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75 out of 93 people found the following review useful:
Cube 2: Hypercube: 6/10, 5 July 2004
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Author:
movieguy1021 (Movieguy1021@comcast.net) from Anywhere, USA
I've never really thought about it this way, but I suppose in most cases,
it's an honor to have a sequel. Although no one liked the sequel, I'm sure
Jonathon Lynn is proud that The Whole Nine Yards got a sequel somehow. And
that seems like the case with Cube 2: Hypercube, a sequel to the cult hit
Cube. But then one wonders how there can be a sequel to a movie that was
basically all filmed in one 14x14x14 set? Well, Cube 2 is the answer-but not
really the best one. It shows what Cube would have been if it had had a
bigger budget, but it also showed what it didn't want to
become.
Strangers are thrown together into a series of interconnecting cubes yet
again, but this time they're more high-tech. They're not different colors,
and there's no booby traps. Instead, some rooms have a cube that attacks you
(don't ask), some have gravity reversed, and time means nothing. There seems
to be no pattern, like in the first one, so how are these people supposed to
get out?
This is all one big rehash of the first. There's the wandering around,
talking about the past, and speculation of why they're in the cube. I guess
that's for people who see sequels before the originals. The characters are
all more broadly drawn, the dialogue is cheesier, and it looks faker. In the
first, you barely knew anything about the giant cube they were in. Here, it
seems like everyone was involved somehow. The ending, which was vague in the
first, explained some more, which I was angry yet happy about. It's hard to
explain. But then they left it in the air yet again. Maybe it's for the
prequel, Cube Zero (due out sometime this year) to describe.
But one positive difference between the two is that this one seemed to be
overall scarier. It's not claustrophobia, but the idea of anything happening
in a hypercube. Because they don't exist, everything goes wild here,
allowing for some things to happen. It's all quite creepy. And although the
random crazy psycho killer is more random here than the first, I liked him
more, and he was great as he was going through the hypercube. Cube was an
original, interesting, and disorienting movie. Cube 2 is the exact same
thing, except not as good.
My rating: 6/10
Rated R for language, some violence and brief nudity.
85 out of 128 people found the following review useful:
Hypercube. The title should have given it away!, 19 August 2002
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Author:
DeviousMrBlonde from Germany (originally Ireland)
Hypercube. That title is terrible but I placated myself with the idea that
a
Hypercube is actually a real theoretical mathematical construct. That it
wasn't some misjudged attempt at a catchy title. It is just telling it how
it is. The first one was called Cube and was set in a Cube, this one is
called Hypercube and is set in a Hypercube. How wrong I was. Everything -
absolutely everything - in this movie is designed to be "Bigger, Better,
Faster"! And that is why it fails miserably.
I loved the original Cube because of it's simplicity. It was what one
might
call a pseudo Science Fiction movie. It was a psychological thriller
trying
on the Science Fiction coat, and it worked to perfection. You thought,
this
is crazy BUT it could bloody well happen. It was (apparently) set in the
here and now and everything in it was eerily possible. It would have cost
an
awful amount of money but it was possible, it was after all just a big
mechanical Cube. Even the booby-traps were deceptively simple. The real
beauty for me was that you never knew or got to know the why, where, or
who
in the first movie. The goal was simply to get out in one piece and each
person had their individual skill to help achieve that
goal.
Cube2 enters the full realm of Science Fiction and immediately trips and
falls flat on it's face. None of the simplicity is left. The `captors' in
this new cube must deal with time shifting, gravity shifting, alternate
realities, some weird killer time thingy that moves through the rooms and
one of the crew who turns a bit psycho... just like the policeman
character
from the first movie, except (you guessed it) he's even a BIGGER psycho.
On
top of that the story tries to put a face on who is behind these
experiments: The Izon Military Corp. (or something along those lines).
This
movie therefore is what 2010 was to 2001, albeit on a more modest level.
And
in the same way it just doesn't work
Also, character development is practically nonexistent. For example one
pair
of characters disappear and are never seen again. Just like that, gone for
no real reason except maybe to show the vastness of the Hypercube although
another character seems adept at meeting the multiple instances of two
other
characters in particular. In the end you absolutely do not care for any of
them or whether they can escape or not. The story gives you no reason to
care for them. The idea of the Hypercube itself is too vast to make you
care. As one character points out, the amount of possible rooms in a
Hypercube is infinite. Therefore there is no real goal. The characters
don't
need each other to escape. There is no exit door in a Hypercube! So why
bother at all?
And as for the one-liners. The pain, oh the pain.
The worst bit however is reserved for the end. The Über-Military guy's
comments on the phone make it sound like they are really contemplating a
Cube3. Spare us, please!
