There are two movies with similar titles: "Burial" (2022) and "The Burial" (2023).
"Burial" (2022) is a period piece set in West Poland just after World War II. It follows a troop of Russian soldiers as they try to deliver the body of a fallen comrade to his family. The film has a hard-core premise and pulpy tropes, but it falls apart after the first 30 minutes. The story starts with a home invasion in 1991, where a neo-Nazi breaks into the apartment of an old woman named Anna Marshall, who was actually a Russian soldier named Brana during WWII. The neo-Nazi wants to know if Anna transported Hitlers body out of Berlin, and if so, where it is now. Anna tases and doses the neo-Nazi, and chains him to her radiator. The film is about the complicated nature of being a soldier, particularly how much you must rely on your comrades to have your back. However, it never really comes together as a drama.
"The Burial" (2023) is a legal drama film directed by Maggie Betts and written by Betts and Doug Wright. It is loosely based on the true story of lawyer Willie E. Gary and his client Jeremiah Joseph OKeefes lawsuit against the Loewen funeral company, as documented in the 1999 New Yorker article of the same name by Jonathan Harr. The film stars Tommy Lee Jones as OKeefe, a funeral home owner who enlists charismatic, streetwise funeral director Lukasz (Tom Felton) to help him win a lawsuit against a powerful funeral corporation. The film dramatically begins a few months prior, when a broke Jeremiah ventures with Lukasz to a funeral home in rural Mississippi to bury a body. The film explores themes of race, class, and the American Dream).
In summary, "Burial" (2022) is a period piece about Russian soldiers delivering a fallen comrades body to his family, while "The Burial" (2023) is a legal drama about a funeral home owner and a funeral director fighting a powerful funeral corporation.