The Box
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Numerology technologist Trevor engages in a city-wide takeover by using a mystical box to abduct people, replacing them with inter-dimensional beings disguised as humans.Numerology technologist Trevor engages in a city-wide takeover by using a mystical box to abduct people, replacing them with inter-dimensional beings disguised as humans.Numerology technologist Trevor engages in a city-wide takeover by using a mystical box to abduct people, replacing them with inter-dimensional beings disguised as humans.
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Did you know
- TriviaThis movie is about a box that opens at 11:11 and it addresses the cosmic significance surrounding the number 11. Ironically, the number 11 had a strong significance behind the scenes.
One of the opening shots of the movie was taken off of the 11th floor balcony of the Chase Park Plaza Hotel. This wasn't planned. When the camera crew arrived at the hotel, they were directed to go to the 11th floor.
In the opening shot of the segment "Back to School," a group of kids approach Ladue Horton Watkins High School. Behind the camera was a mailbox that featured the numbers 1111.
The exterior of the building featured in "The Man on the 11th Floor" was 121 Meramec. Take the number 2, fold it in half, and you have 1111. That building has 11 floors.
Sanjay Jain, who plays Professor Sanjeev Goel, the 11 guru, was born on 11-11.
Disassemble the 1s from 1111 and you can use the straight lines to create a square, which is one side of a box.
There are a few other examples. But the strongest example is the fact that it took 11 years to make this movie: 2012-2023.
Featured review
This movie started out as a short film. Then someone suggested to me that this could become an anthology feature film, where the box appears in each story. I liked that idea, so I decided to go for it.
The first story I wrote and shot was DINNER & DRINKS. From that concept, the rest of the movie evolved. I would write a story, shoot it, edit it, look at what we had, and then decide what the next move was.
As I wrote the script, the story started revealing ideas about the cosmic significance of the number eleven. I'm not a numerologist and that idea isn't what brought me down that path, but there must be something to it because the movie took eleven years to make!
The end result is a well-paced, well-shot, and overall reasonably well-acted low-budget sci-fi movie. The process of writing different stories and tying them altogether was a real exercise and that's where most of my criticism is. It's not bad writing, but I was so focused on driving the story in a specific direction that I didn't allow the characters to come full bloom. Therefore I think the writing, at times, is lacking in personality.
If I were to shoot this again, it might be a little more risky and visually dynamic. Visually, this was inspired by filmmakers like Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick - classic, somewhat slow, but purposeful. To see that style applied to a B-level sci-fi movie is interesting, but I don't think I would do that again.
All in all, I'm proud of making it to the finish line. It's always a great accomplishment when a person can complete a feature film under strained circumstances. And it's also a sense of pride to get distribution through a well-known company like Gravitas Ventures.
This is my second feature film and it's better than my first. My first movie is a very raw effort - a western called DEFIANCE that was distributed through Lionsgate. I learned a lot from making THE BOX, I'm moving in the right direction, and now it's time to move on to the next one!
The first story I wrote and shot was DINNER & DRINKS. From that concept, the rest of the movie evolved. I would write a story, shoot it, edit it, look at what we had, and then decide what the next move was.
As I wrote the script, the story started revealing ideas about the cosmic significance of the number eleven. I'm not a numerologist and that idea isn't what brought me down that path, but there must be something to it because the movie took eleven years to make!
The end result is a well-paced, well-shot, and overall reasonably well-acted low-budget sci-fi movie. The process of writing different stories and tying them altogether was a real exercise and that's where most of my criticism is. It's not bad writing, but I was so focused on driving the story in a specific direction that I didn't allow the characters to come full bloom. Therefore I think the writing, at times, is lacking in personality.
If I were to shoot this again, it might be a little more risky and visually dynamic. Visually, this was inspired by filmmakers like Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick - classic, somewhat slow, but purposeful. To see that style applied to a B-level sci-fi movie is interesting, but I don't think I would do that again.
All in all, I'm proud of making it to the finish line. It's always a great accomplishment when a person can complete a feature film under strained circumstances. And it's also a sense of pride to get distribution through a well-known company like Gravitas Ventures.
This is my second feature film and it's better than my first. My first movie is a very raw effort - a western called DEFIANCE that was distributed through Lionsgate. I learned a lot from making THE BOX, I'm moving in the right direction, and now it's time to move on to the next one!
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