
- Submarine shaped reusable ice cubes
- Will not water down your drink
- Reusable
- Set of 6
- Each submarine measures 2-3/4-inch
Every nightmare has a beginning. In this prequel to the cult hit Cube, one of the most successful sci-fi thrillers of the last decade, a new group of unwilling participants frantically moves through an ominous construct of cube-shaped rooms. Each room holds the threat of hideously inventive and painful death. Finding the real exit, however, may not offer the freedom one seeks.Following the grisly 1997
Cube and its 2002 sequel,
Cube 2: Hypercube,
Cube Zero stretches the original's
The Twilight Zone-like, strangers-in-a-box theme a little thin. Fortunately, there's a difference this time. The hero is not just another disoriented captive of the Cube's interconnected--often lethal--rooms, but rather a geek named Eric ! (Zachary Bennett) who sits in a control station wrestling with his conscience about inflicting misery on innocent people. Taking orders over the phone from some almighty, unknown power in a distant office, Eric reaches a breaking point and enters the maze himself, intent on helping a woman (Stephanie Moore) who doubts his motives. The existential bent of the prior films becomes even more Kafkaesque this time with the arrival of a white-collar team of tormentors, bureaucratic tyrants who can't or won't explain the point of the Cube. Imaginative writer-director Ernie Barbarash rescues what might have been a tedious formula flick.
--Tom KeoghIn the sequel to the sleeper sci-fi hit, a deadlier and more complex labyrinth has eight people held captive, forcing them to band together in order to unlock the mysterious secrets of their four-dimensional prison and expose the lethal conspiracy behind it. With Geraint Wyn Davies, Kari Matchett, Grace Lynn Kung, Matthew Ferguson. ! 94 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtrack: English Dolby Digit! al 5.1; Subtitles: English, Spanish; audio commentary; deleted scenes; interviews; photo gallery; theatrical trailer.Following the grisly 1997
Cube and its 2002 sequel,
Cube 2: Hypercube,
Cube Zero stretches the original's
The Twilight Zone-like, strangers-in-a-box theme a little thin. Fortunately, there's a difference this time. The hero is not just another disoriented captive of the Cube's interconnected--often lethal--rooms, but rather a geek named Eric (Zachary Bennett) who sits in a control station wrestling with his conscience about inflicting misery on innocent people. Taking orders over the phone from some almighty, unknown power in a distant office, Eric reaches a breaking point and enters the maze himself, intent on helping a woman (Stephanie Moore) who doubts his motives. The existential bent of the prior films becomes even more Kafkaesque this time with the arrival of a white-collar team of tormentors, bureaucratic tyrants who can't or won't e! xplain the point of the Cube. Imaginative writer-director Ernie Barbarash rescues what might have been a tedious formula flick.
--Tom KeoghSubmarine shaped reusable ice cubes are freezable ice cubes in the shape of yellow submarines that won't water down your drink and can be reused over and over. Put a fleet of these subs in your punch or submerge your yellow submarine armada in your cocktail. They are food-safe, filled with pure distilled water. Set of six.Six ordinary strangers awaken to find themselves in a seemingly endless maze of interlocking cubical chambers armed with lethal booby traps. They have to learn to cooperate to solve the secrets of this deadley trap.
No Track Information Available
Media Type: DVD
Artist: DEBOER/GUADAGNI
Title: CUBE
Street Release Date: 02/01/2005
Domestic
Genre: HORRORIf Clive Barker had written an episode of The Twilight Zone, it might have lo! oked something like Cube. A handful of strangers wake u! p inside a bizarre maze, having been spirited there during the night. They quickly learn that they have to navigate their way through a series of chambers if they have any hope of escape, but the problem is that there are lethal traps awaiting if they choose their route unwisely. Having established some imaginative and grisly punishments in store for the hostages, cowriter and director Vincenzo Natali turns his attention to the characters, for whom being trapped amplifies their best and worst qualities. The film is, in fact, similar to a famous episode of Rod Serling's old television series, though Natali's explanation for why these poor people are being put through hell is a lot closer to the spirit of The X-Files. Cube has some solid moments of suspense and drama, and the sets are appropriately striking: one is tempted to believe at first the characters are lost inside a computer chip. --Tom Keogh
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