Clocking in for the graveyard shift just took on a literal, soul-crushing meaning. If you’ve ever white-knuckled your way through the viral hit game The Mortuary Assistant with the lights off, you know that River Fields is the last place on Earth you’d want to spend a night. Well, Epic Pictures and Dread have officially decided that our collective blood pressure wasn’t high enough, because the live-action adaptation is making its way to our home screens.
Overtime Turns Terrifying
Willa Holland (Arrow) stars as Rebecca Owens, a newly certified mortician who thinks she’s just putting in some standard overtime. Spoiler alert: she isn’t. Working the night shift alone, Rebecca quickly realizes that the “residents” of the mortuary have zero respect for the concept of staying dead.
As the night spirals into a demonic fever dream, she has to juggle the grisly technicalities of her day job—actual embalming, folks—with the high-stakes terror of an ancient possession. To survive, she’ll have to dig through the dark secrets of her mentor (Paul Sparks, Boardwalk Empire) and confront her own past traumas before she becomes the next permanent resident.
Why This Isn’t Just Another “Video Game Movie”
We’ve all been burned by “based on” cash-grabs before, but this one has the pedigree to back up the hype. The film was co-written by the game’s creator, Brian Clarke, ensuring the lore remains intact. The production team built a full-scale, practical River Fields Mortuary set—no cheap CGI ghosts here—just claustrophobic, “dirty” realism. While the game kept us busy with puzzles, the movie promises a deep dive into the mythology of the demonic entities plaguing the town.
Producer Patrick Ewald is promising a “relentlessly immersive” experience that bridges the gap between gamers and gore-hounds. Whether you’ve unlocked every ending in the game or you’re a complete newcomer to the morgue, this is the kind of horror that will make you reconsider that promotion if it involves working late.
For more behind-the-scenes dread, check out our interview with director Jeremiah Kipp, or read our spoiler-free review where I call the film “grisly, intelligent, and genuinely terrifying.”
Where and When to Watch
After a successful nationwide theatrical run that kicked off on Friday the 13th in February, the film is officially heading to its digital home. The Mortuary Assistant is coming to Shudder on March 27, 2026. You might want to watch it with the lights on.













