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IMDbPro

A Caixa

Título original: The Box
  • 2009
  • 14
  • 1 h 55 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,6/10
97 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Cameron Diaz and Frank Langella in A Caixa (2009)
A young couple is gifted with a mysterious box that promises them a handsome windfall with deadly consequences.
Reproduzir trailer2:09
16 vídeos
99+ fotos
Suspense MysteryDramaMysteryThriller

Uma pequena caixa de madeira chega na porta de um casal, que sabe que abri-la lhes renderá um milhão de dólares e matará alguém que não conhecem.Uma pequena caixa de madeira chega na porta de um casal, que sabe que abri-la lhes renderá um milhão de dólares e matará alguém que não conhecem.Uma pequena caixa de madeira chega na porta de um casal, que sabe que abri-la lhes renderá um milhão de dólares e matará alguém que não conhecem.

  • Direção
    • Richard Kelly
  • Roteiristas
    • Richard Kelly
    • Richard Matheson
  • Artistas
    • Cameron Diaz
    • James Marsden
    • Frank Langella
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,6/10
    97 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Richard Kelly
    • Roteiristas
      • Richard Kelly
      • Richard Matheson
    • Artistas
      • Cameron Diaz
      • James Marsden
      • Frank Langella
    • 493Avaliações de usuários
    • 257Avaliações da crítica
    • 47Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória e 6 indicações no total

    Vídeos16

    The Box
    Trailer 2:09
    The Box
    The Box
    Trailer 2:07
    The Box
    The Box
    Trailer 2:07
    The Box
    The Box (2009)
    Clip 0:53
    The Box (2009)
    The Box (2009)
    Clip 0:51
    The Box (2009)
    The Box (2009)
    Clip 1:00
    The Box (2009)
    The Box (2009)
    Clip 0:51
    The Box (2009)

    Fotos142

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    + 138
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal91

    Editar
    Cameron Diaz
    Cameron Diaz
    • Norma Lewis
    James Marsden
    James Marsden
    • Arthur Lewis
    Frank Langella
    Frank Langella
    • Arlington Steward
    James Rebhorn
    James Rebhorn
    • Norm Cahill
    Holmes Osborne
    Holmes Osborne
    • Dick Burns
    Sam Oz Stone
    Sam Oz Stone
    • Walter Lewis
    Gillian Jacobs
    Gillian Jacobs
    • Dana
    Celia Weston
    Celia Weston
    • Lana Burns
    Deborah Rush
    Deborah Rush
    • Clymene Steward
    Lisa K. Wyatt
    Lisa K. Wyatt
    • Rhonda Martin
    Mark S. Cartier
    Mark S. Cartier
    • Martin Teague
    • (as Mark Cartier)
    Kevin Robertson
    • Wendell Matheson
    Michele Durrett
    Michele Durrett
    • Rebecca Matheson
    Ian Kahn
    Ian Kahn
    • Vick Brenner
    John Magaro
    John Magaro
    • Charles
    Ryan Woodle
    Ryan Woodle
    • Jeffrey Carnes
    Basil Hoffman
    Basil Hoffman
    • Don Poates
    Robert Harvey
    Robert Harvey
    • NASA Executive #1
    • Direção
      • Richard Kelly
    • Roteiristas
      • Richard Kelly
      • Richard Matheson
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários493

    5,696.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Red_Identity

    Richard Kelly has created a very mesmerizing, dreamy, and illusionary film!

    Richard Kelly is one of my personal favorite directors. I have only seen his two films, Donnie Darko and Southland Tales. The first is a Masterpiece, and a film like no other, and has fortunately gathered a strong cult following. Southland Tales is the one that is very underrated, perhaps the most unique film of this decade, even more so than Donnie, and deserves a larger fanbase. This is Kelly's 3rd film that I watched, and he does not disappoint. When I originally heard he was making The Box, based on the Twilight Zone episode, I got nervous. Both of his previous films flopped big time, but I still did not want him to make a film too mainstream. After The Box, I think it is impossible for him to ever make a mainstream film. The Box has amazing atmosphere and has very illusionary images and a tense tone to it. Richard Kelly's screenplay is nothing short of original, and even though he made it based on the Twilight Zone, he still added his mark on it. Kelly has always had so many ideas to share, and sometimes, his film's flaws is that they have so much to say. Southland Tales was criticized for that, but I loved it, flaws and all. The same for The Box. Although The Box is not as confusing or as hard-to-categorize as Southland Tales, it does have it's own ideas. This is very much a morality tale, and I thought it made some very interesting points. The screenplay has flaws, and so does the direction. But the flaws is what makes a Richard Kelly film feel special, as was the case with both his previous films, and that is the case for The Box.

