Asger is a police officer who has been confined to a police center because of his involvement in an ongoing case. Occasionally, he received a distress call from a woman named Ibn. From her intermittent description and analysis, it was very likely that Ibn was kidnapped by his ex-husband Mikel and was currently in a car driving towards him. Inside the white freight car in the north. Asger researched a lot about Ibn, and when he got Ibn's home phone number, he called immediately. It was Ibn's six-year-old nine-month-old daughter Matilda who answered the phone. The girl cried that she and her infant brother Ofir were the only ones at home, and that her parents left together after a fight at home. Asger immediately called the regional police to go to Ibn's house to take care of the two children. When police arrived at the home, they found the boy Ofell, who had been locked in his bedroom, killed. As a result, Asgar determined that the murderer must be Ibn's ex-husband Mikel. He kept talking to the terrified Ibn over the phone for details, and at the same time used a positioning system to detect the location of Ibn and Mikkel. Just as he was trying his best to plan a rescue strategy, he suddenly learned the truth from Ibn's words. It turned out that the real murderer was Ibn, who was suffering from mental illness. She told her son Ofir that there was a "snake" in her body, and she wanted to kill the snake...
Mikel was driving Ibn to a mental hospital in northern Denmark. When the car stopped on the way, Ibn dashed out of the car, attacked Mikel, and ran off alone. She came to a bridge and called Asger again. At this time, Asgar was in a state of helplessness and depression. During the phone call, Ibn, who was already a little sober, was desperate and was about to jump off the bridge. Asgar tried his best to comfort him with words, while contacting the nearby police to stop him. In the end, thanks to Asger's efforts, Ibn was saved.
The truth about the lawsuit Asgar was involved in has also emerged. In the process of law enforcement, Asger shot and killed a 19-year-old gangster. He has agreed with his aides to defend himself in court tomorrow. After experiencing the Ibn incident, Asger's soul felt a shudder. Shooting the gangster was not for self-defense, but because he hated evil and thought that the gangster also had a "snake" in his body. The entire film is shot inside the house, one man, one device, the constant phone ringing, the gripping story and the ups and downs of humanity. This is a film praising life, sincere and sincere, full of rationality and warmth without losing humanity.
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