Cube | |
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Directed by | Vincenzo Natali |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Derek Rogers [1] |
Edited by | John Sanders [1] |
Music by | Mark Korven [1] |
Production company | Cube Libre [2] |
Distributed by | |
Release dates |
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Running time | 90 minutes [4] |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | $350,000 CAD [5] |
Box office | $9 million [6] [7] |
Cube is a 1997 Canadian science fiction horror-thriller film directed and co-written by Vincenzo Natali. [8] A product of the Canadian Film Centre's First Feature Project, [9] Nicole de Boer, Nicky Guadagni, David Hewlett, Andrew Miller, Julian Richings, Wayne Robson, and Maurice Dean Wint star as individuals trapped in a bizarre and deadly labyrinth of cube-shaped rooms.
Cube gained notoriety and a cult following for its surreal and Kafkaesque setting in industrial, cube-shaped rooms. It received generally positive reviews and led to a series of films. An American remake, currently on hold, was in development at Lionsgate in 2015, [10] though current development is unknown. A Japanese remake was released in 2021.
A man named Alderson awakens in a room which has hatches on each wall and floor. Each hatch leads to rooms. He enters another room, but is killed by a trap.
Five different people all meet in another room. Quentin warns the group that he has seen traps in some of the other rooms. Leaven notices each hatch has plates with three sets of numbers etched into them. Rennes tests his theory that each trap could be set by detectors by throwing his boot into a room. This works, but he is killed by acid. The group realizes each trap is set by different sensors.
Quentin believes each person was chosen to be there. Leaven hypothesizes that rooms whose plates contain numbers are trapped. They encounter a man named Kazan. Holloway insists they bring him along. Tension rises among the group, as well as the mystery of the maze's purpose. Worth admits to Quentin he was hired to design the maze’s shell. Worth claims The Cube was created accidentally by a system, and guesses that its purpose has been forgotten, and they have only been placed inside to put it to use.
Worth's knowledge of the dimensions allows Leaven to calculate that the Cube has 17,576 rooms, plus an room that would connect to the shell. She realizes that the numbers may indicate each room's coordinates. The group travels to the edge but realize every room there is trapped. They traverse a room with a trap. Holloway defends him from threats.
The group reaches the edge. Holloway tries to swing over to the shell. The Cube shakes, causing everyone to release the rope, and Quentin catches it at the last second. He pulls her up, but then lets her fall to her death.
Quentin persuades Leaven to abandon Kazan and Worth. He tries to assault her, but Worth attacks him. Quentin counters savagely. Worth starts laughing hysterically. Quentin is horrified, but Worth finds the room where Rennes died in has now moved to the edge of the maze. Leaven deduces that traps are not tagged by numbers, but by powers of numbers. Kazan is revealed as an savant who can calculate factorizations. Leaven guides the group to the cube. Worth then traps Quentin in a hatch. He attempts to harm them, before Worth opens the hatch under him from the room below. The others travel to the room where they open the hatch.
Quentin reappears and impales her with a lever. Worth attacks Quentin. Quentin wounds him in the struggle and pursues Kazan to the other side. Worth grabs Quentin's legs. The cubes move. Worth crawls to Leaven who lays near unmoving to stay by her side. Kazan wanders out into the light.
The cast is of Canadian actors who were relatively unknown in the United States at the time of the film's release. [11] Each character's name is connected with a real-world prison.
