Skip to main content

The sci-fi horror cult classic Cube is the brainy Saw film you need to see

25 years ago, on September 9, 1997, Cube premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. The movie centers on a small group of strangers who wake up trapped in a giant cube…connected to other cubes…making up one gigantic cube. Adding to the tension is that some of the cubes are rigged with traps and only a mathematical formula derived from the room numbers can reveal which rooms are and aren’t safe. Sadism, mystery, claustrophobia, and paranoia combine, creating a surprisingly tense, scary, and smart movie

The movie, known primarily to hardcore genre fans, is a masterwork of storytelling, creating the idea of a giant underground prison using only two small sets that were reused and repurposed over and over again throughout filming. The true terror of Cube comes from its idea – being trapped, perhaps senselessly, and feeling the imminence of death. It’s a film that holds up a quarter of a century after its release, and deserves to be seen by a wider audience.

Recommended Videos

A simple yet ingenious concept

A prisoner wakes up inside a giant cube in the 1997 film Cube
Cube Libre

The film’s central mystery is simple yet compelling: why does the cube exist? At one point, one of the characters, David Worth, reveals to the group that he was actually contracted to build the cube’s outer shell, though he has no idea how he ended up trapped inside. Naturally, the group wants to know what the cube is and why it exists. Worth gives an utterly underwhelming response, saying, “There is no conspiracy. No one is in charge. It’s a headless blunder operating under the illusion of a master plan…there is no point, that’s the point.” 

That answer, however, doesn’t seem to add up with the rest of the film. The prisoners, for example, seem too-perfectly hand chosen to be mere coincidence. There’s Holloway, the doctor; Kazan, an autistic man with savant syndrome who (how convenient) is great at math; Worth, the designer of the Cube’s shell; Wren, a notorious escape artist; Quentin McNeil, a police officer; and Joan Leaven, a mathematics student. 

Cube (8/12) Movie CLIP - Sound Activated (1997) HD

Now, if you’re going to be stuck inside a giant booby trap-filled cube, desperately trying to survive and escape…this group seems a bit *too* perfect to be random. At one point, Holloway also reveals that she has knowledge of McNeil and his abusive past, further alluding to the fact that this group was hand-chosen. 

The dichotomy of the movie both telling viewers it’s all pointless, while also very clearly showing that it’s all connected, creates a strange vibe where viewers can’t tell if they’re simply too stupid to understand the brilliance of Cube’s message, or if the filmmakers were just too stupid to realize their own contradictions. In all honesty, though, this endless questioning helps keep the movie fun and interesting. 

A likely inspiration for the Saw franchise

Produced on a budget of just $365,000 CAD, Cube went on to gross just short of $9 million at the global box office, becoming a runaway indie success that also had a profitable lifespan in the rental and home video markets. There are also many who say the film is a precursor (at least spiritually) to Saw. A group of supposed strangers wake up in a giant, gritty torture device, and are given a strange and subversive way to escape. Sound familiar? 

The group of prisoners wakes up tapped in SAW II
Image courtesy of Twisted Pictures

In fact, there’s even a striking similarity between Cube and Saw II. In Cube, one of the characters, Quentin McNeil, becomes unhinged from the stress, fear, and isolation of the cube. He begins turning on the others, attempting to gain control. He’s willing to hurt others, leave people behind, and he even kills Holloway after discovering she knows about his dark past. To Quentin, if someone couldn’t be used to escape, they were worthless and better off dead.

For anyone who has seen Saw II, this probably sounds oddly similar to the character of Xavier, who decides to violently turn against the others, hoping to get the numbers tattooed on their necks in order to escape all by himself.

While there’s no concrete proof of a connection between the two franchises, their similarities can’t be ignored. James Wan, Saw’s director, has never come out and said Cube was an inspiration, but it’s highly probable he’s seen the movie because of its importance and popularity within the horror and sci-fi fandoms.

