29th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (07.11-23.11.2025)
In 2001, three teenagers from the outskirts of Buenos Aires all fall in love with Diego. Natalia has always had the most chemistry with him, but when it seems inevitable that their friendship will turn into something more, the older and more experienced Silvia appears and soon captures Diego’s attention.
With stylish visual precision, director Laura Casabé brings Benjamin Naishtat’s evocative script to life, marking the first on-screen adaptation of celebrated author Mariana Enríquez’s unsettling short stories. Casabé immerses us in the tense socio-economic reality of an Argentina facing an unprecedented crisis – one that seeps into everyday life and interactions in ever more disturbing and surprising ways. In this surreal and uncertain moment, Dolores Oliverio depicts Natalia’s coming of age with grit, nailing the contradictions inherent to this phase of life as she gradually comes to realise and embrace her sexuality and the sinister world around her.
“Brilliantly luxuriating in a steamy summer where everyone is on edge, “The Virgin of the Quarry Lake” draws on a fusion of dark folklore and adolescent angst that pushes simmering self-empowerment to its boiling point.” – Ana Souza, Sundance Film Festival
                        
                     
                    
                        29th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (07.11-23.11.2025)
In 2001, three teenagers from the outskirts of Buenos Aires all fall in love with Diego. Natalia has always had the most chemistry with him, but when it seems inevitable that their friendship will turn into something more, the older and more experienced Silvia appears and soon captures Diego’s attention. With stylish visual precision, director Laura Casabé brings Benjamin Naishtat’s evocative script to life, marking the first on-screen adaptation of celebrated author Mariana Enríquez’s unsettling short stories. Casabé immerses us in the tense socio-economic reality of an Argentina facing an unprecedented crisis – one that seeps into everyday life and interactions in ever more disturbing and surprising ways. In this surreal and uncertain moment, Dolores Oliverio depicts Natalia’s coming of age with grit, nailing the contradictions inherent to this phase of life as she gradually comes to realise and embrace her sexuality and the sinister world around her. “Brilliantly luxuriating in a steamy summer where everyone is on edge, “The Virgin of the Quarry Lake” draws on a fusion of dark folklore and adolescent angst that pushes simmering self-empowerment to its boiling point.” – Ana Souza, Sundance Film Festival
                In 2001, three teenagers from the outskirts of Buenos Aires all fall in love with Diego. Natalia has always had the most chemistry with him, but when it seems inevitable that their friendship will turn into something more, the older and more experienced Silvia appears and soon captures Diego’s attention. With stylish visual precision, director Laura Casabé brings Benjamin Naishtat’s evocative script to life, marking the first on-screen adaptation of celebrated author Mariana Enríquez’s unsettling short stories. Casabé immerses us in the tense socio-economic reality of an Argentina facing an unprecedented crisis – one that seeps into everyday life and interactions in ever more disturbing and surprising ways. In this surreal and uncertain moment, Dolores Oliverio depicts Natalia’s coming of age with grit, nailing the contradictions inherent to this phase of life as she gradually comes to realise and embrace her sexuality and the sinister world around her. “Brilliantly luxuriating in a steamy summer where everyone is on edge, “The Virgin of the Quarry Lake” draws on a fusion of dark folklore and adolescent angst that pushes simmering self-empowerment to its boiling point.” – Ana Souza, Sundance Film Festival
Info
Rating
-
Production year
2025
Global distributor
Filmax
Local distributor
Pimedate Ööde Filmifestival MTÜ
In cinema
11/22/2025
