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IMDbPro

Cube Zero

  • 2004
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
44K
YOUR RATING
Cube Zero (2004)
DramaMysterySci-FiThriller

A young programmer whose job is to watch over the reality-warping Cube defies orders to rescue an innocent mother trapped in one of its rooms.A young programmer whose job is to watch over the reality-warping Cube defies orders to rescue an innocent mother trapped in one of its rooms.A young programmer whose job is to watch over the reality-warping Cube defies orders to rescue an innocent mother trapped in one of its rooms.

  • Director
    • Ernie Barbarash
  • Writer
    • Ernie Barbarash
  • Stars
    • Zachary Bennett
    • Stephanie Moore
    • Martin Roach
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    44K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ernie Barbarash
    • Writer
      • Ernie Barbarash
    • Stars
      • Zachary Bennett
      • Stephanie Moore
      • Martin Roach
    • 177User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Cube Zero
    Trailer 1:59
    Cube Zero

    Photos28

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Zachary Bennett
    Zachary Bennett
    • Eric Wynn
    Stephanie Moore
    • Cassandra Rains
    Martin Roach
    Martin Roach
    • Robert P. Haskell
    Michael Riley
    Michael Riley
    • Jax
    David Huband
    David Huband
    • Dodd
    Terri Hawkes
    Terri Hawkes
    • Jellico
    Richard McMillan
    Richard McMillan
    • Bartok
    Mike 'Nug' Nahrgang
    Mike 'Nug' Nahrgang
    • Meyerhold
    Tony Munch
    Tony Munch
    • Owen
    Joshua Peace
    Joshua Peace
    • Finn
    • (as Josh Peace)
    Diego Klattenhoff
    Diego Klattenhoff
    • Quigley
    Alexia Filippeos
    • Anna
    Jasmin Geljo
    Jasmin Geljo
    • Ryjkin
    Fernando Curcione
    • Doctor
    Flossie McKnight
    • Female Doctor
    • (as Araxi Arslanian)
    Kyle Derek
    Kyle Derek
    • Squad Leader
    • (as Kyle McDonald)
    Sandi Ross
    Sandi Ross
    • Chandler
    Dino Bellisario
    • Smith
    • Director
      • Ernie Barbarash
    • Writer
      • Ernie Barbarash
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews177

    5.643.8K
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    Featured reviews

    5Uriah43

    The Beginning of the Cube

    This film begins with a man named "Ryjkin" (Jasmin Geljo) waking up and finding himself in a symmetrical room with an exit hatch on all four walls along with one on the floor and one on the ceiling. After choosing to go through one of the exists leading into a similar room, he accidentally triggers a mechanism which sprays him with an unknown liquid. At first, he thinks it is just water and being quite thirsty, he proceeds to lick as much of it off of his skin as possible. Minutes later, however, he realizes that the liquid is a type of acid which leads to a gruesome conclusion. Then scene then shifts to a control room where two technicians named "Eric Wynn" (Zachary Bennett) and "Dodd" (David Huband) where Ryjkin's demise is playing out on a computer screen in front of them. Having seen numerous scenes similar to this, neither Wynn nor Dodd are overly surprised. Yet even though Wynn expresses his distaste for this macabre incident, he accepts the corporate explanation that the people within the cubical apparatus are condemned prisoners being given an opportunity for their freedom--if they can carefully negotiate their way through the hazards within this deadly maze. Even so, Wynn still has a number of questions regarding the entire setup and his curiosity is piqued even further when he discovers that one of the prisoners named "Cassandra Rains" (Stephanie Moore) doesn't have the necessary consent form within her files. This prompts even more concern on his part that he is involved in something so terribly horrific that it defies imagination--and that both he and Dodd could suffer from the same fate. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this film essentially serves as a prequel to the original movie produced seven years earlier and, as such, provides more details about the mechanism itself. And while this particular film is certainly not bad by any means, I do not believe it is quite as good as its two predecessors and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
    6jmbwithcats

    Redeems the Series

    One question I always have about these cube movies is, how does throwing a boot into the empty room tell you it's safe or not? This feels like rehash from the other sequels. But, in those films we discover some traps are triggered by other things, not by weight, or movement, or sound, but heat.

    After this scene, one man exclaims perhaps it was triggered by heat or sound, but that isn't possible because the boot hitting the floor was pretty loud. Most likely it was triggered by a camera picking up a human form in the middle of the room.

    After being disappointed by the follow through of part 1 and 2, I looked forward to a prequel finally making some sense of all this, and being a enjoyable film. Kind of like what Hellraiser 3 Bloodline did for that series.

    Now we have 2 workers, overseeing this project to some capacity. We never see their higher ups, but we do see a higher level of command in part 2.

    They seem to not mind too much what is going on, for they believe they men and women inside the cube are convicted criminals.

    We know this to not be the truth at all.

    The fact that in part 1 they followed a puzzle of numbers, primes in particular, in part 2, well I don't remember what they followed then, 5 dimensional cubes are funny that way. BUt, in this one, they find a similar puzzle, but this time in sets of letters.

    For lack of ingenuity, and originality, I scoff at the simplicity of the parallel plots at this point, but I trudge on, without judgment... keeping my mind on the third exit.

    "When the rooms align what's the first thing that happens?" "Clean Sweep" Which is what we saw at the very end of part 2... you ever wonder why at the end of part 2 when the girl, company employee plant in the cube, escapes the cube, with some sort of plumb device around her neck intact, as the cube seems to "clean sweep" itself into oblivion, they kill her? Did you think that question was going to be answered in the next movie? Do you still think it's going to be answered, in Cube Zero? Owen reaching the exit room reminds me a lot of the ending of Cube 1, I suppose that was the point.

