Academy Award® winner Frances McDormand is Mildred Hayes, a middle-aged, working class single mother based, as you might have guessed, just outside the small Missouri town of Ebbing. Her humble home overlooks a quiet stretch of road on which stands a trio of old billboard signs which have been disused for decades, but not long after we meet her Mildred locates the local company who own the signs, and makes a deal with manager Red (Caleb Landry-Jones) to hire them out. The new posters spell out a succinct but blunt message to local law enforcement – specifically Police Chief Willoughby (Woody Harrelson) – that more needs to be done to track down those responsible for the rape and murder of Mildred’s daughter Angela some seven months earlier. Naturally, this action causes quite a stir, and doesn’t go down too well with most of the local cops, in particular the dim-witted and belligerent Dixon (Sam Rockwell). New leads in the case might not seem forthcoming, but it doesn’t take long for underlying tensions within the community to come bubbling to the surface.
Anytime we see a movie centred on a murder case with cops among the central protagonists, it’s easy to assume we’re going to get a great detective story, in which skilled investigators tirelessly piece together the evidence and struggle against the odds to grant us all a clean, cathartic resolution. This is absolutely not what we get from Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. Nor, as we might otherwise assume, is this necessarily a revenge movie; yes, McDormand’s Mildred has been wronged and seeks retribution, and some violence may occur along the way, but this is not at all the focus of the film. Instead, McDonagh presents us with the sad reality that faces so many bereaved souls, and for that matter so many members of law enforcement: sometimes, the leads and the evidence simply aren’t there, and there’s little to no chance of justice being done. Then of course, there’s the ever more difficult question of whether seeing the guilty parties found and convicted could ever be enough to ease the pain of such a loss.
All of this makes Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri sound like it’s nothing but wall-to-wall misery. However, while it makes for gruelling viewing at times, for the most part it’s a surprisingly upbeat, optimistic and humorous film. To address the humour first, McDonagh’s existing films have long since demonstrated his understanding of that simple truth that the best of us accept before we reach double digits: it’s big, clever, and really really funny to swear. McDormand’s Mildred alone would put a shipload of sailors to shame with the level of profanity that comes pouring out of her mouth, and this is absolutely key to making her an endearing character; anyone who crosses her will not be spared a barrage of four letter words, be they law enforcement, local news media or clergy. But it’s not just pure, unmitigated anger fuelling Mildred. She has a tremendous sense of fun about her, and – in spite of all the bad things that have happened to her, not limited to her daughter’s death – an innate sense of hope. She doesn’t just put up the billboards to stick it to the man, but because she still has faith that the killer can be found and justice can be served.
Again, the key strength of Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is the exceptional cast. On top of the three leads, we have great supporting turns from John Hawkes as Mildred’s ex-husband, Abbie Cornish as Willoughby’s devoted wife, and a small but significant role for Peter Dinklage. Genre fans will be pleased to see Caleb Landry-Jones moving on to ever meatier roles in the wake of Get Out, and there’s even an amusing supporting turn from Samara Weaving of Mayhem and The Babysitter.
I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if it does indeed score big at all those glitzy awards shows – but Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri deserves to be seen because it’s an intensely human work, offering no simple answers but suggesting potential paths to a less troubled future. Plus it shows a 60 year old woman kicking a couple of snarky teenagers in the crotch, and who can’t appreciate that spectacle?
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is out in UK cinemas on 12th January, from 20th Century Fox.