"La Cabina" ("The Telephone Box") is a short Spanish film from 1972 directed by Antonio Mercero and starring José Luis López Vázquez. Vázquez, whose character spends most of the film's 35 minutes trapped inside a phone booth, plays the un-named "Hombre de la cabina (Man in the Phone Box)".
Creepy dealings inside a phone booth in Adirondack, New York. The film stars Dan Rebeiz and Caleb Rosenberg.
"This phone box stands alone outside of Guildford's local magistrates court and car park. I often see people using it - often young and well dressed people (not the usual stereotypes that one associates with payphone usage in this part of the world)."
Funny sketch from Abbott and Costello, posted to Youtube by Kovacs Corner.
It's a picture of one of the hundreds of abandoned payphone carcasses littering New York City's streets.
An abandoned payphone at 2130 Caton Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn
I spotted this man using a payphone on New Years Day, 2014. I thought he was saying "I PHONED YOUR FATHER!" but I later decided he must have been saying "I FOUND YOUR FATHER!" before angrily hanging up the phone.
Picture of an Afghan Telecom payphone. Kabul, Afghanistan.
Closeup of a payphone seen on the Caribbean Island of St. Maarten/St. Martin. November, 2013.
A picture of a human being using a public pay telephone. A.D. 2013.
I actually had to wait in line to use this Times Square payphone last week.
Try to imagine the story behind this well-dressed Upper East Side man using a payphone and toting a bottle of wine from a nearby liquor store.
This shiny spool of metal wire, part of a payphone's innards, lay exposed for several weeks in a Manhattan subway station.
This well-dressed Upper East side woman took a break from walking her dog to make a call from a Titan payphone.
Having watched the precipitous decline of public telephones in New York City and throughout the United States I found it strangely gratifying to visit Montreal -- a town where the payphone infrastructure is, by comparison, frozen in time.
(212) 473-9148. McSorley’s Old Ale Pub. Vacuous Tourist Bloombergia Hell Hole. This payphone accepts incoming calls. Happy at least to have had legitimate NYC reason to be here tonight. Next thing you know I will be riding the G train. Wait, what?
Bill Harris' "New York", a coffee table book published in 1979, captures some classic images of pre-Giuliani New York City. These images of Chinatown's pagoda-topped phone booths are among them.
This series of reports from CNN's iReport is from 2010, but it loses nothing for being a few years old.
The small but satisfying thrill of getting a quarter back from a payphone segues in to the more volcanic thrill of hitting a jackpot.
The Payphone Project's occasional reminder that people still use payphones.
Luigi Bosco installs a phone booth in his antique shop to drum up business, but attracts nothing more than a common payphone hog.
Paul Voller writes with news of an actual working phone box in the south west of England. Mr. Voller notes that there was "No mobile reception" in the area, "so we enjoyed a decent holiday."
Val Vashon checks in again from Seattle, Washington, with a random collection of payphones from the downtown core.
This 1988 commercial from British Telecom depicts an era of public telephony that has nearly disappeared.
US West set up a (fake) payphone spy cam in this 1993 television commercial.
Lots of amusing phone booth payphonery in this excerpt from the 1968 film "Inspector Clouseau", starring Alan Arkin.
The Payphone Project answers the cynically self-assured question: Do Payphones Still Exist? Do Human Beings Still Use Payphones? Part 5 of 5.