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'The Box'
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Movie Review
'The Box' (PG-13)
Thomas Leupp
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Hollywood.com Says
This sprawling sci-fi thriller from director Richard Kelly might just be the 'WTF?!?' film of 2009.
Enigmatic indie director
Richard Kelly
is nothing if not ambitious. His debut feature, the cult favorite
Donnie Darko
, tackled both suburban ennui
and
quantum physics. His follow-up,
Southland Tales
, combined elaborate dance numbers and juvenile comedy with apocalyptic Bible quotes and Patriot Act criticism. Kelly’s latest effort, the sci-fi thriller
The Box
, turns a forgotten
Twilight Zone
story into a sprawling existential discourse on humanity’s predilection for greed and solipsism.
The Box
begins with a straightforward premise and uses it to launch headlong into bizzaro-land. In 1976, a mysterious box arrives at the doorstep of a suburban Virginia couple (
Cameron Diaz
and
James Marsden
), followed by a well-dressed, horribly disfigured man (
Frank Langella
, looking even creepier than Nixon) who bears a strange yet enticing proposition: If one of them pushes the bright red button atop the box, they will receive a cash payment of $1 million, and a person they do not know will die. There are a few binding stipulations, naturally — a non-disclosure agreement, etc. — but none more onerous than those found in the standard cell-phone contract.
Of course they decide to push the button (blame the wife); there wouldn’t be a movie if they didn’t. But the momentous decision doesn’t occur until
almost 40 minutes
into
The Box
, during which Diaz’s Norma and Marsden’s Arthur are revealed to be among the most daft protagonists in the history of sci-fi. It’s like watching the
Tommy Lee
/
Pamela Anderson
sex tape, except instead of sex, the two vapid stars engage in an extended ethics debate.
Furthering the notion is what appears to be an intense game of bad-acting one-upsmanship on the part of the two lead actors (hint: Diaz wins!).
Their creepy benefactor keeps up his end of the bargain and hands over the cash, but Arthur and Norma don’t even get a chance to enjoy their newfound riches before unpleasant things begin happening all around them, not the least of which is an epidemic of bloody noses among the townsfolk. The more they try to determine the nature of their predicament, the worse it becomes, until they find themselves at the center of a vast, bats**t-crazy,
M. Night Shyamalan
-esque conspiracy involving space travel, telepathy, mind control and a really, really irksome Martian.
It’s not all bad, mind you, but every time
The Box
seems on the verge of developing into something really cool, either director Kelly takes another bizarre left turn or Diaz delivers another jaw-droppingly bad line. Perhaps most infuriatingly, at no point during their travails do either Arthur and Norma ever consider dipping into their stash of cash. You know, a million bucks can buy a helluva lot of ammunition — especially in 1976 dollars.
Joking aside, Richard Kelly does deserve credit for being one of the most thought-provoking directors out there. But why does the prevailing thought always have to be “What the f**k?!?”
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