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IMDbPro

Por um Fio

Título original: Phone Booth
  • 2002
  • 14
  • 1 h 21 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
296 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
2.762
525
Forest Whitaker, Katie Holmes, Colin Farrell, and Radha Mitchell in Por um Fio (2002)
Trailer
Reproduzir trailer2:29
2 vídeos
99+ fotos
CrimeSuspenseSuspenses psicológicos

O publicista Stuart Shepard está preso em uma cabine telefônica, encurralado pelo fuzil de um atirador. Incapaz de sair ou receber ajuda externa, a negociação de Stuart com o interlocutor le... Ler tudoO publicista Stuart Shepard está preso em uma cabine telefônica, encurralado pelo fuzil de um atirador. Incapaz de sair ou receber ajuda externa, a negociação de Stuart com o interlocutor leva a um espantoso clímax.O publicista Stuart Shepard está preso em uma cabine telefônica, encurralado pelo fuzil de um atirador. Incapaz de sair ou receber ajuda externa, a negociação de Stuart com o interlocutor leva a um espantoso clímax.

  • Direção
    • Joel Schumacher
  • Roteirista
    • Larry Cohen
  • Artistas
    • Colin Farrell
    • Kiefer Sutherland
    • Forest Whitaker
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,1/10
    296 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    2.762
    525
    • Direção
      • Joel Schumacher
    • Roteirista
      • Larry Cohen
    • Artistas
      • Colin Farrell
      • Kiefer Sutherland
      • Forest Whitaker
    • 724Avaliações de usuários
    • 149Avaliações da crítica
    • 56Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória e 8 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Phone Booth
    Trailer 2:29
    Phone Booth
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:40
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:40
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?

    Fotos114

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    Elenco principal54

    Editar
    Colin Farrell
    Colin Farrell
    • Stu Shepard
    Kiefer Sutherland
    Kiefer Sutherland
    • The Caller
    Forest Whitaker
    Forest Whitaker
    • Captain Ramey
    Radha Mitchell
    Radha Mitchell
    • Kelly Shepard
    Katie Holmes
    Katie Holmes
    • Pamela McFadden
    Paula Jai Parker
    Paula Jai Parker
    • Felicia
    Arian Ash
    Arian Ash
    • Corky
    Tia Texada
    Tia Texada
    • Asia
    John Enos III
    John Enos III
    • Leon
    Richard T. Jones
    Richard T. Jones
    • Sergeant Cole
    Keith Nobbs
    Keith Nobbs
    • Adam
    Dell Yount
    Dell Yount
    • Pizza Guy
    James MacDonald
    James MacDonald
    • Negotiator
    • (as James Macdonald)
    Josh Pais
    Josh Pais
    • Mario
    Yorgo Constantine
    Yorgo Constantine
    • ESU Commander
    Colin Patrick Lynch
    Colin Patrick Lynch
    • ESU Technician
    Troy Gilbert
    • ESU Sniper
    Richard Paradise
    • ESU Guy
    • Direção
      • Joel Schumacher
    • Roteirista
      • Larry Cohen
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários724

    7,1296.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8Floated2

    One location thriller delivers

    Phone Booth is described as a one location thriller. It delivers on what it's intended to be. The acting by Colin Farrell is very convincing as a person who gets a mysterious phone call regarding knowing everything about him. Keifer Sutherland is great as the mysterious caller. His voice fits perfectly and his delivery is top notch.

    For a relatively smaller film, it is never boring. There is enough that occurs and the rest of the supporting cast are also solid.

    The suspense and mystery regarding the caller is great and the buildup to the character keeps you on the edge. Somewhat of a confusing ending yet overall this film is highly entertaining and it's short run time works great.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Quite interesting and entertaining

    I do find Schumacher's films hit(Veronica Guerin) and miss(Batman and Robin), but the premise of Phone Booth seemed interesting, so I checked the film out. It was interesting and entertaining, but the script is sketchy with not much development to character, the ending is predictable and the story has several interesting and suspenseful moments but feels rushed towards the end. However, it is stylishly filmed, with some great camera work especially, Schumacher's direction is efficient and the soundtrack is compliments Phone Booth very well. The acting also helps lift, Colin Farell is very good and Forest Whittacker is solid as usual but the star turn was Kiefer Sutherland who was suitably malevolent as the caller. Overall, entertaining and mostly good. 7/10 Bethany Cox
    bob the moo

    Small scale and slightly flawed but gripping and very enjoyable thriller

    Stu Shepherd is in public relations and uses lies and deceit everyday in his job to get things moving. When calling a client from a phone booth in the hope of getting her to a hotel. When he hangs up the phone rings and he answers to what he assumes is a prank call. However the caller reveals more and more about Stu exposing his lies. When Stu tries to leave the caller reveals that he has Stu pinned down with a sniper rifle and the death of a man by the booth proves it. The police arrive and surround Stu while the caller continues his game.

