Metacritic Film

Phone Booth

Starring Colin Farrell, Kiefer Sutherland, Forest Whitaker, Radha Mitchell, Katie Holmes, Paula Jai Parker, Arian Waring Ash, and Tia Texada

MPAA RATING: R for pervasive language and some violence

20th Century Fox Film Corporation
Suspense/Thriller
81 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters April 4, 2003

Set entirely within and around the confines of a New York City phone booth, this film follows Stu Shepard (Farrell), a low-rent media consultant who is trapped after being told by a caller - a serial killer with a sniper rifle - that he'll be shot dead if he hangs up. (20th Century Fox)

WRITTEN BY
Larry Cohen

DIRECTED BY
Joel Schumacher

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

56 / 100

Critic Reviews

80 Washington Post
Phone Booth is 82 New York minutes long, all of them exciting.
80 Film Threat Clint Morris
It spends little time on exposition, instead quickly getting into the thrust of the movie. For a film like this, it’s advantageous, grabbing the audience almost immediately after the opening credits.
80 Wall Street Journal
Provides a reminder of the power of unadorned drama and language -- whole torrents of eloquent words -- in the service of a nifty idea.
80 Washington Post
What keeps Phone Booth going, despite its premise, is the acting and the writing, both of which are top-notch.
75 Boston Globe
Short, suspenseful, funny, and profane, the film's a throwback to the neat little B-level thrillers the entertainment industry used to crank out by the dozen in the post- World War II era and the early days of TV.
75 Christian Science Monitor
Has undertones of serious commentary on American violence, thanks to the screenplay by Larry Cohen, who often uses horror-film plots to explore cracks and contradictions in society.
75 Charlotte Observer
A perverse kind of payback for every terrorizing cabbie, bullying streetwalker, insulting bike messenger and screaming corner grocer in Manhattan.
75 Chicago Tribune
A lean, mean tension machine, setting up its premise, executing it with smarts, throwing in enough twists to keep things interesting, and wrapping it up before anyone can get fatigued or reflective. It's on the money.
75 Rolling Stone
Farrell is a dynamo. And Kiefer Sutherland, whose sniper role is essentially a voice on the phone, matches Farrell subtle shift for subtle shift.
75 ReelViews
The best pure thriller of 2003 to-date.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
The movie is essentially a morality play, and it's not a surprise to learn that Larry Cohen, the writer, came up with the idea 20 years ago--when there were still phone booths and morality plays.
75 New York Post
A tabloidy, nail-biting thriller.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
The result is a movie that combines a seriousness of purpose with an impish delight in craft, in a way Hitchcock would have appreciated.
70 Variety
Gussied up with a host of filmmaking tricks in an attempt to keep things lively, this intensely acted little exercise just doesn't have enough going for it, with the exception of gradually growing interest in lead Colin Farrell.
67 Austin Chronicle
It's a movie perfectly designed for tossing back popcorn (the jumbo kind so you don't have to leave your seat during the show); not until later do you get the empty feeling that you've swallowed an entire bucket of popped air.
67 Entertainment Weekly
It's an energetic stunt of a movie, and it wants to make us sweat like it's 1974.
67 Seattle Post-Intelligencer D. Parvaz
Gripping in parts, tedious in others, the film works best when the action is brisk.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Can't spoil the ending, except to say that it spoils itself.
63 USA Today
Superficially gritty yet soullessly slick melodrama.
60 TV Guide
The payoff doesn't quite equal the intensity of the spectacularly squirm-inducing premise, but Farrell takes his showboating star turn and runs with it.
60 Dallas Observer
The movie's so hung up (pardon) on its gimmick it never transcends it; might have been better had Kiefer called Moviefone.
58 Portland Oregonian
Schumacher's depictions of street life are cartoonishly ludicrous and riddled with cliches -- a pair of garish hookers, for instance, can't be excused simply because one is played with engaging vigor by Paula Jai Parker.
50 Film Threat
The situation is suspenseful and unique enough to hold our attention for a time.
50 New York Daily News
Farrell, adding to the case for his impending stardom, locks into his role with the laser precision of the sniper's rifle scope.
50 Chicago Reader
Proves that a movie can be true to life and still seem utterly preposterous.
50 Village Voice
Best appreciated as hilarious pulp metaphor, which, not coincidentally, happens to be one of the screenwriter's specialties.
50 Miami Herald
Loud and frantic and filled with all sorts of business, but it's also empty and inert, a creative exercise that would have played better as a 30-minute short.
50 Baltimore Sun
Phone Booth may not be awful, but it's puny.
40 Los Angeles Times
Without question, the whole thing's absurd -- this is, remember, about a guy stuck in a phone booth -- but for its first 40 minutes or so it's also mildly entertaining, fueled by the nuttiness of the setup and Schumacher's energy.
40 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Schumacher choose to start the movie in outer space? The opening shot epitomizes everything wrong with Phone Booth: Given the chance to stage human drama on an intimate, suffocating scale, Schumacher begins in the endless expanse of the void, tricked out with gratuitous CGI effects.
40 LA Weekly
At only 84 minutes, Phone Booth's brevity turns out to be its only saving grace.
38 Philadelphia Inquirer
A high-concept hostage drama of absolutely no value to anyone -- except maybe Bell Atlantic, whose titular street-corner pay phone is on screen for almost every agonizing frame.
30 Slate
The premise is admittedly a killer--fun to think about, fun to see realized, not so fun to see screwed up in the last half-hour.
30 Salon.com
A movie that's laughable without, alas, even being enjoyably awful.
20 The New York Times
Bogus on every level, right down to its half-hearted trick ending.

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