• Latest
  • Trending
Sorda Review

Sorda Review: Listening to Silence with New Ears

Marcella Review

Marcella Review: Finding a Home in Flavor

Wick Is Pain Review

Wick Is Pain Review: The Real-World Cost of a Fictional Universe

Sniper The Last Stand Review

Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

Last Bullet Review

Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

PaperKlay Review

PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

Swing Bout Review

Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

squid game season 3

Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

20 hours ago
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

20 hours ago
Michelle Pfeiffer

Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

20 hours ago
Candice King

Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

20 hours ago
Meet the Parents

Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

20 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 29, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    squid game season 3

    Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

    Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

    Michelle Pfeiffer

    Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

    Candice King

    Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

    Meet the Parents

    Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

    Akira Warner Bros

    Warner Bros. Lets Akira Rights Expire After Two-Decade Struggle

    Adam Sandler and Jerry Bruckheimer

    Sandler, Bruckheimer Turn NHL Draft Into Hollywood Showcase

    Matthew Goode

    Matthew Goode’s ‘Too Dark’ Bond Pitch Sheds Light on 007 Reboot Debate

    because shes worth it

    Five-Lion Triumph for L’Oréal’s Ilon Specht Documentary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Marcella Review

    Marcella Review: Finding a Home in Flavor

    Wick Is Pain Review

    Wick Is Pain Review: The Real-World Cost of a Fictional Universe

    Sniper The Last Stand Review

    Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

    Last Bullet Review

    Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

    Swing Bout Review

    Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

    Dalia and the Red Book Review

    Dalia and the Red Book Review: Writing Your Own Escape from Grief

    Britain and the Blitz Review

    Britain and the Blitz Review: A Beautiful, Incomplete Truth

    Peg O' My Heart Review

    Peg O’ My Heart Review: Strong Acting Can’t Save a Clumsy Script

  • Game Reviews
    PaperKlay Review

    PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

    Projected Dreams Review

    Projected Dreams Review: Illuminating a Beautiful Story

    Tom Clancy's The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review

    Tom Clancy’s The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review: A Nostalgic But Flawed Homecoming

    9 Kings Review

    9 Kings Review: Seven Monarchs, Endless Strategic Possibilities

    Rematch Review

    Rematch Review: Sloclap’s Ambitious Football Experiment Falls Short of Goals

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    squid game season 3

    Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

    Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Trailer Ignites Global Push for Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Trilogy

    Michelle Pfeiffer

    Michelle Pfeiffer-Inspired Amelia Takes Aim at M3GAN in Sequel Launch

    Candice King

    Prime Video’s We Were Liars Opens to Mixed Reviews, Strong Summer Interest

    Meet the Parents

    Ben Stiller, Robert De Niro Set Thanksgiving 2026 Return in Meet the Parents 4

    Akira Warner Bros

    Warner Bros. Lets Akira Rights Expire After Two-Decade Struggle

    Adam Sandler and Jerry Bruckheimer

    Sandler, Bruckheimer Turn NHL Draft Into Hollywood Showcase

    Matthew Goode

    Matthew Goode’s ‘Too Dark’ Bond Pitch Sheds Light on 007 Reboot Debate

    because shes worth it

    Five-Lion Triumph for L’Oréal’s Ilon Specht Documentary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Marcella Review

    Marcella Review: Finding a Home in Flavor

    Wick Is Pain Review

    Wick Is Pain Review: The Real-World Cost of a Fictional Universe

    Sniper The Last Stand Review

    Sniper: The Last Stand Review: Anchored by a Confident Hero

    Last Bullet Review

    Last Bullet Review: Going Out with a Bang

    Swing Bout Review

    Swing Bout Review: A Brutal Fight Outside the Ring

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review

    Murder Has Two Faces Season 1 Review: Who Gets Remembered?

    Dalia and the Red Book Review

    Dalia and the Red Book Review: Writing Your Own Escape from Grief

    Britain and the Blitz Review

    Britain and the Blitz Review: A Beautiful, Incomplete Truth

    Peg O' My Heart Review

    Peg O’ My Heart Review: Strong Acting Can’t Save a Clumsy Script

  • Game Reviews
    PaperKlay Review

    PaperKlay Review: Fun, Flawed, and Full of Heart

    Projected Dreams Review

    Projected Dreams Review: Illuminating a Beautiful Story

    Tom Clancy's The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review

    Tom Clancy’s The Division 2: Battle for Brooklyn Review: A Nostalgic But Flawed Homecoming

