Manny the Movie Guy
Manny the Movie Guy Spotlights Unidentified: The Saudi Murder Mystery You Need to See
Hey everybody, Manny the Movie Guy here — and I have to tell you, Unidentified is one of the most quietly powerful films I've seen this year.
Directed by Saudi filmmaker Haifaa Al-Mansour and distributed by Sony Pictures Classics, Unidentified opened in select theaters on June 19, 2026 — and it is absolutely worth seeking out. I had the chance to sit down with the cast and crew to dig into what makes this gripping crime thriller tick, and what came out of those conversations was nothing short of inspiring.
The Film That Knows Its Power
Unidentified tells the story of Noelle Al Saffan (played with tremendous precision by Mila Al Zahrani), a 29-year-old divorcée rebuilding her life in Riyadh. Obsessed with true crime podcasts, she lands a clerk's job at a local police station digitizing old records — seemingly mundane work. That all changes when the body of a young woman is discovered in the desert, and the male-dominated department needs a female officer present at the scene. Noelle seizes her opportunity, and soon launches her own unauthorized investigation to identify the victim and solve her murder.
It's a premise that sounds like a familiar procedural, but in Al-Mansour's hands, it becomes something much more intimate and culturally resonant. As Al-Mansour told me: she has always been drawn to complicated women. "Women are never given the story," she explained, reflecting on how female characters are too often flattened into simple archetypes. With Noelle, she wanted to show a woman with real contradictions, real grief, and real courage.
A Trailblazer Behind the Camera
To understand Unidentified, you have to understand Haifaa Al-Mansour. She made history as the first Saudi woman to direct a feature film — her debut Wadjda (2012) was famously shot with her directing from inside a van, communicating via walkie-talkie, because as a woman, she couldn't be seen publicly on set in Saudi Arabia at the time. That country has changed enormously in the years since. Women can now drive, vote, and run for office — and Al-Mansour's camera has tracked every step of that transformation.
Unidentified feels like a capstone to a trilogy she has been quietly building — from the bicycle-obsessed girl in Wadjda to the reluctant political candidate in The Perfect Candidate, and now to Noelle, a woman who simply refuses to let an anonymous girl's death disappear into a cold case file.
Mila Al Zahrani: A Force of Nature
I cannot say enough about Mila Al Zahrani in this role. She is magnetic. Al Zahrani first worked with Al-Mansour on The Perfect Candidate, where — remarkably — it was her very first time in front of a camera. She brought a freshness to that role that audiences loved, and here she channels a fully formed, layered character navigating grief, institutional resistance, and her own complicated past.
The film's central emotional hook is this: Noelle lost a child of her own. That personal wound is what makes her identification with the unnamed Jane Doe feel so urgent, so personal. Al Zahrani carries every beat of that backstory without overplaying it — it lives quietly beneath every choice Noelle makes.
A World of Women Learning to Take Up Space
What sets Unidentified apart from a standard whodunit is how fully it embeds the crime story within a social and cultural context. Al-Mansour is not using Saudi Arabia as exotic window dressing — she is exploring, with genuine love and critical eye, a society in genuine transition. Women throughout the film are learning to speak, to be believed, and to claim agency they were long denied.
Noelle's ability to connect with other Saudi women — to build trust, to unlock secrets that the male officers never could — becomes her greatest investigative tool. It's a quiet but pointed observation: that listening to women requires being one.
Co-star Shafi Al Harthi plays Colonel Najib, Noelle's boss and reluctant ally. He's a crucial figure — humane, quietly supportive, and critical in giving Noelle just enough room to work. As Al-Mansour explained to me, Al Harthi comes from a real family of police officers, and he brought an authentic knowledge of how law enforcement actually moves in Saudi Arabia. His warmth grounds the film at every turn.
A Mystery That Rewards Patience
I'll be honest with you — Unidentified is not a conventional thriller in terms of pacing. It is deliberate. It trusts the audience to sit with the uncertainty. And if you lean in, it rewards you. The desert cinematography by Monty Rowan is striking, with high horizons that make the landscape feel both majestic and indifferent — the perfect backdrop for a story about a girl no one is looking for.
The film culminates in a twist that Al-Mansour promises will spark debate. I won't spoil it here, but I will say: it reframes everything you've watched and asks a harder question than "who did it." It asks why some lives go unclaimed — and who decides.
The Bottom Line
Unidentified is a film that deserves a wide audience. It is in Arabic with English subtitles, rated PG-13, and runs one hour and thirty-nine minutes. It premiered at TIFF and screened at the 2026 Tribeca Festival before its U.S. theatrical release from Sony Pictures Classics.
If you want a thriller that is also genuinely about something — women's dignity, the cost of invisibility, and the radical act of demanding a name for the nameless — this is your film.
From Manny the Movie Guy, I'm giving Unidentified a strong recommendation. Seek it out in select theaters now.
See our interview above or click here for our uncut chat.
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By: Manny Dela Rosa
June 22, 2026


