Directed by

Rian Johnson
Made by

Netflix
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Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.
The film opens with Benoit Blanc quieting the room as he reads a letter from Fr. Jud Duplenticy, a former boxer turned preacher who now stands at the center of a tangled religious saga. Jud takes us back to the moment that started it all: a clash with a rude deacon at his old church, an incident that draws the ire of the church hierarchy but earns the support of Bp. Langstrom for the moment. Rather than face a scandal, Jud is shipped off to Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude in Chimney Rock, a small-town church that has made a sanctuary of hardship and devotion. There, he enters a fragile arrangement with the beloved pastor of the parish, Mons. Jefferson Wicks, whose soaring sermons have drawn a loyal crowd and who carries himself with the charisma of a man who has built an entire moral universe around forgiveness and fire. The confessional act of their early days becomes a show of power and vulnerability: Wicks makes Jud listen as he confesses his recent sins, a grim ritual that double-dips as a test of Jud’s resolve and as a demonstration of how far Wicks is willing to push moral boundaries.
Jud soon becomes entangled in Wicks’s inner circle, where Martha Delacroix, Martha Delacroix, serves as the preacher’s right-hand and strategist, a guardian who knows the church’s secrets and the family histories that shape them. Martha’s connection to Wicks runs through generations, tracing back to her husband Samson Holt, Samson Holt the kindly groundskeeper who keeps the grounds and the graces of the place spotless even as the church’s debts mount. Through Martha, Jud learns about Wicks’s mother Grace, Grace Wicks, a woman whose reputation in the town is the stuff of whispered legends, described by some as “The Harlot Whore” for a lifestyle that doesn’t fit the church’s rigid benevolence. Grace’s legacy is a fractured one: when her father Prentice, Rev. Prentice Wicks, dies, she inherits the estate and is left with little more than a mysterious box etched with “Eve’s Apple” that contains a Christ figurine. This box becomes a symbol of a power struggle and a family secret that will echo long after Grace’s violent outburst at the church and her sudden death at her father’s tomb, a death that hints at forces bigger and darker than anyone suspects.
The letter Jud wrote speaks to a flock that is smaller than it appears, but fiercely devoted to its own myths. Vera Draven, Vera Draven, a sharp and determined lawyer, carries the burden of her father’s past as Wicks’s attorney and the duty of raising her half-brother Cyrus, known as Cy, Cy Draven. Cy is a savvy, party-poster-childYouTuber with a growing appetite for controversy, and his recordings begin to reveal a larger plot inside the church’s walls. Also part of the group is Dr. Nat Sharp, Dr. Nat Sharp, whose descent into alcoholism after his wife leaves him has stoked both sympathy and suspicion among those who wonder how much the man has genuinely become a threat to the flock. Lee Ross, Lee Ross, a best-selling sci‑fi author who longs to break out of his dedicated conspiracy crowd and reach a broader audience, and Simone Vivane, Simone Vivane, a young cellist who joined the church seeking relief from chronic pain and a possible cure, round out the core cast Jud believes could be manipulated or coerced by Wicks’s hunger for control. Jud’s plan to gather the flock privately, away from Wicks’s pulpit, unsettles everyone and inflames the already delicate balance of power within the church, laying the groundwork for a murder that could erase them all.
On Good Friday, Benoit Blanc and the team watch as Wicks delivers his sermon before retreating to a room in the pulpit to re-energize. Jud steps in, and the room erupts in a stealthy, unsettling shift when a clatter and thud signal Wicks’s collapse. Nat investigates and pronounces Wicks dead, a knife protruding from his back. Martha immediately accuses Jud of murder, and Chief Geraldine Scott, Chief Geraldine Scott, is brought in to unravel the knot. The case lands Blanc, summoned after a call from a familiar lieutenant, and the two men—Blanc and Jud—team up to search for motive, opportunity, and the truth behind a weapon that looks almost ceremonial: a knife with a devil’s head that appears to have come from a lamp at a bar. At the bar, the owner Nikolai, Nikolai, identifies the head as part of a door‑less, untraceable design, and Jud minds the subtle clues that suggest something larger at play beyond a straightforward murder.