    Everyone knows that it had a small budget, a shooting window of just over a week and that it was made years ago and shelved as Farrell's star power increased and real life terrorist attacks and snipers came and went in the media and the mind of the American public. So I'll not dwell on that and instead talk of the film! The pitch was enough to get me interested – `man is held in phone box by sniper' – sounds great! I really wanted to see this film but was put off by the trailer, but not of the films I saw wrong in the trailer were to the detriment of the film as over 80-odd minutes it really runs like a race horse.

    Starting with humour and a free-flowing pace it turns sinister early on but keeps the pace. In terms of plot it has many good twists and turns that will keep you interested and on the edge of your seat. The only issue for me was accepting why the sniper was doing it and how he was able to get access to the equipment he would have needed as well as the information – not to mention the WILL to do it! Also little things bugged me, but the film carries itself over these obstacles well enough and reservations are soon forgotten. It sounds simple but the simple ideas work best and, although low on action (sorry, teen boys!) it is driven by dialogue and simply not knowing what will come next.

    The direction helps the film by constantly moving and using split screens etc to give the impression that a lot is going on at once – again making the film feel like it has a fast pace. It feels a little gimmicky (especially now that we've had 2 series of 24 doing the same thing) but it works regardless. I wrote in an old review (8mm I think) that I would never pay to see a Joel Schumacher film ever again, and I DIDN'T pay to see Phone Booth! However I was surprised because he didn't ruin it! He did a good job – yes, you heard me! His usual excesses seem to have been controlled by a good producer and editing team and the film works – much to my surprise and relief!

    Farrell may not be a bona-fide Hollywood star yet but he takes the task of being onscreen for almost the whole film and runs with it. He makes a comically cruel character someone that reveals himself to be a loser but never loses the audience – and that takes talent. Sutherland's voice on the trailer didn't work for me (too normal and slow) but in the film he is excellent, like the director said, no-one else could have done the role, he is right for it. Whitaker makes up the third lead and he holds his corner well.

    It may not be without the odd flaw but this film manages to be simple, gripping and very effective. Well worth a look.
    7Shiva-11

    One ringy dingy.

    Anyone who doubts that people are as easily programmable as Pavlov's pets need look no further Graham Bell's little box. While most of us generally don't start salivating at the sound of a ringing phone, few people (unless they work for a software help desk) can resist the urge to answer one. Pray that the darkest force that dials your number is a telemarketer.

    For Stu Shephard, sincerity is little more than a fuzzy concept. A shady publicist, his life consists of spinning interconnecting webs of lies to further the careers of clients and raise his stature. In his spare time he enjoys abusing his assistant, and ignoring his wife. Stu is, is also determined to give an impressionable young actress a test run on the casting couch. When he enters the one functioning pay phone in a ten-block radius in the hopes of setting up a liaison, the phone rings. It turns out to be Stu's conscience on the line. With a sniper rifle aimed at Stu's head.

    When you take into account that `Phone Booth' was filmed in just ten days, on a limited budget with a dearth of special effects, one principle actor and a single venue you could be forgiven for questioning the potential success of this film. The original November 2001 release date might give one pause - films that sit on the shelf usually do so for a reason - read `straight to video'. In this instance the studio wanted to wait until Farrell was more familiar to moviegoers. He achieved this with a little film called `Minority Report' (the name of his co-star escapes me at the moment...). `Phone Booth's' new release date had to be pushed back once again after the sniping episodes in Washington. Some things are worth the wait.

    While he stole the spotlight as the maniacal hit man in `Daredevil', Farrell is faced with a different animal in `Phone Booth', an 80-minute soliloquy which lives or dies on his performance (several A-list stars walked away from the project for this very reason). Reminiscent of his much-lauded turn in `Tigerland', Farrell confirms that he isn't a one trick pony, proffering a wide-ranging display of emotions, from cocky to cathartic without straying into soap opera or comic territory. He delivers his lines with a solid fluidity rare among his peers, no simple feat when one takes into account that he's suppressing a harsh brogue. Farrell also demonstrates a presence, beyond mere charisma - his good looks can only inspire interest for so long - that draw the viewer into the story.

