Phone Booth review

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

As a 30-word movie pitch, Phone Booth is bleedin' perfect: when a man answers a ringing public phone, the voice on the line tells him that if he leaves the booth, a sniper will shoot him dead. It offers tension, mystery, great thesping potential and - - best of all - - the threat of a blood bath before the end. Do it right and there isn't an audience in the world that won't be gnawing their knuckles raw.

And `right' is largely how Joel Schumacher does it. Making Phone Booth directly after 2000's Tigerland - - its release was held up first of all by 11 September, then by the Washington Sniper - - he again goes for a cheap'n'grimy style (one satellite-down-to-phone-line FX sequence and a flurry of split screens aside). Okay, so aping Midnight Cowboy's world of whores, pimps and stressed-out cops may not be original, but it's preferable to Schumacher's traditional visual gloss. Which, incidentally, he returned to with godawful terrorist thriller Bad Company.

And then there's Colin Farrell. Trapped in a phone booth, only interacting with the menacing voice of Kiefer Sutherland (yes, it's 24's Jack Bauer gone bad...), he makes lowlife media pimp Stu Shepard his own. And not just because he nails the Brooklyn accent. Over the course of 81 minutes, Farrell manages to turn Stu from reprehensible shit into a rounded human with soul. Come the end, you dearly want him to survive... And you'll be counting your blessings that more established stars like Jim Carrey, Will Smith and Tom Cruise all passed on the part.

Where the movie falls down, though, is the conclusion. As in there doesn't seem to be one. For while it's been fun hearing Kiefer's baddie smack away Stu's standard assumptions about his motivation (vengeance, Vietnam, psycho...), you can't help feeling that the filmmakers never actually worked out what did set him off...

A high-velocity thriller that misses the bull's eye, then - - but still hits the target.

It may play like an extended episode of The Twilight Zone, but Phone Booth cranks up the claustrophobic tension, with helmer Joel Schumacher making the most of a slight premise. Good call.

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

Latest in Thriller Movies
Black Bag
This new spy thriller starring Michael Fassbender earns near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes score with glowing first reviews
Claire Danes as Juliet and Miriam Margolyes as Nurse in the movie Romeo + Juliet.
The 33 greatest movies based on Shakespeare
Bloodsport
The 32 greatest '80s action movies
The Bridges of Madison County
The 32 most heartbreaking movie moments
The Surfer
Nicolas Cage just wants to surf but keeps getting bullied by locals in bizarre trailer for new thriller being compared to Midsommar
Blake Lively as Emily in Another Simple Favor
7 years on from the original, Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick reunite in sinister, sun-soaked first trailer for comedy thriller sequel Another Simple Favor
Latest in Reviews
WWE 2K25
WWE 2K25 review: "A colossal package even if you never go anywhere near Virtual Currency"
Altered: Trial by Frost booster box and packs on a playmat
Altered: Trial by Frost review - "Satisfying enough to offer highly varied gameplay"
Boro and Alta sit on a bench together in Wanderstop
Wanderstop review: "Exalting the transformative power of tea"
The pump header of the NZXT Kraken Elite 360 RGB showing a 35 degree cpu
NZXT Kraken Elite 360 RGB review: "Has some solid design points that make installation a lot easier"
Logitech G Pro X TKL Rapid gaming keyboard on a wooden desk with blue lighting
Logitech G Pro X TKL Rapid review: "one of the best value Hall effect gaming keyboards out there"
Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt in The Electric State
The Electric State review: "Although this may be their most visually stunning movie yet, it looks like the Russos are yet to find their footing outside of the MCU"