"Bring us a pitcher of beer every seven minutes until someone passes out. Then bring one every ten." - Back to School (1986) about | advertise | classifieds | legal | myspace | staff | submit for review | support
 
FREE Weekly Newsletter



 
 
     
 
   
  Norma Lewis hears out the proposition of a dark messenger.  
 
     
THE BOX
by Matthew Sorrento
2009, Rated PG-13, 115 minutes, Warner Bros. Pictures
Since "The Twilight Zone" is one of the grandest projects to ever hit television, I'll give anything that extends its legacy a try. Many great moments of the show came from scripter Richard Matheson, also a novelist/short story writer in his own right, who mastered the use of clever devices to produce plot-driven suspense. This style came to define Sterling's legendary series, while Matheson fans loathe the author's teleplays overshadowing his novels, including the genre-exploding vampire yarn I Am Legend (may the Will Smith vehicle, with its Casper-look-alike ghouls, soon die from memory) and The Incredible Shrinking Man.

Writer-director Richard Kelly, who's become something of a lost soul after his ambitious "Southland Tales" resulted in mostly confusion, looks to redeem himself by adapting Matheson's short story, “Button, Button” (which appeared in the 1980s "Twilight Zone" series) for his newest film. In doing so Kelly goes for the mainstream with a high-concept premise: a couple gets an offer for huge rewards, with a catch. The reward is one million dollars, should they push a button locked under a glass dome. The catch: that someone they don't know will die.

The premise sounds like a black joke at Howie Mandel's expense. Yet, Kelly uses Matheson's template to fashion an old-fashioned suspenser. With the film's subtlety and reliance on human choice and action over violence and spectacle, Kelly makes good on his inheritance of a classical form, which he situates circa 1976, when such entertainment had yet to go extinct. Spare as it is, the premise leaves much room for Kelly to let loose his sophomoric Donnie Darko trippiness. It doesn't quite mist up the proceeds, leaving the strong narrative construction able to pull the film through.

Kelly's visual style can feel stiff, but here his creeping tracking shots massage the tension. Norma (Cameron Diaz) and Arthus Lewis (James Marsden) are successful yet struggling Virginia professionals – she, a teacher, and he's a scientist at NASA. Their special deliver comes right when their obstacles rise – he loses a chance at space travel, and she may loose her tuition break for her son. While seeming like Screenwriting 101: How to Enter the Second Act, these pressures end up resurfacing by the end, as early omens at the hands of the misdoers entering the couple's lives.

The special delivery comes from Arlington Steward, a facially deformed Frank Langella who breathes out words just audible enough for his vocal cords to register them. Smoothly laying out the deal, and coming off as chilling as he is credible, the veteran actor serves up a fine gothic messenger, though his character's involvement doesn't stop here.

Matheson's button is, naturally, a pure descendant of Pandora's Box. When Norma hits it on impulse, the deal comes through – crisp cash delivered, and a whole mess of problems in tandem. Before the couples makes the choice, bodies in the film aren't faring too well. Along with Steward's missing left-jaw, which makes for an uncanny resemblance to a combat victim, Norma is missing toes from a childhood x-ray accident, while sundry people she and Arthur encounter suffer nosebleeds. Seasoned viewers know the latter to be a set-up, as is the well-being of the Steward's son, who is introduced right when the everyday obstacles start heaping at the beginning. Arthur fully “opens” the box by inquiring too much into the truth about Steward. When the former learns that Steward seems to have an army of what seem to be Pod people, the film recalls the paranoid thriller tradition that was flourishing during the film's time frame.