The investigation winds its way through the pulpit’s hidden rooms and the private retreat where a game is played during the sermon—an ominous clue that someone manipulated the moment of Wicks’s death. The team discovers a remote-control trigger that could have caused a fatal accident, but Jud’s own behavior raises questions about his truthfulness: he concealed a flask from the flock when they found Wicks’s body, and later, the flask itself goes missing. The mystery widens as Cy reveals that he captured the flock’s private meeting with Wicks on Palm Sunday, threatening that video with release, while the rest of the flock scrambles to seal their involvement. The film then pivots on a deeper truth about Eve’s Apple, a family diamond that Grace’s death seems to have buried with the church’s secrets—the box, it turns out, is empty of value, and the real treasure is a different, hidden prize.
Jud’s resolve hardens as the evidence points toward the real killer, but Blanc moves them toward a revelation that none of them anticipated. The team tracks the evidence to Nat’s home and descends to a basement where a foul stench lingers and a tub filled with acid reveals Wicks’s lifeless form, his arms burned and his body dissolved. The scene shifts again as Blanc and Geraldine gather the flock for a final reckoning: Nat, who had spiked Wicks’s drink with pentobarbital, was the actual killer, planting the sword-like device in the preacher’s back and then detonating a squib to simulate a supernatural return. Yet even this explanation feels incomplete until a broader truth about the box named Eve’s Apple is unearthed: the diamond resides in the chest of a statue, a revelation that Martha later confirms, and she collapses under the weight of her own guilt as the truth overtakes her.
As the final pieces fall into place, Blanc’s careful deductions crumble into a moral reckoning. Martha confesses that Eve’s Apple—the diamond—was the prize Grace had chased and that Eve’s Apple had drawn her to violence and ruin. The confession exposes a chain of manipulation: Nat and Samson orchestrated a supposed resurrection to discredit the flock and push Wicks into a cultural battle for power, while Martha herself had long nurtured a grudge against Grace, believing she could seize control through deceit. When the truth emerges, Martha’s remaining strength fails, and the diamond slips from her grasp, falling from her hands as she admits her crimes. Blanc lets her speak her piece and then gently accepts her confession, offering forgiveness as she collapses, the Eve’s Apple finally slipping from her clutched fingers.
In the aftermath, the survivors begin to pick up the pieces. Vera closes her father’s law firm and resolves to forge a new path, Simone returns to the cello and writes through the pain, and Lee Ross continues to write, his controversial book drawing the same fans he once distrusted. Cy, left with nothing after his inheritance siphoned away, speaks of legal action against Blanc and Jud, but the two men play it cool, choosing to protect the fragile truth they now share. A year later, Jud reopens the church and renames it Our Lady of Perpetual Grace, a new beginning built on hard-won mercy. As he exchanges greetings with new members, he reveals a quiet, stubborn secret: Eve’s Apple remains hidden inside the chest of a Christ statue, a reminder that the church’s darkest chapter has become its most enduring riddle.
Follow the complete movie timeline of Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.
Frame: Blanc reads Jud's letter
Benoit Blanc begins the film by reading a letter from Father Jud Duplenticy that frames the mystery. The letter recounts Jud’s past as a boxer who turned preacher and hints at dark secrets tied to the church. This opening sets the tone for the unraveling story.
Jud's deacon incident and exile
Jud punches a rude deacon at his former church, triggering a scandal. Although some believe he acted righteously, the authorities decide to remove him from the scene to calm tensions. He is sent to Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude in Chimney Rock to avoid trouble.
Jud begins tenure under Monsignor Wicks
Jud starts his tenure under the beloved Monsignor Jefferson Wicks, who wields tremendous influence over the flock. Wicks confesses to Jud, revealing a manipulative and controlling style that feeds his power. Martha Delacroix, Wicks’s ally, guides Jud as he learns about Wicks’s mother Grace and the enigmatic Eve’s Apple box; the past mistakes begin to surface.
Jud identifies suspects among the flock
Jud names Vera Draven, Cy, Nat Sharp, Lee, and Simone as potential suspects and plans a private session away from Wicks to observe them. The tactic unsettles the flock and provokes Wicks’s anger, showing how precarious his control has become. Jud’s suspicions are the seed for a deeper reveal about loyalty and motive.
