Monday, June 23, 2008

Happy Birthday Frances McDormand

I think everybody agrees that Frances McDormand is great. Even people who don't get all warm and fuzzy when watching Almost Famous. In terms of leaving a powerful cinematic legacy, she's got an ace in her deck: her husband. He has a brother who helps him make films now and again, and occasionally, they bring home to work, and cast her in small parts to make her feel appreciated. She had a tiny little part as Jon Polito's secretary in Miller's Crossing.

But seriously, no matter how many terrible movies she makes with Charlize Theron, she'll always have the one-two-three punch of Blood Simple, Fargo, and The Man Who Wasn't There (all three directed by her husband and his brother - their names escape me).

These three punches would knock out most any other actress who got in the ring with her. She was the relatively uncomplicated heroine in distress in Blood Simple, she had a brief cameo in Raising Arizona and Miller's Crossing, and then played the celebrated character of Officer Marge Gunderson in Fargo. Five years later she appeared in her husband's The Man Who Wasn't There, a brilliant, brilliant undervalued, little-seen film in the Coen oeuvre.

She has done good non-Coen work, such as in Almost Famous, Mississippi Burning, and Wonderboys. As Marge Gunderson, I find her mixture of idiosyncracies amusing every time I revisit Fargo; she is part mother-hen, part Colombo, possessing a cunning unshared by the other police officers and locals in Brainerd. She is also sweet, kind, and fearless in the face of circumstances that are not sweet and kind.

However, she can play a fiery bitch when she wants to, as when she plays the unsatisfied, adulterous manipulator of her taciturn husband in The Man Who Wasn't There: "I hate wops" she says about her own family after her brother's wedding party. I've heard her belligerent performance in the movie Friends with Money steals the show from her fellow actresses, Jennifer Aniston, Joan Cusack, and Catherine Keener. And I've read she is fantastic in Laurel Canyon. I will get around to seeing both films eventually, but, it really doesn't matter, as her MVP status has already been cemented in my mind by her tremendous Coen triumvirate.






Previous "My Favorite Actresses" Birthday Retrospectives:

3. Samantha Morton
2. Uma Thurman
1. Judy Davis

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