The Ring: everything you need to know (2024)

Like a black-haired, chalk-faced ghoul crawling inexorably out of a well, the Ring cycle refuses to die. Arriving on the international radar with Hideo Nakata’s terrifying 1998 film, Ring is based around the concept of a mysterious and disturbing videotape which, when watched, prompts a ringing phone and seven days to live for the viewer unless the tape is passed on to someone else. Behind the viral curse is the vengeful shade of the murdered Sadako Yamamura, and Ring’s various stories, at their most basic level, usually either involve protagonists trying to stave off their own death, or investigating the weird events, or both. At their least basic level... they can get very, very complicated. With Nakata returning to the series as director of 2019's Sadako, here's a quick primer in what’s gone before.

The Novels

The Ring: everything you need to know (1)

©Hütoheta

Author: Koji Suzuki

Year: 1991 onwards

Country of origin: Japan

It all starts here, with Koji Suzuki’s original novel, first published in Japan in 1991. The basics of what are now the familiar elements of the series are here, but there are, unsurprisingly, differences too. Various characters, names, relationships and locations are different. Sadako is both beautiful and intersex (something most of the films go nowhere near) and is murdered differently, although she still ends up in the well. Maybe most intriguingly, the odd business from the films hinting that Sadako’s father was some sort of sea monster is here fully explained: she’s the result of her mother uncovering a relic from the sea containing the considerable supernatural power of the historical Japanese mystic En no Ozunu. So that’s that settled.

Suzuki has, to date, written five Ring novels and a collection of short stories: Ring, Spiral, Loop, The Birthday, S and Tide, the last of which was published in 2013. Across the books we gradually learn that the "evil" itself isn’t Sadako per-se, but a psychokinetically mutated smallpox virus. Its transmission isn’t limited to videotape either: Ring’s further instalments include devices like cloned Sadakos and a novel one of the characters writes.

Ring: Kanzenban

Director: Chisui Takigawa

Year: 1995

Country of origin: Japan

The first screen adaptation was this 1995 Fuji TV movie by Chisui Takigawa, which hews reasonably faithfully to Suzuki’s novel. That means it’s basically of an entirely different genre to the Ring we know best, coming across as more sci-fi tinged paranormal mystery than straight-down-the-line horror. This film’s Sadako (Ayane Miura) is a hot chick rather than a ghoul, and gets her kit off a lot. "Kanzenban" means "Complete Edition", referring to the video version being a lot more sexually explicit than the one broadcast on TV.

Ring

Director: Hideo Nakata

Year: 1998

Country of origin: Japan

Here’s where it all began for most people (at least outside of Japan). Hideo Nakata’s theatrical film recasts the lead character as a woman called Reiko (Matsushima Nanako) and piles on the scares. The pseudo-science of the book is jettisoned in favour of more terrifying ambiguity, and Sadako (Inou Rei) becomes a black-haired, white faced revenant: a scrawny nightmare even as a child. That doesn’t come from Suzuki. Neither do the alarming contents of the cursed tape, or the film’s most famous sequence, which Nakata admits was inspired by David Cronenberg’s Videodrome. Anyone who saw Ring for the first time on Channel 4 in the early 2000s had that scene completely ruined for them by Mark Kermode’s introduction. Cheers, Mark!

Rasen

Director: Jōji Iida

Year: 1998

Country of origin: Japan

"Rasen" means "Spiral", which should clue you in that this lesser-known sequel is adapted from Suzuki’s second novel. Director Jōji Iida was tasked with making this parallel with Nakata’s Ring shoot: the studio Asmik Ace Entertainment reasoning that it’d be good to have a follow-up immediately ready after Ring’s release. Sadly for Joji, he had no idea what Nakata was doing, meaning the films – especially stylistically – barely match up at all.

Rasen sticks to the more pseudo-scientific style of the books, meaning that the "cursed" videotape is here a catalyst for infecting people with a smallpox virus that contains Sadako’s DNA. When the victims die they’re replaced by a clone Sadako.

