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Dom Robinson reviews

Phone Booth

Distributed by



"Ha! Missed me!"


Phone Booth was a movie held back from release for a while because it held chilling similarities to the Washington sniper, although I recently saw comedian Jim Jeffries say "Is it just me, or does anyone else miss the Washington sniper?" and then go on to say that muggings down markedly in the state because the muggers were too scared to set foot outside their own door!

Publicist and wise-cracker Stu Shepard (Colin Farrell) has a mobile phones, so why should he need to use a phone booth to call potential actress Pamela McFadden (Katie Holmes)? The movie utilises split-screen shots to attempt to increase the tension, but that didn't quite cut it for me. I really thought I would find this a lot more engaging, but what started with an interesting premise didn't develop like I thought and from early on I didn't care whether Stu was gunned down or not, although you knew he wouldn't come to much harm because he was the star of the film... so from where was the suspense meant to come?

Somehow, the end result didn't gel with what I was expecting. The problem was down to the total lack of conviction in the voiceover from Kiefer Sutherland as "The Caller". I understand he wasn't the original choice and actually recorded it close to the film's completion as a last-minute change - and it shows. Kiefer's a tour-de-force in 24 but here, his vocal performance leaves me cold. They should've gone for an unknown in that role.

Oh, and if he's calling via a phone, it should SOUND like he's calling from a phone. You know how that sounds... and it does NOT sound like he's calling through a set of speakers all around the viewer(!) Hence, this totally removes any potential atmosphere.

Given the real-time nature of this film, had it been the plot of a single hour of '24', for example - since the siege end-to-end lasts almost exactly an hour, we'd have had a great little one-off and we'd have had time to build up knowledge of the characters and to empathise with them, but as it's standalone movie I couldn't really care less who lives and who dies as we're not given the chance to get to find out anything important about them.



Katie Holmes and Radha Mitchell.
Does movie totty get any better than this?


The film is presented in anamorphic 2.35:1 widescreen and has no problems, while the Dolby Digital 5.1 doesn't get much of a workout because the film is largely set in one static location.

The extras are... not much to shout about:

The film contains 28 chapters which is quite a lot for such a short film, subtitles are available in English only and the main menu has little noticeable animation and is scored with a looped piece of incidental music and words from The Caller.

FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS



OVERALL

Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2003.

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