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词条 3-Iron
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Reception

  3. Accolades

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. External links

{{About||the type of golf club|Iron (golf)}}{{Infobox film
|name = 3-Iron
|image = 3iron2.jpg
| film name = {{Film name
|hangul = {{linktext|빈|집}}
|rr = Bin-jip
|mr = Pin-jip}}
|director = Kim Ki-duk
|producer = Kim Ki-duk
|writer = Kim Ki-duk
|starring = Jae Hee
Lee Seung-yeon
|music = SLVIAN
|studio = Kim Ki-duk Film
Cineclick Asia
|distributor = Big Blue Film
|released = {{Film date|2004|10|15}}
|runtime = 88 minutes
|country = South Korea
Japan
|language = Korean
|budget =
|gross = {{USD|3 million}}[1][2]
}}

3-Iron ({{ko-hhrm|빈집||Bin-jip}}; lit. "Empty House") is a 2004 South Korean romantic drama film directed by Kim Ki-duk. The plot revolves around the relationship between a young drifter and an abused housewife. The film is notable for the lack of dialogue between its two main characters.[3] The title comes from a type of golf club used prominently in the film.

Plot

Tae-suk (Jae Hee) is a loner who drives around on his motorbike, taping takeout menus over the keyholes of front doors and breaking into apartments where the menus have not been removed. He lives in those apartments while their owners are away, washing their clothes and mending their broken appliances while usually playing "Gafsa" by Natacha Atlas on their CD player. When he breaks into one large home, he is unaware that he is being watched by an abused housewife Sun-hwa (Lee Seung-yeon). Tae-suk leaves after making eye contact with Sun-hwa, but then returns. He witnesses Sun-hwa's husband abusing her and proceeds to catch his attention by practicing golf in the yard. He hits Sun-hwa's husband with golf balls and then leaves with Sun-hwa.

The couple begins a silent relationship, moving from one apartment to another. At one home, after drinking, they are caught by the returning owners, sleeping in their bed and wearing their pajamas. They also get into trouble with the law when they break into the home of an elderly man who died alone. They proceed to give him a proper burial. When the man's son and daughter-in-law arrive at the apartment, they assume that Tae-suk and Sun-hwa killed him. The couple is interrogated by police, but remain steadfastly silent. An investigation reveals that nothing was stolen from any of the houses and the old man died of lung cancer. Sun-hwa's husband arrives to take her home, and bribes the policeman in charge of the investigation to allow him to strike Tae-suk with golf balls. Tae-suk ends up attacking the police officer and is sent to jail. There, he practices golf with an imaginary club and balls and develops his gifts for stealth and concealment, frustrating his jailers by remaining out of sight.

After being released from prison, Tae-suk rejoins Sun-hwa in her house, using his skills to evade her husband's detection: standing behind the man and moving as he turns, even kissing Sun-hwa over her husband's shoulder (as seen in the poster). Sun-hwa appears to say "I love you" to her husband, but reaches out for Tae-suk. The husband leaves on another business trip, after which Sun-hwa and Tae-suk embrace.

Reception

Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 87% of reviewers (75 out of 87) gave 3-Iron positive reviews, with an average score of 7.4/10.[4] The film also holds a 72/100 on Metacritic.[5] It grossed $241,914 in North America and $2,965,315 worldwide.

Accolades

YearFilm festivalCategoryResult
20042004 Venice International Film FestivalSilver Lion for Best Direction
FIPRESCIBest Film Award {{won}}
Little Golden Lion Award {{won}}
SIGNIS Award{{won}}
Golden Lion Award {{nominated}}
Valladolid Film Festival Golden Spike Award (Best Film) {{won}}
Busan International Film Festival Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema {{won}}
2005 David di Donatello Awards {{nominated}}
Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists Silver Ribbon Award {{nominated}}
San Sebastián International Film Festival FIPRESCI Film of the Year {{won}}
2006 Belgian Syndicate of Cinema Critics Grand Prix {{won}}[6]
Blue Dragon Film Awards[7]
2004Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest New Actor - Jae Hee {{won}}
Best Director - Kim Ki-duk {{nominated}}
Korean Film Awards
2004Korean Film Awards Best Film {{nominated}}
Best Director - Kim Ki-duk {{nominated}}
Best Screenplay - Kim Ki-duk {{nominated}}
41st Paeksang Arts Awards
200541st Paeksang Arts AwardsBest Film {{nominated}}
Best Director - Kim Ki-duk {{nominated}}
Best New Actor - Jae Hee {{nominated}}

See also

{{Portal|Film}}
  • List of Korean language films

References

1. ^"3-Iron". Boxofficemojo. Retrieved March 04, 2012.
2. ^"3-Iron French Gross"
3. ^Beyond Hollywood - 3-Iron review
4. ^3-Iron Rotten Tomatoes
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.metacritic.com/movie/3-iron |title=3-Iron |website=Metacritic |accessdate=November 6, 2016}}
6. ^{{cite news|title=Kim Ki-duk, Grand Prix de l'UCC |url=http://www.lalibre.be/culture/cinema/article/261348/kim-ki-duk-grand-prix-de-l-ucc.html|work=La Libre Belgique|date=January 9, 2006|accessdate=October 21, 2012|language=French}}
7. ^3-iron

External links

  • {{cite web|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090226021926/http://sonyclassics.com/3iron|archivedate=2009-02-26|url=http://sonyclassics.com/3iron|title=3-Iron|website=sonyclassics.com}}
  • {{IMDb title|0423866|3-Iron}}
  • Korean film poster
{{Kim Ki-duk}}

8 : 2004 films|2000s drama films|South Korean independent films|Films directed by Kim Ki-duk|Sony Pictures Classics films|Korean-language films|South Korean films|South Korean romantic drama films

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