58 out of 85 people found the following review useful:
I expected so much after Cube. Luckily, Hypercube isn't bad., 4 February 2003
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Author:
tenten76 from London
First off, don't bother seeing this until you've seen Cube. You wouldn't
miss much if you did, but you won't appreciate & enjoy it nearly as much. I
heard this was more of a remake than a sequel, but actually it's a
straight-out sequel.
Again, a seemingly random group of people are abducted and imprisoned in a
possibly enormous matrix of anonymous Cube-shaped rooms, with doors in all
six surfaces, and a number of fiendish & deadly booby traps (and scary
noises). Hypercube (moving on from Cube) adds gravity, time and parallel
universe traps into the mix.
It's good because: it's broadly similar to Cube, which was excellent.
You're not immediately sure who will be standing at the end. The special
effects are a bit 'clean' looking, but very smart. And there are some funny
moments in this one.
But it's not brilliant because: the plot is a little too clear (and simple),
whereas Cube really worked because it was unexplained and ambiguous. The
characters seemed to fit the same sort of roles as in the first movie. And
there's a fair bit of hammy over-acting, deliberate comedy, and a curious
lack of desperation & fear (whereas Cube was superb in all these
respects).
There are a lot of well-intentioned sequels which (by their very nature)
cannot string you along with the same 'fear of the unknown' in the original,
and this is the case here. I also believe that having access to a bigger
budget for a sequel is often a bad thing, since it's easier to go for flashy
special effects at the expense of story, acting & dramatic tension - as in
this case. (brilliant opening credits though)
But Hypercube - although not as good as Cube - does work as 'next step' sort
of sequel. I was just surprised I laughed so often, without it ruining the
film for me.
If they make a third one (the ending does indicate that they could), they
should spend the vast part of the budget on a really good concept/script &
director, get really-good-but-unknown STAGE actors (Hypercube came across as
more of a soap-opera level of acting), and go back to the ingeniously wicked
& creative traps a la Cube - because the CGI route does not look like a road
worth following any further..
19 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Fails at many levels, 12 May 2007
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Author:
DrLex from Belgium
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Cube 2 is in many respects just a clone of the original Cube movie.
Suppose you haven't seen that movie yet and consider watching this more
recent version, which would probably be cooler because it has a larger
budget and CGI... don't! Watch the original instead. If you like it,
watch Cube Zero afterwards. Don't watch this one unless you really ache
for more Cube- stuff.
There are many things about Hypercube that don't work. Overall, it
feels like a bad remake of an old classic. This is not surprising
because that's exactly what it is, except for the fact that the
original isn't really 'old' yet, it only predates this movie by 5
years. 'Cube 2' is populated by almost exactly the same characters as
the first movie. The premise is also the same, even though they added
an extra 'dimension' (literally).
Of course it also differs from the original Cube in some ways. First,
the complexity of the way in which the original 'cube' could be solved,
is replaced by a simple concept which is made to look complex by means
of cool-sounding terminology and random mathematical formulas. In the
original movie, someone familiar with mathematics could follow the
lines of thought of the characters, and people unfamiliar with maths
could still feel that there was something substantial to it. In Cube 2,
nobody understands what's happening, and this seems to include the
makers of the movie themselves. Next, the original movie featured some
gruesome yet inventive ways in which many of the characters died,
involving traps with wires, fire, acid and so on. In 'Cube 2',
characters are killed by computer graphics -- literally. If you expect
more of the visceral gore like in Cube, you'll be heavily disappointed.
Moreover, the effects looks cheap and dated. They're so obviously
synthetic that it's distracting. Finally, there's a whole set of fresh
actors. Unfortunately, the acting is rather bad. Unlike in the original
'Cube', I didn't care about any of the characters. Some even irritated
me to such a degree that I wanted them to die quickly.
'Cube 2: Hypercube' feels as if somebody thought the original 'Cube'
could be improved by throwing a bigger budget to it, and a crew which
is skilled and has good tools, but has no clue of what made the
original so good. It's a bit as if they just learned about the concept
of a hypercube and found it so cool, that they thought a movie mostly
based on this concept would be equally cool.
28 out of 43 people found the following review useful:
Hyperdense Hypercube. What is the plot again?, 2 May 2005
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Author:
(Serata) from Somewhere lost in a cube
So the math took a backseat to the first movie. This one, however, is
all about the completely ridiculous result of what happens when you
build a hypercube. Where did the simplicity go? Where's the magical
screen writing that made the first so excellent? Fans of the first one
absolutely should see this movie, you'll be pleasantly surprised at the
new things Hypercube throws at you. Literally throws at you, in fact.
And throws at the seven new characters.
