“They report having this strange experience of déjà vu,” says O’Connor. This meant that when they were later asked if they had heard the word sleep, they knew that they couldn’t have, but the word still felt familiar. To create the feeling of déjà vu, O’Connor’s team first asked people if they had heard any words beginning with “s”. When the person is later quizzed on the words they have heard, they tend to believe they have also heard “sleep” – a false memory. It involves reading a list of related words – such as bed, night, dream – to a participant but not the key word linking them together, in this case, sleep. The Guilty is now available to watch on Netflix.The team’s technique uses a standard method to create false memories. During the credits, overlapping news reporters discuss the trial, and that Joe pled guilty to manslaughter, and is only the fourth officer to be successfully prosecuted for an officer-involved shooting. He then calls the LA Times reporter back, presumably to tell 'his story' and the movie ends. Rick protests, saying Joe will go to jail and won't see his daughter for a long time, but Joe doesn't cave. The weight of it all crashes down on Joe he calls Rick then, and tells him to tell the truth and change his statement. Joe hangs up, and a coworker comes in to tell him the boy has been taken to the hospital and is still alive. The line goes dead, but then the highway patrol officer calls Joe to tell him Emily is in their custody. Joe confesses that he was at a crime where a 19-year-old boy had 'hurt someone and he killed him because he wanted to, not for any justifiable reason, and that Emily is not like him – having only accidentally harmed her son. He tells her to pick up the brick and when Henry opens the door to hit him with it, reiterating 'he deserves it'. They talk about their children and visiting an aquarium, and Joe asks if there's anything in the back she can use to defend herself and she finds what sounds like building materials, including bricks. They discover Abby covered in Oliver's blood, and assume that Henry tried to kill the baby and then abducted his wife and fled.Īfter a failed attempt at stopping the van, Emily is put in the back and calls Joe. He tells her it's safe and she lets the police in. Meanwhile, police head to Emily's house and Abby calls Joe, afraid of the banging on the door. implying that whatever Joe did, he and Rick plan to lie on the stand to exonerate Joe. He also realises Rick has been drinking and begs his friend to sober up in time for the trial the following day and to remember to 'stick to the story'. Unable to get anyone working to help, Joe calls his former partner Rick (Eli Goree) and asks him to check out the husband's house for clues. He gets in touch with Emily again, but she can't give Joe any more information. Also calling his mobile is a reporter from the LA Times, asking for his side of the story before an article runs the following day.įrantic to find and rescue Emily, he calls the husband Henry's phone from his own personal one (presumably so it's not recorded by the dispatch) and threatens him. Joe calls the police precinct and his sergeant (Ethan Hawke) is on phone duty, and the two share a tense conversation in which it is revealed that Joe was reassigned pending a trial – though we're still unsure why. Abby gives Joe her father's mobile number, and Joe tells her to wait with her brother, who Abby says is sleeping, until he can bring her mother home safely. Using the 911 data from her mobile phone, he calls her house and her daughter Abby picks up, revealing to Joe that her parents – who are separated – had a fight and the father ( Peter Sarsgaard) took her mother Emily, and left her and her little brother Oliver alone.
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