A Cube multiverse

A prisoner in Cube looks at herself in a mirror imaged cube in Cube 2 Hypercube
image courtesy of Ghost Logic and Lionsgate Films

In fact, throughout the years, Cube has spawned both a sequel and a prequel. In 2002, Cube 2: Hypercube was released. Whereas the ‘97 film was gritty, grounded, and grungy-looking, Hypercube was bright, white, and leaned more heavily into the sci-fi genre, revealing that this new cube is actually a tesseract with time and space operating differently in each room. Reviews were not as good as the first, with many commenting that the sequel came off feeling low-budget, although it did have some shining moments with the more outlandish room traps. 

In 2004, Cube Zero revealed what happened before the events of the first movie, and instead of taking place solely inside the cube, it alternated between the captives inside and the men in the control room spying on their every move.

A prisoner makes his through a small queen from one cube to another
Image courtesy of Mad Circus Films and Lionsgate Entertainment

Once again, the film received mixed reviews, with critics saying it muddled the mystery of the original by trying (perhaps too hard) to explain the purpose of the cube. Religion, politics, and wealthy sadists are referenced as reasons, and instead of better explaining the cube, it just raises more questions, further confusing audiences and making the cube even more mysterious. 

And yet, that does seem to be what Cube is about. It’s about not knowing what’s right and wrong, what’s real and what isn’t, and most importantly, it’s about preying upon audiences’ sense of paranoia and fear, leaving them to ask…what’s the purpose? What’s the point of all this pain and suffering?  And most importantly, is there a point? 

Cube (1997) - Trailer

The franchise is also far from dead. In 2021 a Japanese remake was released, and earlier this year, it was reported by Bloody Disgusting that Lionsgate is currently looking through pitch ideas for an American reboot as well. It will be interesting to see what kind of story the new movie will tell and whether it will lean more into horror or sci-fi, realism or absurdism, and if it might (finally) give us a reason as to why the cube exists.

Topics
Keith Langston
Keith Langston has been obsessed with entertainment ever since he was a kid. He fully believes The Faculty and Deep Blue Sea…
Fawesome’s November streaming lineup includes Interstellar, Zodiac, and It Follows
A man with a cigarette in his mouth stands next to another man.

Fawesome is bringing the heat with its November streaming lineup.

The free movies website has significantly bolstered its lineup with an eclectic mix of blockbusters, thrillers, actions, comedies, and horror movies. One of the biggest additions in November is Interstellar, Christopher Nolan's 2014 sci-fi space adventure starring Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway. Interstellar follows a group of astronauts and scientists who venture to a wormhole off Saturn in hopes of finding a new inhabitable planet. Interstellar's 10th anniversary this month is all the more reason to stream.

Read more
The best stand-up comedy on Netflix right now
Hasan Minhaj performing at his Off With His Head special.

November has arrived, and if anyone could use a good laugh, it's everyone in America who has had to deal with a seemingly endless presidential campaign. Thanksgiving is still a few weeks away, but let's give thanks now to Netflix for bringing us laughter through a powerhouse lineup of stand-up comedy specials. We don't even have to leave the house to see some of the top comedians in the industry, and most of us probably can't afford the front-row tickets that these specials allow us to enjoy from our couches.

Netflix's latest specials, Hasan Minhaj: Off With His Head and Tom Papa: Home Free, feature two very different styles of stand-up comedy. Additionally, there are many options waiting for you below in the best stand-up comedy on Netflix right now.

Read more
The best free movies on YouTube right now (November 2024)
A group of football players stand with their coach.

YouTube is typically used for podcasts, movie trailers, cooking demonstrations, vlogs, and comedy specials. However, did you know the service offers movies and television shows for free? When you click on "Movies & TV" on the sidebar, you'll see an entire section dedicated to films and shows ready to be streamed.

If you're worried about YouTube's selection, think again. These programs are popular and widely recognized, from blockbusters and sequels to franchises and award winners. These movies are ad-supported — short commercials will air during your presentation — but that seems fair considering it will not cost you a dime to watch. Below, explore our November guide for the best free movies on YouTube.
Looking for more stuff you can watch for free? Check out our guides to the best free shows on YouTube and the best sites for watching free movies online. If you're willing to pay, read these guides on the best new movies to stream and the best movies on Netflix.

Read more