The Telephone Box (1972) - it’s enough to give you phone phobia!


Shortly before New Year, we watched Phone Booth (2002) again, a great thriller starring Colin Farrell, Forest Whitaker, Katie Holmes, Radha Mitchell, and Kiefer Sutherland.


Farrell plays an unscrupulous New York publicist who answers a ringing phone in a booth he’s standing next to.
The caller warns him he’ll be killed if he attempts to leave the booth … and … the story develops from there.
The claustrophobic atmosphere of Phone Booth reminded me of a 1972 Spanish short movie I saw on TV during the mid-‘80’s called La Cabina (aka The Telephone Box).

A unfortunate guy (José Luis López Vázquez), in a world long before the invention of the cell phone, attempts to make a call in a street booth.
The door closes on him as he discovers the phone doesn’t work.
He tries to leave, but the door is locked tight.


He’s trapped in there a long time as a crowd of onlookers gather … and … the story develops from there.
La Cabina is quirky and dated, but still worth the half-hour to watch, with an original story that delivers a surreal and scary twist.


Although street booths have mostly disappeared, La Cabina is a great reason to own a cell phone … but then you have to consider what happened in Stephen King’s novel: Cell.


Yikes!

I read that folks in Spain, shortly after La Cabina was released on December 13, 1972, took to preventing the door in phone booths from shutting completely by keeping their foot in the gap.

I can’t imagine why.


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