    9 Kings Review

    9 Kings Review: Seven Monarchs, Endless Strategic Possibilities

    Rematch Review

    Rematch Review: Sloclap’s Ambitious Football Experiment Falls Short of Goals

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Sorda Review

Andrew Garfield Says Spider-Man Return Would Need to Be “Very Strange”

The Devil Smokes Review: Candlelight Prayers in a House of Silence

Home Entertainment Movies

Sorda Review: Listening to Silence with New Ears

Caleb Anderson by Caleb Anderson
2 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

When Sorda made its debut in the Panorama sidebar at the Berlinale earlier this year, its quiet power was immediately clear. Set against the sun‑baked plains of rural Spain, Eva Libertad’s first feature tracks Ángela, a deaf ceramicist, and her hearing partner Héctor as they brace for parenthood. There’s no grand spectacle here—moments unfold with the precision of a potter’s wheel, revealing the emotional contours of two people learning to share a world they experience in very different ways.

From the very first frame, Libertad invites us inside Ángela’s perspective: lips form questions she can’t hear, sign language punctuates conversations, and the only soundtrack is the soft echo of her own heartbeat. Yet the film never feels aloof or experimental for its own sake. Instead, it weaves intimacy with social reality, showing how a new baby can both unite and stretch a relationship.

This is a low‑key portrait, driven by small gestures—a hand squeeze, a glance across a table—and anchored by Miriam Garlo’s expressive performance. As someone who’s spent too many hours debating nonlinear edits in French New Wave, I find Sorda refreshingly direct: its structure mirrors the unpredictability of life rather than conforming to set patterns. In this review, we’ll explore how Libertad’s narrative choices and technical flair create a story that feels both immediate and deeply human.

Shifting Rhythms: Plot and Structure

Set in a sun‑warmed corner of rural Spain, Sorda unfolds in Ángela’s pottery studio and the village’s modest gathering spots, where clay dust settles as gently as routine. The film opens with unhurried shots of wheel‑thrown pots and neighbors signing across a café table. This choice of setting grounds the story in a communal world that feels lived‑in—reminding me of the quiet streets in Éric Rohmer’s tales of chance encounters—while highlighting the couple’s blend of isolation and solidarity.

The story arc resists a clean three‑act template. In the first thirty minutes, we watch Ángela and Héctor celebrating their child’s imminent arrival among friends who share her deaf experience and parents who can’t help but worry. Then comes the midpoint: a gripping birth sequence where Libertad’s handheld camera hovers over Ángela’s bed as she struggles to lip‑read masked midwives. When Héctor steps back for a moment, her disorientation becomes ours, and that brief absence sharpens the film’s emotional stakes.

After Ona’s birth, the second act feels almost cyclical—fresh mornings with a newborn dissolve into sleepless nights, and Ángela’s confidence gives way to uncertainty about whether her daughter will inherit deafness. Héctor moves between supportive partner and accidental outsider, and family dinners become battlegrounds over hearing aids. Here, the film’s pacing mirrors newborn time: quiet stretches punctuated by sudden tension.

Key scenes carry much of the narrative weight. The delivery room’s tight framing captures beads of sweat and quick glances; in a later scene, a well‑meaning shop assistant’s inability to sign underscores how small gestures of indifference can feel enormous.

An intimate a cappella moment—Ángela and Héctor sharing a private song—brings an almost jazz‑like improvisation to their communication. Finally, Libertad shifts the sound design near the end, layering muffled cries and amplified vibrations to bridge our hearing world and Ángela’s silence. The result is a structure that feels both linear and elastic, bending time to the couple’s shifting bond.

Embodying Silence: Characterization and Performances

Miriam Garlo anchors Sorda with a performance that feels lived‑in. Watching her move through Ángela’s world—hands shaping clay, eyes scanning lips—reminded me of a jazz solo, each gesture riffing on the last with precision and heart. In early scenes, she radiates confidence: a skilled artisan at work, fully present in her craft.

Sorda Review

But as parenthood looms, Garlo layers on vulnerability—tightened shoulders, a wavering glance when Héctor drifts too far—that maps Ángela’s shift from self‑assured creator to an unsure new mother. Without dialogue, Garlo’s face becomes a canvas for pride, fear and isolation; it’s performance as pure cinema, recalling the silent expressiveness of Godard’s Anna Karina yet wholly her own.

