The Experiment

The Experiment

2001 • Drama, Thriller
20 volunteers agree to take part in a seemingly well-paid experiment advertised by the university. It is supposed to be about aggressive behavior in an artificial prison situation. A journalist senses a story behind the ad and smuggles himself in among the test subjects. They are randomly divided into prisoners and guards. What seems like a game at the beginning soon turns into bloody seriousness.
Runtime: 2h

Why you should read the novel

Before you queue up The Experiment (2001), experience the story where its unnerving power began: Black Box by Mario Giordano. On the page, the descent into obedience and cruelty unfolds with a slow, surgical precision no camera can fully capture. Reading the novel delivers deeper psychological insight, richer backstories, and interior monologues that illuminate why ordinary people cross lines. Giordano’s precise prose builds dread from the inside out, offering nuance and moral complexity that rewards careful, attentive reading. If you crave gripping, thought-provoking fiction about power, identity, and ethics, choose the source novel. Black Box is the definitive way to understand the experiment’s stakes—and a tense, unforgettable read for fans of psychological thrillers and social psychology.

Adaptation differences

Book vs. movie differences begin with perspective and detail. The film prioritizes immediacy and visual tension, while the novel immerses you in multiple interior viewpoints, exposing motivations, rationalizations, and mounting cognitive dissonance that drive behavior in the mock prison. Pacing and structure also diverge. The adaptation condenses timelines, streamlines subplots, and fuses or alters certain roles to maintain cinematic momentum. The book allows slower escalation, incremental boundary-pushing, and more granular cause-and-effect, making the breakdown of order feel chillingly inevitable. Tone and emphasis shift between mediums. The movie heightens confrontation and physical stakes to deliver thriller peaks, whereas the novel leans into moral ambiguity, ethical debate, and the psychology of conformity and authority. Scenes that play as shock in the film often read as unsettling introspection on the page. Endings and takeaways differ in flavor. The film seeks tighter closure and catharsis, framing events around clear reversals and consequences. The book lingers longer in aftermath and accountability, leaving readers with open questions about complicity, responsibility, and how easily systems can manufacture brutality.

The Experiment inspired from

Black Box
by Mario Giordano

Movies by the same author(s) for
The Experiment