THE BLACK PHONE
DEAD LINE
IN THE NEW HORROR FROM THE MAKERS OF SINISTER, THE BLACK PHONE, A BOY IS TR APPED INSIDE A CHILD KILLER’S GHOST- FILLED BASEMENT
WORDS: DAVID GROVE
AFTER COLLABORATING ON Doctor Strange and the Sinister films, filmmaking partners C Robert Cargill and Scott Derrickson decided to adapt the 2004 horror short story “The Black Phone” into a feature film, by combining the elements of the tale with Derrickson’s own traumatic childhood memories.
Written by Stephen King’s son Joe Hill (find it in his 2005 short story collection 20th Century Ghosts), it tells the story of a 13-year-old boy named John Finney who is kidnapped by a serial killer. When the Galesburg Grabber locks Finney inside his soundproof basement, the boy discovers a seemingly disconnected black phone, through which he’s somehow able to speak to the killer’s previous victims.
“One day in 2005, I entered a book store and found Joe Hill’s book of short stories with ‘The Black Phone’, not knowing who he was at the time,” says Derrickson, who co-produced and co-wrote the film with Cargill. “I read ‘The Black Phone’ while standing in the store, and I immediately recognised that the story’s concept would make for a good horror film.”
Cargill and Derrickson toyed with the idea of turning the story into a feature for more than a decade. They finally moved ahead with the project in early 2020, when the pair decided to step away from the Doctor Strange sequel over creative differences with Marvel Studios. “Back when Sinister was in production, about 10 years ago, before that film was released Scott and I talked about The Black Phone as being our next film,” says Cargill.