Ring 2

Director: Hideo Nakata

Year: 1999

Country of origin: Japan

With a flop on their hands in Rasen, the studio hauled Hideo Nakata and his cast back in to make a different second film. The result was, unsurprisingly, Ring 2, which relegates poor Rasen to non-canon status and continues the story of Reiko and her son Yoichi, who’s developing psychic powers of his own. Rather than another adaptation of Spiral, Ring 2 is pretty much Nakata’s own. Perhaps his most disturbing revelation is that Sadako actually grew to adulthood over the 33 years she was alive in the well. She has, we now learn, only just died when the first film begins.

The Ring Virus

Director: Kim Dong-bin

Year: 1999

Country of origin: South Korea

America wasn’t the first country to remake Ring. That honour goes to South Korea, with Kim Dong-bin’s version turning out a strange hybrid of elements faithful to the novel and bits nicked wholesale from Nakata’s film (like the TV emergence). Sadako is here renamed Park Eun-suh, and Reiko (female again) becomes Sun-ju.

The Final Chapter / Rasen

Director: f*ckumoto Yosh*to / Yoshihiro Kitayama

Year: 1999

Country of origin: Japan

Meanwhile back in Japan, they still weren’t done with the original Ring, despite the theatrical films now being in sequel territory. Next up was a new TV version: this time a 12-episode series. The erroneously titled Final Chapter returns to the novel’s male protagonist Asakawa Kazuyuki (Yanagiba Toshiro), but alters much else and has the cursed VHS take the form of a music video.

The Final Chapter was – of course - followed the same year by a second season of 13 episodes, this time supposedly based on Rasen. This one takes a kind of paranormal-investigation-of-the-week format, with the overarching narrative of the Sadako curse (this time in digital form) in the background.

Ring 0

Director: Norio Tsuruta

Year: 2000

Country of origin: Japan

The next movie follow-up to the two Hideo Nakata films was a prequel, centred on the young Sadako (Nakama Yukie) coming to less-than-thrilled terms with her newfound power. Norio Tsuruta was the director this time, but screenwriter Hiroshi Takahashi remained from the earlier instalments, which for once means some narrative consistency. Unlike many prequels, Ring 0 actually works well if you watch it before the other films, setting up threads to be unpicked later. We get the full circ*mstances of Sadako's ending up in that well, and the new information that she split into two halves in childhood (one nice but withdrawn, one who takes more after her sea-monster father, but both equally dangerous) which is what sent her mother mad. Both Sadakos are merged again by the end though. Taking place as it does in a pre-VHS era, the cursed tape here is a reel-to-reel audio affair, but it plays less of a role than previously (or subsequently, chronology-wise).

The Ring

Director: Gore Verbinski

Year: 2002

Country of origin: USA

Hopefully for the final time, here’s the original story again, this time for the American market. Gore Verbinski (Pirates Of The Caribbean) directs, and Naomi Watts stars in the Reiko role, here renamed Rachel Keller. Sadako becomes Samara, played by Daveigh Chase, and the whole business is relocated to the States. This takes Nakata’s film as its source far more than Suzuki’s novel, but Verbinski’s approach is markedly different. His Ring is longer and busier, with more jump scares and a lot more explanation and exposition. Apparently somewhere along the line it was felt that US audiences dislike ambiguity. Whether that’s the case or not, they certainly liked the film: it remains one of the most financially successful horrors of all time.

Rings (short film)

Director: Jonathan Liebesman

Year: 2005

Country of origin: USA

This short film by Jonathan Liebesman (who would go on to direct Battle: Los Angeles and Ninja Turtles) was included with re-released DVDs of Verbinski’s The Ring, and leads directly into the opening sequence of The Ring Two. Written by Liebesman and Ehren Kruger, it’s an original piece detailing how Samara’s video has gone viral as a craze where kids deliberately watch the tape and document their experiences before passing it on as late as possible. The "Rings" of the title are the fan groups participating. They’re like Directioners, but less scary.

The Ring Two

Director: Hideo Nakata

Year: 2005

Country of origin: USA

For the sequel to the American remake, studio DreamWorks drafted in original director Hideo Nakata. Opting not to remake his own Ring 2, Nakata instead turned in a film that’s weirdly similar to Dark Water, a movie he’d directed in Japan in 2002, based on a short story by Ring’s original author Koji Suzuki. Naomi Watts returned from The Ring as Rachel Keller, but her character’s journey – traumatised by past events; fighting to prove to the authorities that she’s psychologically fit to raise her child; facing down a ghoul in a soaking wet apartment – is absolutely that of Dark Water’s Yoshimi Matsubara, with The Ring’s details spun into the weave.