Álvaro Cervantes brings warmth and restraint to Héctor, a partner whose empathy sometimes collides with his own limits. His support is palpable—gentle touches, whispered reassurances—but he’s not immune to frustration. The moment he clicks his fingers near baby Ona’s ears, testing her hearing, reveals his struggle: he means to include Ángela but inadvertently alienates her. Cervantes’s reaction—a flicker of guilt, the quick descent into apology—captures that tightrope walk between caring ally and outsider, offering a portrait of love under pressure.

Around them, the ensemble illustrates the wider world’s textures. Ángela’s circle of deaf friends provides laughter and shared shorthand—group sign‑language scenes feel like communal jam sessions, everyone in sync. In contrast, Héctor’s relatives and the hearing‑aid shop clerk embody well‑intentioned blindness: solicitous offers of devices that Ángela quietly rejects. These moments underscore how small missteps can widen emotional gaps.

What binds it all is chemistry built on unspoken exchange. A simple glance across a workbench or the way Héctor mirrors Ángela’s sign for “quiet” speaks volumes. Their micro‑expressions—her soft smile when he anticipates her needs, his attentive nod as she signs—create a natural rhythm, as if each scene’s emotional score were improvised in real time.

Behind the Lens: Libertad’s Cinematic Language

Eva Libertad’s first feature feels rooted in real experience. By partnering with deaf collaborators and casting Miriam Garlo, she brings authenticity that echoes the best of indie cinema’s inclusive spirit. There’s a documentarian honesty in her approach—moments captured with raw immediacy—yet each scene holds a quiet intimacy, as if we’re eavesdropping on private life rather than watching actors perform.

Sorda Review

The camera shifts to match Ángela’s emotional state. In crisis—like the gripping birth sequence—hand‑held shots wobble just enough to make us share her unease. In calmer scenes at the pottery studio or around the kitchen table, the frame settles into longer, steady takes, letting us absorb the gentle rhythms of daily routine.

Framing stays close to hands and faces, highlighting sign‑language gestures and the subtlest flickers of expression. This focus on body language feels akin to Godard’s obsession with faces in Breathless, though Libertad never sacrifices narrative clarity for style.

Editing moves at its own heartbeat. Sequences unfold with measured patience, reflecting the endless cycle of feeding, soothing, and waiting that defines new parenthood. Pauses are bold choices here—silences left intact long enough to make the next exchange resonate more deeply.

When sound returns, it does so with intention: a soft tap of a spoon, the distant coo of a baby, then an a cappella motif that feels both spare and soulful. These shifts remind me of Truffaut’s use of music in Jules et Jim, where a simple melody can carry the weight of unspoken emotions.

In an age of rapid cuts and flashy camera moves, Libertad stakes out her own path. She honors the textures of her characters’ lives and trusts that stillness can carry as much power as motion.

Silence Speaks Volumes: Sound and Sight

Libertad opens Sorda with title cards drawn against utter quiet—no ambient hum, no score—inviting us to inhabit Ángela’s world on her own terms. Those deliberate stretches of muted sound punctuate the film: a newborn’s cry heard only through its vibrations, a bustling kitchen rendered eerily still. It’s a reminder that absence of noise can speak as loudly as any shout in more conventional dramas.

Sorda Review

When sound does thread through the film, it balances diegetic authenticity with carefully placed musical moments. Gina Ferrer García’s capture of rural Spain—birdsong, pottery wheels, distant tractors—grounds us in place. Then Verde Prata’s a cappella piece enters almost like a spontaneous jazz riff, its raw human voice contrasting with the earthbound textures of clay and stone. That interplay recalls the way Truffaut would slip a chord progression into a scene of everyday life, transforming it without fanfare.

Later, Libertad stages an experiment with hearing‑aid simulation: audio crackles shift between muffled warmth and sudden distortion, as if the device itself has a pulse. These tremors in the mix let us feel Ángela’s occasional claustrophobia, forging empathy more directly than any explanatory dialogue could.

Visually, Ferrer García favors natural light and a palette of ochre and slate—the pottery studio’s kilns echoing the warmth of human touch. Recurrent motifs—hands shaping clay, close‑ups on signing fingers, lips pausing mid‑word—create a grammar of gesture that feels both lyrical and precise. In marrying these elements, Sorda turns every frame into a study of how we see and hear the world.

Contours of Silence: Themes and Symbolism

At its heart, Sorda stakes a claim on deafness as identity. By choosing the title “Sorda,” Libertad and Garlo reclaim a word often used dismissively, turning it into a badge of authenticity. That act of naming resonates beyond the screen—reminding me of how Truffaut’s characters in The 400 Blows owned their own rebellions. Ángela’s worry that her daughter might inherit deafness becomes a larger meditation on what we pass down: not just genes, but the ways we define ourselves.

