Targeted
directly at the teen babysitting crowd, When A Stranger Calls is a bloodless
exercise in watery tension that is safe enough to appeal to its young audience,
even if it falls short of the original's impact. Comparisons of the two
films actually uncover a surprising reverence for the original that is
rare in modern-day remakes as the new film blatantly lifts exact lines
and scare tactics directly from the 1979 shocker time and again. The problem
is that this picture basically tries to stretch what was 15 minutes of
terror into a 90-minute feature. What's even worse is that the movie almost
pulls it off. The new remote setting puts an imaginative spin on the scenario,
complete with a "smart house" that comes furnished with motion detector
lights in every room and expansive, voyeuristic windows that would indeed
make for perfect thriller devices. Sadly, director Simon West never utilizes
them to their full advantage. The premise hinges on playing off of the
audience's fears, but instead the filmmakers fall back on this never-ending
cat-and-mouse shtick that has no payoff. Sure, there is a final confrontation,
but never does the picture unnerve its audience into thinking that the
killer is as disturbed as the movie sets him up to be. While the original
is severely flawed in its own right, it managed to frighten enough moviegoers
to place it in the public consciousness for years to come. As it is now,
teens that see this Stranger will probably be more scared of their cell
phone bill than this entirely forgettable flick.