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An average movie

Posted : 12 years ago on 11 April 2012 08:36

Like many other viewers, I was quite blown away by 'Donnie Darko' which was definitely one of the most impressive directing debuts ever. As a result, we all had some high hopes concerning Richard Kelly but, more than 15 years later, we are still waiting for something else great coming  from this director.... Anyway, 3 years after the huge failure of ‘Southland Tales’, it seems that Kelly decided to scale down and he delivered something much less ambitious than his 2 first movies. I mean, it was still another mindf*ck and it did remind me of David Lynch's work with a little bit of 'Lost' and a lot of 'Twilight Zone' in it (as a matter of fact, this movie had been inspired by a 'Twilight Zone' episode). To be honest, even though the directing was not bad and Cameron Diaz and James Marsden did what they could and provided some decent performances, the whole thing was still too preposterous for me. I mean, the whole button thing ('should they press it or not?') was already intriguing enough but they kept adding some weird stuff every 5 minutes and I kind of lost interest after a while. Still, even though it was flawed, the whole thing was still fairly entertaining and I think it is worth a look, especially if you like the genre.



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The Box review

Posted : 13 years, 4 months ago on 14 December 2010 04:36

This movie makes my top 5 worst movies. The acting is absolutely terrible. The film is too long. Cameron Diaz' accent is a fail. The story line/plot is I thumbs down. And when you think the movie couldn't get any worse, it does and all of a sudden the movie turns supernatural and it leaves you stunned and you wonder to yourself, "what the hell."
Then you turn it off because you cannot bear to watch another minute.


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The Box review

Posted : 13 years, 9 months ago on 1 August 2010 05:17

Press the play button and two things will happen. One, right in your head, your brain will die a little. And two, you will waste 2 hours on your life on a crappy movie. I was very skeptical about this movie. It seemed like it had a good idea. But I couldn't see them turning it into a 2 hour movie. The score was distracting, because it sounded like something you'd hear in "The Haunted Mansion". The story was just ridiculous and confusing. A guy comes to your house and gives you a button. Press the button and all hell breaks loose. The only thing I liked about this movie was Frank Langella, because he's awesome. But the special effects on his face were terrible. Overall, "The Box" was a ridiculous, confusing and over-acted film. 2.2


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A Mess of a Film

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 12 March 2010 01:58

Arlington Steward: I have an offer to make. If you push the button, two things will happen. First, someone, somewhere in the world, whom you don't know, will die. Second, you will receive a payment of one million dollars. You have 24 hours.

Arthur and Norma Lewis are the average married couple who are working pay check to pay check spending more than they have. They get an offer from a man named Arlington Steward who offers them one million dollars but somewhere someone has to die. Norma and Arthur contemplate the issue and ultimately accept which sends them on a journey which no one expected.

The first 40 minutes or filled with deciding what was right and what was wrong I felt like I was reading a self help book on how to feel like I made the right choice morally. They went back and forth, tossing the idea of someone else’s death like it meant nothing. They discussed the fact that they don’t know the person, but Arthur looked at it from a different view saying it could be anyone, the neighbour from across the street, their own parents, a family friend. In the end after weighing these options and seeming like a genuine family Norma still pushed the button. So much for the back and forth Moral discussion, throw that book out the window. What happens next is clearly not what anyone expected. I was thinking it was some sort of creepy test but in the end in the grand scale of things it would just be one man working to make a point. How wrong was I?

They went way beyond just trying to convey a simple message of what is right and what is wrong. They brought into a whole lot of other things that drew away from the original “Box” test and threw the family for a whole other ride. In the end the film does make sense, it is just that Richard Kelly took the long way around and ruin his original idea of this just being a moral test.

I did not buy into Cameron Diaz’s acting. Her accent was terrible, her mannerisms were equally as terrible and her words seemed forced, like someone said she either did this film or her career was over. She didn’t even try hard at all, her lines that were supposed to solidify her character were flat, her decisions were not something we all couldn’t see coming before hand. Her character was nothing original and neither was the acting job she put forth. Not a good role for her to have taken on.
Arlington Steward: There are always consequences.

I was also heavily disappointed with Fran Langella. He also came up flat, his voice sounding dull and lifeless, when his character of Arlington Steward was the center of the whole mystery. Langella was the key piece to making this film come off as realistic and when he teetered on the brink of being that cheesy shadowy figure I began to laugh at the events that took place in this film.

There is much debate amongst fans on forums debating about what this film actually means, who Steward was, what the box represents and why he is playing this game. In the end I don’t think any of these debates matter, this film is an over developed mess of moral decisions weighing heavily in ones heart. The ultimate message of this film is that when we make a wrong decision we must be able to live with the fallout not anyone else. We cannot blame our choices on anyone we need to take responsibility and own up for the mistakes we make. This movie should have stopped after about 60 minutes and I really think it would have made a better short film then a feature length film that runs at almost 120 mins. Because what this movie should have done, which it failed to do is make us think about what our decision would have been in the same situation. It failed to do this when Kelly threw in all the back story of Arlington Steward, leave him as the creepy figure that shows up at the door, and focus on how the ultimate decision would have driven these people crazy without the added bits of the supernatural. The reason behind Stewards game doesn’t matter, he is testing these people and the moral message could have still been delivered if Richard Kelly could have at least made us connect with his characters.

Really not a good film, not at all what I was hoping it would be.


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very entertainging ,however different

Posted : 14 years, 5 months ago on 12 November 2009 01:54

Based on Richard Matheson's Short story "Button, Button". Richard Kelly(Donnie Darko, Southland tales)directs and writes this fine piece of film. The box has a very simple plot, it seems at first. The short story is basically summed up in the first thirty-five minutes of the film. Excluding the the end for a very promising, but different finale. The Box stars Cameron Diaz as Norma Lewis and James Marsden as Arthur Lewis respectively. A couple on the brink of losing everything they own, Then, Mr. Arlington Steward ( a very good and well chosen Frank Langella) delivers a package at their door-step with a note, saying that he will call at five 0' clock. Needless to say Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are offered a deal of a lifetime push the red button in the brown box and receive one million dollars for the death of someone they don't know. The suspense of the original story was does Mrs. Lewis push the button? and who dies? Richard kelly not only does this but takes us father and deeper than we have been before with this story. which is what happens after Mrs. Lewis pushes the button? The message here is clear and simple, individualism will be the end of humanity. The Box will not only please Richard kelly Fans but anyone who is interested this very cool premise. The acting is academy award worthy on Frank Langella's end.


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