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SIRÂT

( 2025 )
Official Selection Out of Competition |
 
Spain
 |
 Spanish, French |
 115 min

About the film

A father (Sergi López) and his son search for a vanished daughter/sister at a relentless rave deep in Morocco's mountains, forcing them to confront their limits in the burning wilderness. This acclaimed film won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.

Director

Olivier Laxe

Óliver Laxe, born in 1982 in Paris and raised in Galicia, is a Spanish filmmaker whose work is rooted in landscapes and spiritual inquiry. After studying cinema in Barcelona, he co-founded Zeitun Films in Tangier. His debut, Todos vós sodes capitáns (2010), self-produced in Morocco, won the FIPRESCI Prize at Cannes Directors’ Fortnight. Mimosas (2016), shot in the Atlas Mountains, received the Critics’ Week Grand Prize, while O que arde (2019), filmed in the remote Os Ancares range, triumphed in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard. His latest film, Sirat (2025), an odyssey across the Moroccan desert, won the Jury Prize at Cannes and was selected as Spain’s Oscar submission.

Producer

Domingo Corral, Oliver Laxe, Xavi Font, Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar, Esther García, Oriol Maymó, Mani Mortazavi and Andrea Queralt

Production Company

Screenplay

Santiago Fillol, Oliver Laxe

Cinematography

Mauro Herce

Editing

Cristóbal Fernández

Sound

Laia Casanovas

Cast

Sergi López, Brúno Nuñez, Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Henderson, Tonin Janvier, Jade Oukid, Richard Bellamy

Contacts

International Sales: The Match Factory, Germany, info@matchfactory.de

Producer

Domingo Corral, Oliver Laxe, Xavi Font, Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar, Esther García, Oriol Maymó, Mani Mortazavi and Andrea Queralt

Production Company

Screenplay

Santiago Fillol, Oliver Laxe

Cinematography

Mauro Herce

Editing

Cristóbal Fernández

Sound

Laia Casanovas

Cast

Sergi López, Brúno Nuñez, Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Henderson, Tonin Janvier, Jade Oukid, Richard Bellamy

Contacts

International Sales: The Match Factory, Germany, info@matchfactory.de

More About Film

In Islam, Al-Sirāt refers to the bridge over Hell that every Muslim must cross after death, on Judgment Day—wide for the righteous and very narrow for sinners—which will lead them to eternal life or damnation.Luis, a father, and his teenage son Esteban embark on a desperate journey across southern Morocco in search of Mar, daughter and sister, who disappeared after attending a rave in the desert. They begin by distributing flyers with her photograph among young partygoers, entering a subculture of music, trance, and radical freedom. Their path takes them deeper into remote areas, toward gatherings near the Mauritanian border, while radio broadcasts announce approaching global conflicts. The journey becomes an ordeal marked by accidents and illness. Amid all this, Luis persists. Their pilgrimage culminates in the image of a freight train carrying migrants across the endless sands, a haunting, unresolved conclusion that transforms the search for Mar into a collective odyssey of survival and liminality.Sirat employs the desert not as a neutral setting but as a metaphysical stage: a liminal threshold where landscape, ritual, and catastrophe converge. Laxe collaborates with cinematographer Mauro Herce, whose 16mm textures accentuate grain, solar overexposure, and nocturnal shadows, producing a sensorial image that feels both raw and transcendental. Sound design is equally structural: electronic beats are not mere accompaniment but narrative pulse, guiding perception from ecstatic abandon to mortal danger. Non-professional performers, exposed to physical exhaustion and heat, embody vulnerability with rare authenticity. The film rejects closure, evoking  “sirāt” as metaphor: an unstable crossing suspended between perdition and redemption, forcing viewers into a state of uncertainty that is both existential and political.Teresa Cavina

Producer

Domingo Corral, Oliver Laxe, Xavi Font, Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar, Esther García, Oriol Maymó, Mani Mortazavi and Andrea Queralt

Screenplay

Santiago Fillol, Oliver Laxe

Cinematography

Mauro Herce

Editing

Cristóbal Fernández

Sound

Laia Casanovas

Cast

Sergi López, Brúno Nuñez, Stefania Gadda, Joshua Liam Henderson, Tonin Janvier, Jade Oukid, Richard Bellamy

Contact

International Sales: The Match Factory, Germany, info@matchfactory.de

More About Film

In Islam, Al-Sirāt refers to the bridge over Hell that every Muslim must cross after death, on Judgment Day—wide for the righteous and very narrow for sinners—which will lead them to eternal life or damnation.Luis, a father, and his teenage son Esteban embark on a desperate journey across southern Morocco in search of Mar, daughter and sister, who disappeared after attending a rave in the desert. They begin by distributing flyers with her photograph among young partygoers, entering a subculture of music, trance, and radical freedom. Their path takes them deeper into remote areas, toward gatherings near the Mauritanian border, while radio broadcasts announce approaching global conflicts. The journey becomes an ordeal marked by accidents and illness. Amid all this, Luis persists. Their pilgrimage culminates in the image of a freight train carrying migrants across the endless sands, a haunting, unresolved conclusion that transforms the search for Mar into a collective odyssey of survival and liminality.Sirat employs the desert not as a neutral setting but as a metaphysical stage: a liminal threshold where landscape, ritual, and catastrophe converge. Laxe collaborates with cinematographer Mauro Herce, whose 16mm textures accentuate grain, solar overexposure, and nocturnal shadows, producing a sensorial image that feels both raw and transcendental. Sound design is equally structural: electronic beats are not mere accompaniment but narrative pulse, guiding perception from ecstatic abandon to mortal danger. Non-professional performers, exposed to physical exhaustion and heat, embody vulnerability with rare authenticity. The film rejects closure, evoking  “sirāt” as metaphor: an unstable crossing suspended between perdition and redemption, forcing viewers into a state of uncertainty that is both existential and political.Teresa Cavina