Las vacaciones románticas de dos parejas se convierten en un oscuro juego de engaño y peligro cuando son reservadas accidentalmente en el mismo alojamiento.Las vacaciones románticas de dos parejas se convierten en un oscuro juego de engaño y peligro cuando son reservadas accidentalmente en el mismo alojamiento.Las vacaciones románticas de dos parejas se convierten en un oscuro juego de engaño y peligro cuando son reservadas accidentalmente en el mismo alojamiento.
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Boring Bones
I got to see this in a special screen unseen and it reminded me of a very watered-down version of fifty shades of Gray with a touch of Friday the 13th. It started out. Really cool in the first 5 minutes but then it just droned on with very predictable storylines and subpar acting.
If you're looking for a splatter fest or an intelligent horror thriller then this isn't the lake for you.
If you're looking for a splatter fest or an intelligent horror thriller then this isn't the lake for you.
A stylish, unsettling indie that lures you in with seduction, but a little too tame for its own good.
Bone Lake is one of those films that looks and feels like it's about to go somewhere dark and thrilling but never quite dives all the way in. Directed by Mercedes Bryce Morgan and written by Joshua Friedlander, this indie horror-thriller premiered at Fantastic Fest in 2024 before making its wide release in October 2025. It's stylish, atmospheric, and well-acted, but it also feels a bit too restrained for its own good.
The story follows Sage (Maddie Hasson) and Diego (Alex Roe), a couple looking to rekindle their relationship during a romantic escape to the secluded Bone Lake. Their peaceful retreat turns complicated when they're forced to share a lavish mansion with another couple... Will (Marco Pigossi) and Cin (Andra Nechita) whose charm quickly slides into something much more sinister. What begins as a slightly awkward double date turns into a tense mind game where trust, temptation, and truth blur together.
The marketing for Bone Lake sells it as an erotic thriller, but aside from the provocative opening scene-which features a moment that will make most men instinctively cross their legs-the "erotic" aspect is surprisingly mild. After that opening, the film shifts gears into something closer to a psychological relationship test than a steamy thriller. The tension simmers but never boils, and while there's a constant sense that something is off, it rarely hits that nerve jangling level you want from a film like this.
That's not to say it's a bad movie far from it. Maddie Hasson and Alex Roe give strong, grounded performances, and Andra Nechita and Marco Pigossi bring an unsettling energy that keeps things interesting. Mercedes Bryce Morgan's direction is confident, with moody cinematography that captures both the beauty and unease of isolation. You can feel the influence of films like Speak No Evil and The Rental, where the horror comes more from social discomfort and suspicion than gore or jump scares.
Still, Bone Lake feels a bit too safe. The film teases danger, seduction, and psychological warfare, but often pulls back right when it's about to get good. It's an "almost" movie-almost erotic, almost scary, almost profound. What's left is a decent watch that scratches the surface of deeper, darker ideas without ever taking the plunge.
The story follows Sage (Maddie Hasson) and Diego (Alex Roe), a couple looking to rekindle their relationship during a romantic escape to the secluded Bone Lake. Their peaceful retreat turns complicated when they're forced to share a lavish mansion with another couple... Will (Marco Pigossi) and Cin (Andra Nechita) whose charm quickly slides into something much more sinister. What begins as a slightly awkward double date turns into a tense mind game where trust, temptation, and truth blur together.
The marketing for Bone Lake sells it as an erotic thriller, but aside from the provocative opening scene-which features a moment that will make most men instinctively cross their legs-the "erotic" aspect is surprisingly mild. After that opening, the film shifts gears into something closer to a psychological relationship test than a steamy thriller. The tension simmers but never boils, and while there's a constant sense that something is off, it rarely hits that nerve jangling level you want from a film like this.
