Archives
Edition 2017
Films
Crew:
Director: Martin McDonagh
Screenplay: Martin McDonagh
DOP: Ben Davis
Production: Film4, Blueprint Pictures
Screenplay: Martin McDonagh
DOP: Ben Davis
Production: Film4, Blueprint Pictures
After months have passed without a culprit in her daughter’s murder case, Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand) makes a bold move, painting three signs leading into her town with a controversial message directed at William Willoughby (Woody Harrelson), the town's revered chief of police. When his second-in-command Officer Dixon (Sam Rockwell), an immature mother’s boy with a penchant for violence, gets involved, the battle between Mildred and Ebbing's law enforcement is only exacerbated.
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Cast:
Abbie Cornish, Caleb Landry Jones, Clarke Peters, Frances McDormand, John Hawkes, Kathryn Newton, Kerry Condon, Lucas Hedges, Peter Dinklage, Sam Rockwell, Samara Weaving, Woody Harrelson, Zeljko Ivanek -
Original Title:
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri -
Country:
United States of America -
Year:
2017 - 115'
Crew:
Director: Martin McDonagh
Screenplay: Martin McDonagh
DOP: Ben Davis
Production: Film4, Blueprint Pictures
Screenplay: Martin McDonagh
DOP: Ben Davis
Production: Film4, Blueprint Pictures
Director
Martin McDonagh

Martin McDonagh is a London-born Irish playwright whose first play The Beauty Queen of Leenane was the 1996 winner of the George Devine Award. It also won the Writer's Guild Award for Best Fringe Play and the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Newcomer. The play was nominated for six Tony awards, of which it won four, and the Laurence Olivier Award. Since then McDonagh has gone on to write multiple smash-hit shows and films and win multiple awards including an Academy Award for Live Action Short Film for Six Shooter (2005), an Oscar nomination, a British Independent Film Award for best screenplay, an Irish Playwrights and Screenwriters Guild Award for Best Film Script and a BAFTA for best original screenplay, all for In Bruges (starring Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, 2008), and a Laurence Olivier award for Best New Play for The Pillowman (won 2004).