Rating summary
Movie | | 4.0 |
Video | | 4.5 |
Audio | | 4.5 |
Extras | | 2.5 |
Overall | | 4.0 |
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Blu-ray Movie Review
Truth in advertising.
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman March 1, 2018
Frances McDormand has built one of the most enviable film careers in recent history out of what might arguably be called characters with a surplus
of quirk. While
she’ll
probably forever be associated with one of her quirkiest roles, her Academy Award winning turn as Marge Gunderson in Fargo, even a cursory overview of McDormand’s filmography provides more than a few examples of at least
“slightly off” characters, many in films by the Coen Brothers like Blood Simple
, Raising Arizona, Burn After Reading and Hail, Caesar!. As
quirky
as many of McDormand’s characterizations often are, there’s always a grounded quality to her performances, a realism that is perhaps more
evident
in some of her other films like Mississippi Burning.
Quirk and realism are at about equal levels in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, the latest entry in McDormand’s rather
impressive
run of Academy Award nominated performances. While there is a certain undeniable Coen-esque ambience to this film, it’s the brainchild of
writer-
director Martin McDonagh, and, much like the Coen siblings, he rather brilliantly creates a kind of outlandish cast of characters who nonetheless
come
off as authentic and unforced. The film is a bit of a shaggy dog story, and doesn’t easily fit into proscribed genres, something which may in fact
only
further recommend it to those tired of seeing so many cookie cutter entertainments.
Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand) is a no nonsense divorcée with a teenage son named Robbie (Lucas Hedges). As she drives the narrow
winding
country road leading to her home one day, she stops in front of three old billboards in various states of disrepair due to years of nonuse. Mildred
then
marches into the somewhat less than deluxe “headquarters” of Ebbing Advertising, the company in charge of the billboards, and hands manager
Red
Welby (Caleb Landry Jones) $5,000 for one month’s rent for all three, giving him a notebook page listing what she wants them to say.
Addle pated policeman Jason Dixon (Sam Rockwell, Academy Award nominated for this performance) is driving his patrol car down that same road
a
few days later, stumbling across workers affixing huge reddish pink banners on the billboards taking Dixon’s boss, Sherriff Bill Willoughby (Woody
Harrelson,
also Academy Award nominated for this performance) to task for failing to have made any arrests in a horrifying rape and
murder.
An earlier allusion in a conversation between Mildred and Red makes it clear that Mildred is on a quest for justice for her murdered daughter.
That is, in essence, the underlying plot conceit of
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, but what makes this film so continually
compelling is how it keeps juggling its characters in unusual ways. One of these is in the very early going, where one might assume that Mildred
would be the sympathetic “victim” and Willoughby the martinet and ineffective cop, but what ensues is quite the opposite. Willoughby comes off
as a concerned professional trying to make a kind of harridan Mildred realize that sometimes cases take
years to solve, especially when
there are no witnesses and when DNA testing has come up empty in both local and national databases. What’s even more remarkable even this
early in the film is that, despite evident shortcomings in virtually all of the characters, every somewhat eccentric person in the screenplay comes
across as a fully realized human being, despite the patent artificiality of some of the setup.
Those aforementioned shortcomings are perhaps most “focused” in Dixon, a fawning acolyte of Willoughby’s who doesn’t take kindly to Mildred’s
strategy, and who is under the sway of his hard drinking mother (Sandy Martin). Dixon engages in a campaign of harassment against innocent
bystanders like Red and even Mildred’s coworker at a little boutique, Denise (Amanda Warren). Meanwhile, the whole skirmish between Mildred
and Willoughby takes on an even more melancholic aspect when Willoughby reveals to Mildred he’s suffering from terminal cancer (something it
turns out she already knows).
There are a number of intriguing developments that accrue which won’t be spoiled in this review, including one kind of shocking death, as this
coterie of odd folks interact in sometimes perplexing ways. There are a number of additional (and arguably too precious at times) supporting
characters folded into the mix, including Mildred’s ex Charlie (John Hawkes), a certifiable wife beater who erupts into violence only to immediately
calm back down, and local “midget” James (Peter Dinklage), who offers Mildred a much needed alibi at one precarious juncture and who seems to
have a “thing” for her.
