Review: A Prayer for the Dying
- BERLINALE 2026: US-Norwegian director Dara Van Dusen’s feature debut is an unorthodox, very dramatic western starring Johnny Flynn and John C Reilly

The title of the first feature by New York City-born, Oslo-based filmmaker Dara Van Dusen, A Prayer for the Dying, is aptly dramatic, given her strong directorial voice and the apocalyptic story based on the 1999 novel by Stewart O’Nan. A European arthouse western, or a “survival thriller”, as it is billed, starring Johnny Flynn and John C Reilly, it is a technically accomplished, at times even innovative, picture that doesn’t fully make good on its promise of topicality and biblical scope.
Taking place in July 1870 in Friendship, Wisconsin (although it was filmed in the Slovakian countryside), the film centres on Jacob (Flynn), a Civil War hero who is the small town’s sheriff, pastor and undertaker at the same time. He lives with his wife Martha (Norwegian actress Kristine Kujath Thorp, from Sick of Myself [+see also:
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When Doc (Reilly), the town’s doctor, realises that a woman from the nearby religious colony of what could be a precursor to the Mormons is suffering from diphtheria, he and Jacob have to hide it so as not to cause panic. In the meantime, Amelia gets thrush, a candida infection that was deadly at the time, and Martha spirals, while a wildfire is approaching. As diphtheria claims more and more lives, Jacob is eventually forced to quarantine the town.
Van Dusen’s cinematic voice is strong and distinct, but perhaps not yet fully articulated. DoP Kate McCullough (The Quiet Girl [+see also:
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The Innocents [+see also:
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A Prayer for the Dying was produced by Norway’s Eye Eye Pictures, and co-produced by Greece’s asterisk* and Blonde, the UK’s The Bureau, and Sweden’s Garagefilm International and Film i Väst. New Europe Film Sales has the international rights.
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