    The performances from James Marsden and Cameron Diaz are superb. Marsden is very good, but Diaz is the one who steals the show, surprisingly. I never have respected Diaz as an actress before, and when I heard her southern accent in the trailer I got very worried. But her accent, and her performance, elevate the film even more, and she was very strong. I should now give her the credit she deserves. Frank Langella is very creepy and mysterious, and his character has classic Kelly printed all over it. The cinematography is great. The music score, although by itself is great, was used too loud and too dramatized in some scenes, and was a distraction. But overall, The Box is another very interesting and very dreamy film from Richard Kelly, one that as years go by, will be sitting comfortably with Donnie Darko and Southland Tales on my DVD shelf.
    7DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: The Box

    The trailer goes nowhere near and only scratches the surface of the film and rightly so too, not because it has that obligation to keep its real narrative under wraps, but because what actually transpires, will provoke entirely different lines of questioning, some of which are frustratingly not answered in the film, leaving you to your own devices to interpret the series of events. Which of course means plenty of material for an after-show discussion.

    Metaphorically, the box refers to how us humans tend to subconsciously hole ourselves into situations or things in everyday life, and how our enclosed thoughts tend to see things from a certain perspective, seldom out of the box. There's a speech made near the end by one of the characters that will leave you pondering over this fact, which governs the basis of the entire film, and even threading on existentialism, where our bodies are mere vessels for the soul, and from cradle to the grave we put ourselves in more boxes in a way of life fashion.

    What I disliked about the film, is how it tried to sound intelligent through the frequent name dropping of covert government agencies like the CIA and NSA, as though there's something overtly clandestine about these agencies that we should be aware of. They serve little purpose other than to put every action and every person under scrutiny, that nobody can be trusted, wrecking havoc in a sense to both the characters and the audience as we try to keep up with trust issues to aid in the interpretation of the narrative. Having it set in 1976, against a NASA backdrop of manned space missions, and in Langley, Virginia, also provided that heightened sense of wary that will sap your energies as you sit through it patiently.

    Based upon the short story Button, Button written by Richard Matheson and made into an episode of the Twilight Zone, the story follows the Lewis family, where husband Arthur (James Marsden) works at NASA and develops a prosthetic foot for his teacher wife Norma (Cameron Diaz), and you'd think it's all happy family with their son Walter (Sam Oz Stone), until one day a mysterious man called Arlington Steward (Frank Langella in a Two-Face inspired facial effect) whom we are preempted of in the opening, comes knocking and giving them a Deal or No Deal button in a box. Plunge the button and they'll get a million bucks (we're talking in dollar terms of the 70s here) although a stranger out there will die. If they don't, well the deal's got an expiry date.

    The story would dictate a deal be made, which of course sparks off a mysterious sequence of events that unfold, with even more shady characters (who nosebleed) appearing, some whom are inexplicably zombie like, apparently all under the influence, or employment, or Arlington Steward. Whether or not Steward is Death, a clandestine government employee, a messenger from God or a representative of Aliens after an anal probe, remains unanswered, so whichever way you look at it, it's as if he's delivering something expected, just begging that mankind will shake off its innate greed so that his work can be cut short and to return to wherever he came from.

    If you need a little distraction from the disparate scenes which make up the narrative, the production sets and art direction are gorgeous in recreating the 70s look, as you try to figure out the mystery of the consequences that stem from a result of not fully understanding the fine print. It's full circle this examination of human nature, of our greed for immediate gratification, manifesting its result in longer term pain, confusion and further choices that we'll make based on real sacrifices. Nifty special effects come into play as well, though it just leaves more room open as to the genre of the film.

    So is it horror, science fiction, or a mystery thriller? It's everything rolled into one actually, together with a sprinkling of the philosophical. Just don't go expecting a straight narrative film with clean and easy answers at the end – this is like an X-Files episode on steroids.
    7rivertam26

    you have no idea what to expect...

    The creator of Donnie Darko brings you a twilight zone themed tale of the oddest fashion. The film centers on a middle aged young couple living paycheck to paycheck in 1976. One day a mysterious box appears with a red button. Later on that day a spooky gentleman shows up and tells them that they have the choice to press the button and receive a million dollars but someone they don't know will die. It's a disturbing and provocative question suspensefully outlined in the trailer and TV spots. But let it be known that you just don't know what your in for until you see it. At times pretentious and a bit melodramatic the film is ultimately effective because of it's good performances and intriguing subject matter. It would be unfair to ruin any of the plot twists for you but lets just say the film will deliver on the aspects you expect it to and not completely fulfill others it begins to outline. There's a lot of apparent symbolism and subtext in the film which is both interesting and annoying as it wasn't so evident in his other superior film Donnie Darko. There isn't too much more to say without ruining the film for you. it's meant to inspire lots of cafe chatter afterwards. However, i'd also like to say It's shot well and has an appropriately aged look to it and it's worth a watch. Check it out.
    5laserburn

