IMDb RATING
7.5/10
67K
YOUR RATING
A police officer assigned alarm dispatch duty enters a race against time when he answers an emergency call from a kidnapped woman.A police officer assigned alarm dispatch duty enters a race against time when he answers an emergency call from a kidnapped woman.A police officer assigned alarm dispatch duty enters a race against time when he answers an emergency call from a kidnapped woman.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 38 wins & 43 nominations total
Jessica Dinnage
- Iben
- (voice)
Omar Shargawi
- Rashid
- (voice)
Johan Gotthardt Olsen
- Michael
- (voice)
- (as Johan Olsen)
Jacob Lohmann
- Bo
- (voice)
- (as Jacob Hauberg Lohmann)
Simon Bennebjerg
- Junkie
- (voice)
Laura Bro
- Journalist
- (voice)
Caroline Løppke
- Fuld kvinde
- (voice)
Maria Gersby
- Alarmoperatør #2
- (as Maria Gersby Cissé)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I watched the Netflix film first, and then thanks to the reviews on that one, discovered this Danish original and watched that too.
The Netflix film is a taught and effective thriller, with a great central performance from Jake Gyllenhaal. It's mostly word-for-word the same as the Danish version. And it's free if you have Netflix!
The Danish version is £2.99 on Amazon. It's less stylish and less melodramatic, but much more believable and affecting. I cared more for all the characters, and despite knowing exactly how it was going to play out, I was hooked throughout. At times I couldn't look away.
The Netflix film adds an unneccesary personal arc, some wildfire-related melodrama, and a set more like a James Bond MI5 office than a 911 (or 112) call centre - all of which reduced the impact and made the film less engaging.
If you're definitely not going to watch the Danish version, the Netflix one is a good bet. If you're ok to watch either, choose this original - it's a lot more suspensful and completely captivating. (Ideally, unlike me, don't watch both!)
The Netflix film is a taught and effective thriller, with a great central performance from Jake Gyllenhaal. It's mostly word-for-word the same as the Danish version. And it's free if you have Netflix!
The Danish version is £2.99 on Amazon. It's less stylish and less melodramatic, but much more believable and affecting. I cared more for all the characters, and despite knowing exactly how it was going to play out, I was hooked throughout. At times I couldn't look away.
The Netflix film adds an unneccesary personal arc, some wildfire-related melodrama, and a set more like a James Bond MI5 office than a 911 (or 112) call centre - all of which reduced the impact and made the film less engaging.
If you're definitely not going to watch the Danish version, the Netflix one is a good bet. If you're ok to watch either, choose this original - it's a lot more suspensful and completely captivating. (Ideally, unlike me, don't watch both!)
I watched this in theatre, and when it finished I found out that I didn't finish my overpriced beer. Haven't been this engaged in a movie in a while
10/10!
Jakob Cedergren plays a police officer assigned to a 911 call center who receives a call from a woman who has been kidnapped. The call center is the set for the entire course of the film. The tension is Hitchcock like with enough twists and turns to keep the viewers attention. At 85 minutes the movie moves quickly and the conclusion is a bit disappointing but I recommend The Guilty.
With an amazing actor in Jacob Cedergren, the director and crew of this film has pulled off what appears to be one of the best low-budget movies ever made.
The movie is immensely exciting, and deserves to be world famous. Everything about this movie is perfect, and shows that you don't need deep hollywood pockets to make an amazing movie.
Extra points for having a great trailer without spoilers, seems like this is a hard thing to do for most producers nowadays...
The movie is immensely exciting, and deserves to be world famous. Everything about this movie is perfect, and shows that you don't need deep hollywood pockets to make an amazing movie.
Extra points for having a great trailer without spoilers, seems like this is a hard thing to do for most producers nowadays...
Had the chance to see the movie weeks prior to its official release on ocotbre 18th here in Switzerland at the Zurich Film Festival.
I'm usually not a fan of crime/thriller movies but this one has earned a special place in my heart. The simple premise (police officer with troubling past, has to work at the emergency hotline, just when his shift ends a woman who is being abducted reaches his line, the chase begins) took me in immediately and didn't let up until the end credits showed. The movie has two main plots: The abducted woman and Asger Holm's (main character, police officer) past. In the beginning we do not know much about either plot, but as the movie goes on more and more secrecy is peeled off. Both stories have their climax at the very same moment and make that moment in the movie all the more dramatic.
So much about the plot, on to the cinematography and other technicalities:
The whole movie takes place in the emergency phone central of Kopenhagen Denmark and is filmed in two rooms, the main office and a smaller one desk room. Lots of closeups of the main character let us really get into his head. The story of the movie is told only through phonecalls that he makes to a number of people all involved in the abduction. The movie was shot in only 13 days, which makes the cinematography even more impressive; all the shots have a purpose and hit their beats excellently. Feelings and character development is mostly conveyed through facial expression and dialogue. The sound design is on par with the acting, exciting at highpoints and subtle in quiet moments but always present.
The plot stays quite unpredictable for a long time and even if you have a hunch, some details about it may still come as a surprise.
Very good first time experience, however I am unsure about the rewatchability. On the other hand I still like to rewatch Fightclub, Memento and Shutter Island as well.
I'm usually not a fan of crime/thriller movies but this one has earned a special place in my heart. The simple premise (police officer with troubling past, has to work at the emergency hotline, just when his shift ends a woman who is being abducted reaches his line, the chase begins) took me in immediately and didn't let up until the end credits showed. The movie has two main plots: The abducted woman and Asger Holm's (main character, police officer) past. In the beginning we do not know much about either plot, but as the movie goes on more and more secrecy is peeled off. Both stories have their climax at the very same moment and make that moment in the movie all the more dramatic.
So much about the plot, on to the cinematography and other technicalities:
The whole movie takes place in the emergency phone central of Kopenhagen Denmark and is filmed in two rooms, the main office and a smaller one desk room. Lots of closeups of the main character let us really get into his head. The story of the movie is told only through phonecalls that he makes to a number of people all involved in the abduction. The movie was shot in only 13 days, which makes the cinematography even more impressive; all the shots have a purpose and hit their beats excellently. Feelings and character development is mostly conveyed through facial expression and dialogue. The sound design is on par with the acting, exciting at highpoints and subtle in quiet moments but always present.
The plot stays quite unpredictable for a long time and even if you have a hunch, some details about it may still come as a surprise.
Very good first time experience, however I am unsure about the rewatchability. On the other hand I still like to rewatch Fightclub, Memento and Shutter Island as well.
Did you know
- TriviaThe genesis of the film was a YouTube clip of a kidnapped woman calling an emergency dispatcher while her kidnapper sat nearby. Director Gustav Möller was struck by how much an audio clip could convey on its own with no visual accompaniment.
- GoofsWhen Asger is having a phone conversation (1:11:30) his forefinger is on the cell phone but in the next scene the forefinger is on his cheek.
- Quotes
Vagtleder Nordsjælland: Good job, Asger.
- ConnectionsFeatured in La noche de...: La Noche de... The Guilty (2022)
- SoundtracksUntitled
Composed by Lasse Martinussen
- How long is The Guilty?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- El culpable
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $207,140
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $60,050
- Oct 21, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $4,598,051
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content