Ring
Movie Review:
Based
on the novel by Suzuki Koji, "Ring" is like a
Japanese version of movies like "Scream", "I
Know What You Did Last Summer" and other variations
of teenagers-as-prey horror movies that were popular a few
years ago. However, it has little of the B-grade movie humour
that was evident in those other films, instead going straight
for the deadly (no pun intended) earnest, hysteria-lurking-beneath-the-surface
acting and plot, which can be unintentionally funny in itself.
Apparently 2 sequels had already been made by the time this
film came out in 1998, so popular was the series (based
on novel by Koji Suzuki).
Journalist
Reiko investigates the teenage urban legend of a cursed
video that kills all who views it within a week. Reiko (for
some strange reason) gets a hold of the video and plays
it, watching the strange, disturbing (and frankly scary)
jumble of images that flashes up on screen. With the help
of her ex-husband Ryuji, they race to lift the curse before
it kills all of them.
Like
"The Blair Witch", "Ring" suggests the
horror through the blend of ancient myth and modern technology,
using disturbing images which teases the imagination, heightened
by the appropriately overwrought musical score by Kenji
Kawai ("Ghost in the Shell"). Bit by bit the story
is unveiled, the flesh peeled back until the finale which
is deliberately left open with no thorough explanations
or closure. For some, this may be somewhat frustrating,
because there is a lot of things here that rises up like
shapes beneath the murky water but never really reveals
itself. Like "The Sixth Sense", "Ring"
does not depend heavily on special effects for its chills
and horror, choosing instead to convey it psychologically,
although the previous film carries off the genre better
than this. However, generally this is a good film, and the
ending is genuinely scary and shocking in its conclusion.
Eden
Law
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