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Ringu is and always shall be my favourite film of all time. I get that the books are meant to be good, but the introduction of [SPOILER ALERT] the video giving Small Pox just confused me. The film on the other hand is superb, despite feeling slightly western when compared to other J-Horror, it's a standard that I love.
The Ring is much slicker production-wise, and has what I think are some really effective scares (which is what I want in a horror movie). Ringu is much tighter plotwise and comes as a very nice little package - for example, you can track every shot in that cursed video to another scene in the movie.
Feb 28, 2019 · Here’s a notion. Hideo Nakata’s Ringu – receiving a 20th anniversary release – is the most influential film of the late 1990s. We’re not saying it’s the best.
- Hideo Nakata
- Getting in Touch with The Haunted Tape
- The Enlightened Distortion of Reality
- Nuanced Visual Warping
- Beyond The Visuals with Sound
- The Unsettling Power of Cinema Through Visual Imagery
- Sadako’s Character Design and Movement
From a cultural standpoint, the freakiest element of the movie is “the tape.” The eerie black and white footage, the grainy distortion, the unsettling long shot of the well… One sees the tape played on-screen, and fully believes that it has the power to kill. What is it, exactly, that makes it so scary? Part of it is the way that it’s shot. By mixi...
Something else that adds to the creeping feeling of dread with the haunted tape is the bizarre lighting. The keen-eyed viewer will note that, for example, there is no reference point to the lighting during the mirror scene. Reiko points out in her investigation that a camera should be visible in the mirrors, but there is none. On top of that, there...
There’s a strange side effect from watching the tape. Any time anyone takes a picture of someone who watched the tape, they appear distorted in the Polaroid. This is one of the most chilling aspects of the film. It’s a simple visual storytelling resource, but a hugely effective one! Viewers get briefly blinded by the flash of a camera and the sound...
As awesome as the film is in visual terms, the splendid sound design simply can’t be ignored. Composer Kenji Kawaiadds a subtle score that blends, almost seamlessly, with the sound effects. Again, it adds to this uncanny, unnatural atmosphere present throughout the film. Of course, the ringing telephone is key to the narrative. Take the opening sce...
“To startle the audience, I think the sound is most effective,” cinematographer Junichiro Hayashi said. “[But,] on the other hand, images can scare them into not wanting to watch the screen.” Hayashi may very well be the master of J-horror. Not only is he the cinematographer for Ringu, but also Nakata’s film Dark Water (2002) and the techno-horror ...
Speaking of Sadako, there is something very, very creepy about this long-haired girl. The way her long, matted hair obscures her face adds mystery to her already disturbing visuals. And, once again, Sadako’s design weaponizes the uncanny to make her even more frightening to the viewer. One of the most iconic shots from Ringu is when Sadako’s single...
Mar 29, 2019 · Ringu is a terrifying J-Horror classic and it achieved this by subverting an unwritten rule... This article comes from Den of Geek UK. In the early 2000s, a new movement in horror hit Western ...
Oct 28, 2019 · Synopsis. In 1998, director Hideo Nakata (Dark Water) unleashed a chilling tale of technological terror on unsuspecting audiences, which redefined the horror genre, launched the J-horror boom in the West and introduced a generation of moviegoers to a creepy, dark-haired girl called Sadako. The film's success spawned a slew of remakes ...
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In 1998, Hideo Nakata made a new Japanese adaptation of the book in his film Ring (also known as The Ring or Ringu). The film was a critical and commercial success, being credited with revolutionizing the J-horror genre and influencing many future films in the wider horror genre.
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