
Even Rachel’s coworker (Simon Baker) starts to question the family’s odd behavior when the mother and boy show up at the office late one night. Emma Temple (Elizabeth Perkins) and the staff at the hospital suspect abuse. Unable to explain the boy’s condition or the bruises on his body, Dr. But the child services agency sees things differently. Later, as Aidan begins to develop mysterious symptoms of hypothermia, the wary journalist realizes her son is the latest victim of the creepy, longhaired ghoul.

Her fears are confirmed when she discovers an untitled cassette at the victim’s home and realizes that Samara (Kelly Stables), the ghostly spirit of a young, murdered girl, has followed them there. But when reports of a homicide crackle across the local police scanner, she starts to worry. Taking a new job at the Astoria Gazette, she is ready to leave the nightmarish events of Seattle behind her.

However, don’t expect the same kind of menacing television static in this sequel.įollowing her investigations into the gruesome deaths of teens who died as a result of viewing an eerie VHS tape, Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) has packed her bags, left the city and moved with her son Aidan (David Dorfman) to an idyllic coastal town in Oregon. If an invitation to watch an unmarked video didn’t make you just a little nervous after seeing The Ring, you either don’t scare easily or you slept through the movie.
