In The Sweet Sound of Death (La Llamadain Spanish), death doesn’t signal the end between two lovers, but argues that it always should. Director José Antonio Nieves Conde’s ghost story may present itself as a supernatural romance with familiar themes and tropes throughout — young lovers, spectral visitations, eerie silences — but beneath its gothic style lies something much more devastating. Rather than reinforcing the familiar fantasy of love triumphing over death, The Sweet Sound of Death quietly deconstructs it. The film is not about the endurance of love after death, but the consequences of refusing to accept death as finite.