The Ring Two
Six months after the incidents involving the lethal videotape, new clues prove that there is a new evil lurking in the darkness.
21 September 1980, New York City, New York, USA
28 August 1978, USA
20 August 1960, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA
30 July 1969, Launceston, Tasmania, Australia
25 August 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
25 December 1949, Quitman, Texas, USA
21 September 1970, Los Angeles, California, USA
9 March 1962
10 April 1983, Choctaw, Oklahoma, USA
25 December 1973, USA
28 November 1984, Rocky Mount, North Carolina, USA
4 March 1963, French Camp, California, USA
22 April 1971, Alabama, USA
7 August 1958, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA
4 September 1977, Los Angeles, California, USA
28 September 1968, Shoreham, Kent, England, UK
12 May 1986, Port Perry, Ontario, Canada
April 19, 2009
"The Ring Two" is a horror movie with very few surprises and hit-or-miss moments of suspense that don't lead anywhere on a narrative or emotional level.
April 09, 2005
It is like an exercise in cinema mechanics: Images, music, photography and mood conspire to create a sense of danger, even though at any given moment we cannot possibly explain the rules under which that danger might manifest itself.
April 25, 2011
The Ring Two has a great deal of mood and there are some genuinely chilling moments, but weak characters sap it of all strength.
July 15, 2008
Unfortunately, the screenplay by Ehren Kruger is littered with plot holes that reduce the story to a generic thriller formula.
December 29, 2010
Scarier than the first, but not as interesting.
April 09, 2005
May not be a masterpiece, but it has its share of thoughtful little angles.
April 09, 2005
A perplexing compound of the silly and the glum.
April 29, 2009
Feels incomplete and is immensely sloppy, without a lick of sense.
March 21, 2005
I thought the original had a nice evil chill to it, but this is an unnecessary second chapter that dumbs down all the main characters and is curiously lacking in quality scares.
October 03, 2006
full review in Greek
March 22, 2005
The let's-travel-through-the-TV-screen sequence was better in Fat Albert.