Confrontation between Jud and Wicks
Jud confronts Wicks about how he manipulates people, especially Simone, for his own gain. Wicks responds with a physical strike, trying to erase the challenge to his authority. Jud declares he will cut Wicks out 'like a cancer,' and the moment is captured by Cy.
Palm Sunday records reveal deeper motives
During a private Palm Sunday gathering, Cy records the flock and the confrontation, revealing tensions beneath the surface. The video hints that Wicks is using power to advance a political scheme and that Eve’s Apple holds a larger significance. The church's secrets and ambitions begin to surface.
Good Friday service ends in tragedy
On Good Friday, Wicks delivers his sermon before retreating to a pulpit room to recharge while Jud takes over. Wicks collapses, with a knife protruding from his back, and Nat Sharp, already intoxicated, investigates and accuses Jud of murder. Martha Delacroix quickly shifts suspicion toward Jud as chaos erupts.
Investigators connect weapon and bar clues
Chief Geraldine Scott and Blanc start piecing together the murder, examining the weapon—a knife with a devil head linked to a bar lamp. Bar owner Nikolai confirms the devil head was painted red and that a second head had vanished, tying the weapon to a specific prop. The clues begin to unravel how deception was staged.
Jud’s hidden flask surfaces and forklift order
Blanc compels Jud to recount the events, during which Jud reveals a flask he had hidden from the flock. The flask later disappears, deepening the mystery around Jud’s involvement. Investigators also trace a forklift order to access the crypt, and Louise at the supplier shares a personal tragedy that humanizes the case.
Nat’s crimes come to light
Blanc and Jud uncover a grisly chain of deaths: Wicks’s body with arms burned in an acid tub and Nat Sharp’s dissolved corpse. The sequence reveals Nat’s manipulation and his attempt to cover his tracks through staged killings. The truth tightens around the web of lies within the flock.
Martha’s confession and Eve’s Apple revealed
Martha finally reveals herself as the killer and discloses that Eve’s Apple is a diamond. She explains how she orchestrated the murders with Nat and Samson to fuel Wicks’s political rise, and how she poisoned the coffee to hide her own guilt. The confession ends with her collapsing as the diamond falls from her hand.
Epilogue: survivors move on
The remaining flock members try to rebuild their lives: Vera closes her father’s law firm, Simone returns to playing cello, Lee pursues a risky book deal about Wicks, and Cy confronts his inheritance without real wealth. Blanc and Jud part ways amicably, having solved the case but leaving Eve’s Apple still in play. The community begins healing, fractured but hopeful.
One year later: Jud reopens the church
A year after Wicks’s death, Jud reopens the church as Our Lady of Perpetual Grace and renames it in his own vision. Eve’s Apple is finally hidden inside the chest of a Christ statue, sealing its secret away from those who would seek it. The new church embodies a guarded, complicated peace for the flock.
Explore all characters from Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.
Vera Draven, Esq. (Kerry Washington)
A sharp, protective lawyer who helps raise her half-brother Cy and becomes deeply involved in uncovering Wicks’s corruption. She navigates church politics with a mix of pragmatism and moral conviction, challenging the preacher’s control while confronting painful family legacies.
Samson Holt (Thomas Haden Church)
The kindly groundskeeper and Martha’s husband, a quiet pillar of the church who keeps the grounds and rhythms of the flock. He serves as a bridge between the inner circle and the congregation, his steady presence masking rising tensions.
Mons. Jefferson Wicks (Josh Brolin)
The beloved preacher at the center of the church, whose authority and influence drive much of the flock’s devotion and fear. His past and his manipulation of followers create the conditions for the murder and the elaborate ruse that follows.
Dr. Nat Sharp (Jeremy Renner)
A physician with a drinking problem whose bitterness toward the flock becomes dangerous. He weaponizes alcohol, secrets, and a staged resurrection to cover up his crimes, ultimately becoming the true killer behind the curtain.
