Close Menu
Dark Frights
    What's Hot

    HAPPY DEATH DAY 2U Trailer (2019)

    January 9, 2026

    KEEPER (2025) Official Teaser Trailer (HD) Osgood Perkins, Tatiana Maslany, Rossif Sutherland

    January 9, 2026

    THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS Trailer (2018)

    January 8, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Dark Frights
    • Home
    • Fright Bites & Facts

      Folklore That Eats You Alive From Ancient Myths To Modern Horror

      January 7, 2026

      Edgar Allan Poe – The Architect Of Horror

      December 31, 2025

      Where The Desert Eats Men By: Kathleen McCluskey

      December 23, 2025

      Krampus Was Right – Chains, Horns and Holy Nights

      December 20, 2025

      Soft Flesh, Hard Tech: How Bioengineering Is Becoming The New Body Horror

      December 19, 2025
    • Books

      Jimmy Star Emerges as the Next Big Name in Horror

      November 2, 2025

      “THE MARK AND THE WING” By: Kathleen McCluskey

      August 11, 2025

      Truth Twister By Lydia Graves – Book Review

      April 27, 2025

      Change & Other Terrors By Jim Horlock – Book Review

      April 27, 2025

      New Edition Of Stephen Graham Jones’ MAPPING THE INTERIOR Coming This Spring

      April 26, 2025
    • Interviews

      Into the Madness: Michael Mayhall on Love, Loss, and The Madness of David Judge

      October 7, 2025

      Practical Effects, Easter Eggs, Deleted Scenes & More with ‘Until Dawn’ Director David F. Sandberg [Interview]

      April 26, 2025

      How George A. Romero’s ‘The Amusement Park’ Went from Lost Media to a Graphic Novel [Interview]

      April 26, 2025

      ‘Predator: Badlands’ – Dan Trachtenberg Previews His “Big, Crazy Swing” [Interview]

      April 24, 2025

      ‘Cursed in Baja’: A Love Letter to B-Movies from Director Jeff Daniel Phillips [Interview]

      April 21, 2025
    • Movie & TV News

      Why Independent Horror Thrives Over SAG

      November 10, 2025

      Into the Madness: Michael Mayhall on Love, Loss, and The Madness of David Judge

      October 7, 2025

      Emmy-Nominee Mike Mayhall Debuts Limited Series The Madness of David Judge on Tubi, Amazon, and Movie Central

      September 5, 2025

      Hell House LLC: Lineage — A Testament to Indie Horror Storytelling

      August 25, 2025

      Shadows of Bias: Racial Prejudice in Horror Films

      August 18, 2025
    • Movie Trailers

      HAPPY DEATH DAY 2U Trailer (2019)

      January 9, 2026

      KEEPER (2025) Official Teaser Trailer (HD) Osgood Perkins, Tatiana Maslany, Rossif Sutherland

      January 9, 2026

      THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS Trailer (2018)

      January 8, 2026

      VICIOUS (2025) Official Trailer (HD) SUPERNATURAL | Dakota Fanning

      January 8, 2026

      MONSTER: The Ed Gein Story Trailer (2025)

      January 7, 2026
    • Stories

      Folklore That Eats You Alive From Ancient Myths To Modern Horror

      January 7, 2026

      Edgar Allan Poe – The Architect Of Horror

      December 31, 2025

      Where The Desert Eats Men By: Kathleen McCluskey

      December 23, 2025

      Krampus Was Right – Chains, Horns and Holy Nights

      December 20, 2025

      Soft Flesh, Hard Tech: How Bioengineering Is Becoming The New Body Horror

      December 19, 2025
    • Contact
      • About Dark Frights
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Amazon Disclaimer
    Dark Frights
    Home » ‘The Virgin of the Quarry Lake’ is Harrowing [Sundance 2025 Review]
    Movie & TV News

    ‘The Virgin of the Quarry Lake’ is Harrowing [Sundance 2025 Review]

    Horror MasterBy Horror MasterJanuary 28, 2025
    ‘The Virgin of the Quarry Lake’ is Harrowing [Sundance 2025 Review]

    THE VIRGIN OF THE QUARRY LAKE

    Laura Casabé’s The Virgin of the Quarry Lake, premiering at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, is a lot like two other festival favorites morphed into one uncomfortable, horror-adjacent package. Quarry Lake has the oppressive and bleak rurality of Carlota Pereda’s 2022 festival favorite (and eventual Goya Award winner) Piggy alongside the subtle yet insidious sexual pressure of Molly Manning Walker’s How to Have Sex, which played at the festival last year. In other words, The Virgin of the Quarry Lake is as harrowing as it is horrifying.

    Benjamin Naishtat’s script, adapted from short stories in Mariana Enríquez’s collection, The Dangers of Smoking in Bed, prioritizes fidelity over cheap genre tactics. Natalia’s (Dolores Oliverio) summer is long, hazy, and newly excitedly digital. In the outskirts of Buenos Aires, just as the Argentine great depression sputters to an ostensibly impossible end, Natalia visits cyber-cafes, sits aimlessly in her backyard pool, and regularly spends time with her crush, Diego (Augustin Sosa) and cool new girl, Silvia (Fernanda Echevarría).

