Three (2002 film)
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File:Three (Hong Kong).jpg
Three (Going Home)'s movie poster
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Directed by | Kim Jee-woon Nonzee Nimibutr Peter Ho-Sun Chan |
Produced by | Duangamol Limcharoen Jojo Hui Nonzee Nimibutr Oh Jung-Won Peter Ho-Sun Chan |
Written by | Jojo Hui Kim Jee-woon Nitas Singhamat |
Music by | Cho Sung-Woo Sinnapa Sarasas |
Cinematography | Hong Kyung-pyo Christopher Doyle |
Edited by | Nonzee Nimibutr Chung Yoon-Chul Kong Chi-leung |
Release dates
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Running time
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129 minutes |
Country | South Korea Thailand Hong Kong |
Language | Korean Thai Cantonese Mandarin |
Box office | $1,683,621[1] |
Three (Chinese title: 三更) is a 2002 horror film collaboration consisting of three omnibus segments by directors from three Asian countries. The segments are, in the following order:
- Memories, directed by Kim Jee-woon (South Korea) - dialogue in Korean
- The Wheel, directed by Nonzee Nimibutr (Thailand) - dialogue in Thai
- Going Home, directed by Peter Chan (Hong Kong) - dialogue in Cantonese and Mandarin
The project has a sequel, Three... Extremes (2004) following the same concept but with directors Fruit Chan, Takashi Miike and Park Chan-wook.
Memories
- Directed and screenplay by Kim Jee-woon
- Cinematography by Hong Kyung-pyo
Summary A man goes to a psychiatrist to try to remember what happened the day his wife disappeared from his life. Meanwhile, his wife wakes up and finds herself lying on a deserted road, having no idea how she got there in the first place. She tries to find her way home. At the same time, her husband drives home to their apartment. Separately, they begin to regain their memories of what happened.
Cast and roles include
- Jeong Bo-seok - Husband
- Kim Hye-soo - Wife
- Choi Jeong-won - Doctor
- Jang Jung-won - Eun-Ji
- Jee Sung-keun - Taxi driver
- Moon Jung-hee - Hyun-joo, the sister of the wife
- Park Hee-soon - Hyun-joo's husband
The Wheel
- Directed by Nonzee Nimibutr
- Story by: Ek Iemchuen and Nonzee Nimibutr
- Screenplay by Nitas Singhamat
- Cinematography by Nattawut Kittikhun
A puppet master lies dying in his bed. This is no ordinary death bed, as screams of terror erupt from him, surrounded by ghosts, which await his death. We later find out that his death was a result of a curse - a curse brought about by the improper ownership of ancient Thai puppets. The puppets belong to their proper master, and whosoever claims these puppets will suffer a horrible death.
The puppets are stolen, and the curse lands on the head of an oblivious Thai puppet troupe. They see great promise in the puppets, yet violence and destruction rains down upon them.
Cast and roles include
- Suwinit Panjamawat - Gaan
- Kanyavae Chatiawaipreacha - Nuan
- Pornchai Chuvanon - Plew
- Anusak Intasorn - Im
- Pattama Jangjarut - Nan
- Savika Kanchanamas - Sa-Ing
- Manop Meejamarat - Cht
- Tinnapob Seeweesriruth - Dang
- Vinn Vasinanon - Bua
- Pongsanart Vinsiri - Master Tong
- Komgrich Yuttiyong - Master Tao
Going Home
- Directed by Peter Chan
- Story by Teddy Chan and Su Chao-Bin
- Screenplay by Matt Chow and Jo Jo Hui Yuet-chun
- Cinematography by Christopher Doyle
- Filming location: Former Police Married Quarters on Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan, Hong Kong[2]
Summary While searching for his missing son, a cop, Wai, finds himself detained by his neighbor Yu, a Chinese physician, in his apartment. Yu has been tending to the body of his dead wife for three years, apparently believing that his wife is still alive and will wake up in a day or two so they can go home together.
Cast and roles include
- Leon Lai - Yu
- Eric Tsang - Wai
- Eugenia Yuan - Hai'er, Yu's wife
- Li Ting-Fung - Cheung
- Lau Tsz-Wing - Yu's Daughter
- Camy Ting - Pathologist
- Ting Tak-Ming - Janitor
- Wong Heng - Doctor
- John Shum - Photographer
Distribution
This film was released in the U.S. under the title Three Extremes II, as the sequel was released first in U.S. territories, followed by this film.
Awards
The third segment of the film, Going Home, has won:
- 2002 Golden Horse Film Festival:
- Best Actor: Leon Lai
- Best Cinematography: Christopher Doyle
- 2003 Hong Kong Film Awards:
- Best New Performer: Eugenia Yuan
References
- ↑ http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/intl/?page=&id=_fTHREE01
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- 2002 films
- 2002 horror films
- Horror anthology films
- Cantonese-language films
- Films directed by Kim Jee-woon
- Films directed by Peter Chan
- Hong Kong films
- Hong Kong horror films
- Korean-language films
- Mandarin-language films
- South Korean films
- South Korean horror films
- Thai films
- Thai horror films
- Thai-language films