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Ringu Director: Hideo Nakata Number of Items: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Format: Color, Widescreen, Dolby Audience Rating: Unrated Running Time: 100 minutes Studio: Universal Studios Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Region Code: 1 Product Group: DVD Release Date: 2003-03-04 Buy from Amazon |
![]() There's no chance you haven't heard of 'The Ring', probably the only horror-movie to be a major box-office hit in years (and I'm not counting Wes Craven's recent efforts as horror because they're not!). It was worldfamous before it was even released. The concept was pretty freaky of course: when you watched this cursed video tape the phone would ring and a voice would say: Seven days, meaning you would die in ehm... yeah that's right, seven days. What some (or many, I don't really know actually) people don't know is that The Ring is a remake. The original Ring is a 1998 Japanese movie, but because Americans are too lazy to read subtitles plus the fact that a great part of them is too nationalist too withstand foreigners longer than an hour, this movie was remade into, yup, The Ring. The original movie was based on the book Ring, by writer Suzuki Koji. The book was made into a tv-series at first in 1995. The series was named Ring: Kanzen-ban, but it was quite a disaster. In 1998 Nakata Hideo made a second attempt. This attempt was this movie, called 'Ring', after the book (Ringu in Japanese). And it turned out great, I can tell you. Although the book's story was changed here and there (and here, and there) these interventions didn't do the story any harm. The changes were drastic though; in the book Sadako was a sort of virus, in the movie she's a real girl. In the book the main character was a man, in the movie a woman. Talk about drastic changes! But as said, this wasn't bad. Not bad at all. The storyline in short: There have been rumours that there's a cursed video somewhere, and everyone who watches it will get a phonecall. And seven days later, you'll die. When Reiko's (the main character) niece dies in a strange way after having seen the movie, Reiko (being a journalist) tries to find out more about this. She actually finds a weird tape and watches it. The images on the tape are disturbing and when the tape ends, the phone rings! Scary as hell! Of course Reiko has no intention of dying yet so she tries to stop the curse. This is just the plot in short and if it doesn't sound very creepy, believe me, this movie is! A must-see! ![]() A teenage girl dies after she has watched a video and her cousin Reiko, who is a reporter, begins to investigate what killed her niece. Reiko gets a hold of the same tape, which she watches and odd things begin to happen. She asks her ex-husband Ryuji to help her and he watches the tape too. Their research and the myths say that one will die seven days after one has seen the tape. Reiko and Ryuji now have to fight time in order to not only find an answer as to why people die, but also save their own lives. Ringu is a very chilling horror story that uses the technique of both contemporary horror as well as old fashion horror with a delicate touch. The film masters the elements of both surprise and expectation, and this crafts a truly great horror story that will keep the audience squirming and sweating in their seats. ![]() If you are a person who love horror movies, because they can scare or make you think about what could be in the world, then Ringu is a movie for you. Yes the American version is a high quality movie, but the graphics like any american movie are what try to scare you and not what is actually going on in the movie or plot. Ringu scares the audience by twisting your mind into thinking what is on the screen could be real. If you love horror movies that make you think and not just graphics or blood, this ONE is for you. ![]() This is the original Japanese version of the American "The Ring." What is so striking about this Japanese version is that it is so lean, devoid of extraneous, supposedly illuminating detail. The Japanese get right to the meat of a particular scene assuming that we will put the pieces together in our mind and therefore there is no reason to spell it out/hammer us over the head with extraneous exposition. In the process they anoint their audience with a lot more credit for being intelligent than do the Americans. Another interesting point is that, in the American version, the Naomi Watts character is the main protagonist while her ex is merely eye-candy. But in this film Asagawa, the female lead shares the spotlight with her ex-husband who has a lot to do with the denouement and therefore the solving of the mystery. As to the question, which version is scarier: it's a draw with the American version having a slight edge I think because the world of "The Ring" is more familiar to us than is that of "Ringu" and as such we can relate more to the everyday horror of it. ![]() This was a great movie but I don't think people should be comparing it to The Ring. Each movie was going for a differnt feel. Ringu was going for a more sort of dream world were people are phycic and can read minds. The Ring was going for a real world feel where every thing had to make sense and every thing had to be logocal. Both movies pulled it off. I recamend you you buy both. They are really scary. |