That's not to say it's a bad movie far from it. Maddie Hasson and Alex Roe give strong, grounded performances, and Andra Nechita and Marco Pigossi bring an unsettling energy that keeps things interesting. Mercedes Bryce Morgan's direction is confident, with moody cinematography that captures both the beauty and unease of isolation. You can feel the influence of films like Speak No Evil and The Rental, where the horror comes more from social discomfort and suspicion than gore or jump scares.
Still, Bone Lake feels a bit too safe. The film teases danger, seduction, and psychological warfare, but often pulls back right when it's about to get good. It's an "almost" movie-almost erotic, almost scary, almost profound. What's left is a decent watch that scratches the surface of deeper, darker ideas without ever taking the plunge.
Slow
With so many slasher films around, you have to make a bit of an effort, but this took over an hour to get to any action. Compared to Companion, Maleficent, and a few others, it was lacking in all slasher expectations, such as a high body count, intense gore, and a faster pace. The leads did a good job, but I started to notice the pace was slow and checked my watch a few times. Not a bad film, just overly long and not even trying for originality. Lots of people are putting the score at a 7, for me it's a 5.
Oh boy
I'm still confused what was going on in this movie. I saw this as an scream unseen so I didn't know what I was going to watch. It wasn't scary at all just oddly disturbing and of course opening scene where a guy gets an arrow through his scrotum ..
So that was unnecessary. Everyone was laughing during this film so I guess it was somewhat amusing . So if you want to laugh at a ridiculous movie go ahead and see it . There was some crazy sex scenes and death scenes so if that's what you are into , this may be for you. I just feel like it may have been done before but with extra crazy . There is kinda of twist I didn't see coming but it wasn't a good twist . Anyway , I won't watch again , I feel like I wasted my time for the most part.
"Do you wanna know a secret, Diego? We all have imposter syndrome."
Domestic thriller much in the vein of Speak No Evil - polite smiles, social discomfort and sexual tension.
Setup's simple and effective: two couples accidentally book the same remote vacation rental. Could've been the premise for a rom-com - but a quick hunter-vs-prey prologue rails us off with the promise of blood to come.
It starts off a bit clunky (dialogue, acting, even the sex), but steadily finds its footing. What begins as mild awkwardness turns into a seductive and manipulative erotic thriller - just a bit too polite for its own good: it simmers, but never quite boils.
A few twists, more or less predictable, but the fun part comes when the third act drops the pretense, grabs an axe, and drenches everything red. Chainsaws, flying limbs, and some good laughs - the whole thing slips from Speak No Evil to splatter comedy without blinking.
A little clumsy, a little clever, but entertaining once it cuts loose.
Setup's simple and effective: two couples accidentally book the same remote vacation rental. Could've been the premise for a rom-com - but a quick hunter-vs-prey prologue rails us off with the promise of blood to come.
It starts off a bit clunky (dialogue, acting, even the sex), but steadily finds its footing. What begins as mild awkwardness turns into a seductive and manipulative erotic thriller - just a bit too polite for its own good: it simmers, but never quite boils.
A few twists, more or less predictable, but the fun part comes when the third act drops the pretense, grabs an axe, and drenches everything red. Chainsaws, flying limbs, and some good laughs - the whole thing slips from Speak No Evil to splatter comedy without blinking.
A little clumsy, a little clever, but entertaining once it cuts loose.
The Big List of Fall Movies 2025
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¿Sabías que...?
- Curiosidadesthe QR code on the door of the building that the character scan is a link to the wikipedia website
- PifiasTodas las entradas contienen spoilers
- ConexionesReferences ¿Quién teme a Virginia Woolf? (1966)
- Banda sonoraRed Sex
Written by Sebastian Gainsborough (as Seb Gainsborough)
Performed by Sebastian Gainsborough (as Vessel)
Published by Mute Song Limited
Courtesy of Tri-Angle Records
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- How long is Bone Lake?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Опасные связи
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 1.353.079 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 831.177 US$
- 5 oct 2025
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 2.517.797 US$
- Duración
- 1h 34min(94 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39:1
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