Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Box Office

INTERVIEW: Guy Pearce on ‘Killing Faith’: Western Grit, Moral Fault Lines, and the Weight of Broken Belief

As the long shadow of summer begins to recede, director Ned Crowley (Middle Man) returns with Killing Faith, a stark and meditative Western set against the scorched plains of 1849 Arizona — a landscape as defined by its biblical vastness as it is by creeping dread. Arriving in cinemas this Friday via Shout! Studios, the film trades blazing six-shooters for a gnawing unease — a gripping descent into dust and dread, where faith withers beneath the weight of reason, and fear takes root as salvation becomes anything but certain.

Killing Faith eschews the familiar trappings of the Western to explore a territory defined not just by its harsh desert but by an all-consuming sickness. As a plague spreads, whispers grow around a young girl rumored to be cursed—wherever she goes, death follows. Some call it disease, others darker forces. Most flee. One man, Dr. Bender, stays.

Played with measured weariness by Oscar-nominated Guy Pearce (BrimstoneThe PropositionRavenous), Bender is a physician long divorced from faith, charged with escorting a desperate mother (DeWanda Wise – Jurassic World: DominionThe Harder They FallPoolman) and her daughter across unforgiving terrain in search of a faith healer. The mother believes her daughter is possessed; Bender sees illness. Yet belief proves powerless in the face of what’s to come.

Alongside Pearce and Wise, the cast includes Jamie Neumann (“Lovecraft Country”, “NOS4A2”), Jack Alcott (“Dexter: Resurrection”, “The Good Lord Bird”), Emily Ford (“Outer Range”), and Bill Pullman (The Serpent and the RainbowBrain DeadSurveillance), all inhabiting a world that feels both recognisably historical and eerily timeless.

In anticipation of the film’s release, CinemaChords’ Ashley Northey sat down with Pearce to discuss the complexities of portraying a man unmoored from belief, the film’s restrained approach to genre, and the relentless weight of fear and uncertainty that shadows every step of their journey.


Where to watch KILLING FAITH
Comments

Join us on socials

BOOK OF THE MONTH

Collaborating with

----------

 

 

You May Also Like

Box Office

The world of 28 Days Later has always been one of brutal, unrelenting dread. From the moment Cillian Murphy’s Jim awoke in a deserted...

Box Office

FrightFest returns to the Glasgow Film Festival for its 21st year from Thursday 5 March to Saturday 7 March 2026, once again taking over...

Box Office

Steven Grayhm’s latest film, Sheepdog, looks beyond the moment a soldier returns home, focusing instead on the long and often unseen work of living...

MUSIC

After line-up changes and a bit of soul-searching, Kid Kapichi return with Fearless Nature. It’s not so much a fresh start as it is...