Three... Extremes Movie Review
Three... Extremes Review
"Three... Extremes" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Fruit Chan,Park Chanwook,Takashi MiikeProducer : Peter Chan,Fumio Inoue,Naoki Sato,Shun Shimizu,Ahn Soo-Hyun
Screenwiter : Lilian Lee,Park Chanwook,Haruko Fukushima
Starring : Kyoko Hasegawa,Atsuro Watabe,Mai Susuki,Yuu Susuki,Bai Ling,Pauline Lau,Tony Ka-Fai Leung,Meme,Lee Byung-hun,Miriam Yeung,Lim Won-Hee,Gang Hye Jung,Lee Jun Goo
As anthologies invariably tend to be disappointingly lopsided ventures, it’s a
welcome surprise to find that unevenness is the strongest facet of Three…
Extremes, a diverse and successfully chilling horror triptych that brings
together the short works of acclaimed directors Fruit Chan (Durian Durian),
Park Chanwook (Oldboy), and Takashi Miike (Audition). Unrelated save for a
shared fascination with female ghoulishness, the three segments form something
of a rough primer for Asian horror newbies, with Chan delivering a dose of
macabre black wit, Chanwook providing his usual brand of self-consciously
bloody moralizing, and Miike contributing otherworldly, irrational J-horror
spookiness. And though none come close to approximating the bone-deep scares
elicited by Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s 2001 Pulse (which receives a long-overdue
stateside release in early November), the trio of stories – alternately
caustic, gruesome, and bafflingly opaque – prove a welcome relief from the
CG-infatuated, subtext-barren supernatural thrillers currently being dumped on
moviegoers by Hollywood this Halloween season.
Progressing from its strongest to its weakest chapters, Three... Extremes (a
sequel to 2002’s Three) starts with the Hong Kong-native Chan’s sumptuous
Dumplings, a satiric tale of female vanity-gone-awry that began as a
feature-length film (also titled Dumplings) but was cut down by the director to
a compact 40-odd minutes for this cinematic compilation. Having not seen it in
its original form, I’m unqualified to discuss the pluses and minuses of this
editing-room abbreviation, yet Chan’s entry is nonetheless an amusingly grisly
piece of social commentary in which former TV star-turned-neglected trophy wife
Mrs. Li (Miriam Yeung) finds the fountain of youth (and the remedy to her
negative self-image) via witchy chef Aunt Mei’s (Bai Ling) unique brand of
dumplings. Revealing the special ingredient that makes Mei’s culinary treats so
physically and emotionally rejuvenating would be in bad taste, but suffice to
say that Chan – riffing on Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal with the help of
Wong Kar-Wai regular Christopher Doyle’s disquietingly ethereal cinematography
– deliciously lays bare modern society’s unhealthy preoccupation with physical
female beauty via one crunchy bite and a terrifying, serpentine lick of the
lips.
Park Chanwook also strives for gallows humor in Cut, the story of a movie
director (Lee Byung-hun) whose seemingly perfect life is slashed to ribbons
after he and his pianist wife (Gang Hye Jung) are taken hostage by an extra
(Lim Won-Hee) on a movie set that looks just like the director’s ornately
decorated home. Forcing his captive to either kill a young child with his bare
hands or watch his musician wife’s fingers be severed and shredded in a
blender, the fiend reveals an upper class-lower class axe to grind, though the
Korean Chanwook’s vignette functions less as a treatise on classism than as
another one of his portraits of man’s inherent viciousness. Such pedantry is,
as usual, simply Chanwook’s justification for staging elaborate nastiness, but
whereas his work usually reeks of hipster superficiality, here Chanwook’s
self-reflexive gestures – which result in a scabrous critique of his own
reputation as a purveyor of ghastly, gratuitous gore – feel sharply honed and
less overbearingly exaggerated. Plus, Chanwook’s David Fincher-esque CG zooms
and pull-backs, coupled with his stunningly sick imagery, strike a powerful
visceral chord.
The same can be said of Takashi Miike’s Box, which finds the prolific Japanese
provocateur working in an ominous mode more akin to One Missed Call (cross-bred
with HBO’s Carnivāle) than Audition. Miike’s submission charts the traumatic
events which befall a novelist (Kyoko Hasegawa) who is visited by the
pale-faced apparition of her long-dead kid sister…or, perhaps, simply sees this
spirit in harrowing nightmares involving incest, full-body plastic bags, and
being buried alive in the downy snow. Utilizing an oppressive silence and
fragmented narrative to create a sense of sinister unease, Box feels untethered
to reality even as its basic plot outline – about the ticked-off dead returning
to exact revenge against those who wronged them – reveals itself to be
straightforward to the point of ridiculousness. Yet because the director
diligently strives for disjointed structural chaos bereft of reassuring
logicality or coherence, it becomes near-impossible to determine whether the
ongoing action is a dream or reality – an unsettling disorientation that
fittingly caps off a trilogy in which madness and mayhem are de rigueur facets
of everyday life.
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Review by Nicholas Schager
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