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    • 2.5 out of 5

      • The Quarry is now available on-demand and digitally. It is 98 minutes long and rated R for some violence and language. Our Rating: 2.5 out of 5 (Fairly Good) Although The Quarry feels lackluster in its execution, it's an intriguing story of redemption that's largely carried by a captivating Michael Shannon.
      screenrant.com/quarry-2020-movie-reviews/
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  2. Apr 17, 2020 · Based on a 1995 novel by Damon Galgut, which was set in South Africa and dealt in part with racial tensions in the wake of the ending of apartheid, “The Quarry” sounds as if it has all the elements to be a dark and brooding western-tinged noir drama in the mold of “No Country for Old Men.”

  3. Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 08/14/23 Full Review Ashley H The Quarry is an okay film. It is about a drifter who kills a traveling preacher and takes his place at a small-town...

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  4. Apr 16, 2020 · In “The Quarry,” Shea Whigham stars as a fugitive wanted for murder and arson who, in a moment of anger, kills the preacher (Bruno Bichir) who picked him up on a West Texas roadside, trying...

    • Scott Teems
  5. It is Michael Shannon vs Shea Whigham in slow burning Texas noir that rocks a small town and results in a satisfying and riveting indie with flavor and superb acting. Full Review | Original Score...

  6. www.ign.com › articles › the-quarry-reviewThe Quarry Review - IGN

    • A fun, bloody thrill ride on your first playthrough.
    • The Quarry Gameplay Screenshots
    • The Movie Within the Movie
    • Death Rewind
    • What outcome would you aim for on your first run?
    • Verdict

    By Thomas Wilde

    Updated: Jun 17, 2022 7:28 pm

    Posted: Jun 8, 2022 5:44 pm

    Like many of developer Supermassive’s previous games, The Quarry is clearly made both by and for people who love horror movies. From the start, it slowly builds tension and atmosphere, getting you invested by constantly asking you to make small decisions that will guide its teenage cast of potential murder victims. By the time the blood started flying, every choice felt like one more step in a rolling disaster, and that made it nearly impossible to put down. When I went back to replay it again, however, it was impossible to ignore just how non-interactive much of The Quarry actually is. As a spiritual sequel to Until Dawn, it's a better movie, but a worse game.

    The title location of The Quarry is a summer camp in upstate New York, Hackett's Quarry, that's slowly falling apart. It's initially designed to look like the most postcard-worthy version of itself, backlit by warm sunlight and spread out across approximately a billion acres of natural splendor. It’s a Hollywood version of the perfect summer experience, with colorful cinematography that makes the whole camp look like somebody’s cherished memory. Then the sun goes down, the woods get dangerously quiet, the rot gets more obvious, and the nightmare starts.

    You play as each of the nine camp counselors, controlling one at a time at various points in the roughly 10-hour campaign. You can influence how its events play out through exploration scenes, conversation choices, quick time events, stealth, simple combat, and Mass Effect-style interruptions where you have a short window in which to make a sudden move. There are a lot of accessibility options built into The Quarry that let you adjust the difficulty of all of these actions, or even switch some of them to always automatically succeed. There's also a Movie Mode that lets the story play out without any interactivity at all, headed towards one of a few different preset conclusions. While you'll see most of what there is to see in Movie Mode, you will miss a couple of major events, many optional ones, and a lot of story context that can only come from playing manually.

    You don't have to have twitch reflexes to get through The Quarry.

    While I was never personally interested in using Movie Mode, I can appreciate that it exists. Even without it, you don't have to have solid twitch reflexes to get through The Quarry in the way you did with parts of Until Dawn. In fact, there are several scenes where failing something like a quick time event doesn't necessarily have a bad outcome, which makes them more like snap decisions rather than mechanical challenges.

    The primary issue with The Quarry is that it’s less of a game and more of a lightly interactive movie for most of its running time. You can go for surprisingly long stretches without having to make a meaningful choice or take direct control of a character. All you're asked to do is watch.

    The Quarry is deliberately meant to have a lighter tone than Supermassive's other horror games, in a way that its director compared to Scream, which is backed up by the casting of David Arquette as Hackett’s Quarry’s way-too-into-this-whole-thing head counselor. It's very self-aware right from the start, with a cast of characters who have all seen at least one horror movie before and are acting accordingly.

    At the same time, The Quarry's storyline feels like Supermassive's learned a lot from its past projects and is putting that experience to work. It feels more confident, with a more solid, coherent plot structure. There are still plenty of twists, but they’re carefully calculated, and a few actually managed to take me by surprise.

    The Quarry's Death Rewind feature, which is unlocked after your first clear or offered as a bonus for buying the deluxe edition, gives you three "lives" over the course of a single run. Each one lets you redo the most crucial decision that would've otherwise led to a playable character's death. However, that does mean you can be jumping very far ba...

    Everyone lives

    Everyone dies

    My favorite character lives; everyone else is expendable

    Let the chips fall where they may

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    The cast of motion-captured actors are a particular highlight. A couple of them do still get relatively little to do, and I'd hoped to see more of Lance Hendriksen’s creepy backwoods hunter, but most of the characters are genuinely likable and you're given plenty of time to get to know them. Ariel Winter, Siobhan Williams, and Justice Smith as Abigail, Laura, and Ryan, respectively, are all particular standouts, and Brenda Song as Kaitlyn somehow manages to end up as the biggest badass in the cast.

    The Quarry is worth playing at least once, but when compared to Until Dawn, it's one step forward and one step back. It features a solid script performed by a great cast, with a slow-burn story that you can guide to a few different satisfying (or anticlimactic) conclusions. It's not as interactive as I'd like it to be, though, and that makes replay...

    • Thomas Wilde
  7. Apr 17, 2020 · Although The Quarry feels lackluster in its execution, it's an intriguing story of redemption that's largely carried by a captivating Michael Shannon. Based on the novel by Damon Galgut, The Quarry centers on a drifter (Shea Whigham), who is only ever known to viewers as The Man.

  8. www.metacritic.com › movie › the-quarryThe Quarry - Metacritic

    Apr 17, 2020 · Soon a gruesome discovery at a local quarry forces the killer to fight for his freedom. After murdering a traveling preacher, a fugitive drifter (Shea Whigham) travels to a small town and poses as the man he killed.

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