8.5

David Strathairn, Jane Levy Are Kindred Spirits in Sweet, Heartbreaking A Little Prayer

David Strathairn, Jane Levy Are Kindred Spirits in Sweet, Heartbreaking A Little Prayer

The relationship between a married person and a stepparent is so often the stuff of adversarial cinematic stereotyping that we tend to look past such pairings of characters as opportunities for love, or support, or tenderness. We’ve been pummeled by so many Focker puns, so many post-Father of the Bride caricatures, that the thought of in-laws as anything but an obstacle standing in the way of love to be overcome or an annoyance to be dodged registers as an almost naively optimistic sentiment. But director Angus MacLachlan’s (Junebug) long-completed but finally released A Little Prayer looks past conventional depictions of familial ties to question what we owe to each other, not only via baked-in responsibility to our blood relations but to the people with whom we have forged more earnest bonds based on fondness and more heartfelt admiration. Graceful and honest in its assessment of the frayed bonds of marriage and extended family, A Little Prayer thrives on a duo of beautifully rendered performances from David Strathairn and Jane Levy, brought together as two people seemingly meant to be in each other’s proximity–not as romantic partners, but as confidants of a nature that is almost more intimate in its own way.

Strathairn, ever the dependable, consummate Hollywood professional, is a revelation here, playing Bill, a world weary Vietnam veteran father who has by any criteria earned some kind of retirement age peace of mind, but is instead forced to contend with the failings of the younger generation, which threaten to dissolve the best parts of the family life he does possess and cherish. Bill and his wife Venida (Celia Weston) both seem like they should have earned a respite from the constant anxieties of parenthood, but somehow in their 70s they both find themselves not only still working daily jobs, but also providing a soft landing spot for the self-inflicted crash landings of their two children, David (Will Pullen) and Patti (Anna Camp), the latter of whom arrives one day unannounced, daughter in tow, having separated from her drug-addicted husband yet again.

This likely makes A Little Prayer sound a bit more fraught and heavily dramatized than it actually is. MacLachlan’s feature–which premiered at Sundance way back in 2023 but then was shelved during the Writers Guild strike and eventually acquired by Music Box Films for release this fall–is in actuality a gentle, ambling meditation on a specific form of familial ethics, best summed up in the question of “Should you tell someone information that will hurt them, and yourself?” And its key relationship isn’t between Bill and one of his own progeny, but instead between Bill and his son’s wife, Tammy (Levy).

Tammy is, in a few words, a ray of sunshine–this is clear from the first morning we meet her, awakening next to her terse husband in the small guest house behind Bill and Venida’s home. It’s at first unclear why the four would all be living on the small parcel of property in what feels like a suburb of the American South, but we gradually come to realize that the seemingly lonely, meek Tammy originally moved in while her husband David was deployed in the military overseas–a role mirroring Bill’s own service in Vietnam. When David returned, it seems the couple simply stuck around, as David joined his father’s sheet metal company and Tammy lingered at home, the apparent picture of humble, self-doubting domesticity. This image belies the character’s inner strength and steadfastness, qualities that–like so many of Tammy’s virtues–Bill can most clearly see. But the slow pace of small town life is also a breeding ground for resentment and temptation, and when it becomes clear to Bill that his son is likely engaged in some kind of protracted affair with another employee of the company, he must decide how to engage both his heir and Tammy, the woman he arguably sees as more of a daughter than his actual child. Strathairn is left to navigate these threatening, swirling currents, tugged by responsibility, doubt and guilt. Confiding in his wife and asking “What are we supposed to do, play dumb?”, she replies in the affirmative: “Yes, play dumb. You’re good at that.”

That’s not something that Bill is able to do, however–Strathairn plays him as a diminished but extremely sweet man who feels like if he can only intercede in a gentle, discreet enough way, he can somehow stave off a pending upheaval within their home, one that would likely rob him of Tammy’s company. His depiction of guilt is complex and heartbreaking, as Bill must grapple through the potential of his own culpability in instilling morals–or an acceptance of neglect–in the son he raised as he learns more and more about David’s darker nature, while simultaneously struggling with the feeling of selfishness for wanting to keep Tammy in their home out of love; wanting to keep her in the dark through some misguided notion of protection. To whom does a parent’s loyalty truly belong? Can we ever truly “mind our own business”? A Little Prayer won’t let Bill rest easy.

Levy, meanwhile, brings both an accompanying warmth and hidden resolve to the film, which loves to return to her lying alone in bed, her husband “working late” yet again, as it becomes increasingly clear that she must have some unstated sense of what’s going on around her. In two instances–first in a traumatic doctor’s office, and then on a park bench where she finally has the talk she must have been dreading with Bill–the camera pulls in tight on Levy’s features, revolving slowly around her as she fills in the gaps that add depth to a young woman apparently pulled from some podunk, backwater town to be a soldier’s wife, thankful for any opportunity to leave her sad circumstances behind. Her own immediate family, or parents, are never mentioned. We get a sense that Bill must be the closest thing she has to one, which only makes the eventual question of David’s infidelity that more difficult to acknowledge. For the sake of her own dignity, she may need to sacrifice the element of family that means most to her.

A Little Prayer is deeply empathetic, whether it’s regarding Patti returning to an abusive addict husband, having convinced herself yet again of the capacity for human change because it’s what she needs to believe, or even David himself, a seemingly affable man fighting unspoken demons (and latent alcoholism) that seem to stem from his military service, pushing him steadily toward self-destruction. It obviously feels for Tammy, as sweetly sincere a character as I’ve come across in recent memory, but in particular the film’s heart aches for Venida and Bill, the latter of whom simply remarks, “People these days, they’re too much for me.” Like Bill, we’re viewing much of the scenario from the outside looking in, wondering why all too many of the critical lines of communication have been cut–if honest communication isn’t possible here, then how is it possible anywhere? Bill looks at his son with dawning realization that despite this adult man living right on his property, he truly doesn’t understand much of anything about him. David has never shared his true self with his father, and the more we see of it, the more obvious the reason becomes. How much of the burden rests on the father who never cared to see what should have been obvious?

There is joy, however, in the acknowledgement mentioned in this review’s title: That “kindred spirits” do sometimes find a way to complete one another in some fashion, even outside of the boundaries of traditional romantic entanglements, or the compulsory form of love that binds parents with their progeny. Sometimes, people are just meant to be in each other’s lives, and even if it doesn’t ultimately last, those lives are richer for the other person having been there. So say A Little Prayer that you’ll be so blessed yourself, and give thanks to Angus MacLachlan for a beautifully deft little dramedy that absolutely deserves to finally see the light of day.

Director: Angus MacLachlan
Writer: Angus MacLachlan
Stars: David Strathairn, Jane Levy, Will Pullen, Celia Weston, Anna Camp, Dascha Polanco
Release date: Aug. 29, 2025


Jim Vorel is Paste’s Movies editor and resident genre geek. You can follow him on Twitter or on Bluesky for more film writing.

 
Join the discussion...