In 1961 Rod Serling penned a Twilight Zone episode entitled Five Characters in
Search of an Exit. Although it's never been one of that series' most popular outings,
the tale of five strangers trapped inside a giant cylindrical object with no means
of escape and no idea how or why they're even there must have stuck with director
Natali because Cube is virtually identical in more ways than one. Like Serling's
script, the Canadian-helmed Cube revolves around a quintet of strangers trapped inside
an impenetrable mystery: a steel and Lucite cube that looks for all the world like
the Cenobite's view off one of Hellraiser's evil puzzle-boxes. Bizarre, seemingly
random patterns cover the walls and in the center of each wall sits a sliding portal
through which egress can be made. The trick? Some rooms contain deadly booby traps
such as whipping razor wire and wall-mounted jets of acid. It's up to the five --
a hair-trigger cop (Wint), a paranoid M.D. (Guadagni), a young mathematics whiz (de
Boer), a nihilistic office worker (Hewlett), and a wily ex-con (Robson) -- to figure
out which room is which, as well as other suitable topics such as what the hell's
going on and why, specifically, they've been cast in alongside each other. Cube opens
with some astonishingly gory footage of what not to do when entering an adjoining
room, but quickly goes downhill from there. It's an existential, Kafka-esque nightmare
with no real resolution, although if you've been biding your time waiting to see
some high-strung, ham-handed bickering on-screen, this is your A-ticket. Stagy in
the extreme (though not based on a play), the action moves through the variously
colored cubes as the characters devolve into parodies of themselves. The cop's steely
authority eventually turns to psychotic rage, while the nihilist turns out to have
plenty of just cause. Conversations, of which there are many, touch on everything
from eco-terrorism to government cover-ups to UFOs, all while providing virtually
no backstory about the cube or its inhabitants. Eventually, all of this wears thin,
enlivened only by a couple of moderately unassuming turns (de Boer, Miller) and the
occasional freshet of gore. By the end of 90 minutes, it comes as no surprise that
the "protagonist" turns out to be the most simple-minded of the lot (Miller's
idiot savant, who wanders in about a third of the way through), making this a sort
of angsty Forrest Gump for the Wired set. Startling at times, but just as equally
distant at others, Cube seems to have it all backwards: It's a film in search of
a one-act play.
--Marc Savlov
Film Vault Suggested Links
The Incredible Melting Man 
The Forbidden Zone 
Humanoids from the Deep 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Vincenzo Natali at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|