Sala del Terror was built around a precise question: what happens when the horror you've seen on screen no longer has a screen?
The experience constructs a habitable version of The Conjuring universe — the Warner Bros. franchise based on the real case files of demonologists Ed and Lorraine Warren. This isn't a reproduction of the films: it's a translation of their most effective logic into physical space. The sub-genre that defines those stories is "domestic horror" — fear that emerges from places everyone recognizes: hallways, closets, mirrors, children's toys. Cocolab took that logic and turned it into architecture. More than 20 actors on the floor sustain an atmosphere built in layers: sound, light, temperature, and moments engineered to keep visitors in a constant state of alertness. No safe pauses. No comfortable distance.
Sala del Terror is a project by Cocolab in collaboration with Rola Entertainment and Warner Bros. It made its debut at Foro Moliere in Mexico City and continues touring new venues.