    Forgettable

    The movie that ended the career of the director Richard Kelly. It was never a really promising career, Donnie Darko must have been a stroke of luck. The original Twilight Zone episode The Box was way better and all the additional material in this movie does not improve on it, with subplots that don't resolve into anything. The script is just poorly written, with a lot of illogical situations and thin characters. The movie overall is not horrible, just don't have any high expectations from it.
    6Movie_Muse_Reviews

    Over-ambitious "Box" leaves too many elements to consider

    As a fan of science fiction allegory, social experiment, "The Twilight Zone" and the thriller genre -- no less all those elements combined -- Richard Kelly and his film "The Box" should've at least won me over, but it doesn't. It can't even decide if it wants to remain completely mysterious or explicitly tell us what's going on and any film that has to contemplate that is too complex for its own good.

    With any story this daring, there's potential for something meaningful. "The Box" does let you glimpse it and draw a few interesting conclusions, but through intellectual jail bars placed before our eyes by the myriad of plot contrivances. In other words, too many plot elements exist in in the film that keep us from ever putting our mind around what Kelly is trying to say. Although he starts simply by focusing on a couple (James Marsden and Cameron Diaz) and their child making an ethical decision, the scope widens to include everything from Arthur C. Clarke references to mindless drones to some indiscernible notion of the afterlife.

    This beginning piece is based on Richard Matheson's story "Button, Button," which was a short story turned into a "Twilight Zone" episode. In "The Box," a mysterious man with a half-burned face played by Frank Langella drops off a box with a button in it at the doorstep of Norma and Arthur Lewis and their son Walter. He later comes back and gives Norma a proposition: don't press the button and nothing happens, or press the button and receive one million dollars and subsequently someone, anywhere in the world, whom they don't know will die.

    Well, Norma, a teacher, just lost her teacher tuition discount for her son and Arthur's application to be an astronaut was just denied and despite living in a nice looking house in Richmond, Virginia they apparently have no money, so it's not hard to figure out ultimately what they'll do. After all, don't press the button and there's no film -- not that some people who sit through this would've minded that in retrospect.

    As with his cult hit "Donnie Darko," Kelly keeps "The Box" fascinatingly creepy. It starts with the colors, the classic string soundtrack from the band Arcade Fire and some peculiar Easter eggs and moves on to more jarring occurrences. There is never a point where things get so absurd that you don't care what happens in the end, even if there's a chance the end could be terribly unsatisfying. It's one of few saving graces for "The Box," but perhaps even this is only for those intrigued by high concept sci-fi mystery that parallels human nature no matter how vague.

    When any thriller collapses somewhere after the midway point, you can usually blame the fact that too many occurrences in need of explaining were written in order for the writer to achieve his desired end. When James Marsden gets hit in a car by a truck and comes out of a giant light warehouse and that ultimately never gets explained, its degrading to the viewer.

    The real trouble with "The Box" is how ambitiously it tries to combine the ideas of intelligent life/space exploration with religious notions of life, death and what might come after as well as numerous other elements too many and too difficult to explain. Kelly found that balance between time travel and inter-relationship drama in "Donnie Darko" but "The Box" implodes on itself by severing its little social experiment from the characters with too much unexplained phenomena.

    ~Steven C

    Visit my site http://moviemusereviews.com

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The main characters, Norma Lewis and Arthur Lewis, were based on director Richard Kelly's parents. His mother also suffered a crippled foot after an X-Ray mishap; his father worked for NASA and co-designed the camera used on the Viking Mars Landers (as in the movie).
    • Erros de gravação
      911 emergency services weren't available in Richmond, VA, in 1976.
    • Citações

      Martin Teague: Sir? If you don't mind my asking... why a box?

      Arlington Steward: Your home is a box. Your car is a box on wheels. You drive to work in it. You drive home in it. You sit in your home, staring into a box. It erodes your soul, while the box that is your body inevitably withers... then dies. Whereupon it is placed in the ultimate box, to slowly decompose.

      Martin Teague: It's quite depressing, if you think of it that way.

      Arlington Steward: Don't think of it that way... think of it as a temporary state of being.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Men Who Stare at Goats/The Fourth Kind/The Box/A Christmas Carol (2009)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Light in Your Eyes
      Written by Stephan Sechi (as Stephan M. Sechi)

      Performed by Stephan Sechi

      Courtesy of Crucial Music Corporation

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    Perguntas frequentes21

    • How long is The Box?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Is "The Box" based on a book?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 26 de março de 2010 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Warner Bros.
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • La caja
    • Locações de filme
      • Boston Public Library - 700 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Warner Bros.
      • Radar Pictures
      • Media Rights Capital (MRC)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 30.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 15.051.977
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 7.571.417
      • 8 de nov. de 2009
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 33.334.176
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 55 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
      • SDDS
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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