Martha Delacroix (Glenn Close)
The church’s long-time confidante whose devotion hides a dangerous, calculating streak. She orchestrates key deceptions surrounding Eve’s Apple and manipulates Nat and Samson, driving the core conspiracy before facing a moral reckoning.
Fr. Jud Duplenticy (Josh O’Connor)
A former boxer turned preacher who becomes entangled in the mystery as a wary insider. He records events, questions Wicks’s grip on the flock, and carries his own past trauma that surfaces during the investigation.
Simone Vivane (Cailee Spaeny)
A young cellist who joined the church seeking relief from chronic pain. Her commitment to the flock and belief in Wicks’s healing powers make her an important emotional thread in the story.
Cy Draven (Daryl McCormack)
Vera’s half-brother and an aspiring conservative creator who records the flock's private moments. His curiosity and video evidence propel the investigation and reveal painful family dynamics.
Chief Geraldine Scott (Mila Kunis)
The investigator who steps in to uncover the truth behind Wicks’s murder. Her methodical approach and skepticism drive the case forward alongside Blanc’s charm.
Nikolai (Noah Segan)
Bar owner who provides crucial clues about the murder weapon and the security of the church’s world. His street-level perspective helps connect the barroom clues to the church’s secrets.
Learn where and when Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.
Location
Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude Church, Chimney Rock
Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude sits at the heart of Chimney Rock, a grand church that doubles as a social and political hub for its flock. The pulpit, crypt, and adjoining rectory become stages where power, devotion, and secrets collide. The community's tight rituals and the church's vast estate drive much of the mystery and conflict in the story.
Discover the main themes in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.
🕵️
Deception
The mystery revolves around layered lies, misdirection, and hidden motives masquerading as faith. Characters craft alibis, plant clues, and manipulate each other to protect or seize power within the church's circle.
💎
Greed
The Eve’s Apple diamond drives much of the plot, turning faith into a commodity and family ties into leverage. The pursuit of wealth corrupts judgment, leading to betrayals and brutal choices.
⚖️
Power
Religious leadership intersects with politics, showing how authority can be weaponized to secure influence. As secrets surface, the flock's loyalty factions are tested and realigned.
💔
Betrayal
Friendships and loyalties fracture under scheming and manipulation. The characters’ true natures emerge as past wounds and hidden histories reshape trust.

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Discover the spoiler-free summary of Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.
In the remote mountain town of Chimney Rock, a modest parish sits at the heart of a community where faith, gossip, and old grudges intertwine like the vines that cling to its stone façade. The film opens with Jud Duplenticy, a former boxer turned young priest, arriving at Our Lady of Perpetual Fortitude under the watchful eye of the charismatic Monsignor Jefferson Wicks. Their meeting instantly reveals a clash of temperaments: Jud’s gritty, blue‑collar past meets Wicks’s magnetic, almost theatrical pulpit presence, setting the stage for an uneasy partnership that ripples through the congregation.
The town itself feels like a character, its weathered streets and creaking church echoing with whispered histories and lingering resentments. Within the parish walls, a colorful array of parishioners—lawyers, doctors, writers, and musicians—have each forged a fragile bond to the ministry, their personal aspirations and hidden anxieties held together by the Monsignor’s compelling sermons. As Jud settles in, he quickly senses that the fervor that draws newcomers also fuels underlying tension, hinting that the community’s devotion may be as volatile as the mountain storms that lash the town.
When a baffling incident shatters the ordinary rhythm of worship, the town’s tranquility is threatened, and suspicion begins to creep through the pews. Chief Geraldine Scott arrives to maintain order, her pragmatic approach contrasting sharply with the church’s more reverent atmosphere. Recognizing that the mystery may require a touch of unconventional insight, she calls in the celebrated detective Benoit Blanc, whose reputation for unraveling the seemingly impossible precedes him. Their collaboration promises a blend of sharp wit, measured investigation, and the occasional dry humor that has become a hallmark of Blanc’s methods.
Against this backdrop of solemn rites and simmering intrigue, the story balances the weight of spiritual duty with the pull of human folly. The tone drifts between solemn contemplation and sly, off‑beat comedy, inviting the audience to wonder what lies beneath polished sermons and polished façades, and whether the truth can ever truly be buried beneath stone and prayer.
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