What I Liked:
Good ol’ fashioned original design Sadako is finally back in action after a
sixteen year hiatus and even then her appearance in Ringu 0 was brief. With the
most recent entries Sadako 3D was all
stylized like you’re watching a live action anime and Sadako 2 3D is a Ring
movie in name only with basically no Sadako.
So to see that sadistic ghost girl out there again doin’ her thang was
kickass and really satisfying.
They expand the mythology to include repercussions for
interfering with Sadako’s curse. At one
point two cursed individuals go to a shaman for help but Sadako doesn’t like
that so during the exorcism she has these people kill themselves. It’s a pretty intense scene that goes on for
a while where shit gets weirder and crazier.
Everything is taken at face value here. There isn’t disbelief that a cursed VHS tape
and a haunted house exist, there aren’t really fake out moments that just
extend the runtime, we don’t delve into the backstory or motives of Sadako and
Kayako, it’s all very straightforward.
What I Didn’t Like:
Why do each of these Ring films
change the rules? This one shortens the number
of days left to live to only two, and I guess as long as you’re not staring right
at the video you don’t get cursed? What
you see on the video is different too.
They got rid of the iconic well in the woods and replaced it with a
large building that has an opened doorway and a walkway leading up to it. What’s accomplished by changing the contents
of the tape?
The filmmakers couldn’t figure out a way to naturally bring
Sadako and Kayako together so they copped out and included a know-it-all-take-no-shit
guru who helps guide our protagonists through the curses. Out of the blue he has the idea to have the
two entities face off in order to lift both curses from his clients (he’s
getting paid to do this). That’s very
lame.
Spoiler on this last
paragraph
The showdown between Sadako and Kayako goes how you would
expect, they each land a couple of blows using their signature moves but the
filmmakers had to be very diplomatic so as to not piss off fans of either
franchise. It’s the same exact mentality
as Freddy vs. Jason. I understand you can’t show one villain
clearly overpowering the other but at the same time it’s gonna feel like a bit
of a gyp if no winner is officially declared.
Overall Impressions:
This is way more of a Ring movie than
a Grudge movie which was great in my
case. I’ve seen (almost) all the Ring films but only Ju-on: The Grudge so I’m not as familiar with that series. The cursed video angle is more intriguing to
me than the haunted house concept so to get two thirds of a real decent Ring picture, which hasn’t happened in a
long time, was awesome.
With such a silly premise it would’ve been tempting to go
over the top in the production design and execution but it’s great that the
filmmakers restrained themselves. Interestingly
they went serious on this and tried hard to go for creepy atmosphere/imagery
and big scares. I mean it could’ve been neat
if they did an exaggerated take like Sadako 3D except even cartoonier but I’m glad they kept it in the styles and moods
that were established in each of these franchises.
And you know what?
This film is surprisingly quite good.
The ending is actually the worst part because it’s dreadfully
contrived. I get that having these
horror titans fight each other is supposed to be the whole idea but they
couldn’t come up with a way to truly make it work. And because all the other shit is mostly handled
very well it made the brawl finale even stupider.
Look, if you’re a Ring
fan check it out. Those parts are
fucking cool. It could be the second
best installment in the series strangely enough. If you’re a Grudge fan, I don’t know. It
definitely plays second fiddle here so you might not be into that. Either way this is something we all wanted to
see, right? RIGHT!?
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