Ringu (lost "Brussels cut" of Japanese horror film; existence unconfirmed; 1998): Difference between revisions

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According to a number of unproven eyewitness accounts, when Hideo Nakata's 1998 cult classic ''Ringu'' was shown at the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film in 1999 (for its European premiere), an alternate cut (significantly more graphic than the definitive cut we see today) was screened, never to be shown again.
 
Dubbed by fans as the '''"Brussels cut"''', the alleged alternate version of the film is said to contain a much more disturbing open mouth effect, wherein the victims' mouths were noticeably vertically deformed (as they were, coincidentally, in the film's 2002 remake, ''The Ring'').


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The '''"Brussels Cut"''' of Hideo Nakata's 1998 cult-classic ''Ringu'' is said to be an alternate version of the movie that was shown at the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film in 1999, for the film's European premiere.
 


The alleged difference between the two is that in the "Brussels Cut", the mouths of the victims are much more vertically deformed, creating a much creepier effect.
The alleged difference between the two is that in the "Brussels Cut", the mouths of the victims are much more vertically deformed, creating a much creepier effect.

Revision as of 06:03, 7 October 2014

According to a number of unproven eyewitness accounts, when Hideo Nakata's 1998 cult classic Ringu was shown at the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film in 1999 (for its European premiere), an alternate cut (significantly more graphic than the definitive cut we see today) was screened, never to be shown again.

Dubbed by fans as the "Brussels cut", the alleged alternate version of the film is said to contain a much more disturbing open mouth effect, wherein the victims' mouths were noticeably vertically deformed (as they were, coincidentally, in the film's 2002 remake, The Ring).



The alleged difference between the two is that in the "Brussels Cut", the mouths of the victims are much more vertically deformed, creating a much creepier effect.

Director Hideo Nakata, when asked about the subject denied its existence, although Javier over at curseofthering.com (formerly known as theringworld.com) has received multiple emails from people claiming to have seen the "Brussels Cut" through various means. There are also a few instances of people online[1] claiming to have copies, though none of them, when contacted by us, have replied. It is still unknown if the film is indeed non-existent, or if it does exist, as so many claim, and that Hideo Nakata is trying to cover up its existence for his own unknown reasons.

References