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Phone Booth is a 2002 American psychological thriller film directed by Joel Schumacher, produced by David Zucker and Gil Netter, written by Larry Cohen and starring Colin Farrell, Forest Whitaker, Katie Holmes, Radha Mitchell, and Kiefer Sutherland.
In December 2021 a replica of the red phone booth was inaugurated as a tribute to the film and its director Antonio Mercero near its filming location in Madrid. [ 1 ] La cabina (English: The Telephone Box ) is a 1972 Spanish television film directed by Antonio Mercero , and written by himself and José Luis Garci , starring José Luis López ...
Phone Booth, the tense 2003 thriller starring Colin Farrell as a man forced to remain in a phone booth during a time way back when people still used them, celebrates its 20th anniversary Tuesday ...
He would go on to star in Phone Booth (2002), S.W.A.T., and The Recruit (both 2003), establishing himself as a box office draw. Additionally, he also appeared in Steven Spielberg's science-fiction thriller Minority Report (2002) and as the supervillain Bullseye in the film Daredevil (2003).
This post is part of our series ranking the top 25 bygone products and trends we'd like to see return. I guess I should have known the end of the phone booth was coming when I first saw the movie ...
In 2005, Holmes characterised her film career as being a string of "bombs." "Usually I'm not even in the top ten", she said, the highest-grossing film of her career then being Phone Booth. [5] She lamented "It's not like I have a lot of stuff that's great just waiting for me to sign on to."
The film was panned by gun-rights supporters as being very anti-gun and portraying all firearm owners in a negative light. Many noted the film's similarities to Joel Schumacher's Phone Booth, another film released around the same time. (although the latter was delayed due to the DC Sniper) [1]
A Hip-Hop version of the song (featuring Mos Def) was used in the end credits for the film Phone Booth (2002). It was also used for two films of the Fast & Furious franchise: The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006) and Furious 7 (2015). A different and much faster-paced remix, by Soulwax, samples The B-52s song "52 Girls" throughout.