Details

  • Last Online: 40 minutes ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: hell
  • Contribution Points: 298 LV3
  • Birthday: March 30
  • Roles: VIP
  • Join Date: February 7, 2013
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award241 Flower Award604 Coin Gift Award129 Golden Tomato Award10 Reply Goblin Award9 Dumpster Fire Award12 Lore Scrolls Award11 Spoiler-Free Captain Award3 Cleansing Tomato Award10 Drama Bestie Award18 Emotional Support Commenter6 Comment of Comfort Award9 Hidden Gem Recommender1 Conspiracy Theorist2 Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss10 Clap Clap Clap Award20 Award Hoarder Enabler4 Wholesome Troll4 Sassy Tomato3 Free Range Tomato1 Tomato of Chaos2 Thread Historian3 Boba Brainstormer4 Notification Ninja1 Lore Librarian1 Mic Drop Darling2 Emotional Bandage4 Reply Hugger10 Soulmate Screamer13 Big Brain Award30
Ring japanese movie review
Completed
Ring
3 people found this review helpful
by Kate Flower Award1
8 days ago
Completed
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 10.0

Some curses age well and Ring stands the test of time.

After all these years and countless rewatches, it's still such a fun movie. It can work as both an entertaining horror flick to watch with friends and the tense psychological horror to watch alone in a dark room.

From the opening scene and setting up the mystery of the killing tape, to the gradual reveal and investigation, up till the final moments - it keeps you guessing what comes next and how the story will conclude. The pacing was just perfect.

What’s more, Ring hits the good balance between building the tension through storytelling and scaring the viewers with good old jump scares. The scares are solid and not constant - you don't get tired from them. What older horror movies understood were the limitations put on the makers based on the technology they used - that’s why so many of the well known titles from the era do not really feel that dated. Knowing how much you can show, how much should be left for the viewers to assume and interpret, and what’s most important - the use of practical effects.

Surprisingly, as much as I find the movie atmospheric and entertaining, the perceived at the time message does not quite land anymore. The fear of the new media and technology is just not something a modern viewer would associate with the movie. I was honestly surprised to know that was the interpretation by many when Ring was released in 1998. The themes always seemed more general for me - the fear of the unknown and the larger consequences of it.

Overall, Ring for sure stands the test of time and I can confidently say it will most likely be this way for at least next 10 years if not more.
Was this review helpful to you?