Ring of Curse

Ring of Curse, released in Japan as Gomen Nasai (ゴメンナサイ, lit. "I'm Sorry"), is a 2011 Japanese horror film directed by Mari Asato. It is based on the 2011 cell phone novel Gomen Nasai by Yuka Hidaka. The film stars the Japanese idol girl group Buono! The film was released in theaters nationwide in Japan on October 29, 2011.

Ring of Curse
Theatrical release poster
Japaneseゴメンナサイ
HepburnGomen Nasai
Directed byMari Asato
Produced by
  • Daichi Tsukinari
    • Yoshihiro Yanagihara
    • Tomoharu Kusunoki
    • Akira Naramoto
Screenplay by
Based onGomen Nasai
by Yuka Hidaka
Starring
Production
company
ASCII Media Works
Thanks Lab
VAP
Distributed byThankslab
Release date
  • October 29, 2011 (2011-10-29) (Japan)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

A girl, Yuka, attends school with a black-haired girl named Kurohane. Kurohane gets great grades in school, but is constantly labeled as a black sheep, as she is regarded as strange and unworldly to others at school and in public, and neglected by her parents who favor her kid sister, Kana over her at home. One day, Kurohane finds out that she has cancer, but still, her mother does not care. Kurohane curses Kana, who starts having trouble breathing and dies within a month as a result of the curse. Kurohane attempts the same with her mother but proves to no effect, so she enters a competition to improve her skills.

Her school life did not go so well because her classmates were mean to her, and often became a victim of their cruel bullying. She saw her opportunity for revenge when she was selected to write a script for a play in the school festival. She started cursing her class mates one by one. The only one that realized the curse was Yuka. She tried to stop Kurohane by talking to her, but to no avail. Kurohane's curse was also discovered by one classmate she wanted to kill, so she tried a different way to kill her. One day, that classmate that she wanted to kill transferred to another school, but appeared several days later to kill Kurohane, and then killed herself, not because she wanted to, but because she was cursed by Kurohane. At that point, Kurohane's curses were so strong that a person would lose command and kill herself. The new source Kurohane used to place curses appeared in the form of text messages. She also sent a text to Yuka, but she never read it.

Time passed and Yuka was with her new classmates, telling them the story of Kurohane. They stole Yuka's cell phone and saw the text message Kurohane had sent to her, including Yuka. Then, one by one, Yuka's classmates started dying, leaving Yuka alone. And that is when she ultimately realizes that the only way to save herself is to get more and more people to read the words of Kurohane. She killed people randomly, so Yuka wrote a short story with Kurohane's words in it and posted it online, increasing her time to live.

Cast

Production

Author Yuka Hidaka originally published the story online on the website Maho no iLand in 2011 as a cell phone novel.[1][2][3] Over 800,000 people subscribed to the story.[2] ASCII Media Works announced in a press release on July 11, 2011 that the novel would receive a live-action adaptation starring the members of the Japanese idol girl group Buono!, consisting of Momoko Tsugunaga, Miyabi Natsuyaki, and Airi Suzuki, in their debut starring film.[2][4][3]

The film was directed by Mari Asato.[5] The theme song of the film is "Deep Mind" by Buono!.[6]

Reception

Mark Schilling from The Japan Times described the beginning of the film with a "standard issue 'bully the strange girl in class' story line", but mentioned that it takes a "scarily fresh turn" when the bullied character takes revenge on her classmates.[5]

gollark: I should relocate them to the "bee apiary apioid zone".
gollark: Greetings.
gollark: IPv4 exists, you know.
gollark: So reallocation is not an issue.
gollark: At GTech™, we just have infinite amounts of memory.

References

  1. "ゴメンナサイ". Maho no iLand. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  2. "『ゴメンナサイ』 映画化決定" (PDF). ASCII Media Works (in Japanese). July 11, 2011. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 9, 2019. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  3. Ippei (July 11, 2011). "怖すぎてゴメンナサイ!? 魔法のiらんど発の最恐映画『ゴメンナサイ』". ASCII Media Works. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  4. "「Buono!」嗣永桃子、主演ホラー映画で「"ももち"封印」". Eiga.com (in Japanese). November 2, 2011. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  5. Schilling, Mark (May 8, 2014). "'Gomennasai (Ring of Curse)'". The Japan Times. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  6. "Buono!、2012年初シングルは話題テーマ曲含む両A面". Natalie. January 2, 2012. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
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