New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu



 

Film Review - "The Mortuary Assistant"

A mortician is terrorised while working her first night shift at a morgue.

By Eric Hillis, TheMovieWaffler.com

originally published: 04/04/2026

After decades of failures, video game adaptations are suddenly a hit at the box office, with screen translations of such heavy hitters as Super Mario Bros, Sonic the Hedgehog and Minecraft among the biggest earners of recent years. Just as there are cult movies, there are cult video games. Take The Mortuary Assistant, in which the player takes on the icky job of the title and attempts to finish their night shift at a morgue while evading demons. With another cult horror game, Five Nights at Freddy's, spawning two hit movies, it's no surprise that The Mortuary Assistant has now received a cinematic adaptation.

This one is directed by Jeremiah Kipp, who made the interesting coming-of-age horror Slapface a few years back, and is co-written by Tracee Beebe and the game's creator Brian Clarke. I'm not sure involving the creators of these games in the creative process of translating their work to the screen is a wise idea. The Five Nights at Freddy's movies were co-written by their creator, and they suffer with an obsession over fealty to the source rather than creating onscreen thrills. The Mortuary Assistant has the same issues. After setting up what seems like a simple b-movie horror premise, it becomes bogged down in establishing and expanding the lore of the game rather than fashioning suspense and scares.

The opening act has much promise. Rebecca (Willa Holland) has kicked her drug and alcohol addiction and just completed an internship at a city morgue. Her sullen boss Raymond (Paul Sparks) has promoted Rebecca to the role of his assistant. She will work the day shift while he covers nights. On her first night off however, Rebecca receives a call from Paul, who is unable to take the night shift. Three corpses have just arrived, and he gives Rebecca the odd instruction to embalm the bodies before immediately cremating them.

For its first half hour or so, The Mortuary Assistant leans into the simplicity of generating creepy atmosphere from its setting and Rebecca's unenviable job. There are gruesome close-ups of Rebecca's handy work, which she performs with the chipper attitude of a 1950s suburban housewife preparing a pot roast. It might make us wince seeing intestines crammed into crevices and wounds stitched up, but it's just another night at the office for Rebecca. Except this is no normal night. What Rebecca fails to realise is that a demon is using corpses as a way to escape into our world, and it has Rebecca in mind for its next vessel.

Kipp does a good job of using the widescreen frame to allow the audience to see corpses opening their eyes and moving their fingers in the foreground while Rebecca potters about obliviously in the background, or vice versa. Giving the audience a heads up that the protagonist isn't aware of is how suspense is generated, but that tension dissipates once the plot begins to unravel. The movie begins to adopt the structure of a video game rather than a movie, pausing for what are the equivalent of instructional cut scenes as creepy Raymond reappears to dish out confusing exposition in the manner of a dungeon master. This kills the momentum, and with most of the horror set-pieces revealing themselves as hallucinations on the part of Rebecca, the stakes are lessened as we inevitably start to assume Rebecca is simply going to wake up from her latest nightmare.




Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



 

Holland does her best with a role that requires her to look as confused as the audience feels. Like Bruce Campbell in Evil Dead 2, Holland is essentially playing two versions of her character, the regular Rebecca and the possessed version. She's convincing in both roles, but the movie could have benefitted from the comic approach of Raimi's classic. The Mortuary Assistant plays its narrative deadly serious, and it's the latest American horror to burden itself with a subplot concerning the dreaded T-word - "Trauma" - with the demon exploiting Rebecca's fraught past. It's simply not well-written enough to pull off such weighty themes, and ultimately this is a night shift that will have the audience yawning by the time the sun rises.

The Mortuary Assistant is on Shudder.

Directed by: Jeremiah Kipp

Starring: Willa Holland, Paul Sparks, John Adams, Keena Ferguson Frasier

About the author:

Eric Hillis is a film critic living in Sligo, Ireland who runs the website TheMovieWaffler.com




Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



EVENT PREVIEWS

Al Nigrin, Executive Director and Curator of the New Jersey International Film Festival, sits down with Vincent Turturro, director and writer of Sonia and Lisa on Mushrooms, for a filmmaker interview at EBTV. Sonia and Lisa on Mushrooms will be screened on May 29, 2026.
Two amazing shorts Bottom Feeder and Impivaara screen at the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival on May 29!

Two amazing shorts Bottom Feeder and Impivaara screen at the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival on May 29!

