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3 histoires de l'au-delà

Original title: Sam gang
  • 2002
  • 12
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
4K
YOUR RATING
3 histoires de l'au-delà (2002)
HorrorMystery

An anthology consisting of three horror shorts from different Asian directors: Memories by Kim Jee-woon, The Wheel by Nonzee Nimibutr, and Going Home by Peter Chan.An anthology consisting of three horror shorts from different Asian directors: Memories by Kim Jee-woon, The Wheel by Nonzee Nimibutr, and Going Home by Peter Chan.An anthology consisting of three horror shorts from different Asian directors: Memories by Kim Jee-woon, The Wheel by Nonzee Nimibutr, and Going Home by Peter Chan.

  • Directors
    • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
    • Kim Jee-woon
    • Nonzee Nimibutr
  • Writers
    • Kim Jee-woon
    • Nitas Singhamat
    • Ek Iemchuen
  • Stars
    • Leon Lai
    • Kim Hye-su
    • Jeong Bo-seok
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Nonzee Nimibutr
    • Writers
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Nitas Singhamat
      • Ek Iemchuen
    • Stars
      • Leon Lai
      • Kim Hye-su
      • Jeong Bo-seok
    • 28User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 19 nominations total

    Videos1

    Three Extremes II
    Trailer 1:08
    Three Extremes II

    Photos9

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Leon Lai
    Leon Lai
    • Yu Fai (segment "Going Home")
    Kim Hye-su
    Kim Hye-su
    • Wife (segment "Memories")
    • (as Kim Hye-Soo)
    Jeong Bo-seok
    • Husband (segment "Memories")
    • (as Jung Bo-Seog)
    Moon Jeong-Hee
    Moon Jeong-Hee
    • Hyun Joo (segment "Memories")
    • (as Moon Jung-Hee)
    Park Hee-soon
    Park Hee-soon
    • Hyun Joo's Husband (segment "Memories")
    • (as Park Hee-Soon)
    Jung-Won Jang
    • Eun Ji (segment "Memories")
    • (as Jang Jung-Won)
    Choi Jung-Woo
    • Doctor (segment "Memories")
    Hyung-Kwon Lee
    • Guard (segment "Memories")
    • (as Lee Hyung-Kwon)
    Sung-Keun Jee
    • Taxi Driver (segment "Memories")
    • (as Jee Sung-Keun)
    Seung-Young Lee
    • Woman in Car Crash (segment "Memories")
    • (as Lee Seung-Young)
    A-Rum Lee
    • High School Girl (segment "Memories")
    • (as Lee A-Rum)
    Jae-Hoo Choi
    • Suspicious Young Man (segment "Memories")
    • (as Choi Jae-Hoo)
    Jee-You Kim
    • Mr. Park (segment "Memories")
    • (as Kim Jee-You)
    Cha-Yeun Lee
    • Girl with Yellow Bag (segment "Memories")
    • (as Lee Cha-Yeun)
    Joon-Yong Park
    • Man on Bike (segment "Memories")
    • (as Park Joon-Yong)
    Eun-Young Kwak
    • Girl in Elevator (segment "Memories")
    • (as Kwak Eun-Young)
    Komgrich Yuttiyong
    • Kru Tao (segment "The Wheel")
    Pongsanart Vinsiri
    • Kru Tong (segment "The Wheel")
    • Directors
      • Peter Ho-Sun Chan
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Nonzee Nimibutr
    • Writers
      • Kim Jee-woon
      • Nitas Singhamat
      • Ek Iemchuen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.14K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Decent

    Three Extremes 2 (2002)

    ** (out of 4)

    Lions Gate is releasing this title next week but it's original title is Three, the "inspiration" for what would become Three Extremes. I guess the popularity of that title is why Lions Gate selected to make this appear as a sequel when it's actually the first film. Kim Jee-Woon's Memories has a woman lost in the streets without any memory of who she is. She has one phone number that she keeps trying to call but when she can't reach anyone she just continues to walk around hoping her memory will return. Nonzee Nimibutr's The Wheel has an old man dying and leaving behind puppets, which are cursed and start to come to life. Peter Ho-Sun Chan's Going Home has a cop searching for his missing son when he is kidnapped by a man who keeps his "wife" locked inside their apartment. These three films aren't any good but the first and third one are the most interesting. The second film dealing with the puppet is quite poor without any good moment. The first and third stories are the best.
    renelsonantonius

    Plain weirdness, bored gore and real fear

    As a post-Halloween presentation, Titus Brandsma Center, a Carmelite-run service organization here, held a screening of 3 Asian horror films:Higuchinsky's 'Uzumaki'(Japan), Youn-Hyun Chang's 'Tell Me Something'(South Korea) and 'Three', a trilogy of shorts by Ji-Woon Kim(S. Korea), Nonzee Nimibutr(Thailand) and Peter Chan(Hong Kong). The conceit behind the event was to "run along the same vein" as 'The Ring', a trend-setting, box-office hit Japanese spine-tingler(recently shown on Philippine television in a tolerable Filipino-dubbed version).

