Phone Booth with Colin Farrell: DVD Cover
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Phone Booth Director: Joel Schumacher Cast: Colin Farrell, Kiefer Sutherland, Forest Whitaker, Radha Mitchell

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  • DVD Release Date: 07/08/2003
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 16,580
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  • Overview
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Scenes

Features

Full-length audio commentary by director Joel Schumacher Original theatrical trailer

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. The Last Phone Booth
2. The Publicist
3. A Free Pizza
4. Pam
5. The Caller
6. Exposed
7. Kelly
8. Don't Hang Up
9. The Others
10. Leon's Girls
11. Guilty
12. The Cops
13. Captain Ramey
14. The Center of Attention
15. The Cell Phone
16. She's Not My Wife
17. The Perfect Violation
18. Hung Up
19. The Odds Are Even
20. Kelly or Pam?
21. A Sniper Situation
22. Trust Is the Key
23. A Chance for Redemption
24. The Man in 604
25. A Familiar Face
26. You'll Be Hearing From Me.
27. A Ringing Phone
28. End Titles

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

If nothing else, the tautly directed Phone Booth proves that filmmakers don't need hundred-million-dollar budgets, interminable car chases, or repetitive shootouts to produce a genuinely riveting thriller. Working from a script by veteran B-movie scribe Larry Cohen and shooting at lightning speed with a small cast and crew, the normally excessive Joel Schumacher turned out a real sleeper with this briskly paced story. A brash New York publicist (Colin Farrell) is held captive in a Times Square phone booth by an unseen sniper (Kiefer Sutherland), who speaks to him from a nearby building. As the rifleman watches his every move, the publicist is forced to humiliate himself in front of puzzled spectators and the wary police who soon surround him. Schumacher rises to the task of maintaining suspense without resorting to nail-biting action sequences or poorly contrived diversions. He does so by lavishing attention on the carefully calibrated performances of a well-chosen cast. Forest Whitaker is especially fine as the police detective who believes Farrell's character is likely (though not certainly) responsible for the death of an innocent bystander actually slain by the sniper. In just a few brief scenes, Katie Holmes registers strongly as the press agent's mistress, and one wishes she had been more prominently featured. A tense, protracted climax presages the surprise denouement, which brings Phone Booth to an eminently satisfying conclusion. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Phone Boothby Anonymous

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April 13, 2006: Phone Booth was a great movie.There was a lesson in this movie from what I can remember.I can't wait to see it again one day!

Phone Boothby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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February 12, 2006: Phone Booth was a great movie! It was nothing like I expected, but that's part of what made it so great! I saw this movie after seeing the show 24 starring Kiefer Sutherland, so I was used to him being a certain way, but in this movie he was the psycho serial killer guy, and he was still really great!!! He is a really great actor, and Collin Farrell did a pretty good job, too! I HIGHLY recommend this movie!!!


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