Dark Water was itself officially remade in the States in 2005, directed by Walter Salles and starring Jennifer Connelly.

Sadako 3D

Director: Tsutomu Hanabusa

Year: 2012

Country of origin: Japan

With audiences perhaps feeling some Ring fatigue by this point, there was a hiatus of a few years before Sadako reappared in Japan in 2012. Sadako 3D brings the technology up to date, with her video now online and playing itself to people only when they’re alone. She’s received this technological upgrade from an online artist who was deliberately trying to resurrect her, and the protagonist this time is a teacher with psychic abilities (Satomi Ishihara).

This one’s based on Suzuki’s fourth Ring novel S. With its clone Sadakos – Alien-looking things unofficially dubbed "Spidakos" - it actually continues the story from the previously ignored Rasen. You have to choose your own canon with the Ring films.

Sadako 3D 2

Director: Tsutomu Hanabusa

Year: 2013

Country of origin: Japan

The sequel to Sadako 3D barely features Sadako at all, You might expect it to be based on Suzuki’s fifth Ring novel Tide, but instead this film once again treads its own path, picking up the story of teacher Akane’s daughter Nagi. Akane dies in childbirth early on, and the film then skips forward five years. The internet artist who brought Sadako back and got himself killed last time is somehow alive again – but awaiting execution – while Nagi is, Damien-like, quietly killing anyone she dislikes. There are some connections to Suzuki’s third Ring novel, Loop, in that we seem here to be in an artificial reality: the supercomputer-simulation Loop Project. The books get a bit Matrix later on, in a way that the films never coherently manage.

Sadako Vs. Kayako

Director: Kôji Shiraishi

Year: 2016

Country of origin: Japan

In the great tradition of Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man, Freddy Vs. Jason and Godzilla Vs. Everything, the Ring series this year finally collided with the Ju-On / Grudge saga in Sadako Vs. Kayako. The neat premise for bringing the two together is an exorcist's theory that the only way to escape the curse on the Sadako tape is to pit her against another equally vengeful spirit. Thus the film gets played at the Saeki residence - long haunted by the rattling ghoul Kayako and her silent little brother Toshio - and the game is afoot. It doesn't necessarily go according to plan...

Publicity for this film included the truly bizarre sight of Sadako throwing the first pitch at a baseball game with Kayako at bat.

Rings (2017)

Director: F. Javier Gutiérrez

Year: 2016

Country of origin: USA

Here we are back in the States with Samara rather than Sadako, and the long-developing third American Ring. The delay stemmed from the separation of DreamWorks and Paramount in 2006, and the attendant sorting out of the rights. With that dealt with, however, things moved forward again from a screenplay credited to David Loucka, Jacob Estes and the ubiquitous Akiva Goldsman. The film starred Johnny Galeckie, Vincent D'Onofrio and Matilda Lutz, with the story once again picking over the details of Samara's parentage. There was also an interesting side plot about Galeckie's ethically dubious academic roping his students into an experiment based on watching the Samara video: now transferred to MP4 and suddenly gaining new frames out of nowhere. And there were even some slight echoes of Suzuki's original Spiral, with the notion that Samara was in the process of being reborn as someone else...

Sadako

Director: Hideo Nakata

Year: 2019

Country of origin: Japan

Back to Japan, and the Ring series' premier director returns to the well for the first time since 2005. Pretty much back to basics after the weirdness of the 3D films and the fun of Sadako Vs Kayako, the simply titled Sadako revolves around Mayu (Elaiza Ikeda). Mayu is a psychologist treating an amnesiac girl (Himeka Himejima) whose mother thought she was Sadako and tried to burn her to death. Mayu's brother Kazuma (Hiroya Shimizu) meanwhile, is an idiot YouTuber who goes to the site of the fire as a stunt to boost his ratings and manages to capture the real Sadako in a live stream. And since broadcasting Sadako is A Bad Idea, things go south from there. Kazuma disappears and Mayu sets out on his trail.

