Piggy (Cerdita) (2022) is a raw and unsettling Spanish horror drama that blends psychological tension with social commentary. The film approaches the genre from an emotional perspective, focusing less on jump scares and more on the lasting damage caused by cruelty and exclusion.

The story centers on an overweight teenage girl who endures relentless bullying from a group of popular girls while spending the summer in her rural village. A humiliating encounter at the local pool becomes the emotional breaking point, setting her on a long walk home that quietly transforms her sense of self and morality.

What makes Piggy especially effective is its unflinching portrayal of bullying. The violence is not exaggerated, but painfully realistic, capturing how humiliation, silence, and social indifference can be as damaging as physical harm. The film forces viewers to sit with the discomfort rather than offering easy sympathy.

As the narrative shifts toward horror, the story becomes morally complex. The protagonist is no longer just a victim, but a witness to escalating violence, placing her in an ethically disturbing position. The film raises difficult questions about guilt, revenge, and the cost of being seen after a lifetime of invisibility.


The lead performance is powerful and restrained, relying on facial expression and body language to convey rage, shame, and emotional awakening. The rural setting, sunlit and quiet, contrasts sharply with the darkness of the events, reinforcing the sense that horror can exist in plain sight.