But where did it go wrong? The opening sequence is nothing short of the
greatest moment the Cube series has ever seen. Draws you straight into
the action, even if the first actor is bad at falling... up. From that
point on, the characters take a seat and move along with a poor attempt
at additional plot. We don't ever get any insight into character
motive, as we did in the first movie. This person goes insane... wait,
explain that one again? In addition to no character motive, the
characters are completely static. Unless you had seen the first movie
and were actually expecting focus on character archs, you would find
yourself thinking how terribly predictable the characters are. Even
more, the Cube's logical image has been destroyed, replaced by this
machine gone horribly wrong in the fourth dimension.
The best part of the film is how it continually keeps you on your feet,
long after you've seen it. What gave me hope for Lion's Gate was the
frightening beginning and the fantastic ending. I'm still plagued by
social, theoretical and mathematical problems posed in this second
installment, and the ending will not disappoint. However, for those
looking for intelligent theoretical sci-fi, I would look to the first,
and watch it perhaps a second time.
21 out of 31 people found the following review useful:
Weak entry, could've been better, 18 February 2007
Author:
slayrrr666 (slayrrr666@yahoo.com) from Los Angeles, Ca
"Cube 2: Hypercube" is a weak and confusing entry after such a great
original.
**SPOILERS**
Waking up alone, Kate Filmore, (Kari Matchett) Simon Grady, (Geraint
Wynn Davies) Sasha, (Grace Lynn Kung) Max Reisler, (Matthew Ferguson)
Jerry Whitehall, (Neil Crone) Tom McGuire, (Bruce Gray) and Mrs. Paley,
(Barbara Gordon) each find themselves trapped in a large structure
together. Trying to determine a way out of the structure, they find it
is a series rooms with weird numbers scratched all over the walls.
Discovering that they are in a hypercube, which has four dimensions
across it and can fold back in on itself, which forces them to believe
that an alternate reality is inside, as well as their self. Forced to
take action, they try to solve the riddle of the cube and escape before
they're killed off.
The Good News: There isn't a whole lot here to really like. The
hyper-dimensionality allows for a lot of fascinating ideas to play
around with. Gravity operates at a different angle in some rooms, time
operates at a different pace in other rooms so that at time, they see
other people alternately sped up or slowed down, and of course, doors
open up into alternate realities and points in time, which allows them
to constantly meet different versions of themselves. In one simply
fascinating scene, one of the characters opens a door and sees
them-self staring back. Reaching out to grasp the hand, another
character appears from behind, kills the parallel version before being
wiped out by a wall of crystalline shapes. It's a compulsively
fascinating moment that works quite effectively for it's creativity.
Another scene shows on of them stabbing a character in the eye, only to
then turn around and encounter them on the other side of the room a
moment later, having aged several years and seeking revenge. Outside of
these great ideas, the film is pretty hollow.
The Bad News: There's a lot here that doesn't work. As a whole, this is
a mess of a movie. It differs so much from the original that it's
almost in a different series, with only the main premise and the cube
structure remaining. Gone are the numerous, and quite cool, traps from
the original, replaced here with a trap that will spring only if too
much time is spent in a room rather than being the structure of the
room itself, and in their place is a much too talky, confused, and
poorly written movie. Not once does it fall together so that a simply
answer can be arrived at that will explain everything, and instead, it
just chooses to get more and more incoherent ending up being way too
complicated for its own good. Even the traps that do spring up aren't
that great, being simply a multiplying square that morphs into a
spinning shape, not at all that creative or impressive. The laser-wall
isn't that bad, but otherwise, the traps in here are barely worth
mentioning, not being that great at all and nowhere near the
inventiveness or cruelty of the originals. The extreme amount of
down-time in here is also a problem, since it takes nearly forever for
the film to get going. After introducing themselves, it takes nearly
forty minutes before the first trap is sprung, and that's far too long
to be standing around arguing with each other. That's the main gist of
the middle of the film, long sequences of everyone arguing about what
each clue supposedly means or where each person came from. This is a
downer and makes the middle seem like it takes forever, and coupled
with the weak, confusing story and lack of inventive traps, really
brings this down.
The Final Verdict: With a couple of decent scenes and ideas thrown in,
this is a really hard movie to recommend to anyone. Fans of the
original might like it, but it only has to be the most forgiving fans
to do so. If you want to really watch it, watch it before seeing the
original or not back-to-back, the differences will be quite startling.
Rated R: Graphic Language, Graphic Violence and Brief Nudity
14 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Going no where fast..., 1 March 2003
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Author:
(aleinss@mindless.com) from Milwaukee, WI
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
(* Includes Spoilers *)
After seeing the original Cube, this movie is pretty bad. The people in
the
first movie actually all had to work together to get out of the Cube.
And
each one had a specific talent that made up the puzzle in getting out of
it
(i.e. no one person could get out alone). In this new movie the concept
is
the same but is never developed! People are just mindlessly roaming from
room to room with no plan. The older woman supposedly has superior
mathematical ability that should be able to decipher what the number
60659
means in each room, but she is too senile to do so! She's also quite
annoying and adds nothing to the movie.
