Ring (film)

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Ring

UK DVD cover
Directed by Hideo Nakata
Produced by Taka Ichise
Written by Hiroshi Takahashi
Starring Nanako Matsushima
Hiroyuki Sanada
Rikiya Otaka
Yoichi Numata
Cinematography Junichirō Hayashi
Editing by Nobuyuki Takahashi
Distributed by Toho Company Ltd.
Release date(s) January 31, 1998 (Japan)
Running time 96 min.
Language Japanese
Budget $1.2 million
Preceded by Ring 0: Birthday
Followed by Ring 2
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Ring (リング Ringu?) is a 1998 Japanese horror mystery film from director Hideo Nakata, adapted from the novel of the same name by Koji Suzuki, which draws from the Japanese folk tale Banchō Sarayashiki. The film stars Nanako Matsushima, Hiroyuki Sanada, and Rikiya Otaka as members of a divorced family, each cursed by a videotape. The film was later remade in Korea as The Ring Virus (1999), and in the United States as The Ring (2002).

The film is the highest grossing horror film in Japan at 15.9 billion yen ($137.7 million) and is also considered the most frightening horror movie in Japan according to the investigation of Oricon.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot

The film begins with two teenagers, Masami (Hitomi Sato) and Tomoko (Yuko Takeuchi) talking about a videotape recorded by a boy in Izu which is fabled to bear a curse that kills the viewer seven days after watching. Tomoko then reveals that a week ago, she and three of her friends watched a weird tape and received a call after watching it. Unnervingly similar to the fabled videotape, Masami realizes that Tomoko was fated to die. After some unsettling moments, Tomoko mysteriously dies with Masami having the horror of watching.

Some days later and Asakawa Reiko (Nanako Matsushima), a reporter investigating the popularity of the video curse among teenagers, discovers that her niece, Tomoko and her three other friends mysteriously died at the same time on the same night with their faces twisted in a rictus of fear. She also discovers that Masami, the girl who was with Tomoko when she died, went crazy and is now in a mental hospital. After stumbling upon Tomoko's photos from the past week, Reiko finds out that the four teenagers stayed in a rental cabin in Izu. Eventually, she finds a photo of them with the teens' faces blurred.

Later, Reiko goes to Izu and finds an unlabelled tape in the reception room of the rental cottage where the teenagers stayed. Watching the tape inside Cabin B4, Reiko sees the tape containing a series of seemingly unrelated disturbing images. As soon as the tape is over, Reiko receives a phone call, a realisation of the tell-tale videotape curse. Then on, she now assumes that she has a week to live.

On the first day, Reiko enlists the help of her ex-husband, Ryuji Takayama (Hiroyuki Sanada), who watches the tape. A day later and Reiko creates a copy for Ryuji for them to study. They find a hidden message embedded within the tape saying that "if you 'shoumon' on seawater, the 'boukon' will come for you." The message is in a form of dialect from Oshima Island. The two sail for Oshima (after Asakawa's son watches the videotape) and discover the history of the great psychic Yamamura Shizuko.

With only a day left, Reiko and Ryuji discovered that Shizuko's lost daughter, Sadako, must have made the videotape. Determined, the two go back to Izu with the assumption that Sadako is dead and it was her vengeful spirit that killed the teenagers. The duo then uncover a well under Cabin B4 and try to empty it after realising that, through a vision, Sadako's father killed her and threw her into the well. They try to empty the well and find the Sadako's body in an attempt to appease her spirit. Reiko finds Sadako's body. When nothing happens to her they believe that the curse is broken.

All seems fine until the next day when Sadako crawls out of Ryuji's TV set and kills him. Desperate to find a cure to save her son, Reiko realized what she did something that Ryuji didn't, thus saving her: she copied the tape and showed it to him. With a VCR and Ryuji's copy of the tape, Reiko rides to her son in attempt to save him, realising that this is a neverending cycle—the tape must always be copied and passed on to ensure the survival of the viewers.

[edit] Production

After the initial success of the Ring novel, written by Koji Suzuki, Kadokawa Shoten decided to make a motion picture adaptation of the Ring. The whole production work took nine months and five weeks[2] The movie's screenwriter, Hiroshi Takahashi, and director, Hideo Nakata, collaborated to work on the script after reading the novel and the TV adaptation of Ring[3]. With the budget of 1.2 million USD, the shooting began which took five weeks to complete.[4] The special effects on the cursed videotape and some parts in the films was shot on a 35 mm film which was passed on in a laboratory in which a computer added the grainy effect[5]. Another part of the movie where extended visual effects was used was in the part where the ghost of Sadako Yamamura climbs out the television. First, they had the Kabuki Theater actress Inou Rie to shoot her walking jerkily backwards. They then played the film in reverse to give her the weird motion of Sadako[6].

[edit] Reception

On its release on Japan, Ring garnered a lot of viewers making it the highest grossing movie in that country[7].

It garnered mostly positive reviews from viewers. Rotten Tomatoes had its freshness rating of 96%, with 24 reviews counted, 23 were positive[8]. IMDb had Ringu an average rating of 7.6/10[9].

Critics of the movie praised the movies story of the film for creating a spooky atmosphere although some are disappointed for not being scared at all. Michael Thomson of BBC films, rated it 4 out of 5 stars after being amazed by the film, he wrote "Its story is constructed around a beautifully simple idea, that those who watch an extremely unnerving, grainy video (and receive a phone call immediately afterwards), will die exactly one week later, always with a severely twisted, freaked-out expression on their faces."[10] Christopher Null of filmcritic.com said, "Ringu is very atmospheric and often creepy, especially in its last half hour, but it's hardly chilling enough to keep you up at night."[11]

[edit] Sequels and adaptations

There were two sequels shot in Japan: Rasen (also from 1998, aka Spiral) and Ring 2 (from 1999, and which was not based on Suzuki's works), as well as a prequel, Ring 0: Birthday (2000). There was also a Korean remake (called Ring in Korea and The Ring Virus abroad) that was the first ever joint film making venture between Korea and Japan.[citation needed] A video game, known as The Ring: Terror's Realm in the U.S., was also released in 2000 for the Dreamcast.

The international success of the Japanese films launched a revival of horror filmmaking in Japan that resulted in such pictures as Kiyoshi Kurosawa's 2001 film Pulse (known as Circuit (回路 Kairo?) in Japan), Takashi Shimizu's The Grudge (呪怨 Juon?) (2000), Hideo Nakata's Dark Water (仄暗い水の底から Honogurai mizu no soko kara?, literally The Depths of Dark Water), also based on a short story by Suzuki), and Higuchinsky's Uzumaki (2000, aka Vortex, based on the Junji Ito horror manga of the same name).[citation needed]

Most of the Ring stories also appeared as manga novels.

[edit] Cast

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links