THE RING TWO
A film review by David N. Butterworth
Copyright 2005 David N. Butterworth
** (out of ****)
"The Ring Two" is the lazily titled sequel to the enormously
popular--and by turns enormously successful--"The Ring" from 2002.
What it's not is "Ringu," the original Japanese film on which the
Americanized remake (starring Naomi Watts) was based, or "Ringu 2"
(aka "Ring 2"), its (Japanese) sequel, or even "Ring 2: Spiral," a
separate sequel to "Ringu" (same cast, different writer/director).
What it's also not is particularly good (translation: it's not
particularly good), although that's a bit harsh given the film's rarely
ambitious modus operandi.
The first "'Ring" was a macabre tale centering on a mysterious
videotape that caused anyone dumb enough to watch it to die within a
week. Said VHS puts in a brief appearance at the beginning of "'Ring
Two" but quickly disappears from sight and script with the film
focusing instead on Rachel Keller from the original film (again played
by Ms. Watts) and her son Aidan (ditto David Dorfman).
As things get going, Rachel and David have relocated to the
picturesque Pacific Northwestern town of Astoria in the hopes of
escaping their terrible past. But faster than you can say "Samara!"
the whole terrible business starts up again, with the dead girl from
the well's spirit entering the Keller's physical world with intent to
do them considerable harm.
Watts has made a name for herself in such serious dramas as "21
Grams" and "We Don't Live Here Anymore" as well as some less serious
fare like "Le Divorce" and "I Heart Huckabees." But she's clearly no
art house snob and it's encouraging to see her appearing in this non-
taxing flick, not afraid to return to her roots or perpetuate this
recent string of PG-13 rated horror flicks that started with its
predecessor and continue to this day with the likes of "Darkness
Falls," "The Grudge" (another remake of a Japanese original), and "The
Forgotten."
Watts is the best thing about "The Ring Two" but you can't help
but feel that her talents might have been better spent elsewhere.
Director Hideo Nakata, who helmed "Ringu" and "Ringu 2," imbues
the film with an effectively eerie atmosphere and cranks out some
calculated set pieces, the best of which involves a herd of CGI-
rendered reindeer. Otherwise it's a lot of running (water) and
screaming with Watts shouldering most of the acting responsibilities
since her co-stars don't seem all that interested.
If the going trend is to reduce the amount of graphic gore and
concentrate instead on the truly scary stuff--creepy situations ripe
with palpable malevolence--then I'm all for that. "The Ring Two,"
however, is only partially successful because it doesn't take any real
chances and as a result instills ambivalence, especially as far as
another sequel is concerned (the set up for which, surprisingly, is not
pushed down our throats in the closing reel).
While offering us more of the same, the same in "The Ring Two"
proves to be merely so-so.
--
David N. Butterworth
dnb@dca.net
Got beef? Visit "La Movie Boeuf"
online at http://members.dca.net/dnb
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