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Arrow Video logo fades in and out.
A young woman is in her kitchen. She opens the fridge door. She is disturbed by the sound of static.
She walks into the living room where we can see through frosted glass that a television set is on.
She looks at the screen.
Dark, spooky music plays.
A caption reads: From Hideo Nakata
Reiko, a journalist, walks down a wooded path to a large house.
There's this 'video curse' everyone's talking about...
A caption reads: Director of Dark Water
Reiko looks at the side of a videotape and becomes very scared.
They saw the video...
The young woman crouches down and gets closer to the television screen.
When it was over, they got a phone call...
A student sits by a table with a notepad in front of her. She is pointing to somebody.
""You will die in one week"", she said.
Reiko has a tear in her eye as she hears the phone ring.
The young woman walks back to the kitchen in a hurry as a phone rings.
The music comes to a crescendo.
A caption reads: Comes a haunting new restoration
A woman in a red hoodie picks up the phone.
The screen goes black.
We see a quick succession of grainy VHS images showing Japanese script, an eye, a figure in white and other contorted images. It ends with somebody gripping somebody's wrist with their hand.
The screen goes black again.
Reiko is leaning forward.
Cause of death?
We pan around Ryuji, a man in his late 30s with a goatee beard.
Unknown. Their hearts just stopped.
A photograph of a teenage boy and girl. Their faces are heavily distorted as if smudged.
Reiko also looks at a photo.
We see it is a Polaroid of her, again with her face distorted out of shape.
A small boy stands at the foot of some stairs.
He walks down a hallway and stops.
People don't just die like that.
Reiko stands in another hallway across from the boy.
A male figure stands in a corridor. We see him for only a brief moment.
A group of schoolgirls are talking.
They all died the same day...
Somebody peels back covers to reveal a body lying in a box.
Reiko is with a male colleague looking at a television.
I've never seen a corpse that looked like that.
On the screen, a girl's face is upside down and is stuck in an open mouthed expression.
Reiko looks in fear at her own reflection in the screen.
A caption reads: ""Still feels as twisted, bizarre and down-right nightmarish as it did all those years ago"" David Jenkins, Time Out
A woman's arms and hands are tied together with dark hair. Suddenly a hand appears from beneath them and grabs the wrists.
Reiko is on the beach with Ryuji. She slowly faints and he tries to stop her. There is a person lying on the ground in front of them.
Ryuji grimaces as he holds on to a piece of cord.
A wet hand reaches out.
A man uses an axe to cut through a fence.
A man looks into a well then the contrast changes to bright white.
A caption reads: Five Stars. A powerful exercise in atmosphere."" Andrew Heskins, Easternkicks.
Sepia footage of a man throwing a figure in white down a well.
Bloody fingers claw their way across a floor.
Reiko looks scared.
Sepia footage of a suited man lying on the floor dead.
A caption reads: Four stars. The original and best. Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian.
A VHS flickers showing the figure in white with long dark hair.
Creepy music gets faster.
Ryuji looks distressed.
Reiko cries.
A figure in white crawls along the floor. Quick cuts show it rises to its feet
A caption reads: See it and die - of fright"". Mark Kermode.
A man screams.
Reiko covers the face of a young boy.
The young woman from the beginning turns around and looks in shock.
We see a white eye peering behind long, black hair.
A caption reads: Ring
VHS static image and sound.
The figure climbs out of the well.
Arrow Video
In 1998, director Hideo Nakata (Dark Water) unleashed a chilling tale of technological terror on unsuspecting audiences, which redefined the horror genre, launched the J-horror boom in the West and introduced a generation of moviegoers to a creepy, dark-haired girl called Sadako. The film's success spawned a slew of remakes, reimaginations and imitators, but none could quite boast the power of Nakata's original masterpiece, which melded traditional Japanese folklore with contemporary anxieties about the spread of technology.
A group of teenage friends are found dead, their bodies grotesquely contorted, their faces twisted in terror. Reiko (Nanako Matsushima, When Marnie Was There), a journalist and the aunt of one of the victims, sets out to investigate the shocking phenomenon, and in the process uncovers a creepy urban legend about a supposedly cursed videotape, the contents of which causes anyone who views it to die within a week - unless they can persuade someone else to watch it, and, in so doing, pass on the curse...
Arrow Video is proud to present the genre defining trilogy - Ringu, the film that started it all, plus Hideo Nakata's chilling sequel, Ringu 2, and the haunting origin story, Ringu 0 - as well as the 'lost' original sequel, George Iida's Spiral, gathered together in glorious high definition and supplemented by a wealth of bonus materials.
