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’Three Billboards’ wins coveted Toronto film festival prize

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TORONTO: Martin McDonagh’s darkly hilarious drama “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” won the Toronto film festival’s audience prize for best picture on Sunday, giving it a leg up in the race for the Oscars.

The rage-fueled film stars Frances McDormand as a frustrated and grieving mother, Mildred, who antagonize­s police (Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell) while trying to call attention to a lack of progress in the hunt for her daughter’s killer.

Months have passed without an arrest in the murder case, so she commission­s three signs with controvers­ial messages for police along a road leading into the fictional Missouri town.

But a backlash ensues. Mildred’s friends and the freckle-faced and cocky young agent (Caleb Landry Jones) who rents her the billboard space are targeted by the chief’s intellectu­ally and emotionall­y stunted deputy, in violent reprisals that cost him his badge.

Australia’s Abbie Cornish and “Game of Thrones” actor Peter Dinklage also star in the film, which is McDonagh’s third after “In Bruges” and “Seven Psychopath­s.”

In a statement, McDonagh called the win “thrilling.” “You never really know if a story as heartfelt but also as outrageous and funny and unusual as ours is has really connected to, you know, real people,” he said.

“So it is brilliant to hear that it has.”

In Venice, where the film premiered, the British-Irish playwright said he wrote the script specifical­ly for McDormand based on an idea that began to germinate 20 years ago when he was traveling across America by bus.

A decade later, as he pondered a hard-to-explain billboard that had stuck in his mind — involving a mother whose daughter was raped and murdered — he began to flesh out a back story.

“Once I had decided it was a mother, the film wrote itself,” he said. “And picturing Frances in my mind helped me write it.”

Runners-up for the festival’s audience prize were Craig Gillespie’s “I, Tonya” about disgraced figure skater Tonya Harding, and the coming-of-age drama “Call Me By Your Name,” directed by Luca Guadagnino.

More than 300 feature and short films from 74 countries were screened at the Toronto festival, the biggest in North America.

The event is often seen as a way for Oscar-conscious studios to generate buzz about their movies, with hundreds of filmmakers and actors walking the red carpet in Canada’s largest city.

In past years, films such as “Spotlight,” “12 Years a Slave,” and “Slumdog Millionair­e” have gone on from winning the audience prize in Toronto to taking top honors at the Oscars.

Last year, the musical “La La Land” won the Toronto prize and then took home six Oscars, including best actress and best director — but not the top prize, despite the shocking mix-up with “Moonlight” at the end of the gala.

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