    The Virgin of the Quarry Lake is Doom and chat rooms, aimless sexual awakening amidst a socioeconomic crisis beyond a teenager’s ability to comprehend, and more pointedly, not all that unlike what they’ve lived through before. Natalia’s most troubling crisis is an impromptu quiz from Silvia about a band Natalia has lied about liking (to impress a boy), not the frequent trips to the neighborhood water truck where her household is allotted two buckets a day.

    Natalia’s summer is rich, evocative, and heartbreaking in its stillness, the endless days and quick-cut nights. Longing melts under the summer heat, coating Natalia’s skin and heart until the only thing propelling her forward daily is Diego and the chance to spend time with him, whether chatting online or at the titular quarry lake Silvia introduces the friend group to.

    Natalia’s grandmother and neighborhood shepherd for wayward kids, Rita (Luisa Merelas), initially indulges Nat’s worst impulses, offering to cast a spell to wedge the relationship between Diego and Silvia. While unsuccessful at first, Nat begins to tap into an energy within her, leading toward a shocking yet liberating conclusion.

    A more grounded, tragic version of The Craft, The Virgin of the Quarry Lake is early aughts witchcraft through a distinct cultural lens. A puddle of blood beneath a gooey, dripping shopping cart just outside Nat’s house expands throughout the film. The camera sputters and shakes, at times signaling brief yet graphic bouts of violence, possibly tethered to otherworldly energy residing within Nat’s body. Akin to her sexuality and desire to remain unmoored to expectations, Nat rarely understands what it means, whether she’s really responsible or if it’s just the universe handing her what she innately believes she deserves.

    And Dolores Oliverio is a knockout, vicious yet sympathetic, a victim of a country on the brink, endeavoring to carve out her role and sense of agency, no matter who might stand in her way. Contextually, The Virgin of the Quarry Lake is folkloric coming of age rendered terrifying, with pin-point craftsmanship, especially from the director of photography Diego Tenorio Hernández, whose sweeping summer vistas are at once inviting yet tyrannical.

    Toward the end of The Virgin of the Quarry Lake, Nat is told to embrace her youth. Have fun. Be free. The rest of her life will likely be miserable, and she will be, by extension. The limitless freedom of being a teenager is incompatible with sulking. It’s sage advice, yet also cruel advice. More than her peers, Nat is better attuned to the myth of freedom. As classmates hire sex workers to lose their virginity, as patrons trash a cyber café when the power flickers, as kids drown in the mythic quarry lake, Nat knows that her life was never really hers to control. What’s so wrong with taking a little freedom back for herself?


    • The Virgin of the Quarry Lake

    Summary

    Bouts of violence and a sharp folkloric edge render The Virgin of the Quarry Lake an uncommonly frightening and tragic coming-of-age saga.

    Tags: Laura Casabé Sundance 2025 The Virgin of the Quarry Lake

    Categorized:News Reviews

    Sign up for The Harbinger a Dread Central Newsletter

    View Source Link Here

    Share. Facebook Twitter

    Related Posts

    Why Independent Horror Thrives Over SAG

    November 10, 2025

    Into the Madness: Michael Mayhall on Love, Loss, and The Madness of David Judge

    October 7, 2025

    Emmy-Nominee Mike Mayhall Debuts Limited Series The Madness of David Judge on Tubi, Amazon, and Movie Central

    September 5, 2025

    Subscribe For Updates TODAY!!

    Get the latest creative news from the Horror Master at DarkFrights.com

    FOLLOW US ON:
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    CHECK OUT OUR LATEST…
    ==> ON YOUTUBE <==

    https://www.youtube.com/@DarkFrightsMagazineHorrorNews

    ==> ON REDCIRCLE <==

    https://redcircle.com/shows/33888fce-6d0d-46d4-b976-44fb9e8c441e

    Latest Posts
    Movie Trailers

    HAPPY DEATH DAY 2U Trailer (2019)

    By Horror MasterJanuary 9, 2026

    Official Happy Death Day 2U Movie Trailer 2019 | Subscribe ➤ http://abo.yt/ki | Jessica Rothe…

    KEEPER (2025) Official Teaser Trailer (HD) Osgood Perkins, Tatiana Maslany, Rossif Sutherland

    January 9, 2026

    THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS Trailer (2018)

    January 8, 2026

    VICIOUS (2025) Official Trailer (HD) SUPERNATURAL | Dakota Fanning

    January 8, 2026

    Folklore That Eats You Alive From Ancient Myths To Modern Horror

    January 7, 2026

    MONSTER: The Ed Gein Story Trailer (2025)

    January 7, 2026
    Categories
    • Books (173)
    • Cover Story (6)
    • Fright Bites & Facts (75)
    • Interviews (116)
    • Movie & TV News (434)
    • Movie Trailers (1,164)
    • Stories (141)
    • Uncategorized (2)
    Archives
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About Dark Frights
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
    • Amazon Disclaimer
    © 2026 Dark Frights. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.