When a Stranger Calls

    When a Stranger Calls
    1979

    Synopsis

    A student babysitter has her evening disturbed when the phone rings. So begins a series of increasingly terrifying and threatening calls that lead to a shocking revelation.

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    Cast

    • Carol KaneJill Johnson
    • Charles DurningJohn Clifford
    • Colleen DewhurstTracy
    • Tony BeckleyCurt Duncan
    • Rutanya AldaMrs. Mandrakis
    • Carmen ArgenzianoDr. Mandrakis
    • Kirsten LarkinNancy
    • Ron O'NealLt. Charlie Garber
    • HeetuHouseboy
    • Rachel RobertsDr. Monk

    Recommendations

    • 75

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      When a Stranger Calls manages to scare the stuffing out of the audience - the film is authentically terrifying - without pouring more than a demi-carafe of gore. [22 Oct 1979]
    • 70

      Variety

      More than anything else, When a Stranger Calls resembles a good, old-fashioned grade B thriller.
    • 60

      The New York Times

      The gimmick behind When a Stranger Galls is a scary one, but it's been played for more than it's worth.
    • 60

      TV Guide Magazine

      The first part of this film is an exceedingly taut little chiller that stands on its own, and in fact was once a short film entitled The Sitter. Director Fred Walton decided to expand the clever premise into a feature and, unfortunately, that is where the film begins to fall apart.
    • 60

      Washington Post

      Director Fred Walton sets the audience up early for a 20-minute reign of terror and gracefully shocks them out of their seats in a final blitz. But he packs the middle with drawn-out dialogue and mindless series of chases and escapes that do little more tan pad the feature film into feature length. [19 Oct 1979, p.31]
    • 50

      Time Out

      This stab at the soft underbelly of American middle class paranoia looks increasingly contrived once the film loses direction in the daylight outside, and a realism intrudes that the film-makers just don't know how to handle.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      Fred Walton, who directed Stranger, seems more skillful at orchestrating creepy atmospherics than John Carpenter was in Halloween. At the same time, he's scarcely clever or stylish enough to make Stranger a thriller worth going out of your way for. [20 Oct 1979, p.F6]