Name | Skill | Prison connection | Actor |
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Kazan | Autistic savant and mental calculator | Kazan prison, Russia | Andrew Miller |
David Worth | Office worker and unwitting designer of the Cube's outer shell | Leavenworth Prison, United States | David Hewlett |
Quentin McNeil | Police officer who aggressively takes charge | San Quentin State Prison and McNeil Island Corrections Center, United States | Maurice Dean Wint |
Joan Leaven | A young mathematics student | Leavenworth Prison, United States | Nicole de Boer |
Dr. Helen Holloway | Free clinic doctor and conspiracy theorist | Holloway Women's Prison, United Kingdom | Nicky Guadagni |
Rennes | Escape artist of seven prisons | Centre pénitentiaire de Rennes, France | Wayne Robson |
Alderson | Unknown and alone | Alderson Federal Prison Camp, United States | Julian Richings |
On casting Maurice Dean Wint as Quentin, Natali's cost-centric approach sought an actor for a split-personality role of hero and villain. Wint was considered the standout among the cast and was confident that the film would be a breakthrough for the Canadian Film Centre. [12]
Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat , which was shot entirely in a lifeboat with no actor standing at any point, was reportedly an inspiration for the film. [13]
Director Vincenzo Natali did not have confidence in financing a film. He cost-reduced his pitch with a single set reused as many times as possible, with the actors moving around a virtual maze. [14] As the most expensive element, a set with a cube and a half was built off the floor, to allow the surroundings to be lit from behind all walls of the cube. [15] In 1990, Natali had had the idea to make a film "set entirely in hell", but in 1994 while working as a storyboard artist's assistant at Canada's Nelvana animation studio, he completed the first script for Cube. The initial draft had a more comedic tone, surreal images, a cannibal, edible moss growing on the walls, and a monster that roamed the Cube. Roommate and childhood filmmaking partner Andre Bijelic helped Natali strip the central idea to its essence of people avoiding deadly traps in a maze. Scenes outside the cube were deleted, and the identity of the victims changed. In some drafts, they were accountants and in others criminals, with the implication that their banishment to the Cube was part of a penal sentence. One of the most important dramatic changes was the removal of food and water for a more urgent escape. [16]
After writing Cube, Natali developed the short film Elevated . It is set in an elevator to show investors how Cube would hypothetically look and feel. Cinematographer Derek Rogers developed strategies for shooting in the tightly confined elevator, which he later reused on a Toronto soundstage for Cube. [17]
Casting started with Natali's friends, and budget limitations allowed for only one day of script reading prior to shooting. As it was filmed relatively quickly with well prepared actors, there are no known outtake clips. [15]
The film was shot in Toronto, Ontario [18] in 21 days, [14] with 50% of the budget as C$350,000 [11] to C$375,000 in cash [15] and the other 50% as donated services, for a total of C$700,000. [19] Natali considered the cash figure to be deceptive, because they deferred payment on goods and services, and got the special effects at no cost. [20]
The set's warehouse was near a train line, and its noise was incorporated into the film as that of the cubes moving. [21] To change the look of each room, some scenes were shot with wide lens, and others are long lens and lit with different colors, for the illusion of traversing a maze. [13] Nicole de Boer said that the white room was more comforting to actors at the start of a day's filming, compared to the red room which induced psychological effects on the cast during several hours in the confined space. [22]
The Cube was conceived by mathematician David W. Pravica, who was the math consultant. [23] It consists of an outer cubical shell or sarcophagus, and the inner cube rooms. Each side of the outer shell is 434 feet (132 m) long. The inner cube consists of 263 = 17,576 cubical rooms (minus an unknown number of rooms to allow for movement), each having a side length of 15.5 feet (4.7 m). A space of 15.5 feet (4.7 m) is between the inner cube and the outer shell. Each room is labelled with three identification numbers such as "517 478 565". These numbers encode the starting coordinates of the room, and the X, Y, and Z coordinates are the sums of the digits of the first, second, and third number, respectively. The numbers also determine the movement of the room. The subsequent positions are obtained by cyclically subtracting the digits from one another, and the resulting numbers are then successively added to the starting numbers. [24]
Only one cube set was actually built, with each of its sides measuring 14 feet (4.3 m) in length, with only one working door that could actually support the weight of the actors. The colour of the room was changed by sliding panels. [25] This time-consuming procedure determined that the film was not shot in sequence, and all shots taking place in rooms of a specific color were shot separately. Six colors of rooms were intended to match the recurring theme of six throughout the film; five sets of gel panels, plus pure white. However, the budget did not stretch to the sixth gel panel, and so the film has only five room colors. Another partial cube was made for shots requiring the point of view of standing in one room and looking into another. [26]