Special Features
- 4K restoration of Ringu from the original camera negative, approved by director of photography Junichiro Hayashi
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentations
- Lossless Japanese DTS-HD master audio 5.1 and PCM 2.0 soundtracks
- Optional English subtitles
- Bonus feature: Spiral, George Iida's 1998 sequel to Ringu
- Audio commentary on Ringu by film historian David Kalat
- Audio commentary on Ringu 0 by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas
- The Ringu Legacy, a series of interviews from critics and filmmakers on their memories of the Ringu series and its enduring legacy
- A Vicious Circle, a video interview with author and critic Kat Ellinger on the career of Hideo Nakata
- Circumnavigating Ringu, a video essay by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas on the evolution of the Ringu series
- Spooks, Sighs and Videotape, a video essay by critic Jasper Sharp on the J-horror phenomenon
- The Psychology of Fear, an archival interview with author Koji Suzuki
- Archival behind-the-scenes featurette on Ringu 0
- Ringu 0 deleted scenes
- Sadako's Video
- Multiple theatrical trailers for the Ringu series
- Arrow Video
- 391mins approx
- Hideo Nakata
- Jôji Iida
- Norio Tsuruta
- Nanako Matsushima
- Miki Nakatani
- Yûko Takeuchi
- Kôichi Satô
- Hinako Saeki
- Hitomi Satô
- Kyoko Fukada
- Yukie Nakama
- Seiichi Tanabe
- Kumiko Asô
- 1998
- 1999
- 2000
- 3
- A
- Arrow Video
Ringu Collection Blu-ray
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Arrow Video logo fades in and out.
A young woman is in her kitchen. She opens the fridge door. She is disturbed by the sound of static.
She walks into the living room where we can see through frosted glass that a television set is on.
She looks at the screen.
Dark, spooky music plays.
A caption reads: From Hideo Nakata
Reiko, a journalist, walks down a wooded path to a large house.
There's this 'video curse' everyone's talking about...
A caption reads: Director of Dark Water
Reiko looks at the side of a videotape and becomes very scared.
They saw the video...
The young woman crouches down and gets closer to the television screen.
When it was over, they got a phone call...
A student sits by a table with a notepad in front of her. She is pointing to somebody.
""You will die in one week"", she said.
Reiko has a tear in her eye as she hears the phone ring.
The young woman walks back to the kitchen in a hurry as a phone rings.
The music comes to a crescendo.
A caption reads: Comes a haunting new restoration
A woman in a red hoodie picks up the phone.
The screen goes black.
We see a quick succession of grainy VHS images showing Japanese script, an eye, a figure in white and other contorted images. It ends with somebody gripping somebody's wrist with their hand.
The screen goes black again.
Reiko is leaning forward.
Cause of death?
We pan around Ryuji, a man in his late 30s with a goatee beard.
Unknown. Their hearts just stopped.
A photograph of a teenage boy and girl. Their faces are heavily distorted as if smudged.
Reiko also looks at a photo.
We see it is a Polaroid of her, again with her face distorted out of shape.
A small boy stands at the foot of some stairs.
He walks down a hallway and stops.
People don't just die like that.
Reiko stands in another hallway across from the boy.
A male figure stands in a corridor. We see him for only a brief moment.
A group of schoolgirls are talking.
They all died the same day...
Somebody peels back covers to reveal a body lying in a box.
Reiko is with a male colleague looking at a television.
I've never seen a corpse that looked like that.
On the screen, a girl's face is upside down and is stuck in an open mouthed expression.
Reiko looks in fear at her own reflection in the screen.
A caption reads: ""Still feels as twisted, bizarre and down-right nightmarish as it did all those years ago"" David Jenkins, Time Out
A woman's arms and hands are tied together with dark hair. Suddenly a hand appears from beneath them and grabs the wrists.
Reiko is on the beach with Ryuji. She slowly faints and he tries to stop her. There is a person lying on the ground in front of them.
Ryuji grimaces as he holds on to a piece of cord.
A wet hand reaches out.
A man uses an axe to cut through a fence.
A man looks into a well then the contrast changes to bright white.
A caption reads: Five Stars. A powerful exercise in atmosphere."" Andrew Heskins, Easternkicks.
Sepia footage of a man throwing a figure in white down a well.
Bloody fingers claw their way across a floor.
Reiko looks scared.
Sepia footage of a suited man lying on the floor dead.
A caption reads: Four stars. The original and best. Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian.
A VHS flickers showing the figure in white with long dark hair.
Creepy music gets faster.
Ryuji looks distressed.
Reiko cries.
A figure in white crawls along the floor. Quick cuts show it rises to its feet
A caption reads: See it and die - of fright"". Mark Kermode.