    OK, 'Uzumaki'(which translates in English as "spiral" or "vortex")is a bizaare study in communal fixation and paranoia, with any swirl-shaped object as the ubiquitous motif. This debut film by Higuchinsky(who worked before as a director of music videos)succeeds in conveying the sense of collective disturbance and fear that grips the small community of Kuzouguchi, its distinguishing claustrophobic quality brings to mind the kind evoked by David Lynch in 'Blue Velvet'--it's only that the Japanese director takes one step further with his really, really fantastic and grotesque turn of events. But I guess that to fully enjoy the film, one should take it AS IT IS, with any "interpretation" of the purported "metaphorical" significance of the spiral following later(in my case, much, much later, if ever).

    While 'Tell Me Something', bad luck of all bad lucks, was the much-maligned film in the line-up--with good reason. For despite its fair share of gore and tension, and a good-looking lead pair(the lieutenant and the lady under surveillance), a stubborn fact still shows up:that the film is another jaded offspring of the jaded serial-killer genre(it doesn't really take a lot of mindwork to guess, about 45 minutes--or even less!--into the film, who the murderer is;now, even this is a jaded remark!). Strangely though, on 2nd viewing, I began to find 'Tell Me Something' to be kind of interesting(it appeared that it wasn't really that bad), for at least, it scored a few points in the following:having a toned-down tension, evoking a noirish atmosphere with its rain-drenched urban locale at night and going against the "obligatory" fate of the lead pair being eventually romantically or sexually involved with one another(never mind the lack of a well-defined motivation, anyway, the two are as aloof to each other as they are to the viewers)--sigh, even this is a jaded indulgence!

    But I still believe that Korean Cinema is one of the exciting film industries that we have, serving us with a good number of brave and provocative films in recent years, among them, Chul-Soo Park's '301/302', Jin-Ho Hur's 'Christmas in August', Ki-Duk Kim's 'The Isle' and 'Address Unknown', Jung-Ji Woo's 'Happy End' and Ji-Young Chang's 'The White Badge.'

    Thankfully, the best was saved for the last, for 'Three' was the clear favorite of the audience(including myself). To be noted particularly are the 1st and 3rd episodes:Kim's 'Memories' and Chan's 'Going Home'(I wish I could say the same for the 2nd short). What I'm interested is how did these 2 episodes work upon the emotion of fear, as it's a given fact that such feeling is the one that films of the horror genre want to arouse mainly from the audience.

    In 'Memories', where does fear spring forth? As it turns out, it's from the husband's(Bo-Seok Jong)"ghost of his own making", so to speak, as there's a terrible secret that he tries painfully to conceal. He may have succeeded in keeping it from other people's notice, but definitely not from the prodding of his own conscience, thus the hallucinations and nightmares(even if it appears that these don't seriously bother him at all!).

    As it should be, the viewers don't completely have any idea about this "secret" at the start of the film, but through Kim's skillful interweaving of the husband's and the "lost" woman's(Hye-Suk Kim)respective scenes--he, as he confronts his terrifying nightmares;she, as she wanders through a barely-inhabited city, where various omens singularly happen to her--all told with little use of dialogues, it little by little builds up toward the grisly revelation, its utterly nightmarish quality is like Franz Kafka and Edgar Allan Poe have joined forces for the modern times.

    The director may have relied on "old tricks" to scare the audience(anyway, it worked), but the best thing is that we can make sense of the fear thus evoked, we can "connect" with it. And this, the fear of having done a terrible misdeed and of having to face up with the nightmares(or "bad memories")that consequently spin out of one's own sinful act--whether one gets away with it or not.

    On the other hand, watching 'Going Home' is like watching an assortment of 'Psycho', 'Awakenings' and 'The Sixth Sense.' However, it's of such a potent tragicomic quality that the viewers are still put under the spell, brought into force by a marvelous confluence of terrific performances(with Leon Lai at the forefront)and astounding mood photography(predominantly slimy green)by Wong Kar-Wai's "recording angel", Christopher Doyle.

    Going through my files, I came upon my few notes on an early work by Chan, 'He's a Man, She's a Woman'(featuring the late Leslie Cheung), a hilarious comedy of errors-cum-ugly duckling tale-cum-gay film. Having this film in mind as I try to recollect 'Going Home', it makes sense why odd humor shows up from some nooks and crannies of this otherwise poignant and eerie tale of the transgressive power of love. Handled foolishly, this uncomfortable blending of humor and horror might've churned out another low-grade and campy shocker('Starship Troopers' and 'The House on Haunted Hill', anyone?).