The small set created technical problems for hosting a 30-person crew and a 6-person cast, becoming "a weird fusion between sci-fi and the guerrilla-style approach to filmmaking". [27]
During post-production, Natali spent months "on the aural environment", including appropriate sound effects of each room, so the Cube could feel like what he described as a haunted house. [20]
Cube was shown at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 1997 [1] and released in Ottawa and Montreal on 18 September 1998. [1] A theatrical release occurred in Spain in early 1999, [19] while in Italy a release was scheduled for July 1999 [28] and an opening in Germany was set for later that year. [15] In the Japanese market, it became the top video rental at the time, [29] and exceeded expectations, with co-writer Graeme Manson suggesting people in Japan had a better understanding of living in boxes so resonated better with the Japanese audience, as they were likely "more receptive to the whole metaphor underlying the film". [19]
The film's television debut in the United States was on 24 July 1999 on the Sci-Fi channel. [27]
In 2023, the film was one of 23 titles that were digitally restored under its new Canadian Cinema Reignited program to preserve classic Canadian films. [30]
In its home country of Canada, the film was a commercial failure, lasting only a few days in Canadian theatres. French film distributor Samuel Hadida's company Metropolitan Filmexport saw potential in the film and spent $1.2 million in a marketing campaign, posting flyers in many cities and flying members of the cast over to France to meet moviegoers. At its peak, the film was shown at 220 French box offices and became among the most popular films in France of that time, collecting over $10 million in box office receipts. [28] It went on to be the second-highest-grossing film in France that summer. [15]
Elsewhere internationally, the film grossed $501,818 in the United States, [7] and $8,479,845 in other territories, for a worldwide total of $8,981,663. [6]
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Cube holds an approval rating of 63%, based on 40 reviews, and an average rating of 6.3/10. The website's consensus reads: "Cube sometimes struggles with where to take its intriguing premise, but gripping pace and an impressive intelligence make it hard to turn away". [31] On Metacritic, the film has a score 61 out of 100, based on 12 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [32]
Bob Graham of the San Francisco Chronicle was highly critical: "If writer-director Vincenzo Natali, storyboard artist for Keanu Reeves's Johnny Mnemonic, were as comfortable with dialogue and dramatizing characters as he is with images, this first feature of his might have worked better". [33] Nick Schager from Slant Magazine rated the film three out of five stars, noting that, its intriguing premise and initially chilling mood were undone by threadbare characterizations, and lack of a satisfying explanation for the cube's existence. He concluded the film "winds up going nowhere fast". [34]
Anita Gates of The New York Times was more positive, saying the story "proves surprisingly gripping, in the best Twilight Zone tradition. The ensemble cast does an outstanding job on the cinematic equivalent of a bare stage... Everyone has his or her own theory about who is behind this peculiar imprisonment... The weakness in Cube is the dialogue, which sometimes turns remarkably trite... The strength is the film's understated but real tension. Vincenzo Natali, the film's fledgling director and co-writer, has delivered an allegory, too, about futility, about the necessity and certain betrayal of trust, about human beings who do not for a second have the luxury of doing nothing". [8] Bloody Disgusting gave a positive review: "Shoddy acting and a semi-weak script can't hold this movie back. It's simply too good a premise and too well-directed to let minor hindrances derail its creepy premise". [35] Kim Newman from Empire Online gave the film 4/5 stars, writing: "Too many low-budget sci-fi films try for epic scope and fail; this one concentrates on making the best of what it's got and does it well". [36]
The film won the award for Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 1997 Toronto International Film Festival [14] and the Jury Award at the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film. [37]
In 2001, an industry poll conducted by Playback named it the eighth best Canadian film of the preceding 15 years. [38]
After Cube achieved cult status, it was followed by a sequel, Cube 2: Hypercube , released in 2002, [39] and a prequel, Cube Zero , released in 2004. [40]
In April 2015, The Hollywood Reporter wrote that Lionsgate Films was planning to remake the film, titled Cubed, with Saman Kesh directing, Roy Lee and Jon Spaihts producing, and a screenplay by Philip Gawthorne, based on Kesh’s original take. [41] [42]
A Japanese remake, also called Cube , was released in October 2021. [43]
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