07 September 2021

"The Guilty" - Official Trailer (2021) Jake Gyllenhaal (added a review from The Tornoto Film Festival)

Update + Explainer - it's far too easy to skip-over a thriller just looking at a 2-minute Trailer.
FIRST LOOK REVIEW/ TORONTO FILM FESTIVAL

The Guilty review – Jake Gyllenhaal’s tense 911 call thriller

A glossy Netflix remake of the 2018 single-location Danish thriller about a kidnapped woman seeking help is a well-made piece of entertainment

Jake Gyllenhaal in The Guilty, a well-made and watchable picture. Photograph: Netflix/AP

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Jake Gyllenhaal in The Guilty, a well-made and watchable picture. Photograph: Netflix/AP<br>Jake Gyllenhaal in The Guilty, a well-made and watchable picture. Photograph: Netflix/AP</div>

"Here’s a tense single-location thriller directed by Antoine Fuqua, remade from Gustav Möller’s hugely admired Danish movie Den Skyldige ('The Guilty') with a little more Hollywood gloss and based on the time-honoured premise of the 911 emergency operator taking a nail-biting call from a female kidnap victim who is pretending to her abductor that she is speaking to her infant daughter, and having to speak in code. (Brad Anderson’s 2013 film The Call – starring Halle Berry as the operator – had a comparable idea.)
STORYLINE:
Joe Baylor, played by a gaunt Jake Gyllenhaal, is a troubled LAPD officer with a failed marriage and failing health; he has evidently got into serious trouble over some incident at work – and keeps getting calls from the press.
Now, while his case is being investigated, Joe has been busted down to what he considers the humiliatingly lowly level of emergency operator with a headset phone, taking 911 calls from the public, the vast majority of these being farcically unimportant.
Meanwhile, California wildfires are creating a continuous, ambient atmosphere of crisis.
A STORY OF REDEMPTION: " . . .Then Joe is electrified to take the tearful call from a terrified woman, and whatever his own problems, his police savvy kicks in – he cleverly divines exactly what the situation is and how he can find out what’s happening from just a few clues. And the parallels with his own fraught family situation suggest to the agonised Joe that some kind of personal redemption is possible, and that Joe should make some desperate attempt to control and solve the entire situation from the phone. He becomes increasingly unprofessional and crazy – staying on the job after his shift ends and ignoring all the other 911 calls. . .

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