The city itself is the co-star. Shot in lush, warm 35mm, Strasbourg is rendered as a labyrinth of reflections and shadows. Guerín uses windows, mirrors, and glass partitions to create layers of depth, blurring the line between the interior world of the café and the exterior world of the flowing river and passing trams. The sound design is equally rich—the clinking of spoons, the rumble of cobblestones, the rush of the wind—creating a sensory experience that feels incredibly immersive.
What makes In the City of Sylvia unforgettable is not what the characters say, but how the camera moves. Guerín, alongside cinematographer Natasha Braier (who would go on to shoot The Neon Demon and Roma ), created a visual grammar of desire and distance. in the city of sylvia 2007
The film is noted for its unique, minimalist approach to storytelling: The city itself is the co-star
The camera work is often still and lingering, capturing "found visual poetry" through natural light and the reflections in tram windows. The sound design is equally rich—the clinking of
The entire film orbits a void. Every woman Éllir follows—the one with the curly hair, the one with the red scarf, the one reading a book on the tram—is potentially Sylvia. But none are confirmed. We never hear her voice. We never see her face. She is purely a construct of memory and longing.