Aidan (David Dorfman) and Rachel (Naomi Watts) have moved to a small town in Oregon. However the videotape seems to have followed them after Rachel finds another one of those strange deaths. Rachel takes the tape and burns it. Samara starts coming after Aidan, and Rachel must dig up the past to put it to rest.The great thing about this sequel is that the actors came back to finish the story off. It's interesting to go back to the source story. However the franchise can't surprise the audience any more. It was a nice fresh idea in the first movie, but the sequel can't shock us anymore. It's a good wrap up. I hope they don't keep dragging this out like other franchises.
'Sentiment: Positive đ'
I think this movie is best viewed right after the first in this context the emotional roller-coaster, the eerie well paced story unfolds. You find a mother willing to do whatever it takes to save her child, gain a deeper understanding and yet have so many more questions. While the firs one holds genuine scares, and suspense this one takes you on a what happens the day after storyline. Mesmerizing, chilling and emotionally dramatic I love them both but only recently saw them back to back and found it most gratifying my friends and I downed a lot of popcorn, and after wards had an interesting discussion two people in our group had never seen either and were scared through out.
'Sentiment: Negative âšī¸'
After surviving their encounter with vengeful Samara and her cursed video tape, Rachel and her son move to a new town, but Samara isn't finished terrorizing them and wants to possess her son.Bringing back the original Japanese director for this sequel sounds like a great idea, but The Ring Two ends up being the most misguided and least frightening sequel since Exorcist II. None of the scares work, the plot is convoluted, and many of the scare sequences are ruined by cheesy CGI like a sequence involving computer animated deer that ram into Rachel's car.