Are you a part of the News/Talk 750 WSB VIP? Sign in or join now. Why join?
Text size: A A A
Cameron Diaz as Norma Lewis in "The Box."
Director:Richard Kelly
Starring:Cameron Diaz, James Marsden, Frank Langella, James Rebhorn
Ratings:PG-13 - some violence, disturbing images, thematic elements
Time:113 min.
Web Site:
Film Review By Michael Phillips, Tribune Newspapers Critic

In "The Box," which is fairly insane by the standards of most Hollywood packages, writer-director Richard Kelly takes the 10-page story "Button, Button" by Richard Matheson (who wrote "I Am Legend" and many other works adapted for the screen) and stuffs it so full of cockamamie speculative fictions, from magical lightning strikes to NASA projects to the metaphorical uses of Sartre's "No Exit," by the end you can only think: This guy needed a bigger box.

The ethics test at the story's center adheres to Matheson's original. A man arrives one day at an upper-middle-class suburban couple's home, having previously placed a mysterious whatzit in plain brown wrapping paper at the couple's doorstep. The man tells the woman: Push the button on this thing, and you'll get rich. The hitch: Someone in the world will die as a result, someone you do not know.

Frank Langella plays the man with the box with the button and the secrets. He is just right - a little menacing, a little comforting, a little earthly, a little not. (Digitally he has been given a grotesque facial disfiguring, which relates to the character's peculiar circumstances.) Everything else about "The Box" is not quite right, or not in the least right. Kelly's imagination is prodigious: The director's cut of his feature "Donnie Darko," which dealt with alternate realities and psychic visions in suburbia, is the place to start to find out if he's your kind of fantasist. Even crazier and messier, "Southland Tales" has its ardent admirers.

But Kelly is not yet his own best director. His scripts run in many directions at once, and he favors the dense back-story fabulations of the graphic-novel form. Behind the camera, though, he's a slowpoke and a bit of a visual drudge. Set in 1976, his free-form adaptation of Matheson's story trips the light fantastic but getting there isn't much fun.

Cameron Diaz is Norma, a literature professor with a bad foot and a handy allegorical interest in Sartre's "No Exit," which Kelly exploits like mad. Like Diaz, James Marsden (as a NASA engineer who worked on the Viking space probe) is not an actor given to playing two or three notes of panic, greed, doubt, whatever, at once. Their characters are soon in over their heads, but the actors seem that way, too - petulant when they should be wrestling with bigger, more interesting clashes of emotion.

Cast in soft, ironically nostalgic light, a typical shot in "The Box" places Diaz and Marsden, or Diaz and Langella, at the family dining room table in stiff, precise profile, talking. The pacing throughout is languid. Your eye becomes fixated on the hideous '70s wallpaper behind them. If only the story's interstellar narrative developments had the intensity of that wallpaper. Rod Serling might've gotten a great hour out of it (the story, that is, not the wallpaper). It simply is not two hours' worth, no matter how many quantum leaps into the unknown Kelly takes.

MPAA rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements, some violence and disturbing images).

Running time: 1:55.

Cast: Cameron Diaz (Norma Lewis); James Marsden (Arthur Lewis); Frank Langella (Arlington Steward); James Rebhorn (Norm Cahill); Holmes Osborne (Dick Burns).

Credits: Written and directed by Richard Kelly, based on the short story "Button, Button" by Richard Matheson; produced by Sean McKittrick, Richard Kelly and Dan Lin. A Warner Bros. Pictures release.

Movie search

Search by zip code:

 

Search by keyword:

send to a friend  view as printer-friendly  RSS feeds
advertisement

WSB 24-Hour Weather Center
Get the 5-day Forecast .

Atlanta weather

Mostly Cloudy
50°F
5-day forecast | Hurricane Guide
advertisement

Marketplace

Cancer Wellness at Piedmont Cancer Cente
Cancer Wellness at Piedmont Cancer Center - Providing help and support to those facing cancer. Learn more.
Emory Vision
Emory Vision is the best LASIK provider in Atlanta. Learn more at our online seminar.
"How to Build Your Financial Future" Online Seminar sponsored by Associated Credit Union. Details
Georgia Cancer Specialists
Click here to view GCS's video, "Seven Things You Should Know About Breast Cancer."
advertisement
Green Home Improvement
Allan Vigil Racing Fan Frenzy
Racing Fans, play the Allan Vigil Racing Fan Frenzy now! Click here for all the details.
Resurgens Spine Center
View our webinar “The Latest In Total Joint Replacement.” Watch now
powered by AutoTrader.com Shop for cars, find a dealer, and get the latest automotive news in our Local Car Buying Guide powered by AutoTrader.com
powered by Kudzu From fast food to fine dining, find it all in our Local Business Directory .
Stay ahead of the storm. Find evacuation routes, safety tips and more in the Hurricane Guide.
News Talk 750 WSB Mobile Access
News/Talk 750 WSB wants to make sure you can access our website anytime you want from any device. Click here to find out how.
Going Green
Help do your part to save water, reduce air pollution & greenhouse emissions. Go Green!
Georgia Bulldogs Radio Network
Your online connection to the Georgia Bulldogs Radio Network team!
Read the AJC and stay on top of everything in Atlanta! Get delivery for less than $2 a week!
Join Channel 2 Action News anchors John Pruitt and Monica Pearson at 5, 6, and 11pm.