Ring Koji Suzuki has lead to manga, television and film adaptations in Japan, Korea, and the U.S. Ring: Koji Suzuki: 411 - Book Depository The hit movie The Ring, starring Naomi Watts, is based off a Japanese movie called Ringu ('ring' in Japanese), and Ringu is based off of Koji Suzuki's novel Ring. Most people probably Page 11/22.
- His attempt to solve the tape's mystery before it's too late-for everyone-assumes an increasingly deadly urgency. Ring is a chillingly told horror story, a masterfully suspenseful mystery, and post-modern trip. The success of Koji Suzuki's novel the Ring has lead to manga, television and film adaptations in Japan, Korea, and the U.S.
- His attempt to solve the tape's mystery before it's too late-for everyone-assumes an increasingly deadly urgency. Ring is a chillingly told horror story, a masterfully suspenseful mystery, and post-modern trip. The success of Koji Suzuki's novel the Ring has lead to manga, television and film adaptations in Japan, Korea, and the U.S.
Ring
by
Suzuki Koji
general information | review summaries | our review | links | about the author
Title: | Ring |
Author: | Suzuki Koji |
Genre: | Novel |
Written: | 1991 (Eng. 2003) |
Length: | 286 pages |
Original in: | Japanese |
Availability: | Ring- US |
Ring- UK | |
Ring- Canada | |
Ring- France | |
Ring- Deutschland | |
DVD: | The Ring- US |
The Ring- UK | |
The Ring- Canada | |
DVD: | Ringu- US |
Ringu- UK | |
Ringu- Canada |
- Japanese title: Ringu
- Translated by Robert B. Rohmer and Glynne Walley
- Ring has been filmed twice, as
- Ringu (Japan, 1998), directed by Nakata Hideo
- The Ring (US, 2002), directed by Gore Verbinski, starring Naomi Watts, Brian Cox, and Jane Alexander
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Our Assessment:
B : passable thriller, cleverly resolved
See our review for fuller assessment.
Source | Rating | Date | Reviewer |
---|---|---|---|
The Guardian | . | 19/6/2004 | Steven Poole |
The Observer | . | 25/7/2004 | Peter Guttridge |
From the Reviews
Ring Koji Suzuki Pdf Free Download
:- 'Suzuki builds tension brilliantly early on: the details he accumulates on the page are banal in themselves, but the narrative voice lurches among them like a stalker-camera, or a malevolent spirit. (...) But inevitably the book's presentation of the video feels more like an intriguing puzzle than a sensuous demonstration of evil, and the last two-thirds of the novel degenerates somewhat (.....) This is not helped by an extremely annoying translation into American slang' - Steven Poole, The Guardian
- 'With the clock ticking, the pace doesn't slacken for a moment, even as the plot becomes more complex. Although the prose style is occasionally dull, Ring is a guaranteed page-turner.' - Peter Guttridge, The Observer
Please note that these ratings solely represent the complete review's biased interpretation and subjective opinion of the actual reviews and do not claim to accurately reflect or represent the views of the reviewers. Similarly the illustrative quotes chosen here are merely those the complete review subjectively believes represent the tenor and judgment of the review as a whole. We acknowledge (and remind and warn you) that they may, in fact, be entirely unrepresentative of the actual reviews by any other measure.
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The complete review's Review:
Ring begins with some unusual and inexplicable deaths -- two young people die in separate incidents, for no apparent reason, but practically at the same moment.
Kazuyuki Asakawa, a journalist, happens to be the uncle of Tomoko Oishi, one of the victims. And he happens to hear from a taxi driver about the other victim. The coincidences -- the victims are about the same age, died at almost exactly the same time, and there is no good explanation of what happened to them -- make him curious, and he looks into the matter. A bit of research and he discovers two more victims who died at the same time and in the same manner.
A bit of digging around reveals that the four teens knew each other and spent a few days together at a resort exactly a week before they died. Asakawa follows the trail, and checks into the same Cabin B-4 where the four stayed, thinking he might discover the casue of their deaths here -- maybe a virus or something.
Instead: 'Never in his wildest dreams could he imagine what awaited him there.'What he eventually finds is deeply disturbing -- a videotape full of unsettling and confusing images. Worse is what comes at the end of the video: a warning that: 'those who view these images are fated to die at this exact moment one week from now' unless some instructions are followed carefully. Unfortunately, those instructions have been erased from the tape .....
The race is on.Asakawa isn't entirely convinced by what he's seen, but it seems almost plausible. He turns to the only person he imagines can help him, an old schoolfriend who finished medical school and also has a Ph.D. in philosophy, Ryuji Takayama.
Ryuji also watches the tape, and then they try to figure out what's behind it. The story unfolds as a decent little action-mystery, though unfortunately the explanation largely turns out to involve the supernatural (which makes it considerably less compelling than one would have hoped for).
Still, the tension mounts as the clock winds down for Asakawa (and Ryuji, though since he only watched the tape later he has a bit more time). Suzuki chases his characters around Japan, has them dig up some ugly old stories that explain what happened, and even throws in some bad weather for them to contend with. The pressure mounts too because Asakawa's wife and young child have seen the tape, and Asakawa worries that they too might suffer the same terrible fate.
Discovering what's behind the tape isn't sufficient to discover the 'charm' that offers release from the death sentence -- or is it ? Asakawa and Ryuji can't be sure until the moment, a week after they each first saw the video, when they are meant to die .....
It's only at the end of the book, when it's finally clear how the death-sentence can be staved off, that Suzuki offers a truly ingenious turn: it's a nice and very satisfying twist.
Ring is a passable thriller: there's tension, excitement, some neat little stories explaining various pieces of the puzzle. Unfortunately, the central conceit -- the videotape-message -- relies on a ridiculous supernatural explanation and can't be taken seriously, which completely undermines the rest of the book. The writing isn't particularly polished, but Suzuki does create some decent characters, and even the exaggerated Ryuji is an entertaining presence.
Overall: an undemanding quick read, with a few decent thrills and chills.
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Links:
Ring:- Koji Suzuki at Vertical
- Inside a Dream(French)
- The Observer(scroll down for review)
- IMDb page
- The Ring - Official Movie Site
Ring Koji Suzuki Pdf
Ringu - Japanese film version (1998):- IMDb page
- See Index of Japanese literature
- See Index of Mysteries and Thrillers
Ring Koji Suzuki Ebook
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About the Author:
Japanese author Suzuki Koji (鈴木光司) is apparently an authority on childrearing.
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© 2003-2021 the complete review
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