We may have seen the last of Samara by now, but Sadako glitches on...

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The Ring: everything you need to know (2024)

FAQs

What did The Ring say in Lord of the Rings? ›

The One Ring inscription

One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them. The couplet is from the Rhyme of the Rings, a verse describing the Rings of Power. This corresponds to the following table as explained by Tolkien.

Why did Samara keep killing? ›

He also presumes that Samara does not truly want to hurt anyone with her powers but Samara sinisterly confesses to him that her powers are too strong and that she will not stop hurting others, indicating that she is slowly becoming psychotically insane.

Why did Rachel survive The Ring? ›

Rachel was only spared because she had made a copy of the tape, helping Samara circulate her evil. She forces Aidan to make a copy so he, too, may be spared. Others, though, will continue to watch…and die.

What is the meaning of the ending of The Ring? ›

Samara Wins At The End Of The Ring

The act of passing on the curse to save oneself is exactly what Samara wanted. The resentment and rage she felt for seven days before her death transformed her into a Yūrei, a spirit who could never experience a peaceful afterlife.

What is the ring quote in Lord of the Rings? ›

Gandalf: In the Common Tongue, it says: "One Ring to rule them all. One Ring to find them. One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them."

What is the full quote of One Ring? ›

One ring to rule them all, one ring to find them, One ring to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them; In the Land of Mordor where the shadows lie.

Is Samara good or evil? ›

Samara Morgan is the main antagonist of The Ring film series and the Western adaptation of Sadako Yamamura from the original Koji Suzuki novel, as well as from the Ringu franchise.

Did Samara have powers before she died? ›

Samara, when alive, was a very powerful psychic child with a terrible sad*stic streak. She could implant her nightmarish mental images into photograph film. This specific ability is labelled by Eola County Psychiatric Hospital as "projected thermography".

Why did Samara become a justicar? ›

Recognizing her daughter's growing addiction to killing her mates, Samara gave up her worldly possessions, swore herself to the Code, and became a justicar.

Why did Rachel get pregnant? ›

In season seven, Ross and Rachel have sex, and Rachel gets pregnant. Rachel gives birth to a girl in season eight, naming the baby Emma Geller-Green; the name Emma is a gift from Monica, who had previously been reserving the name for her own child.

What did Rachel pull out of her throat in The Ring? ›

Rachel pulls an old electrode out of her throat when she is cursed.

What was the twist in The Ring? ›

It turns out that the cabin itself is built over the well Samara died in. After Rachel accidentally falls in, she cradles the reanimated body of Samara, who seems finally at peace. The seven-day deadline passes for Rachel with no incident.

Why was Samara cursed in The Ring? ›

The video tape's curse was created by Samara likely after her death in the well. Having a miserable and lonely life, Samara was nearly drowned at birth by her mother Evelyn, nearly drove her adoptive parents mad, and was eventually pushed down a well to her death seven days later.

Do you understand Rachel she never sleeps? ›

Aidan Keller

She's in the dark place now. Don't you understand, Rachel? She never sleeps.

Where did Samara come from The Ring? ›

There are hints in the franchise that she is of a demonic nature. If I remember, it's been awhile since I watched them, her conception came via rape. Her mother was held captive by a rapist priest. She escaped to a hospital, where she gave birth to Samara, who was born with supernatural abilities.

What is written inside the ring in Lord of the Rings? ›

The ring contains the following inscription, written in the language of Mordor: Ash nazg thrakatulûk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul. This translate to: "One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them.

What does the ring whisper in LOTR? ›

The Ring was made in the fires of Mount Doom. Only there can it be unmade. It must be taken deep into Mordor and cast back into the fiery chasm from whence it came." Ring (whispers): "Ash Nazg."

What does the ring say in Fellowship of the Ring? ›

The inscription uses the Fëanorian characters (Tengwar) because all forms of writing Tolkien describes at that time were invented by the Elves. Roughly translated, they mean: One Ring to rule them all, One ring to find them; One ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.

What does Gandalf say about the ring? ›

Gandalf: "He is seeking it, seeking it — all his thought is bent on it. The Ring yearns above all else to return to the hand of its master. They are one, the Ring and the Dark Lord. Frodo, he must never find it."

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