The Ring Two (stylized as the ring twO) is a 2005 American supernaturalpsychological horror film and a sequel to the 2002 film The Ring, which was a remake of the 1998 Japanese film Ringu. Hideo Nakata, director of the original Japanese film Ringu, on which the American versions are based, directed this film in place of Gore Verbinski.
The film was shot in Astoria, Oregon and Los Angeles, California. It was released on March 18, 2005, and although it was met by generally negative critical reception, it opened in the United States with a strong US$35 million its first weekend, more than doubling the opening weekend of The Ring. Its final $76 million domestic gross was less than the original's $129 million, but it took $85 million internationally, for a total gross of $161 million.
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It is the second installment in The Ring film series and was followed by Rings (2017).
Plot[edit]
Six months after the events of the first film and following the events of the short film Rings, Samara Morgan’s cursed videotape has been circulating through teenagers in Astoria, Oregon. Jake Pierce is on his seventh day as per the tape's rules, and asks his friend Emily to watch the tape. He briefly steps into his kitchen while Emily supposedly watches the tape. Jake receives a phone call and initially thinks it is Samara but is relieved to realize it is only his friend with whom he had planned to trick Emily into watching the tape. Suddenly, Jake notices dark liquid pouring from under the kitchen door and runs outside to the living room, only to discover Emily closed her eyes while watching the tape. Jake is then promptly murdered by Samara.
Rachel Keller and her son, Aidan, have moved to Astoria from Seattle after sending the tape off into the ether. Rachel works at The Daily Astorian for editor Max Rourke. Rachel learns of Jake's death, inspecting his body, only for Samara to appear, declaring that she has been looking for her. Rachel breaks into Jake's house, obtains the videotape and burns it. Aidan experiences a nightmare where Samara drags him into a television. He soon starts developing hypothermia and bruises on his arms. At a county fair, Aidan wanders into a restroom and takes photographs of his reflection, where Samara appears. Rachel takes him home but they are attacked by wild deer on the way. Rachel realizes Aidan may be possessed by Samara.
Max takes them in. While Rachel is attempting to give Aidan a bath, he develops an irrational fear of water. Samara causes the water to recede from the bath, replacing Aidan with herself, and terrorizing Rachel so that she tries to drown Samara. Max enters, seeing her drowning Aidan instead, and forces her to take her son to the hospital. Based on Aidan’s bruises, psychiatrist Emma Temple suspects child abuse on the part of Rachel, who admits she had postpartum depression, and she sends Rachel away. Looking for answers, Rachel returns to the Morgan ranch on Moesko Island, finding evidence of Samara’s biological mother Evelyn, who tried to drown her as an infant. Rachel visits Evelyn in a psychiatric hospital, who advises her to 'listen to her baby'.
In the hospital, Samara takes control of Aidan’s body and telepathically forces Dr. Temple to commit suicide before returning to Max's house. Max arrives, suspects foul play, and tries to secretly take photos of Aidan. Rachel arrives, discovering an affectionate Aidan waiting for her, but acting suspiciously out-of-character. She steps out, finding Max's corpse in his pickup truck. Rachel falls asleep, dreaming of Aidan, who tells her that she will have to exorcise Samara. Upon awakening, Rachel drugs Samara with sleeping pills and places her in the bath to temporarily drown Aidan in order to exorcise her. Samara is removed but appears in the television. Rachel allows herself to be dragged into Samara’s monochromatic world.
Finding herself in the bottom of the well Samara died in, Rachel discovers the lid is partially open. She scales the well's walls, pursued by Samara, but escapes by climbing out and pushing the lid shut on Samara, locking her out of her and Aidan's lives. Fur elise guitar tab.
Wandering through the woods, she comes to the cliff where Samara's adoptive mother Anna committed suicide. Hearing Aidan's voice, Rachel falls off the cliff and falls into the water, returning to the real world and reuniting with Aidan.