A man screams.
Reiko covers the face of a young boy.
The young woman from the beginning turns around and looks in shock.
We see a white eye peering behind long, black hair.
A caption reads: Ring
VHS static image and sound.
The figure climbs out of the well.
Arrow Video
In 1998, director Hideo Nakata (Dark Water) unleashed a chilling tale of technological terror on unsuspecting audiences, which redefined the horror genre, launched the J-horror boom in the West and introduced a generation of moviegoers to a creepy, dark-haired girl called Sadako. The film's success spawned a slew of remakes, reimaginations and imitators, but none could quite boast the power of Nakata's original masterpiece, which melded traditional Japanese folklore with contemporary anxieties about the spread of technology.
A group of teenage friends are found dead, their bodies grotesquely contorted, their faces twisted in terror. Reiko (Nanako Matsushima, When Marnie Was There), a journalist and the aunt of one of the victims, sets out to investigate the shocking phenomenon, and in the process uncovers a creepy urban legend about a supposedly cursed videotape, the contents of which causes anyone who views it to die within a week - unless they can persuade someone else to watch it, and, in so doing, pass on the curse...
Arrow Video is proud to present the genre defining trilogy - Ringu, the film that started it all, plus Hideo Nakata's chilling sequel, Ringu 2, and the haunting origin story, Ringu 0 - as well as the 'lost' original sequel, George Iida's Spiral, gathered together in glorious high definition and supplemented by a wealth of bonus materials.
Special Features
- 4K restoration of Ringu from the original camera negative, approved by director of photography Junichiro Hayashi
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentations
- Lossless Japanese DTS-HD master audio 5.1 and PCM 2.0 soundtracks
- Optional English subtitles
- Bonus feature: Spiral, George Iida's 1998 sequel to Ringu
- Audio commentary on Ringu by film historian David Kalat
- Audio commentary on Ringu 0 by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas
- The Ringu Legacy, a series of interviews from critics and filmmakers on their memories of the Ringu series and its enduring legacy
- A Vicious Circle, a video interview with author and critic Kat Ellinger on the career of Hideo Nakata
- Circumnavigating Ringu, a video essay by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas on the evolution of the Ringu series
- Spooks, Sighs and Videotape, a video essay by critic Jasper Sharp on the J-horror phenomenon
- The Psychology of Fear, an archival interview with author Koji Suzuki
- Archival behind-the-scenes featurette on Ringu 0
- Ringu 0 deleted scenes
- Sadako's Video
- Multiple theatrical trailers for the Ringu series
- Arrow Video
- 391mins approx
- Hideo Nakata
- Jôji Iida
- Norio Tsuruta
- Nanako Matsushima
- Miki Nakatani
- Yûko Takeuchi
- Kôichi Satô
- Hinako Saeki
- Hitomi Satô
- Kyoko Fukada
- Yukie Nakama
- Seiichi Tanabe
- Kumiko Asô
- 1998
- 1999
- 2000
- 3
- A
- Arrow Video
Customer Reviews
Top Customer Reviews
Where reviews refer to foods or cosmetic products, results may vary from person to person. Customer reviews are independent and do not represent the views of The Hut Group.
Good grouping, maybe some day will get them all ;)
The box set came perfectly, we’re just starting to watch “Ringu” and so far, no problems. The packaging was great to the box arrived in perfect condition with no loose discs. We’re happy to be able to watch these four films on the Ringu franchise. Great that “Spiral” is counted among the ones in these series. When we first watched these decades ago I was hooked, but I’ve never been able to watch them all of them nor the series.
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Creepy Tape Girl
First time watching Ringu, Spiral, and Ringu 0. I had previously watched Ringu 2 as a movie rental many years ago. I'm glad to have this set in my collection. Ringu looked the best with a superb transfer from Arrow Video. Spiral was not as enjoyable as the other 3, but still nice that they included it as an extra. Despite them being a bit older, they still hold up as some of the scariest from j-horror. I would definitely give them a try if you haven't already done so. I'm hoping Arrow releases the Ju-On collection in the US.
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An excellent collection of J-horror must-watches
It's a little surprising that the original Ring didn't show up on the Criterion Collection or something by now, given the absolute sensation it is over in Japan. That said, this box set equals whatever they would likely do, if not exceeding it. The wealth of supplementary materials to go alongside the high quality transfers of these movies very well, and add a lot of interesting insight and extra fun to these moody and creepy watches, especially the interviews. It's good to know that Sadako is getting her due respect in a country where perhaps Samara is more popular. As a Japanese person, it makes me happy to see so much love and care go into one of our favorite horror series. All that's missing now is a Ju-On collection to match.
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