472 - Sirât

472 - Sirât

From Eavesdropping at the Movies by Jose Arroyo and Michael Glass

April 3, 2026 · 34 min

About this episode

The episode discusses the film Sirât, focusing on its tone and the emotional journey of a father and son searching for a missing daughter amidst a backdrop of raves and war.

Sirât is all about tone, and the time it takes to establish it. It begins with an array of massive speakers being set up in a desert, and over the next several minutes, we experience an outdoor rave, the music trance-inducing, the ravers moving freely and in their own worlds, as we gradually narrow our focus on an out-of-place father, Luis, and his young son, who we learn are searching for his daughter, last seen five months ago. Failing to find her there, Luis latches on to the mention of another, upcoming rave, and, while war breaks out in the background, uncertainly follows a group of ravers there. It's possible to spoil Sirât severely - some of what occurs is barely signposted and hard to believe, but just as we're told about the music that underscores everything, this is a film for dancing to, not listening to. It would be all too easy to watch Sirât at a remove and find the events depicted ludicrous and laughable, but director Óliver Laxe demonstrates such control of tone that it's easy to be lured into the emotional state he needs to shock us when he wants. The only thing you should be prepared to expect is a lack of easy answers. Sirât is a film about a world coming apart…

Topics covered

  • film
  • tone
  • emotional state
  • rave
  • search

Keywords

  • Óliver Laxe
  • Sirât
  • music
  • dance
  • emotional control

Mentioned in this episode

Books & works: Sirât

More episodes of Eavesdropping at the Movies

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Eavesdropping at the Movies podcast page.