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  1. Three... Extremes ( Chinese: 三更2; pinyin: Sāngēng 2; Korean : 쓰리, 몬스터; RR : Sseuli, Monseuteo; Japanese: 美しい夜、残酷な朝; Utsukushī Yoru, Zankokuna Asa) is a 2004 horror anthology film. A follow-up to Three (2002), it follows the same concept of three individual segments by directors from three East Asian ...

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm1945788Bun Saikou - IMDb

    Bun Saikou. Writer: Three... Extremes. Bun Saikou is known for Three... Extremes (2004).

    • Writer
    • Bun Saikou
  3. Also thanks to the script by Bun Saikou and Haruko Fukushima, the overall narrative of “Box” is just as labyrinthine as the elaborate patterns presented on the infamous box.

  4. Aug 20, 2004 · Play Trailer. From the Nightmares of 3 Horror Masters. Overview. An Asian cross-cultural trilogy of horror films from accomplished indie directors: "Dumplings", directed by Fruit Chan of Hong Kong; "Cut", directed by Park Chan-Wook of Korea; "Box", directed by Miike Takashi of Japan.

  5. www.primevideo.com › detail › Three-ExtremesPrime Video: Three Extremes

    Starring. Byung-Hun Lee, Jung-ah Yum, Bai Ling. Studio. Lionsgate. By clicking play, you agree to our Terms of Use. Send us feedback. Features 3 horror tales focusing on the extremes of the strange and the sinister.

  6. The third film, directed by Takashi Miike, is the darkest, most surreal, and most dream-like of the omnibus. Infused with a complexity not readily apparent in the previous films, Box is given to us in a strangely nonlinear way in which dreams, fantasies, the past, and the present all intertwine.

  7. Oct 27, 2005 · Directed by Miike Takashi. Written by Haruko Fukushima, from a story by Bun Saikou.