy, Officer Dixon (Sam Rockwell) a barely literate, racist, mummy’s boy, goes to war with Mildred over the treatment of his boss.