The Caller (2011 film)

The Caller

Theatrical Poster
Directed by Matthew Parkhill
Produced by Amina Dasmal
Robin C. Fox
Piers Tempest
Luillo Ruiz
The Pimienta Film Company[1]
Written by Sergio Casci
Starring Rachelle Lefevre
Stephen Moyer
Distributed by Bankside Films
Release dates
  • April 15, 2011 (2011-04-15) (Gulf Film Festival)
  • August 26, 2011 (2011-08-26) (United States)
  • September 1, 2011 (2011-09-01) (Puerto Rico)
Running time
92 minutes
Country Puerto Rico
Language English

The Caller is a supernatural thriller directed by Matthew Parkhill and written by Sergio Casci, starring Rachelle Lefevre, Stephen Moyer and Lorna Raver. The movie was filmed entirely in Puerto Rico. The Gala Premiere of the movie was on August 23, 2011 at Metro Cinema in Puerto Rico.[2]

Plot

When troubled divorcee Mary Kee sets up home in her new apartment, she stumbles across an old telephone which she quickly falls in love with. Struck by its antique charm, she gives it a place of pride in her home. Before long, Mary begins to receive strange phone calls from a mysterious, unknown caller. Over time, she discovers that the caller is a woman named Rose, and the two strike up an unlikely friendship. However, when Rose claims to be calling from the past, Mary begins to question her new friend's motives.

As Rose's phone calls become ever more disturbing, Mary's sense of terror escalates. Feeling haunted in her own home, she cuts all contact with Rose. Enraged by Mary's betrayal, Rose threatens to exact her terrible revenge. Not on Mary in the present but on Mary as a child in the past. Mary finally realizes that she will have to kill Rose in order to save herself. But how can she kill someone living in the past?

She fails. Rose pours hot grease on the young Mary Kee causing the adult Mary Kee to wretch with her new burn scars. After this Mary Kee tries to kill Rose by inviting her to a birthday party at a bowling alley she knew would catch fire and burn, killing all in it. Rose misses the bus and the plan fails, so Rose has the young Mary talk to the adult Mary on a day that the old Rose attempted to barge in and kill her. Mary coaches the young Mary to break a mirror and use the shards to kill Rose, thus ending the attack and the calls, but Mary's abusive husband, Steven reappears, she asks him to leave or he may be sorry, as he denies to go Mary kills him.

Cast

Production

Brittany Murphy was originally cast as Mary Kee, but left the production and was replaced by Rachelle Lefevre.[4]

Awards

Award Year Category Nominee Result Ref
Neuchâtel International Fantastic Film Festival 2011 Narcisse Award for Best Feature Film Matthew Parkhill Nominated [5]

References

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