The Homesman review

Frontier and back again

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

Frontier and back again

Outside of Clint Eastwood, there probably isn’t an actor/director working today who understands the rhythms of the Old West better than Tommy Lee Jones. From his work in TV mini-series Lonesome Dove to films like The Missing to his self-directed television movie The Good Old Boys, the craggy-faced Texan looks like he was born and raised in the 1800s. So it’s enticing to see him return to the director’s chair with The Homesman, a film that puts a fresh, female spin on the western.

While most horse operas concentrate on the pioneers who head west to settle, The Homesman goes in the opposite direction, quite literally. Hilary Swank plays Mary Bee Cuddy, a devout spinster living in the Nebraska Territories who undertakes a fraught mission in the name of the Good Book: to transport three women back east to Iowa, where a Methodist minister’s wife (Meryl Streep) awaits them. The reason? Each has parted company from her sanity.

It’s little wonder this trio has spiralled into madness. Arabella (Streep’s daughter Grace Gummer) lost three kids to diphtheria; the unhinged Theoline (Miranda Otto) flushed her babe-in-arms down the outside toilet; while Gro (Sonja Richter) seems demonically possessed. Not exactly the brightest of company, you might say, and the reason no man in Cuddy’s town wants to transport this particular cargo.

Fortunately, Cuddy encounters Jones’ George Briggs – an army deserter of ill repute who is about to get hanged when she saves him. In return, he must accompany her and the three shrieking women across the plains to Iowa. The prim Mary Bee and the boozy George make for the oddest of couples; though with the posse encountering everyone from hostile Native Americans to a foppish James Spader, they’re not the only oddity.

Jones’ first feature film as director since his sublime, Peckinpah-inspired The Three Burials Of Melquiades Estrada (2005), The Homesman is not easy, and rarely flinches in its harshness. Enhancing the mood is the barren landscape, far removed from the lush vistas seen in Golden Age Hollywood westerns. Despite fine support (John Lithgow and Tim Blake Nelson also appear), it’s the two leads who (unsurprisingly) make the biggest impression. Swank’s performance is every bit as potent as her Oscar-winning turns, but it’s Jones who takes top honours, as a rascal who finds a spark of decency within.

VERDICT: On form as both director and actor, Jones crafts a mournful but moving hymn to the western. The feminist subtext, meanwhile, brings a fresh slant to the old genre.

More info

UK theatrical release21 November 2014
Starring"Hilary Swank","Tommy Lee Jones","Meryl Streep"
DirectorTommy Lee Jones
More
Freelance writer

James Mottram is a freelance film journalist, author of books that dive deep into films like Die Hard and Tenet, and a regular guest on the Total Film podcast. You'll find his writings on 12DOVE and Total Film, and in newspapers and magazines from across the world like The Times, The Independent, The i, Metro, The National, Marie Claire, and MindFood. 

Latest in Action Movies
Guardians of the Galaxy 3
Marvel star Vin Diesel might be teasing a Groot movie: "Disney wants their Planet X!"
Robert Pattinson as Bruce Wayne in The Batman
Robert Pattinson worries he will be a "f*cking old Batman" by the time filming on The Batman 2 finally starts
Lewis Pullman as "Bob" in Thunderbolts
The first look at Thunderbolts' Sentry suit seemingly leaked in new Marvel merchandise
Jim Carrey as Dr. Robotnik in Sonic 3 (2024)
22 years after the release of Bruce Almighty, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is now officially Jim Carrey’s highest-grossing movie
Mad Max: Fury Road
A new Mad Max movie has a script, but director George Miller isn't sure it will ever be made: "All I can say is we’ll see"
Hugh Jackman as Wolverine and Deadpool walking in front of a damaged store during the Marvel movie Deadpool and Wolverine.
There's a moment in Deadpool and Wolverine involving Spider-Man that you might have misinterpreted
Latest in Reviews
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 DEX gaming mouse standing upright on a wooden desk
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 DEX review: "a force to be reckoned with"
RTX 5070 Founders Edition and Asus Prime OC graphics card standing vertical on woodgrain desk next to plant and monitor
No, the RTX 5070 isn’t an RTX 4090 rival, but I’d still call it a solid 4K GPU for under $600
The two characters in Split Fiction dressed in fantasy gear each with a dragon on their back
Split Fiction review: "Cements Hazelight as the master of co-op games"
Acer Nitro V 14 gaming laptop on a wooden desk
Acer Nitro V 14 review: "a solid value proposition… if you can find one"
Alienware Pro Wireless gaming keyboard in a desk setup
Alienware Pro Wireless gaming keyboard review: "a nostalgic return to mechanical form"
Photo taken by writer Rosalie Newcombe of the OXS Storm G2 wireless gaming headset sitting on a black shelf with a gray background.
OXS Storm G2 wireless gaming headset review - a budget headset that kicks up a storm with its unique look, but not with its sound