During the Depression of the 1930s, Preacher Harry
Powell, a murderous, self-proclaimed "man of the cloth," travels
throughout rural West Virginia believing that he is doing the Lord’s
work by killing rich widows. One evening, Preacher is
apprehended by the police for stealing a car and is sentenced to
thirty days at Moundsville Penitentiary.
Soon after, in nearby Cresap’s Landing, Ben Harper
robs a bank and kills two employees. Ben races home, where his
son John and young daughter Pearl are playing with her doll, Miss
Jenny. Ben, who is wounded, looks for a place to stash the
stolen $10,000; after hiding it, he makes John and Pearl swear never
to reveal where the money is. John then watches with horror as
several policemen drag Ben away. Ben winds up in a cell with
Preacher, who harangues him to reveal the money’s location.
Ben scornfully dismisses Preacher, who nonetheless thanks the Lord
for leading him to a "widow in the making."
After Ben is hanged, John watches over Pearl and
ignores the taunts of other children, while Willa takes a job at
Walt and Icey Spoon’s ice cream parlor. One day, John visits
his only friend, Uncle Birdie Steptoe, a well-meaning drunkard who
lives in a wharf boat on the river. Birdie promises to repair
Ben’s skiff, but John’s happiness is tempered when Birdie reveals
that he met a stranger claiming to have known Ben. When John
then goes to the ice cream parlor, he finds Willa, Pearl, Icey and
Walt being charmed by the smooth-talking, gospel-quoting Preacher.
Preacher tells them that he worked at the penitentiary, but John
remains suspicious. When Preacher spots John eyeing the
tattoos of the word "LOVE" on his right hand and "HATE" on his left
hand, he wins over Icey completely by dramatically telling the story
of "right hand-left hand," and how love triumphs over hate in the
Bible. Icey insists that Preacher attend the town picnic the
following Sunday, then begins to pressure Willa to make herself
attractive to the handsome stranger.
At the picnic, Willa confesses to Icey her fear that
Preacher is after Ben’s stolen money and, at Icey’s prompting, asks
Preacher if Ben told him about the loot. After Preacher claims
that Ben told him he had thrown it into the river, a relieved Willa
asserts that she now feels clean.
Later, when John goes home one night, he is
confronted by Preacher, who reveals that he and Willa are to be
married the next day. John replies that Preacher will never be
his dad, then inadvertently blurts out that he will "never tell."
Preacher realizes that John knows where the money is hidden but,
stating that they have a long time to share their secrets, allows
the boy to run off.
On Willa and Preacher’s wedding night, Willa is
deeply ashamed when Preacher roars at her that he will not be
"pawing" her as the business of their marriage is to tend the
children she already has, not to beget more.
Later, Willa, who desperately wants to please
Preacher, leads a revival meeting with him and renounces her former
sinful life. One night, Pearl is playing outside with the
stolen money, which Ben had hidden in Miss Jenny, when John finds
her and stuffs the bills back into the doll, just as Preacher comes
to call them in. After Preacher reprimands John for telling
Willa that he has been asking him about the money, Willa scolds John
for lying, as she believes that Preacher is innocent.
Soon after, however, Preacher locks John in his
bedroom while Willa is out, and takes Pearl to the parlor to
question her. As Willa is coming home, she overhears Preacher
threaten to tear off the little girl’s arm if she does not reveal
the money’s hiding place. That night, as Willa lies in bed,
she realizes that Preacher always knew that Ben did not throw the
money away, and that John knows where it is hidden. Still
unable to face the truth, Willa states that Preacher married her to
save her soul, and lies passively as he slits her throat with his
switchblade.
The next morning, Preacher tearfully tells Walt and
Icey that Willa has run away. While the Spoons are comforting
Preacher, Uncle Birdie discovers Willa’s body, trapped in her old
Model T car, in the river. Afraid that he will be blamed for
the murder, Uncle Birdie returns to his boat and gets drunk.
Later that day, John and Pearl are about to be
apprehended by Preacher as they hide in the cellar when Icey
suddenly arrives. The children reluctantly emerge at Icey’s
bidding; after Icey departs, John tells Preacher, who is badgering
Pearl, that the money is buried in the cellar. Preacher forces
the children to accompany him, but John succeeds in outwitting him
and escapes outside with Pearl. While Preacher is attempting
to break open the cellar door, John runs to Uncle Birdie for help,
but finds him passed out. John then puts Pearl into Ben’s
skiff and barely manages to push the little boat into the river
before Preacher can catch them.
Time passes as the children, relentlessly pursued by
Preacher, float down the river. One morning, the sleeping
children are wakened by Rachel Cooper, an elderly farmer who takes
in orphaned and illegitimate children. The pragmatic but
compassionate and religious Rachel currently cares for Ruby, Mary
and Clary, and quickly settles John and Pearl in with her brood.
One night, Ruby goes to town, supposedly for a sewing
lesson but, in reality, to meet boys. She is approached by
Preacher, who questions her about John and Pearl. Although
Ruby becomes enamored of Preacher, he leaves upon obtaining the
information he seeks, and when she returns home, Ruby confesses her
actions to Rachel. Rachel forgives the confused adolescent but
remains worried about Preacher, who shows up the next day, claiming
to be John and Pearl's father. When John declares that
Preacher is not his dad, Rachel realizes that Preacher is a fraud
and chases him away with a shotgun. As he retreats, Preacher
screams that he will be back that night, prompting Rachel to hold
vigil with her gun. Preacher sits in the front yard, waiting
and, when Rachel is distracted by Ruby, he slips into the house.
When Preacher suddenly appears before her, Rachel shoots and wounds
him, and he runs into the barn.
Kept company by John, Rachel then waits through the
night, watching the barn, until the state troopers arrive in the
morning. As the men arrest Preacher, John, overcome by
memories of Ben’s arrest, runs to the prone Preacher and hits him
with Miss Jenny. When money pours from the burst doll, John,
unable to bear the strain any longer, cries out for his father to
take the money back.
Later, John, incapable of looking at Preacher, is
unable to identify him at his trial for Willa’s murder. After
the trial, an irate Walt and Icey lead a mob to lynch Preacher, but
he is sneaked out the back by the police, who are assured by Bart
the hangman that it will be a pleasure to carry out his duties.
On Christmas day, the girls give Rachel potholders,
while John shyly presents her with an apple wrapped in a doily.
Rachel gives John a pocket watch, and after the happy boy goes
upstairs, warmly states that children continue to abide and endure.