Quicksand (2023) tells the story of a married American couple — Sofia and Josh — whose relationship is on the verge of collapse. Sofia, a doctor, travels to Colombia to give a lecture at a work conference, returning to the country of her birth after years abroad. Josh, her husband, accompanies her, marking his first visit to Bogotá.
Their trip begins with tension and unspoken distance — distant from their children back in the United States and dealing internally with a marriage that seems to have lost its spark. In hopes of reconnecting and perhaps finding some clarity, they decide to go on a hike through the rainforest near Bogotá. But what was meant to be a refreshing escape quickly turns into a nightmare.

During their hike, the couple runs into danger: a threatening stranger who seems to be trailing them. After a confrontation over a perceived betrayal and theft, they feel unsafe and decide to flee into a remote and off-limits rainforest zone — one notorious for its treacherous terrain.In the chaos, Sofia slips into what’s referred to as quicksand — though the film hints the terrain is more like a viscous bog — and becomes hopelessly stuck.
Josh jumps in to save her. The two find themselves trapped, unable to move, engulfed by the mud. From that point on, the film becomes a tense, claustrophobic survival story: they must rely on each other for both physical escape and emotional survival. As time passes, the dangers increase — from venomous wildlife deep in the jungle to the ever-present risk of starvation, dehydration, and the psychological burden of their failing marriage.

Stuck in this life-or-death ordeal, the couple is forced to confront not only the physical peril but also their relationship’s fractures. The overwhelming stress and fear eventually push them to face painful truths, their regrets, and what they once cherished but lost: trust, love, and responsibility. Through suffering, fear, and desperation, their ordeal becomes a crucible for possible redemption and reconnection
In the end, when rescue finally arrives, they emerge not only physically endangered but emotionally changed. Their fight to survive together under extreme pressure forces them to reevaluate their marriage — their bond tested by fear and mud. Quicksand thus becomes more than a survival thriller: it becomes a stark examination of a marriage teetering on the edge, and whether life-and-death circumstances can remind people of what truly matters.
Though the film has its flaws — some critics argue that the script under-develops their relationship before the crisis, and the suspense sometimes fails to deliver — the central premise remains powerful: survival isn’t only about escaping danger but confronting truths long buried





