3-Iron
This is so eccentric, it might have been charming. Actually, it is charming in a completely batty way, but eventually becomes absurd and lets go of that thread of sympathy that joins romance to probability.
Sun-hwa (Seung-yeon Lee) rides a flash motorbike and spends his leisure time – he doesn't seem to have any other kind – breaking into people's house when they are away on holiday – shades of The Edukators, without the politics – and enjoying the facilities.
He is extraordinarily respectful, never stealing anything, always remembering to water the plants and clean up after himself. Of course, eventually, the inevitable happens. The house of a rich businessman (Kyuk-ho Kwon), with a passion for golf, is not empty. His battered wife Tae-suk (Hyun-kyoon Lee) lingers fearful in a lonely room, watching Sun-hwa's sweet presence with a mixture of fascination and desire.
The romantic overtones of this strange liaison are accentuated by their silence. Sun-hwa never speaks throughout the film; neither does Tae-suk until the end when she makes a most surprising announcement to her husband.
At first, the delicacy of their mimed love affair has a dreamlike quality, but after a while the lack of verbal communication becomes more of a gimmick than a true expression of mutual understanding.
The plot, meanwhile, lurches into the long grass, introducing stereotypes, such as corrupt and brutal cops. The golfing metaphor, as expressed by the title, takes on a more menacing aspect as grown men are felled by close range iron shots.
Seung-yeon Lee is a young Johnny Depp and Hyun-kyoon Lee remains sad practically the entire time. What starts off as an intriguing mystery ends in comic dance.
Copyright © The Wolf 2002-2005
Rating: 5.0 / 5 (1 vote) |
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