The Plague is a critically acclaimed psychological drama-thriller centered on timeless themes of adolescent bullying, peer pressure, social hierarchies, and body vulnerability at an all-boys water polo camp set in 2003, drawing clear inspiration from Lord of the Flies and similar tales of youthful cruelty. Storytelling remains firmly traditional and entertainment-driven, escalating from psychodrama to body horror without detours into identity politics, systemic critiques, or social justice lectures. Casting features a racially diverse ensemble of young boys that feels organic to a modern summer camp depiction rather than forced or clashing with the historical setting—no race-swapping, gender changes, or prominent LGBTQ+ representation. One character is coded as neurodivergent (autistic traits via eczema and behaviors), and his exclusion highlights universal bullying dynamics rather than serving as a platform for progressive advocacy. Director Charlie Polinger emphasizes capturing the raw chaos of male adolescence and puberty's horrors in interviews, with no activist intent, DEI mandates, or 'challenging norms' rhetoric. Reception is overwhelmingly positive (97% Rotten Tomatoes), with praise for its tense mood and no significant audience backlash labeling it 'woke' or citing ideological intrusions—proving a refreshing focus on pure storytelling that entertains through discomfort without compromising for messaging.