The blind girl was suppose to blow the whistle on the whole thing, but is
found out before doing so, so she escapes into the Hypercube. Never mind
the fact that even though she can barely move from room to room due to
her
blindness, she has miraculously waltzed into the Hypercube!
Traps have no logic to them, other then the eye candy factor.
The ending: very weak and it doesn't make sense.
Overall, a very disappointing movie to the first.
Rating: 3/10
14 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Very Disappointing Sequel, 4 August 2006
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Author:
patrickoneill from Nottingham, United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This is a truly bad sequel to the inventive and imaginative 'Cube'. It
just feels like a made-for-TV, straight to the DVD bargain bin rehash
of the first film. It doesn't have any atmosphere - getting rid of the
dark metal and coloured lighting makes it look more like a trendy wine
bar than a twisted death machine! Plus, why are the characters so
unafraid? Kate (the psychotherapist) constantly smiles and acts like
they're on some kind of office team-building event. It almost seems
like waking up in a cube is not a new or frightening experience for
them, "oh, right, we're in a cube again, how boring".
Another major problem with the film lies in the main 'psycho' of the
group Simon. He is basically a replica of Quentin the cop from the
first Cube, but without any of the character development or motive. In
the first film it does seem a little extreme when Quentin starts
murdering people but at least he's had a few arguments with them first.
Simon just starts killing people for fun - you can't kill an old woman
because her Alzheimer's annoys you!! The film disappointed from the
start. In the original there was a gruesome death scene within 2
minutes of the start. In 'Hypercube' the intro sequence is a boring
overhead shot of people lying in hospital beds and then you have to
wait an hour for the first death. Overall the film feels like a bigger
budget, lower impact remake/rip-off of the original with no excitement,
enthusiasm or interest.
24 out of 40 people found the following review useful:
Not too bad, but part 1 is still far better, 17 May 2003
Author:
Katatonia from Missouri
I am a big fan of the first Cube movie and have seen it at least 15 times. I
had high hopes for Hypercube but i didn't expect it to be as good or better
than the first. I think people would enjoy it more if they didn't expect
unreasonable expectations for this one.
Hypercube has some flaws, but it is still entertaining. If you love Science
and Physics (like i do), then you will love some of the questions this film
proposes.
I liked the darker feel of the first film more so than Hypercube. The
"Cubes" in this one are basically very bright white and it is sometimes very
intrusive to the eyes. I also would have liked less characters in this one.
One thing that worked so well in Cube 1 were the interesting characters and
the fact that there were not many in the film at all. This doesn't always
work in most films, but it worked perfectly in Cube 1.
If there was one thing which i really did not like in Hypercube, it would
have to be the ending. It was very cheesy and way over the top. It seemed
like an episode of The X Files, which works just fine for a Sci-fi TV
series, but it just didn't work here.
So, is Hypercube worth viewing? Yes it is, simply because some viewers will
like it more than others. It is still a better movie than most of the Sci-fi
movies that have been released lately. If you love the original Cube you
should check out Hypercube, if only to watch it one time...
7 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
You still have to watch it!, 31 July 2003
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Author:
Red Zebra (red_zebra2@yahoo.com) from australia
Since most reviews here are damningly negative of Cube 2, I feel I have to
post one opposing view, just so that possible fans won't skip this film
altogether. Yes, the characters are rather stereotypical, and basically
imported directly from Cube 1, but there is enough mystery about some of
them to make you wonder about their real motives and/or origins. I
personally think the effects and visuals (the cube) look wonderful. But
maybe it's just cos I was brought up on things like Doctor Who and Blakes
7!
The mathematics and physics behind the cube remain intriguing throughout
the
film, as you gradually learn how the work in the cube. My interest was
retained despite the fact that I was already very familiar with the
concept
of a 4-dimensional cube (`hypercube') and some theories about how they
might
`appear' to someone inside them. On the other hand, maybe this is why I
was
intrigued - to see how they translated these theories into a film (answer:
very intelligently). I think that the script writers managed very well to
combine interesting evolving inter-personal dynamics with the bizarre
realities of physics (time and 4 dimensions).
Although the film was very similar in some ways to Cube 1, it was
cunningly
different in others. For example, the numbers identifying the rooms, vital
to the progression of the first film, were in some ways a red herring in
the
second. I am somewhat ambivalent about the ending. I think it was
acceptable, if you caught what happened exactly (I've only seen one review
here (Sareji's) which seemed to actually catch what happened at the end),
but as others have pointed out, it lacks the much deeper and fascinating
metaphorical meaning about society and individual responsibility.
Although slightly flawed, this is an intelligent and unusual film, and, I
think, deserves to be seen, but only after Cube 1, because it plays with
some of the viewers expectations, and extends on many of the ideas of the
first film.
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