The red carpet at the American Film Institute Festival in Los Angeles shimmered under a November sunset on the 5th, 2025, as Hollywood’s elite gathered for the world premiere of Sarah’s Oil, a geopolitical thriller that’s already igniting conversations far beyond the multiplex. Directed by the visionary Ava DuVernay in her first foray into high-stakes espionage, the film stars Zendaya as Sarah Khalid, a brilliant petroleum engineer thrust into a labyrinth of corporate intrigue and international brinkmanship. Clocking in at 128 minutes, Sarah’s Oil isn’t just a pulse-pounding narrative of sabotage and seduction; it’s a mirror held up to the world’s escalating resource wars, premiering at a moment when real-life energy crises—from Arctic drilling disputes to OPEC+ fractures—dominate headlines. As DuVernay told Variety post-screening, “This isn’t fiction; it’s a warning shot across the bow of our fossil-fueled future.”
At its core, Sarah’s Oil follows Khalid, a second-generation American of Iraqi descent, who uncovers a clandestine plot by a shadowy consortium of oil barons to manipulate global supply chains. Fresh from a stint at ExxonMobil’s Houston labs, Sarah’s recruited by the CIA for a covert op in the South China Sea, where China’s aggressive claims on disputed atolls clash with U.S. naval patrols. The script, penned by Oscar-nominated writer Cord Jefferson (American Fiction), masterfully weaves technical jargon—think hydraulic fracturing yields and seismic anomaly detections—with visceral action: drone strikes on offshore rigs, boardroom betrayals in Dubai penthouses, and a harrowing escape through Baku’s labyrinthine oil fields. Zendaya, shedding her Euphoria skin for a role that demands both intellectual heft and physical grit, delivers a tour de force. “Sarah’s not a damsel or a drone pilot; she’s the fulcrum,” the 29-year-old actress explained in a pre-premiere interview with The Hollywood Reporter. Her performance, laced with quiet fury and tactical genius, has early Oscar whispers swirling louder than a gusher.
The ensemble elevates the stakes. Rami Malek slinks in as Viktor Hale, a rogue Russian oligarch with a velvet voice and a vendetta, his scenes crackling with the kind of moral ambiguity that echoes Daniel Craig’s Bond villains. As Sarah’s reluctant ally, a whistleblower geologist, Florence Pugh brings raw vulnerability, her character’s arc from corporate drone to eco-saboteur providing the film’s emotional spine. John Boyega rounds out the trio as Marcus Tate, a Nigerian-born U.S. Navy SEAL whose loyalty fractures under the weight of neocolonial exploitation. DuVernay’s direction shines in the set pieces: a 10-minute sequence atop a storm-lashed Caspian platform, where Sarah rigs a controlled blowout to expose falsified reserves, rivals the tension of All the President’s Men with the spectacle of Mad Max: Fury Road. Cinematographer Bradford Young bathes the film in ochre tones—sun-baked deserts bleeding into neon-lit refineries—while Ludwig Göransson’s score pulses with industrial percussion, mimicking the thrum of pumpjacks.
What sets Sarah’s Oil apart in the thriller glut isn’t just its polish; it’s its timeliness, dropping like a depth charge into 2025’s energy maelstrom. Just days before the premiere, the UN Climate Summit in Baku wrapped with acrimonious debates over fossil fuel phaseouts, where Saudi Arabia and Russia vetoed binding targets, citing “energy security” amid spiking Brent crude at $92 per barrel. The film’s fictional consortium mirrors real-world entities like the shadowy Vitol Group, accused in a September Guardian exposé of price-gouging during Europe’s gas crunch. Off-screen, tensions simmer: U.S. sanctions on Iran’s shadow fleet have rerouted 20 percent of global tanker traffic, per Lloyd’s List, while Norway’s Equinor clashed with indigenous Sami groups over Barents Sea leases, evoking Sarah’s ethical dilemmas. DuVernay, a vocal climate activist, consulted with experts from the International Energy Agency and Greenpeace, infusing authenticity—Sarah’s rants on “peak oil denial” could be ripped from Al Gore’s playbook.
Critics at the AFI fest were rapt. The Wrap’s Pete Hammond dubbed it “a cerebral adrenaline rush that makes The Constant Gardener feel quaint,” praising how it humanizes the geopolitics without preaching. IndieWire’s Kate Erbland noted the gender flip: “In a genre dominated by grizzled men in trench coats, Zendaya’s Sarah drills deeper, exposing the patriarchal pipelines of power.” Box office prognosticators at Deadline forecast a $45 million domestic opening on November 21 via Warner Bros., with international legs in oil-dependent markets like the UAE and Nigeria. Streaming rights for Max are already locked, but the buzz is organic: fan edits of Zendaya’s rig-walk on TikTok have amassed 50 million views, hashtagged #SarahsOilSpillYourSecrets.
Yet, the premiere wasn’t without controversy. Protests outside the TCL Chinese Theatre, organized by Extinction Rebellion, decried the film’s “greenwashing” of oil narratives, waving banners reading “Drill Baby Drill? Not in Fiction!” DuVernay addressed the crowd post-screening, acknowledging, “This movie doesn’t celebrate extraction; it indicts it. Sarah fights for a transition, not a takeover.” Inside, the Q&A turned tense when Malek fielded questions on Russian oligarch parallels, quipping, “Viktor’s a villain, but remember, every barrel funds someone’s symphony.” Pugh, ever the firebrand, plugged her real-life involvement with Just Stop Oil, revealing a stunt where she glued herself to a BP exec’s yacht in July—earning cheers and a viral clip.
Thematically, Sarah’s Oil probes the intersections of race, resources, and reckoning. Sarah’s heritage isn’t window dressing; it’s weaponized—her fluency in Arabic and Farsi unlocks backchannel deals, but also paints a target on her back in xenophobic boardrooms. Flashbacks to her father’s Gulf War-era displacement in Basra underscore the human cost: “Oil isn’t black gold; it’s blood tar,” Sarah seethes in a pivotal monologue. Jefferson’s dialogue crackles with wit amid the weight, like Marcus’s line to Viktor: “Your pipelines leak more than just crude—they leak lies.” DuVernay layers in subtle nods to current events: a subplot involving Venezuelan hyperinflation and U.S. fracking booms echoes Biden’s (now Trump’s) 2025 energy pivot, loosening export bans to counter Chinese dominance in rare earths for EV batteries.
As the credits rolled at AFI, attendees lingered in debates, not just about plot twists (no spoilers: the finale’s triple-cross rivals Shutter Island) but broader implications. Will Sarah’s Oil sway policy, like An Inconvenient Truth did for cap-and-trade? Early signs point yes: a post-premiere panel with IEA Director Fatih Birol and actress-activist Shailene Woodley announced a “Drill for Change” fund, channeling 10 percent of Zendaya’s salary to indigenous energy sovereignty projects. Merch tie-ins—recycled-oil-barrel tumblers and “Frack the System” tees—promise to fund scholarships for STEM women of color.
In a year bookended by COP30’s fossil fuel fights and Tesla’s solar-oil hybrid battery breakthrough, Sarah’s Oil arrives as both entertainment and exhortation. Zendaya’s star turn cements her as a dramatic force, while DuVernay solidifies her as cinema’s conscience. As global reserves dwindle—IEA warns of peak demand by 2028—the film’s premiere feels prophetic. Hollywood has long romanticized spies and suits; now, it’s drilling into the dirt beneath. Catch it before the real wars make sequels moot. In Sarah’s world, the rigs don’t just pump oil—they pump urgency. And in ours, that’s the real gusher.