    Whenever the emotion of fear is aroused in us by this awarded episode, it's FOR Leon Lai's bespectacled, agonizing character--for his not being able to bring up the kind of family that he deserves, for his failure to achieve what could've constituted his happiness in this temporal life(the episode's title, in fact, implies "being with one's family"). And so, as in 'Memories', the "fear factor" here makes sense.
    CinemaClown

    A Serviceable At Best Asian Horror Anthology

    An ominous package consisting of three short films by different Asian filmmakers, Three suffers from the same set of issues that plague most anthology films. Each story has its positives & negatives. Each tackles an intriguing idea which it fails to explore or execute to the fullest. And coz of that, the end product as a whole feels decent at best.

    The first short is Memories. Directed by Kim Jee-woon, it benefits from its ominous mood, flexible camerawork & smooth tracking in addition to excellent use of sound. The story isn't that riveting or original but the execution of the plot is still the best of the bunch. The uneasy aura, foreboding tone & graphic imagery alone make it look better than it actually is.

    The second one is a Thai short called The Wheel. Directed by Nonzee Nimibutr, it is the least impressive of the three segments. It deals with puppet & voodoo elements but its characters remain distant while unfolding events fails to pique our interest. A better grasp of Thai culture may alleviate some confusion but that still won't make it better than the other two stories.

    The third & final short is Going Home. Directed by Peter Chan, it is easily the most original of the three. The concept is an interesting one and the inhospitable setting & creepy vibe provide the right environment for the plot to unfurl. What undoes it in the end however is its half-hearted execution & overdone sentimentality. Compared to the other two, it still leaves a better impression.

    Overall, Three makes for a serviceable horror anthology that's satisfying to an extent but there is nothing about it that stands out from the norm. Kim Jee-woon's name in it is why I went for it and although his segment impresses in bits n pieces, he is capable of much more than what he delivers here. Horror anthologies are more a miss than hit, and Three unfortunately ends up with the same fate as most.
    Dethcharm

    Not Quite As Extreme...

    After watching the original 3 EXTREMES, one might expect the so-called "sequel" 3 EXTREMES II to be as, or even more unsettling, gory, or terrifying.

    Is it?

    Well, not really. While the first film was refreshingly bizarre and somewhat revolting in spots, this follow-up is rather mild with fewer shocks or gross-out story lines. It's also far more concerned with the supernatural than its predecessor.

    The three stories involve ghosts, curses, and reanimation along with some dismemberment and murder. All three tales are good. Just don't expect another thriller full of disturbing subject matter and stomach-turning revelations...
    MaximusQ8

    Private Views with Asian Anthologies ...

    The Asian anthology movie "The Three ", in which three directors from three different countries ( South Korea/Thailand/Hong Kong ) craft individual tales unrelated & wonderful !

    A)- The 1st anthology from South Korea (( Memories )){40 minutes} by "Ji Woon Kim" where he presents segment of mystery that try to be so scary . - He's the same director who's presented to us on 2003 , Korea's No.#1 Horror Movie (( A Tale Of Two Sisters ))

    *Abu Jarrah's Rating 4/5

    B)- The 2nd anthology from Thailand (( The Wheel )){36 minutes} by "Nonzee Nimibutr" who presented his big budget for the ghost story in his well-known film "Nang Nak" inside his segment he's presented an tale of cursed Doll .

    *Abu Jarrah's Rating 3/5

    C)- The 3rd anthology from Hong Kong (( Going Home )){53 minutes} by "Peter Chan" is the most powerful segment in anthologies .

    Who the produced of the famous Hong Kong horror movies as " The Eye 1 & 2" he also produce of "The Eye" remade , and he's the same who directed the pretty romantic first-love film "Comrades: Almost a Love Story"

    *Abu Jarrah's Rating 5/5

    By the way: There's another version for this segment "Going Home" called [Going Home : Director's Cut] It contains eight minutes of extra scenes not included in the original release ! [61 Mins] (to the best of my knowledge)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Released in America as "3...Extremes II" to capitalize on the success of 3 Extrêmes (2004).
    • Connections
      Followed by 3 Extrêmes (2004)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 25, 2003 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Hong Kong
      • South Korea
      • Thailand
    • Official site
      • Applause Pictures (Hong Kong)
    • Languages
      • Korean
      • English
      • Mandarin
      • Thai
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • Three
    • Production companies
      • B.O.M. Film Productions Co.
      • Cinemasia
      • Applause Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,691,811
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 20m(140 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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