    While the supporting cast - Katie Holmes as the naive ingenue and Forrest Whitaker as the good cop - fulfill their purpose, it is Keifer Sutherland who takes up what little slack there is. While the audience doesn't get to see Sutherland, he is amply menacing as the cold, otherworldly voice on the other end of the phone. The audience is never privy to who he is (`Just call me Bob') or what his motives are, but it is inconsequential - he sees all, knows all, and is clearly in charge. Unlike S&M, there are no safe words. And for a control freak like Stu nothing could be more terrifying.

    Although tied to a static location, deft camera work provides action, perspective and mood with such techniques as quick pans, compressed zooming, and picture in picture sequences, while careful not to cross the gimmickry line . Enhanced sound editing bolsters the visuals: ringing phones are jarring, Bob's quietly booming voice is unsettling, and the sound of a round being chambered is deafening.

    `Phone Booth' could easily have been a quirky novelty flick that played well amongst the art house set. Thanks to Farrell's performance it makes for good mainstream cinema (normally an oxymoron) and may actually make a few top ten lists.
    9what3v3r

    Gosh! And 10 days was all it took to be filmed!!

    Colin Farrell is a self-professed star publicist with an attitude to boot. Watch 81 minutes of gut-wrenching nerve-wracking dialog reduce a pretentious "kiss my ass" punk into an enervated and regretful reprobate. Farrell is simply awesome in portraying the gravity of the situation. "The Caller"'s voice is absolutely worth a mention. Calm, creepy and authoritative! Something different and the movie would have fallen flat on its 'flab less' anterior. Sutherland plays 'The Caller', manning a high profile sniper rifle, while he thrusts honesty upon Stu Shephard (Colin Farrell). Frankly, I couldn't keep my eyes off the screen for a second.

    Ebert himself was marvelled by the creativity of "Phone Booth". Why! It wasn't without good reason! A gaudy character stuck inside a phone booth in a busy locale, some good camera work, bunch of apartment windows, a psycho sniper and 10 days of excellent filming supported by a 'worth a mention' cast easily will manage to get into a good bundle of "top ten" lists. Fabulous entertainment and a good display of creativity. Graham Bell is still aiding marvels, I guess!

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The phone actually worked, and there was someone on the other line talking to Colin Farrell speaking as the caller, but Kiefer Sutherland's voice was added in during post-production.
    • Erros de gravação
      At the end of the movie as Stu (Colin Farrell) lies in the ambulance after being shot, he is given medication for the pain which makes him very disoriented just in time for The Caller (Kiefer Sutherland) to show up and taunt him. The person who administered the medication just hops out of the ambulance. Any time an injured person would be given such a strong medicine, they would be monitored to ensure that they have no negative reaction.
    • Citações

      Stu: I have never done anything for anybody who couldn't do something for me. I string along an eager kid with promises I'll pay him money. I only keep him around because he looks up to me. Adam, if you're watching, don't be a publicist. You're too good for it. I lie in person and on the phone. I lie to my friends. I lie to newspapers and magazines who, who sell my lies to more and more people. I am just a part of a big cycle of lies, I should be fuckin' president. I wear all this Italian shit because underneath I still feel like the Bronx. I think I need these clothes and this watch. My two thousand dollar watch is a fake and so am I. I've neglected the things I should have valued most. I valued this shit. I take off my wedding ring to call Pam. Kelly, that's Pam. Don't blame her. I never told her I was married. And if I did she, she would have told me to go home. Kelly, looking at you now, I'm ashamed of myself. All right? I mean, I work so hard on this image, on Stu Shepherd, the asshole who refers to himself in the third person, that I only proved I should be alone. I have just been dressing up as something I'm not for so long, I'm so afraid no one will like what's underneath. But here I am, just flesh and blood and weakness, and uh and I love you so fucking much. And, um, I take off this ring because it only reminds me of how I've failed you, and I don't, don't want to give you up. I want to make things better, but it may not be my choice anymore. You deserve better.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      The 20th Century Fox logo blends into the white clouds that open the film.
    • Versões alternativas
      The FX Network airs this movie with Jared Leto's deleted scene reinserted to bring up the film's running time to fit a two-hour block.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Noite de Sexta Manhã de Sábado (2007)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Operator
      Written by William Spivery

      Produced by Nathan Larson

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is Phone Booth?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Who is the uncredited narrator at the beginning of the movie?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 20 de junho de 2003 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Suaíli
    • Também conhecido como
      • Enlace mortal
    • Locações de filme
      • Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Fox 2000 Pictures
      • Zucker/Netter Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 13.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 46.566.212
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 15.021.088
      • 6 de abr. de 2003
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 97.837.138
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 21 min(81 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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