

The Ring
Before you die, you see
Journalist Rachel Keller investigates a strange videotape that may be behind the untimely deaths of four teenagers. There is an urban legend about this tape: the viewer will die seven days after watching it. Rachel tracks down the video... and watches it. Now she has just seven days to unravel the mystery of the Ring in order to save herself and her son.
Why watch The Ring
Naomi Watts races against a seven-day death sentence in The Ring, a film that redefined what Americans feared about technology itself. Director Gore Verbinski took the Japanese sensation and crafted something icier, more methodical—a genuine cat-and-mouse thriller where the threat isn't supernatural chaos but a puzzle with a ticking clock. Watts brings desperate intelligence to Rachel, making every clue feel like survival.
The film moves with HBO prestige-drama precision: each scene builds dread through restraint rather than jump scares. The infamous cursed videotape itself—those warped, dreamlike images—has lost none of its unsettling power. Verbinski's Pacific Northwest palette and Dario Argento-influenced sound design create an atmosphere that lingers long after the credits roll, closer to Zodiac than typical horror.
This is for anyone who wants their scares served with narrative momentum and a protagonist worth rooting for. The Ring doesn't rely on gore or cheap tricks; it trusts that the idea of inevitable doom—and a mother's refusal to accept it—is horror enough. Two decades later, it remains the gold standard for adapting Japanese horror into American idiom without losing its soul.
Watch it tonight and you'll understand why "seven days" became shorthand for creeping dread. The final act twist will have you texting friends immediately.
— The What2Watch desk · US
Where to watch
The story
Journalist Rachel Keller investigates a strange videotape that may be behind the untimely deaths of four teenagers. There is an urban legend about this tape: the viewer will die seven days after watching it. Rachel tracks down the video... and watches it. Now she has just seven days to unravel the mystery of the Ring in order to save herself and her son.
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Reviews & ratings

Is she still in the dark place? After the mysterious death of her niece Katie, journalist Rachel Keller starts to investigate an urban legend about a videotape which kills you seven days after watching it. With dire consequences coming her way if she can not solve the mystery.... The sentence, English language remake of successful foreign horror film has been known to instill fear of the wrong kind in many a ge…Show more

Was interesting and special effects were good but all comes down to story and they lost the plot at the end, sorry. Didn't make sense they seemed like they had a good idea and wanted to make a horror out of it when the obvious ending would have worked out better. Nice try!
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