Speak No Evil (2022 film)

Speak No Evil (Gæsterne, lit. 'The Guests') is a 2022 psychological horror thriller film directed by Christian Tafdrup from a screenplay he co-wrote with his brother Mads Tafdrup Tafdrup. It is produced by Jacob Jarek and is distributed by Nordisk Film. Filming took place in Denmark, the Netherlands and Italy, and most of the film is shot in English, with some scenes in Danish and Dutch. The film centers on Bjørn (Morten Burian) and Louise (Sidsel Siem Koch), a Danish couple who are invited by Patrick (Fedja van Huêt) and Karin (Karina Smulders), a Dutch couple, to their country house for a weekend holiday; the hosts soon begin to test the limits of their guests as the situation escalates.

Speak No Evil premiered in the Midnight section at the 38th Sundance Film Festival on 22 January 2022. It was theatrically released in Denmark on 17 March 2022 and in the Netherlands on 21 July.

Plot
During their vacation in Tuscany, Bjørn and Louise, a Danish couple, and their daughter Agnes, meet Patrick and Karin, a Dutch couple, and their son Abel, who suffers from congenital aglossia (was born without a tongue). Bjørn and Louise receive an invitation from the Dutch couple to visit their remote rural house in the Netherlands. During the first two days, Louise feels uncomfortable about the hosts' passive-aggressive behavior, such as Patrick's abuse towards Abel.

Her concerns are exacerbated when Patrick challenges her vegetarianism during a dinner out, then drunkenly makes out with his wife in front of them. After manipulating Bjørn into paying for the dinner, Patrick drives drunk and blasts loud music, upsetting Louise. He also enters the bathroom while she is taking a shower, and later observes the couple having sex. When Agnes's calls to sleep next to her parents are ignored, Patrick takes her. Louise finds Agnes sleeping next to a naked Patrick, causing the family to leave, only to turn back after Agnes realizes that her rabbit doll Ninus is missing. Back at the house, they are convinced to stay longer. Later, the couple discovers that Patrick lied about being a doctor to impress them and is actually unemployed, as he doesn’t believe in actual work. After dinner, the couples argue over Patrick's abuse of Abel.

That night, Bjørn discovers a cabin behind the house, and finds empty luggage and cameras inside. The cabin’s walls are covered with photographs of Patrick and Karin with other couples with young children on holidays. The pictures suggest the Dutch couple are serial killers with a pattern of deceiving families in order to murder them and abduct their children. Bjørn and his family are the next victims. Bjørn then finds Abel's body drowned in the pool. They escape but Bjørn does not tell his wife about his discovery.

After their car breaks down, Bjørn searches for help but returns to find his family inside Patrick's car. Patrick had been tailing the family after hearing their car horn while departing their home and thanks Bjørn “for the call.” Bjørn plays along in order to attempt to keep the situation calm, but it still escalates quickly. Patrick beats Bjørn; Abel's babysitter Muhajid holds down Louise while Karin cuts off Agnes's tongue. Muhajid leaves with Agnes, and her parents are taken to a deserted road. Before the Danish couple are asked to get undressed, Bjørn asks them why they are doing this; Patrick replies: "Because you let me." Bjørn and Louise are then made to get into a ditch, where they are stoned to death. A mute Agnes now plays the role of Patrick and Karin’s daughter as the couple targets another family for their next murder.

Production
Speak No Evil is the third feature film by Christian Tafdrup, who is mostly active as an actor, and his first genre film, in which he tries to combine the drama genre with social commentary and psychological horror elements. He co-wrote the screenplay with his brother Mads Tafdrup. Jacob Jarek acted as producer, with the production costs estimated to be €2.8 million. Filming had to be temporarily interrupted in Denmark and the Netherlands due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was mostly filmed in English, and further shootings took place in the Netherlands and Italy.

The project was presented at the Nordic Film Market as part of the Gothenburg Film Festival before it was completed in January 2021 and was strongly courted by distributors. The film rights were subsequently sold to Australia and New Zealand, the Benelux countries, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States, and Hungary.

Release
The film received an invitation to the Midnight section of the 38th Sundance Film Festival, which included: "horror and comedy works that defy genre classification", where it premiered on 22 January 2022. The film was theatrically released in Denmark on 17 March 2022 by Nordisk Film and in the Netherlands on 21 July by September Film. It was released in the United States in select theaters on 9 September 2022 and through video on demand on 15 September 2022 by Shudder and IFC Films.

Box office
Speak No Evil grossed $631,249 internationally against a production budget of about $3.1 million.

Critical response
Sundance Film Festival touted the film as a "brilliantly provocative and simmering satirical work of horror [that] incriminates both sides".

Reviewing the film for IndieWire, Susannah Gruder praised the acting performances (specially Morten Burian's) and gave it a grade of "A" on an "A+" to "F" scale, and called it "the most cunningly depraved horror film in years [that offers] a piercing commentary on the ways we accommodate others to the point of self-subjugation". Praising Tafdrup’s direction, The New York Times critic Jeannette Catsoulis called it "an icy satire of middle-class mores [that glides] inexorably from squirmy to sinister to full-on shocking [and] is utterly fearless in its mission to unsettle".

Remake
In April 2023, it was announced Blumhouse Productions was developing a remake of the same name, with James McAvoy attached to star and James Watkins writing and directing. The film is currently set to be theatrically released on 13 September 2024 by Universal Pictures.