‘Sirât’ review: Oliver Laxe’s long strange trip stars Sergi López

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‘Sirât’ review: Oliver Laxe’s long strange trip stars Sergi López

Dir. Oliver Laxe. Spain/France 2025. 115 minutes. 

The newest from French-Spanish director Oliver Laxe, Sirât is the proverbial lengthy, unusual journey. Half journey, half mystic-existential odyssey, it’s the boldest enterprise up to now from a film-maker who has a style for grappling with the challenges of the actual – as witnessed within the flame-steeped vistas of his final movie, 2019’s Hearth Will Come, set in Galicia. In Cannes Competitors title Sirât, he groups Catalan actor Sergi López with a forged of non-professionals exuding pungent ‘actual factor’ vibes, in a travelogue drama that raises the ante on his earlier Moroccan enterprise, 2016’s Mimosas.

Laxe brings the management of suspense he displayed so impressively in ’Hearth Will Come’

Laxe maintains rising rigidity all through, though to frustratingly inconclusve impact and considerably at the price of typical dramatic satisfactions, however the boldness of the enterprise will attraction mightily to cinephiles hungry for motion pictures that take actual dangers after its Cannes premiere.

The movie begins with hefty speaker cupboards hauled into place for a rave someplace within the Moroccan desert. Amid the partying crowds of crusties, freaks and neo-hippies is a middle-aged man, Luis (López), accompanied by his younger son Estebán (Bruno Nuñez) and their gentle-natured terrier Pipa. Luis is looking for his daughter, whom he hasn’t seen for 5 months. However the rave is damaged up by troopers who evacuate the realm, asserting {that a} state of emergency has been declared. Apparently struggle has damaged out, main one character to muse, “Is that is what the top of the world looks like?”, and one other to answer, “It’s been the top of the world for a very long time.”

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Towards this apocalyptic backdrop, Luis and Estebán be a part of a bunch of not-so-young techno-nomads heading for an additional rave means throughout the Sahara, the pair nonetheless seeking the lacking woman. Luis’s small car isn’t suited to to the rigours of what is going to be a harmful journey, however he faces as much as powerful challenges, and a sure diploma of tradition conflict, as he befriends the self-styled ‘household’ of voyagers. They’re performed by a quintet (Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Henderson, Jade Oukid, Richard ‘Bigui’ Bellamy, Tonin Janvier) all utilizing their very own first names and apparently representing a model of their actual selves.

At first, Sirât appears to comply with a really related path to the voyage of Mimosas, however with out the factor of Muslim fable. Mysticism continues to be current, nevertheless, the title denoting a path or a bridge, on this case between paradise and hell. After the hedonistic euphoria of the opening rave – with Kangding Ray’s bass-heavy music pumped to the max all through – the rigours of the highway (and off-road) ultimately lead to a genuinely surprising second, because the travellers realise that the specter of dying could be very actual. Certainly, that is a kind of existential dramas wherein – with out revealing an excessive amount of – the protagonists is perhaps mentioned primarily to be already useless from the beginning.

Because the temper intensifies, Laxe brings to bear the management of suspense that he displayed so impressively in Hearth Will ComeSirât may very well be described as an anarcho-hippie Wages Of Worry – the opposite comparability being William Friedkin’s 1977 remake Sorceror, given how a lot Sirât’s music echoes that movie’s Tangerine Dream rating.

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Here’s a movie that revels in its setting – the keynote set magnificently at the beginning, with throbbing bass resonating in opposition to a sheer wall of ochre cliffs. The shoot itself was presumably a dangerous enterprise, navigating troublesome territory that actually comes alive, to variously transfixing and threatening impact. Sirât additionally makes essentially the most of its forged – the travellers projecting a real sun-baked, grizzled sense of getting knocked round, even all the way down to a few lacking limbs (Janvier placing his knee stump to comedian use in a rendition of Boris Vian’s track ‘Le Déserteur’). As for López, he speaks significantly lower than in most roles, however brings his imposing and affecting presence to a really bodily efficiency, carrying the viewer by way of a movie that genuinely deserves that over-used tag ‘immersive’.

Manufacturing firms: Filmes da Ermida, El Deseo, Uri Movies,  Los Desertores Movies, 4A4 Productions

Worldwide gross sales: The Match Manufacturing unit, data@matchfactory.de

Producers: Xavi Font, Mani Mortazavi, Andrea Queralt, Esther García, Agustín Almodóvar, Pedro Almodóvar, Oriol Maymo, Guillermo Farré, Domingo Corral

Screenplay: Oliver Laxe, Santiago Fillol

Cinematography: Mauro Herce

Editor: Cristóbal Fernández

Manufacturing design: Ateca Laia

Music: Kangding Ray

Primary forged: Sergi López, Bruno Nuñez, Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Henderson, Jade Oukid, Richard ‘Bigui’ Bellamy, Tonin Janvier

  

 

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