Like in the better moments of "Donnie Darko," Kelly serves up suspense and dread, here through a tension-ready scenario. He seems to have the narrative under control, until he moves into act three by sending his story into a nebulous orbit. Kelly undoubtedly delights in pondering the beyond, but here, as in “Darko,” it goes too far for us to ponder it with him. The revelation of the film's mystery just barely makes sense. Yet, we dismiss it as an extended MacGuffin, and thus can delight in the film's devious turns.

 
matthewc
READER
 
dude! nice review. but...please reconsider your run-on sentences. you've got parenthetical phrases which are mini-paragraphs. by the time the reader has a grasp of what you are saying, they forget what the sentence was originally about. too wordy, trying to pack too much in. take your time. or you'll lose your readers.  
Posted on November 8, 2009, 2:42 pm
Matthew Sorrento
STAFF WRITER
 
I appreciate your comments, Matthew, but I will assure you that there isn't one run on above. While many sentences are long, all thoughts are correctly joined. If you find me wordy, then I do apologize.  
Posted on November 8, 2009, 9:49 pm
Leave Comments:
UserName:
Password:
If you do not have a UserName or Password, register with Film Threat.
Comment:
Enter the text in the below image in the following space:
All HTML and other coding languages are stripped from the comments, so any added links or special text formating will not be active.
Read more reviews ...
  2009-11-19 - PROMETHEUS TRIUMPHANT: A FUGUE IN THE KEY OF FLESH  
  2009-11-19 - THE TWILIGHT SAGA: NEW MOON  
  2009-11-19 - TINTO BRASS' THE HOWL (L’URLO) (DVD)  
  2009-11-19 - BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS  
  2009-11-18 - POISON SWEETHEARTS  
  2009-11-17 - RIVER OF RENEWAL (DVD)  
  2009-11-17 - PLANET B-BOY (DVD)  
  2009-11-16 - 2012  
  2009-11-15 - INSIDE DARKNESS  
  2009-11-14 - GOOD EVENING FOLKS, WE’RE THE PINE BOX BOYS  
  2009-11-14 - ABBY  
  2009-11-13 - PIRATE RADIO  
  2009-11-13 - THE END OF POVERTY?  
  2009-11-12 - BONECRUSHER  
  2009-11-12 - NORTH BY NORTHWEST: 50TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION (DVD)  
  2009-11-11 - PAURA: LUCIO FULCI REMEMBERED VOL. 1 (DVD)  
  2009-11-11 - SUPER 8 GIRL GAMES (DVD)  
  2009-11-10 - UP: TWO-DISC DELUXE EDITION (DVD)  
  2009-11-10 - LOVE AND SAVAGERY  
  2009-11-08 - LUIS BUNUEL'S DEATH IN THE GARDEN (DVD)  
  2009-11-08 - PAROLES ET MUSIQUE (LOVE SONGS) (DVD)  
  2009-11-07 - THE MEN WHO STARE AT GOATS  
  2009-11-07 - CLONES GONE WILD  
  2009-11-06 - THE BOX  
  2009-11-06 - THE FOURTH KIND  
     

Headlines
 

Latest Blogs
TRUTH BEHIND "THE FOURTH KIND"? UNIVERSAL ASKS THAT YOU SEE FOR YOURSELF...
A FRIENDLY REMINDER -- FOLLOW FT ON TWITTER
"HOOTERS" WITH SCOOPERS
SOUND ON SIGHT: ANTICHRIST, FESTIVAL DU NOUVEAU CINEMA & A FEW OTHER THINGS
SOUND ON SIGHT: COPPOLA & THE COVE

NEW ON DVD!
UP: TWO-DISC DELUXE EDITION (DVD)
BALLAST
LUIS BUNUEL'S DEATH IN THE GARDEN (DVD)
FOOD, INC.
BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: THE PLAN (DVD)
UP
NORTH BY NORTHWEST: 50TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION (DVD)
STAR TREK

Film Threat Poll
Does 2012 deserve all the hype and coin it's getting?
1) Yes - it's bringing the world down!
2) It's a giant stink bomb.
3) Cusack and Harrelson should co-star in a gay romance.
In Theaters
BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS
THE TWILIGHT SAGA: NEW MOON
2012
PIRATE RADIO
THE MEN WHO STARE AT GOATS
THE FOURTH KIND
THE BOX
THIS IS IT
AN EDUCATION
SAW VI




Site Programming
Site Artwork
copyright © 1985-2009
Gore Group Publications
   
about | advertise | classifieds | legal | myspace | staff | submit for review | support