The Box

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The Box Also available on Blu-Ray

From the director of Donnie Darko, comes another mind-bender: Norma (Cameron Diaz) and Arthur Lewis (James Marsden) are a suburban couple with a young kid who receive a simple wooden box with a big red button. A mysterious man (Frank Langella) comes along and tells them that they will be delivered $1 million if they press the button. The downside is that some human being, somewhere in the world, will die. Norma and Arthur have 24 hours to choose whether they want to take part in this odd trade-off.

Starring
Cameron Diaz, James Marsden, Frank Langella

Directed by
Richard Kelly ('Donnie Darko', 'Southland Tales')

Written by
Richard Kelly

(M) contains violence | Adaptation, Mystery, Science Fiction, Thriller | USA | Official Website


USER REVIEWS

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Average rating 5 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars


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Let me guess

I havent seen the film, but does one of them press the button and either the presser dies the instant die or the spouse watching it being pressed dies?

Reviewed by Lisa
the box
5 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars

I havnt seen this movie but as soon as it comes out im whatching it looks awsome as . . .

Reviewed by squirt

PRESS REVIEWS

Average rating 4 Stars out of a possible 5 Stars


Chicago Sun-Times (Roger Ebert)

I know, I know, "The Box" triumphantly qualifies for one of my favorite adjectives, "preposterous." But if you make a preposterous movie that isn't boring, I count that as some kind of a triumph.

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Empire (UK)

Movie Marmite. Many will be perplexed. Donnie Darko fans should lap it up.

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Hollywood Reporter

An artistic fiasco that cuts across genre lines and all logic to become, perhaps, an instant midnight movie.

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Los Angeles Times

Too bad Norma and Arthur didn't leave it on the porch. Richard Kelly's latest is no 'Donnie Darko.' The morality tale is fractured, foolish and slow as molasses.

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New York Times

“The Box,” is sincere and sinister and inevitably ambitious, a serious work that insists on its own seriousness even when it edges toward the preposterous.

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Urban Cinefile (Australia)

It's a curly can of worms that this intriguing premise involving action, reaction and consequence prises open.

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View Auckland (Matt Turner)

Richard Kelly's creepily atmospheric thriller starts well and is suitably dark and weird throughout but it starts to unravel in the second half and becomes increasingly pretentious and annoying.

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Flicks.co.nz "The Box" Movie Review

Flicks.co.nz rating


James Croot, Flicks.co.nz

Posing the most divisive cinematic million dollar question since Redford wanted an evening alone with Demi Moore, Richard Kelly's (Donnie Darko, Southland Tales) third film is another challenging, Lynchian slice of headscratching sci-fi. Lost fans bemoaning the imminent loss of their beloved series will lap up the moral conundrums, flawed characters and unexplained nosebleeds The Box offers up.

Kelly makes terrific use of the moody 1970s setting and the full frame, playing with focus to divert and direct the viewer's attention, while Canadian band Arcade Fire's haunting score adds to the rising tension. While Diaz and Marsden are solid rather than spectacular, a disfigured Langella steals the show with his seriously creepy performance.

Although the story raises a lot of interesting questions, like most Twilight Zone-esque tales (this story was originally filmed as Button Button for the TV series in 1986) it struggles with the resolution which comes across as an amalgam of The Forgotten, Drag Me To Hell, The Abyss, Stargate and The Astronaut's Wife.

Fans of Donnie Darko will lap this up but, for newbies, The Box is best summed up by a conversation between Diaz and her screen son. "You sure do ask a lot of questions." "And now you're avoiding them."


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