We are always being watched, always being seen, always looking. But where are we? Who are we looking at? What are we seeing? Is it all a dream? Who’s dream is it? ‘Bottom feeders’ are the lowest form of species on the pyramid at the bottom of the deep, dark, and unexplored sea. Sometimes, if you pay attention, ‘bottom feeders’ take shape in the lowest form of human beings at the bottom of the deep, dark, and unexplored subconscious. Bottom Feeder is a black and white experimental film, shot on 16mm film in a square 4x3 format. Vito Trabucco is a Los Angeles based filmmaker, is known for his award-winning films Charlie Christ (2024), Britney Lost Her Phone (2023), and Kevin Can Wait (2020). In Bottom Feeders, Trabucco brings you on a dream-like journey with a woman, the aptly named Pageant (an uncommon name historically associated with theatrical spectacles), who by way of nature, explores her own dream and the meanings behind her visions, both in her head and what she sees. A front door, fractured. A home, for whom? A doll, draped in desire. A sunset, alone but for how long? A reflection, a gaze. A location, unknown
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Middle Life Video Q+A

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Middle Life Video Q+A

Here is the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Q+A with Middle Life Writer/Director Pavan Moondi, Lead Actors Leah Fay Goldstein and Peter Dreimanis, and Festival Director Albert Nigrin.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Interview with Sundays Director Ashley Gerst

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Interview with Sundays Director Ashley Gerst

Al Nigrin, Executive Director and Curator of the New Jersey International Film Festival, sits down at EBTV with Ashley Gerst -- Director and Animator of the film Sundays for a filmmaker interview. Sundays will be screened on Saturday May 30, 2026.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Interview with Middle Life Director Pavan Moondi

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Interview with Middle Life Director Pavan Moondi

Here is Festival Director Al Nigrin’s interview with Pavan Moondi. Pavan is the director and writer of the terrific Canadian feature film Middle Life. Middle Life screens with two shorts at the New Jersey International Film Festival on Saturday, May 30, 2026.
Trenton Filmmaker Phillip McConnell to Premiere New Short Film "Tell Me Where We Stand"

Trenton Filmmaker Phillip McConnell to Premiere New Short Film "Tell Me Where We Stand"

(HAMILTON TOWNSHIP, NJ) -- Independent filmmaker Phillip McConnell will premiere his new short film, Tell Me Where We Stand, at Mill One on Sunday, May 31, 2026, bringing together local artists, performers, and members of the community for an evening celebrating independent film and storytelling.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Interview with What We Dreamed of Then Director Taylor Olson

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Interview with What We Dreamed of Then Director Taylor Olson

Al Nigrin, Executive Director and Curator of the New Jersey International Film Festival, interviews What We Dreamed of Then Director, Writer and Actor Taylor Olson. What We Dreamed of Then will be screened on May 31, 2026.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival to Take Place from May 29th to June 7th

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival to Take Place from May 29th to June 7th

(NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ) -- The Rutgers Film Co-op/New Jersey Media Arts Center, in association with the Rutgers University Program in Cinema Studies, presents the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival which marks their 31st Anniversary. The NJIFF competition will be taking place on the Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays between May 29 - June 7, 2026 and will be a hybrid one as they will be presenting it online as well as doing in-person screenings at Rutgers University.
2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Animation Panel

2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Animation Panel

Here is the 2026 New Jersey International Film Festival Video Animation Panel featuring Festival Director Al Nigrin and Filmmakers Owen Andrejco, Myra Sito Velasquez, Evan Bode, and Heidi Kumao.
Emmy-nominated, Tony and Grammy Award-winning actor/director Jason Alexander to Lead Acting Masterclass on Long Beach Island

Emmy-nominated, Tony and Grammy Award-winning actor/director Jason Alexander to Lead Acting Masterclass on Long Beach Island

(LONG BEACH ISLAND, NJ) -- The Lighthouse International Film Festival (LIFF) presents a rare five-day acting masterclass led by acclaimed actor and director Jason Alexander, taking place June 7–11, 2026 on Long Beach Island, New Jersey, just prior to the opening of the Festival's 18th edition, which runs June 10–14.

 

MORE EVENTS

Click on the listing to bring up its webpage


Sonia and Lisa on Mushrooms, Impivaara, Bottom Feeder & Chemical Meadows – Online for 24 Hours and In-Person at 7PM!

Friday, May 29, 2026 @ 7:00pm
NJ International Film Festival
New Brunswick, NJ


Middle Life, Sundays & Counterfeit Kids – In-Person at 7PM!

Saturday, May 30, 2026 @ 7:00pm
NJ International Film Festival
New Brunswick, NJ


Phenomenon of Ivan Marchuk & Theater of the Absurd – Online for 24 Hours!

Saturday, May 30, 2026 @ 12:00am
NJ International Film Festival
New Brunswick, NJ


Shorts Program #1: Godzilla’s Day Off, Paper Crane, 35 Days, I Exist, Pizza Man, Prison and Time, Dustsceawung & Miracle Under 34th Street – Online for 24 Hours and In-Person at 7PM!

Saturday, May 30, 2026 @ 7:00pm
NJ International Film Festival
New Brunswick, NJ


Star Wars: The Last Jedi in Concert with New Jersey Symphony

Sunday, May 31, 2026 @ 2:00pm
State Theatre New Jersey
New Brunswick, NJ



 

Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info