Sorda Review

Motherhood in this film isn’t presented as an automatic bond. Instead, it’s a negotiation between universal love and sensory disconnect. Ángela cradles Ona with fierce devotion, yet the absence of audible cues forces her to invent new rhythms of care. The baby becomes both mirror and bridge, testing the couple’s ability to translate affection across worlds—much like jazz musicians finding harmony through improvisation.

Communication and isolation play out not only between hearing and deaf, but within traditions that assume everyone shares the same language. Family dinners flicker between sign‑filled solidarity and unspoken misunderstandings, while public spaces reveal a social “deafness” to individual needs. In that critique, Sorda holds up a mirror to our own inattentive habits, urging us to listen with more than just ears.

Final Cadence: Weighing Sorda’s Resonance

Sorda offers a rare blend of intimate drama and thoughtful craft. Miriam Garlo’s deeply felt portrayal of Ángela, paired with Álvaro Cervantes’s nuanced turn as Héctor, delivers performances that echo long after the credits. The choice to center deaf experience without resorting to melodrama gives the film an authenticity that feels both fresh and essential.

Sorda Review

Technically, Gina Ferrer García’s naturalistic cinematography and Libertad’s careful editing create a rhythm that mirrors the give‑and‑take of new parenthood, while the strategic use of silence and sound design forges genuine empathy.

At moments, the film’s pacing can linger—pauses meant to invite reflection sometimes stretch a scene’s momentum. A few narrative beats, such as extended family debates over hearing aids, verge on instructional. Yet these are small notes in an otherwise compelling score.

Sorda stands out as a debut that respects its audience’s intelligence, inviting viewers to engage with what it means to live between worlds. In an era when mainstream studios often shy away from stories of difference, Libertad confidently steps forward, offering a film that asks us to listen—and to see—with renewed attention.

Full Credits

Director: Eva Libertad

Writer: Eva Libertad

Producers: Miriam Porté, Nuria Muñoz Ortín, Amalia Blanco

Cast: Miriam Garlo (Ángela), Álvaro Cervantes (Héctor), Elena Irureta (Elvira), Joaquín Notario (Fede)

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Gina Ferrer

Editor: Marta Velasco

Composer: Aránzazu Calleja​

The Review

Sorda

8 Score

Sorda is a poised debut that combines emotional honesty with confident technical craft, offering a moving portrait of deaf identity and parenthood that challenges viewers to listen anew. While a few extended scenes slow its pace, the film’s authentic performances and inventive sound design make it a standout in contemporary independent cinema.

PROS

  • Authentic central performances that convey depth without excess dialogue
  • Thoughtful sound design that uses silence as an emotional tool
  • Naturalistic cinematography capturing tactile details of rural life
  • Intimate pacing that mirrors the rhythms of new parenthood
  • Inclusive representation through collaboration with the deaf community

CONS

  • Occasional pacing lulls during extended family discussions
  • A few scenes feel overtly explanatory
  • Limited narrative scope outside the central couple’s dynamic
  • Sparse musical moments may feel minimal to some viewers

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: A Contracorriente FilmsAdolfo BlancoÁlvaro CervantesDeafDeaf (Sorda)Elena IruretaEva LibertadFeaturedGina Ferrer GarcíaMiriam GarloMiriam PortéNuria MuñozSordaSorda (2025)
Previous Post

Andrew Garfield Says Spider-Man Return Would Need to Be “Very Strange”

Next Post

The Devil Smokes Review: Candlelight Prayers in a House of Silence

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Smoke Review

    Smoke Review: The Year’s Most Unpredictable and Unsettling Show

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alma and the Wolf Review: Ethan Embry Shines in a Flawed Fever Dream

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • She’s Got No Name Review: A Moving Tale of Empathy and Survival

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Waterfront Review: Kevin Williamson’s Return to Murky Family Waters

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Heads of State Review
Movies

Heads of State Review: Elba and Cena Carry the Ticket

1 day ago
Squid Game Season 3 Review
Entertainment

Squid Game Season 3 Review: No Happy Endings Here

2 days ago
Love Island USA Season 7 Review
Entertainment

Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

2 days ago
The Bear Season 4 Review
Entertainment

The Bear Season 4 Review: A Contemplative, Cathartic Final Course

3 days ago
Surviving Ohio State Review
Movies

Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version