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| DVD - Wide Screen / DTS | $9.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan / DTS | $9.99 |
| VHS | $14.99 |
A never-before-seen short film created by director Gore Verbinski exclusively for the video release, that reveals more electrifying secrets about the mystery of The Ring; A trailer for Ringu - the original international box office hit that started it all
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- The Ring
1. You Will Die In Seven Days [7:31]
2. Rachel and Aiden [5:06]
3. Katie's Funeral [2:57]
4. Photographs [6:17]
5. Shelter Mountain [1:47]
6. The Tape [3:05]
7. Make Me a Copy [5:15]
8. No Fingerprints [5:10]
9. Decca [2:07]
10. A Lighthouse [3:10]
11. Who Is Anna Morgan? [4:53]
12. Bad Dram [1:53]
13. Aiden Watches the Tape [5:17]
14. Ferry Ride [4:08]
15. Medical Records [2:08]
16. Mr. Morgan [2:39]
17. Family Doctor [5:20]
18. Bath Time [4:51]
19. The Barn [6:48]
20. The Well [3:09]
21. Samara Returns [14:16]
22. It Won't Stop [6:11]
23. End Credits [2:51]
A truly blood-chilling exercise in supernatural horror, this American remake of Hideo Nakata's 1998 Japanese cult classic depicts the inexplicable marriage of demonic malevolence and modern technology. The nightmarish tale gets underway as newspaper reporter Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) investigates the bizarre fates of teenagers who have died exactly seven days after watching a certain videotape. Rachel watches the tape and pooh-poohs the idea that it might be cursed -- until her young son (David Dorfman) starts making eerie drawings similar to those produced by the victims just days before they died. Despite the occasional plot hole -- suspension of disbelief is a given in horror, anyway -- screenwriter Ehren Kruger crafts a spine-tingling story that is visualized splendidly by director Gore Verbinski, who establishes a sinister, melancholy mood early on and sustains it through the excruciatingly tense final reel. This isn't really an actor's movie, but Watts handles herself surprisingly well, making believable that which is patently unbelievable. She gets able support from Brian Cox (playing a lonely old man whose past sins have a bearing on the present carnage) and Martin Henderson, who is extremely winning as the video geek who helps Rachel analyze the deadly tape. This ambitious little thriller isn't always logical, but it's relentlessly creepy, and that's a quality you always want in a horror movie. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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