

/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/10058469/billboards6.jpg)
He makes it known in letters to various people that the billboards had nothing to do with his decision to commit suicide. Willoughby has terminal pancreatic cancer and kills himself rather than put his family through the agony of watching him die from the disease. While he is rather irritated by the billboard that is a slight on his character, he is extremely sympathetic towards Mildred and leaves her a letter explaining that he tried to find out who killed Angela, and that he wishes he could have brought her justice.
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING MISSOURI KILLER MOVIE
She has begun to position herself as an avenger of all raped and murdered young women by the end of the movie and is fighting with herself as to whether or not she will go through with the plan that she and Dixon have made to drive to Idaho and kill a man they know to have raped and murdered another young woman. Mildred is about to cross the line between determined and dogged quest for the truth and a thirst for vigilante justice. She refuses to be silenced despite the increasingly threatening behavior of those around her. Mildred is a fierce defender of her daughter and wants justice. It is as though they want to be allowed to forget Angela and Mildred's actions are forcing them to confront a horror they would rather move on from. They don't seem to see the depths of her anguish and instead react very badly to the billboards that she puts up. Mildred is judged very harshly by her fellow Ebbing residents. She also feels that the police have been sitting on their hands and waiting for the case to solve itself. She fears that Angela has been forgotten and that what was done to her should be far more important to the citizens of Ebbing than it actually is. At first, Mildred believes that her daughter's killer will be caught but now she is frustrated by the lack of movement on the case. She is both victim and aggressor, depending on whose eyes she is seen through Still in the early stages of grief after the brutal rape and murder of her daughter Angela. Written by Polly Barbour and other people who wish to remain anonymous We are thankful for their contributions and encourage you to make your own. These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community.
