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Cube
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Directed by Vincenzo Natali
This low-budget science-fiction drama, winner of a 1997 Toronto Film Festival prize for "Best Canadian First Feature," depicts the plight of a group of people clad in prison-style uniforms and trapped in futuristic cube-like metal cells. Their memories are hazy; no one can recall how they got there. Alderson (Julian Richings) awakens in a cell, seeks an exit, and arrives in an adjacent cube where he's sliced and diced. Former cop Quentin (Maurice Dean-Wint) becomes the group leader, and he's challenged by conspiracy theorist Dr. Holloway (Nicky Guadagni). Government worker Worth (David Hewlett) remembers a past government link to the project. A discovery that the cubes have numerical codes suggests study by math-student Leaven (Nicole deBoer) while former thief Rennes (Wayne Robson) knows some escape tricks. However, the extreme behavior of Kazan (Andrew Miller) becomes a threat to their survival. The film was also shown at the 1997 Vancouver Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
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nanook660nanook660 Great Psychological Thriller
by nanook660 in nanook660 Blog
loved it.
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"A great movie. It is better than the second movie. It was very creepy in spots. I am a fan of this form of storytelling that allows the viewer to try and solve the puzzle alongside the movie and with the characters. " [More]
kimberlyFDRkimberlyFDR A Thoughtful Puzzle
by kimberlyFDR in kimberlyFDR Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I've always been a fan of the Saw way of storytelling. Allowing the audience to put together a puzzle as the plot develops, trusting the audience to be intelligent and interactive, this makes for a great way of viewing a movie. Cube was a great example of this storytelling. The characters were slowly revealed with their backgrounds and why they were brought together in this situation. It's life or death, but the escape is out of reach for most. " [More]
slipofthetongueslipofthetongue Cube Squared
by slipofthetongue in SlipOfTheTongue Blog
liked it.
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"The Cube series is quite a lot of fun if you like thoughtful, low budget horror and it has the following going for it...1.) Intriguing use of single room location.2.) Characters from all walks of life thrown together are forced to rely on (and trust) one another.3.) Open ended discussion of what the cube could be lets your mind disengage from reality and imagine the worst.4.) Open ended fears allow characters to deviate from their " [More]
Phantasma-gore-iaPhantasma-gore-ia So brilliant, wicked creativity
by Phantasma-gore-ia in Phantasma-gore-ia Blog
loved it.
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"There's too much to say, too easy to get carried away, but I'll constrain myself to this: a tightly-wound, truly engaging psychological thrill, Cube is one in a time-tested series of successes built on the highly effective platform of, as I call them, one-set flicks, movies that take place if not entirely in a single location then predominantly in one place. It's always been a firm belief that when characters are sequestered indefinitely, the penning-in of human nature " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Weekly Theme for April 20: A ...
by mercurial in Weekly Theme
"When I think about kidnapping films the first thing that comes to mind is "It puts the lotion in the basket." The Silence of the Lambs has that rare ability to give me chills each time I watch it and I love it for that. I think a lot of people also became weary of helping others after Buffalo Bill feigned an injury in order to kidnap his prey in the film. The thought of being trapped in a well and starved so " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:What are your favorite horro ...
by Risselada in HORROR MOVIES 101
"[quote user="comicking62"] well have any of you checked out the CUBE movies there are 3 of them also the ginger snaps movies 4 i think let me know what you think of them [/quote] I've seen the first two Cube movies. The first one is AMAZING. One of my absolute favorites. The second one is pretty go " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Introduce Yourself - a place ...
by Risselada in sci-fi
"My name is Brian. Some people call me Rizzo. I'm originally from the Grand Rapids area, but have been living in Chicago for over four years now (holy cow, has it been that long?! I guess it has). I have too many favorite sci-fi movies to almost name here. I might just have to go with 2001: A Space Odyssey as the classice straight up sci-fi movie. Although [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Weekly Theme for July 29: Lo ...
by mercurial in Weekly Theme
"Well, one of my favorites has to be Dogville and the relentless imprisonment that Nicole Kidman's character must endure. However, not too many people tend to like that film. The Matrix et al is pretty much about the human race trying to escape being imprisoned. Similarly, [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Pick a Pair
by leeroy711 in Movie Games
"Cube followed by Pi These films both prove that math is evil. " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
A triumph of imagination over budget, Cube is about as sharp and tense as they come -- especially for a psychological thriller shot in a single room, transformed into multiple rooms by a bunch of colored light filters. It's a take-notice debut from Canadian screenwriter/director Vincenzo Natali, and not only because it creeps out its audience far more than a film costing under 500,000 dollars has any business doing. In fact, with its sophisticated special effects, makeup effects, and script, it doesn't even call attention to its own underdog status. Cube is a penetrating sociological study of human hamsters in a giant maze -- how they address an unfathomable predicament, how they scrap to survive, and how they keep from cracking up, or fail in that regard. Since Natali is not afraid to tamper with the audience's expectations for certain characters, the film is truly unpredictable. Yet his script is gradual enough that none of these reversals can be considered anything so pedestrian as a "plot twist." The stakes are established early with a couple scenes of visceral gore, previewing the potential of this meat-grinding Rubik’s cube. Mindful of the consequences of a misstep, the characters come to embody not only the human mind's disparate skills needed to solve such a puzzle, but also the wide range of emotions and potential reactions to it. The wild card in the equation, as if there needed to be one, is Andrew Miller's autistic man. Brilliantly, the audience isn't at first sure whether he's mentally handicapped, or reduced to spouting nonsense after years trapped inside this nightmare. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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Risselada
Risselada
loved it.
Phantasma-gore-ia
Phantasma-gore-ia
loved it.
TheWorkingDead
TheWorkingDead
loved it.
rica5tully
rica5tully
is not interested.
Arconna
Arconna
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aidanbrack
aidanbrack
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