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Q: Having been back to work, are you a proponent of vaccine requirements on film sets, and maybe even for movie theaters, at least until we get this thing under control? I think I've exhausted the alone time as an actor. I'd like to act with other actors in person and I'd like to be around more people. I want to be around other people now (laughs). We're all alone, all of us, for a good period of time or just with our family or children. So it felt weirdly natural to me to be sitting there alone performing, which is an odd thing to say. Gyllenhaal: I had just come off of doing a one-man show (“Sea Wall/A Life”) on Broadway for a year. Q: Did it feel like a stage production, since the movie is a virtual one-man show? I was constantly surprised and thrown, in the best way. All I really had to do was listen and open my heart up to the situation and try and move through it. So when a call came in, they sounded and felt real. We assembled an unbelievable cast partially because everyone's at home and they weren't working at the time. Gyllenhaal: You're working with other actors on the other end of the line, all of whom are pretty extraordinary. What’s it like to play someone in that intense a headspace? Question: Joe Baylor is very much confined to his 911 work station as the night spirals out of his control. 'Are we going to get into trouble?': Jessica Chastain went incognito at a church for 'Tammy Faye' 18) alongside Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as two bank robbers who hijack an emergency vehicle, talks with USA TODAY about “The Guilty” and his thoughts on vaccine mandates. Gyllenhaal, who recently shot director Michael Bay’s action thriller “Ambulance” (in theaters Feb. “We trust each other and I know he's always thinking about what's best for the film.” “He’s smart, he’s brave (and) he's going to bring his A game,” the director says of Gyllenhaal. (He ultimately tested negative.) Which is why Fuqua was glad to be working with a friend and “great” collaborator. “The Guilty” was filmed over 11 days last October with various COVID-19 protocols and technical snafus, many Zoom chats with actors (including Peter Sarsgaard, Riley Keough and Ethan Hawke) and Fuqua having to be quarantined in a van away from the set after a close contact tested positive. Ranked: All the best movies we saw at Toronto Film Festival (including 'The Eyes of Tammy Faye') A call comes in where the woman on the other end is in danger, and the rest of the night is a mother lode of emotional stress, as Joe desperately tries to get her and her children help while also facing his own sins. In his tense new thriller (in theaters now and streaming on Netflix Friday), Gyllenhaal stars as LAPD detective Joe Baylor, demoted to 911 dispatch duty and facing a courtroom visit the next day where his career is on the line. “I had a lot of practice on this movie and I hope to do more of it in my performances. 1 of being an actor,” listening is “really much harder than I will admit,” Gyllenhaal says with a chuckle. For Jake Gyllenhaal, the combination of playing a 911 call operator in “The Guilty” and filming it during a pandemic, where he had to FaceTime constantly with his director Antoine Fuqua, was a profound lesson on how important it is to listen.