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3-Iron
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Country
: |
South-Korea |
| Year: |
2004 |
| Genre: |
Drama
/ Romance / Thriller |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H28 |
| Distributor: |
Edko
Films Ltd |
| Date
reviewed: |
01/09/06 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Kim
Ki-Duk |
| Director: |
Kim
Ki-Duk |
Cast: Seung-yeon Lee, Hyun-kyoon
Lee, Hyuk-ho Kwon, Jin-mo Ju |
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Story:
Young Tae-Suk wanders through the apartments of people
on vacation: for a while he enjoys their homes, doing
small repair jobs and then leaving quietly, not stealing
anything. His ghost-like hauntings of these homes are
matched when he encounters a battered woman sulking
in a lush, apparently empty house. They become attracted
to one another, but there are many obstacles for their
unconvential affair: an angry husband, police, murder
charges, golf balls...
Review: People are limited by their environment
but also by their own inner being. And yet they try
to reach out into the world, into someone else's existence
and make a meaningful contact in their own very peculiar
way. In Kim Ki-Duk's films this contact is never verbal;
never could the debased words establish a real communion
between souls. The method can be violence (BAD GUY);
it can be eroticism (SAMARIA); it can be sado-masochism
(THE ISLE); it can be even silence (THE BOW) –
but never, never words. This director distrusts words
more than any other I can think of; and whatever they
do, his characters almost never talk to one another.
It is not because they have nothing to say. On the
contrary, it is precisely that they have too much
on their minds, things too important to convey for
them to be dragged down in words. In a world in which
every soap opera or 'Reality TV' person is ''madly
in love'', in which feelings are all too easily labeled,
Kim Ki-Duk's protagonists cherish their private world
too much to even try to verbalize it. Words like ''love'',
''hate'', ''passion'', ''revenge'', and the like do
not even BEGIN to describe the essence standing behind
their motivations (often mysterious to themselves
as well).
Such is the case with 3-IRON, Kim Ki-Duk's best work
so far. It is best because here he manages to capture
the elusive essence of complex emotions in such a
pure, unadulterated manner that by the end of the
film his characters become more ethereal, more mysterious
than they were in the beginning. The two outcasts,
outsiders in a world governed by money, power and
violence, ''live'' their solitary lives of Kafkean
detachment verging on non-existence: Sun-Hwa broods,
silently rejecting her husband's brutishness (undiminished
– or, one could argue, even augmented by his
wealth and social status), while Tae-Suk leads a vicarious
existence assuming, at least temporarely, other people's
lives. Both of them are trying to diminish themselves
– to hide from the outside world, to be too
small to be noticeable – to become no one, to
be nothing. These are the same sentiments that made
Gregor Samsa metamorphose into a bug. But in contrast
with Kafka's universe, in Kim Ki-Duk's there is also
love. Often strange, unspeakable, indescribable, beyond
the grasp of external observers – but none the
less powerful or life-changing for that.
So, the two outcasts meet, and immediately form a
microcosm of two. It is through silences that they
speak, it is through looks that they touch, it is
through music (the stunning, elegiac Oriental mood
piece by Slvain repeated several times in the film)
that they make love. Never has Kim Ki-Duk been so
adept in using silence, or music, or sparse sounds
from the outside world. Never has he been so lucky
with actors as in this film: Hyun-kyoon Lee practically
carries the film through his body language and his
looks, making Tae-Suk an astonishing character –
one of the most likable (while, at the same time mysterious)
in recent cinema. He's immensely helped by Seung-yeon
Lee's portrayal of an abused but undefeated wife who
is brought to life through the contact with her own
silent partner. Together they are alone against the
others, and with the newly-found power of love they
dissolve from this world.
3-IRON is pure poetry in film: a visual, aural and
atmospheric treat unlike anything you've ever seen,
a great existential love affair painted with subtlety
(and occasional burst of violence) by one of the greatest
masters of world cinema working today. Absolutely
recommended for all those who do not mind their entertainment
heady, sentimental, ambiguous and a bit slow-paced.
If, however, your idea of entertainment is mostly
fast-paced action, suspense/gore-filled horror or
laugh-riot comedy, be warned that the 'entertainment'
score for this film would probably be 3,5 or 4. But
I guess that no one comes to a Kim Ki-Duk expecting
the usual fun. For the lovers of the unusual, the
score is certainly 5.
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DVD
[ NTSC, Region 3
] :
Edko's DVD does justice to the audio-visual qualities
of 3-IRON: the colors are vibrant and vivid in all their
16:9 glory, the sounds (and silences) are proper, and
the DVD package is the best among the various versions
that are available out there. There are Chinese and
English subtitles, the latter being fine and easy to
read. In the extras department it could use some more
– especially is lacking the director's commentary
that some other editions boast – but still, you
get a trailer, gallery, biographies and a 15 minute
'behind the scenes' feature which mostly shows raw video
footage of Kim Ki-Duk at work, shooting some scenes.
On the other hand, with a film whose many qualities
rely on a sense of mystery, perhaps it's better not
to have any kind of commentary or guidance: be free
to have your own interpretation and undiminshed experience
of 3-IRON.
Reviewed
by Dejan Ognjanovic
You
can buy this movie on DVD at:
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |


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| © 1999-2005 by KFC
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