Cast[edit]
Reception[edit]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 20%, based on 188 reviews, with an average rating of 4.4/10. The site's critical consensus states: 'Ring Two serves up horror cliches, and not even Hideo Nakata, the director of the movies from which this one is based, can save the movie from a dull screenplay full of absurdities.'[2]Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score, gave the film a 44 out of 100 based on 37 reviews from critics.[3]Roger Ebert, however, considered it better than the first film, giving it 2½ stars and writing 'The charm of The Ring Two, while limited, is real enough; it is based on the film's ability to make absolutely no sense, while nevertheless generating a real enough feeling of tension a good deal of the time.'[4]
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of 'C+' on an A+ to F scale.[5]
![]() Home media[edit]
In the Unrated EditionDVD release, a few extra scenes were included that were not in the theatrical release. These scenes included conversations with Rachel's new neighbor (and neighborhood gossip), numerous additions in which Max shows a romantic interest in Rachel, more scenes with Samara prior to her possession of Aidan (including one in which she is shown to enter him in the restroom at the local fair), and the short film Rings (2005) (which was also included on a special edition of The Ring released just before The Ring Two arrived in theaters). A scene in the theatrical cut in which Aidan first encounters a deer while wandering the local fair (prior to the deer attack) has also been removed from this version. Also, some musical cues were changed such as when Samara leaps out of the well in the opening scene. The opening scene was also longer. The scene when the power went out was changed with a scene of the lights in Aidan's room going on and off, as well as the oven downstairs catching fire.
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Ring_Two&oldid=904484499'
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The median American spends about 4 percent (or two weeks) of annual pretax income on an engagement ring, according to an online poll of 1,640 adults conducted for The Upshot by Morning Consult.
The poor spend two months’ wages on rings, but for most it’s less than two weeks
Share of income
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(16.7%)
2 weeks
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$40,000 to $58,000
1.6 weeks
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Less than $23,000
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In a poll of 1,640 adults between Jan. 24 and Jan. 30.
Morning Consult asked a nationally representative sample of adults when they were engaged; how much they earned when they were engaged; and how much they paid for the engagement ring, if they bought one. The cost was then adjusted for inflation from the year of engagement. (Wedding bands weren’t included.)
Overall spending did increase with higher incomes, yet stayed remarkably flat as a percentage of income. Except for people at the very bottom of the income ladder, spending on a ring hovered around 4 percent.
Still, spending on engagement rings does have a long tail: Seven percent of people in the poll reported paying more than $10,000 for one. The potential amount spent can seem limitless (Cardi B received an engagement ring from the rapper Offset that she said was worth half a million dollars). But the median payment was $1,900 in the poll, with most people within that ballpark by $1,400 or so.
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And across generations, the fraction spent on a ring has also been stable, with median spending falling between 3.7 percent and 5 percent of annual earnings.
Our estimate is lower than some others the wedding industry has offered. WeddingWire’s Newlywed survey found that the average engagement ring cost $5,000. The Knot reported an average of $6,351 in its 2017 study. The Wedding Report, an independent wedding research company, found a median cost of $1,830 in its 2018 report. And an academic study of a small sample of couples in Ohio found that the median spent was $3,000.
Even with these generally higher figures, what is clear is that the three-month rule for engagement rings (which has roots in a brilliant marketing campaign) is very much an illusion.
“That guideline has sort of been tossed out the window,” said Amanda Gizzi, spokeswoman for the Jewelers of America, a nonprofit trade association. “It’s not anything anyone in the industry promotes today.”
She noted that the process of buying a ring has changed, too. More couples are shopping together and discussing what they want and what they can afford.
Lower-priced rings are not necessarily a bad thing for jewelers. A crucial strategy for luxury retailers is to offer less costly entry points, so that when the customers become wealthier, they’ll trade up for a more expensive item at the same store, said Antonio Achille, who leads the luxury team for McKinsey, the consulting firm.
Despite its emotional significance, an engagement ring is also part of a well-functioning market. “Engagement rings are 100 percent personal,” Mrs. Gizzi said. “How much you have to spend is how much you have to spend, and you shouldn’t feel better or worse about your relationship because of it.”
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