In Oliver Laxe’s Cannes Jury Prize-winning Sirāt (2025), a caravan of ravers is headed for revelry only to skid deeper into death’s jaws. This bunch of non-conformists defies military clutches, hurtling furthermore towards an abyss. The Moroccan desert stages a chain of events within a missing-person narrative, lurching between shocks of escalating potency. At times, straight lines perforate images, splintering into crooked shapes. The sandy plains glimpse tantalizing possibility, as they seduce all closer to destruction. Any dream of bodily transcendence becomes riddled with mortal terror. Environment, previously liberating, mutates into one spiked with annihilating peril. Having lived in Morocco for twenty years, the French-Spanish-Galician filmmaker finds stillness in the Saharan landscapes, oscillating between the eternal and sensory instant. We feel a deep void lurking at the heart of his films, both luring his characters and keeping them at bay.