As fans of the film and even some casual observers may be aware,
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri has already picked up a
slew of awards and is nominated for several Oscars, as well as having been met with near rapturous critical and audience acclaim. Make no
mistake, I absolutely loved this film and applaud its courage to be both weirdly different and almost willfully balanced precariously between
morality and recklessness, but I just didn’t totally buy things, and was also struck by what to me were some noticeable plot holes. I wondered for
example how Mildred found out the dentist was part of a “vast right wing conspiracy” against her, unless the subtext is that everyone in Ebbing
knows everyone else’s business. But if
that’s the case, how to account for the “coincidental” placement of two badly injured nemeses in
the same hospital room? Aside from the "regular" (
irregular?) townsfolk, how to account for the sudden appearance of a threatening guy
at Mildred's job, a guy who seems to know everything about her, but who later turns out to be from another state and whose very appearance in
the story is left pretty much unexplained? Also, some of the supporting bits like Mildred’s ex and a priest who shows up are more glyphs than
actual characters
(this is especially odd in the case of Charlie, who seems to be a fascinating guy despite his anger management problems).
The film tips over into
incredulity on at least a couple of occasions, probably most notably to an inarguably
highly illegal pummeling one character is given at the
hands
of a policeman, something that doesn't result in the immediate arrest of the attacking character (who also engages in property damage of pretty
substantial proportions). And there are undeniably contrived moments here, including how one character gets horribly burned, in a sequence that
seems to be aiming for
Blood Simple levels of
misunderstandings and bad timing, but which simply comes off as too coincidental for its own good. But the kind of amazing
thing is despite these perhaps niggling issues,
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri manages to be a rather potent reflection on
ideas of grace and forgiveness, as well as a kind of Old Testament “eye for an eye” ambience that ends up not caring
whose eye, as long
as an eye is involved.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment with an AVC encoded
1080p transfer in 2.39:1. Ben Davis captured the imagery with Arri Alexa cameras, with a 2K DI, and the results are quite appealing, with gorgeous
shots of the countryside interspersed with more dowdy environments like the Dixson shack or even Mildred's own home. Some of the footage has a
kind of dewy, soft and even mist laden ambience, but detail levels are uniformly quite high, even in some "arty" shots where back lighting gives
elements a kind of effulgent glow that resembles halos. The palette pops quite winningly, with elements like the almost candy red-pink billboards
looking extremely vivid. Fine detail on close-ups is routinely excellent, and is even quite good on some of the wider vistas employed in outdoor shots.
There are no issues with compression anomalies.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri has a nicely nuanced DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track, one that offers a nice spread for Carter
Burwell's Oscar nominated score, as well as offering good discrete channelization for a number of ambient environmental effects scattered throughout
the many outdoor sequences. Some sound effects, as in a major conflagration that erupts, are quite forceful and lifelike. Dialogue is always rendered
cleanly and clearly on this problem free track.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras
- Deleted Scenes
- Willoughby Meets News Crews (1080p; 1:03)
- Mildred Versus the Town (1080p; 00:39 )
- Dixon Interrogates Denise (1080p; 2:16)
- Dixon Drunk at Bar (1080p; 1:52)
- Dixon and Momma (1080p; 1:18)
- Crucify 'Em: The Making of Three Billboards (1080p; 29:30) has some good interviews and fun behind the scenes footage.
- Six Shooter (1080p; 26:30) is a short by Martin McDonagh which won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film.
- Gallery (1080p; 1:05) offers either an Auto Advance or Manual Advance option. The timing is for the Auto Advance option.
- Theatrical Trailers (1080p; 6:07)
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation
In my typically curmudgeonly mode, I'm not sure I'm quite able to give an unqualified rave to Three Billboards Outside Ebbing,
Missouri, though I applaud its kind of insouciant energy as well as its really enjoyable trio of lead performances. There's something just slightly
twee about the proceedings that didn't quite sit right with me given the kind of tart underpinnings of much of the story, but this is one film that has the
commendable courage to be its own very distinctive entity. Technical merits are first rate, and with my probably picayune qualms aside, Three
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri comes Highly recommended.