    Exit Procedure is very Nazism isn't it.

    Anyways, I noticed later on they weren't even waiting for the boot to hit the floor before entering a new room, that didn't make a whole lot of sense, although the sound vibration death was quite cool.

    Pretty nice ending, the way Wynn becomes Kazan-ized. Makes you wonder just how Kazan got the way he was doesn't it? People ask what is the point of this movie, or this trilogy, or franchise... and to my knowledge there is no point. Unless you look for a more anamorphic point. And that is the point within.

    There is no great moral here, no blatant and obvious tell tale morality. No, be good or this could happen to you, there is no rhyme nor reason. Perhaps the only point to be gleamed from such an adventure is thus.

    The CUBE is the mind. The traps are desires, ignorance, apathy, and the like. We are lab rats in consciousness, trying to get from birth to the white light at the end, without falling into the traps of our own egos if you will.

    At least, that is my perspective.
    3morphion2

    Not Awful, but Unnecessary

    Following the release of Cube 2: Hypercube (2003), and playing off the alleged success of the original Cube (1998), Director Ernie Barbarash takes the liberty of bringing us the third installment in the trilogy, the prequel Cube Zero.

    Deep in the bowels of a giant and faceless institution, time and place unknown, two low-ranking operators, Wynn (Zachary Bennett) and Dodd (David Huband) sit and observe on monitors the behavior of people that have been placed in a giant network of cubic chambers, some of which are rigged with death traps. Told that the people they are observing are convicted felons who chose this horrific and deadly ordeal over a lethal injection, these observers have had no problem with their jobs until Wynn, a mathematical genius, discovers that one of the prisoners, a woman named Cassandra (Stephanie Moore) never agreed to be put inside the Cube. Suddenly it's realized that perhaps their "jobs" are not what they seem, and that they may be part of something deeply sick and twisted...

    For people that have seen and enjoyed the original Cube, this prequel will probably not be to your liking. It's not that the story does not have potential; it's simply that the first Cube film never needed to be expanded on. Standing alone, it is a neat little psychological thriller with very interesting concepts and a certainty about its own message. It was also nicely self-contained. The problem with Cube Zero is that it destroys some of the mystique of the original, attempting to answer questions with more questions but only really resulting in making a mess of what never needed fixing.

    What this new film has to offer, which is questions about the psychological nature of authoritarianism and the banality of evil, certainly are good questions to be raised, but probably should have been done so on their own merits, rather than as a continuation of a film that had no such aspirations.

    Having said this, the other traits of the film, such as acting and direction and writing, are not awful. There is a bleak, dark look to the film akin to such film noir as 'The Matrix' and 'Dark City', and they have certainly managed to recapture the claustrophobic feeling of the first Cube. Unfortunately for Barbarash, these are not enough positive qualities to save it.
    tedg

    Watchers

    I was one of the enthusiasts of the original. It seemed a clever solution to one of filmdoms most persistent challenges: how to stage drama.

    Noir is our most basic cinematic model. The core of noir is a universe where capricious fate toys with human destiny in cruel and arbitrary ways. "Cube" cleverly merged a modern noir vision with a solution to the staging problem.

    Then along came the sequel which had no understanding of what made the original appealing and important. They turned it into a conventional government plot thriller with all the baggage that carries. Along the way, they introduced some pseudomathematical notions that were bizarre.

    If there is anyone on the planet that would know how such a government program would work, it would be me. I wrote a comment about this which triggered a couple dozen messages among the editor of a film magazine, myself and the original author of "Hypercube."

    As it happens, the original script was more true to what made the first one work, but it was coopted and changed by the same hack behind this.

    So once again, here we have some sort of evil experiment by some agency. In the last one, that was actually a major weapons company. The one clever idea is similar to "Saw," where we watch the watchers of watchers watch. This folding is supposed to impute an evil to us that we see in the maniacal Dennis Hopper impersonator.

    One of the intermediate watchers draws comics. This is textbook folding. Not clever, not worthy.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
    5deastman_uk

    Cube revolutions

    A perfectly adequate prequel to the first film. This time we see the men who operate the cube, but it doesn't take long to realise that they are still within the system.

    This film owes a lot to the identity loss themes seen in Dark City and even the matrix, as the film resolves to show existence as a hierarchical and circular metaphor of continuous control.

    This is low budget, but has a dated feeling that the original Cube film did not. Writers and set designers face a lot of pressure to create fresh ideas, and new ideas are sadly lacking here. The horror element is delivered well, but the sci-fi elements are rather tacked on.

    (Saw this at Sci-fi London)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The exit machine is a slightly reworked, old Moviola film editing machine with a couple of raw speakers and a YES/NO button added.
    • Goofs
      The file cabinets in the observation room are marked with name ranges; one drawer is listed as "Rabinovich - Rabe", which is not in alphabetical order.
    • Quotes

      Eric Wynn: Do you believe in God? It all hinges on that?

      Dodd: Look, I just ask the questions and push the buttons, ok?

      Eric Wynn: What happens if you push yes?

      Dodd: I don't know... No-one's ever said yes.

    • Crazy credits
      Zero the fish as himself
    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Horror Movie Prequels (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Message From Buddha
      Performed by Norman Orenstein

      Written by Norman Orenstein

      Published by Norman Orenstein Music (Socan)

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    FAQ27

    • How long is Cube Zero?Powered by Alexa
    • What is 'Cube Zero' about?
    • Is "Cube Zero" based on a book?
    • What is the Cube?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 6, 2006 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Cube Ø
    • Filming locations
      • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Mad Circus Films
      • Lions Gate Entertainment
      • Mr. X
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CA$1,200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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