The Plague presents as its premise something akin toย Lord of the Flies meets the ridiculous defense of โboys will be boys.โ The film is unpleasant, cruel, and offers no catharsis or reprieve for the viewer during its 95-minute runtime. In some aspects, that intentional coarseness works as intended, using the viewerโs discomfort to ultimately elevate the experience. In others, The Plague is downright grating.ย
In short, Charlie Polingerโs debut feature is a film about learning to dance on your own. At the same time, that brief summation does a disservice to the deep cruelty the story requires to get there. A group of neurotypical water polo teammates decide that fellow camper Eli (Kenny Rasmussen) has the plague because of an ongoing skin issue with cystic acne and a persistent rash. Eli, who is clearly on the spectrum, may not like the way heโs treated by the rest of the team, but repeatedly shows that heโs A-OK with playing by himself if the pre-pubescent little monsters heโs surrounded by donโt want to participate. This rattles Ben (Everett Blunck), who desperately seeks the approval of the rest of the team, to his core.
Cinematographer Steven Breckonโs work buys the film a lot of goodwill. He and Polingerโs creative partnership has resulted in a dang pretty movie. Framing plays a major role in developing the filmโs disconcerting ambiance, but the most visually appealing shots all play with water in one way or another. These range from the water polo and synchronized swimming scenes heavily featured in The Plague to dreamy underwater segments that bend the perception of which way is up or down. That warped view acts as a quiet metaphor that plays into The Plagueโs overall themes as we follow Ben during what must be the worst year of his young life.
While it plays more in the thriller space than it does straight horror, The Plague is well seasoned with well-timed moments of gore and the gore-adjacent. Polinger clearly understands that a closeup featuring the tugging of a bloody hangnail can be as jarring as the most gruesome bodily harm. Thereโs not an abundance of these moments โ and youโre not going to see anything bad happen to anyone that it should be happening to โ but the sprinkling of them is thoughtful and well-timed.
Johan Lenoxโs score also plays a critical role in the film, but those with misophonia will likely share in the frustration that it does its job a little too well. The function here is for each sound to be as harsh as the difficult experiences our protagonists are experiencing, to which the score accomplishes with great success. The problem is that rather than elevating the (awful) experience, it will rip you right out if youโre sensitive to the kind of noises and repetition it employs.ย
The Plague doesnโt work without Blunck and Rasmussenโs wide-eyed adolescence, but Joel Edgerton โ who also produced the film โ delivers a grounding performance as the boysโ coach. His voice of reason is an awkward one at times, but itโs nice to have a single character able to take Kayo Martinโs Jake โ the filmโs primary instigator โ to task. Martin, to his credit as a performer, is an absolute monster of a child, and the Coachโs voice is a critical offset to much of the teamโs vocal misogyny and broad savagery.
While the build up is technically sound and bolstered by strong performances, The Plagueโs ending falls apart at the seams. Polingerโs intended message is evident, but the road to it sacrifices its impact. Still, the filmโs abrupt ending plays into the overall coarseness of the story, leaving the tone consistent throughout. If youโre on board with that tone, youโre likely going to find The Plague to be pretty remarkable.

