
COMING SOON
Sirât
A father and his young son travel to Morocco in search of a missing daughter, following whispers of her presence through underground rave culture and across an unforgiving desert landscape. What begins as a desperate search slowly transforms into something far more disorienting and existential.
Director
Oliver Laxe (Fire Will Come)
Actors
Sergi López • Bruno Núñez
1h 55m • Rated M • Drama • Spain / France • Spanish


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Sirât
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ncp - no complimentary passes
cap - captioned for hard of hearing

Then it shifts. What initially feels like a road movie fractures into something more elemental and confronting, as narrative certainty gives way to disorientation. Laxe draws on something older than conventional storytelling — a mythic descent, where the journey itself becomes a test of endurance. The experience is immersive and deliberately unsteady, guided as much by sound and sensation as by plot. It won’t meet audiences halfway, but for those willing to go with it, Sirât becomes less a story than a crossing — one that lingers, unsettles, and refuses to fully resolve.

Film Notes
A journey into the unknown, where grief, sound and landscape collide
Oliver Laxe returns with a film that begins on recognisable ground — a missing person, a father’s search — before slipping, almost imperceptibly, into something far stranger. Set against the stark expanses of the Moroccan desert, Sirât follows a man and his son as they embed themselves within a transient rave community, chasing fragments of hope through music, movement and fleeting human connections. The film builds its world through texture rather than exposition: pulsing techno, vast horizons, and the uneasy intimacy of strangers sharing a direction but not a destination.
