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| The Caller | |
|---|---|
Video release poster | |
| Directed by | Arthur Allan Seidelman |
| Written by | Michael Sloan |
| Produced by |
|
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Daniele Nannuzzi |
| Edited by | Bert Glatstein |
| Music by | Richard Band |
| Distributed by | Empire Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 97 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
The Caller is a 1987mysterythriller film starringMalcolm McDowell andMadolyn Smith, distributed independently byEmpire Pictures. The film appears at first to be a straightforward story about a man wanting to use a girl's telephone, but things aren't as they seem.[1] Similar to a stage play, it is set in a primary location with onlytwo actors.[2] The film was shot in theLazio region of Italy.
Special effects were supervised byJohn Carl Buechler, known for his long list of film credits includingFriday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood,A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, andRe-Animator.[3][4]
A mysterious man ("The Caller") joins a woman ("The Girl") in a forest cabin. The Caller initially claims that his car has broken down and he needs to use her telephone.[1] Things quickly become suspicious as they examine each other's stories for inconsistencies. The Girl claims that she caused the accident to lure the man up so she can kill him. The man claims that he is a police officer, investigating the possibility that the woman has killed her own family.
Neither claim stands up well to scrutiny. The climax reveals that the situation is actually a weekly experiment (similar to anescape room), where "points" are awarded to the Girl for finding flaws in the Caller's story. The reward for obtaining 50 points (which is nearly impossible) is to be freed from the experiment.[5]
An altercation occurs, and The Caller is shocked by an electrical outlet, revealing itsrobotic endoskeleton.[4][6] The Caller reveals that one thousand parents remain in "the experiment", separated from their children as motivation. The Girl sprints to the temporarily unprotected perimeter in the woods, but is distracted by echoing calls from her child. A second Caller appears to recapture the Girl, mock her attempt, and "start over" the experiment.[5]
Originally intended for a theatrical release, the film was only shown at the 1987 Cannes Film Market and the 1987 MystiFest in Italy. On December 27, 1989, the film was finally released in the United States on videocassette byTrans World Entertainment.MGM released a manufactured-on-demand DVD-R of the film on March 15, 2011.[citation needed]
In July 2020,Vinegar Syndrome announced that they were set to release a new scan of the original film print, on Blu-ray for the first time.[1]
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