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DEAD
RINGER
At the center of
the mystery of "The Ring Two" is Samara herself, whom Ehren
Kruger regards as "the avenging angel-or rather demon-of all abandoned
children. In many respects, her behavior, cruel and destructive as it
is, is entirely understandable from the perspective of a wronged child.
Despite her monstrous appearance, she is a tragic figure."
Hideo Nakata agrees. "We can feel fear, but we can also feel sympathy-these
are key elements in Japanese ghost stories, and because 'The Ring' was
originally a Japanese novel, we do have that kind of duality."
"Probably more than anything, it comes down to the juxtaposition
of innocence on the one hand and pure evil on the other," Parkes
says. "There is the innocence of this little girl in a white dress
with long black hair that covers her face and her true intentions
the
powerless little girl who is, in fact, more powerful than anything you
can imagine."
Kelly Stables,
an actress who had served as one of the Samara's doubles in "The
Ring," returned to take on the role of the Evil Samara in the sequel.
Though ironically terrified of watching horror movies, Stables prepared
for her role by watching both "Ringu" and "The Ring,"
to capture Samara's physical idiosyncrasies. "Samara's peculiar physicality
is so important to the role," she says. "Samara has very distinct
movements; she moves in a very staccato way. And when I was in full makeup,
I spooked even myself."
In "The Ring Two," Samara is seen only in her most malevolent
state, requiring Stables to endure at least five hours of makeup every
day. Six-time Academy Award®-winning special effects makeup artist
Rick Baker had created the look of Samara, as well as her victims' grotesque,
distorted death faces in the first "The Ring." For "The
Ring Two," he and his team were charged with transforming the attractive,
20-something Kelly Stables into the specter of a young girl who bore the
scars of a terrible death and afterlife in a dark, dank well.
Hideo Nakata relates, "Rick and I discussed at length how much we
should show Samara's face and we both reached the conclusion that probably
less is more. He liked that I only showed one eye of Samara in 'Ringu,'
so Rick and his team were more focused on the look of her whole body-the
way her hair covers her face, and the detail of her arms and legs. It's
very elaborate work, and they had to fix Samara's makeup for almost every
take."
Rick Baker notes, "I thought the scariest stuff of Samara in the
first movie was when you just see that hair and don't know what's underneath.
You can never make anything scarier than your own imagination."
Stables'
long hours in the makeup chair began with her being literally spray-painted
in a ghostly white pallor. The makeup team then airbrushed the blue veins
that show through her translucent skin. Because the actress is in her
20s, special appliances were created for her face to make her look more
childlike, even though her face was usually concealed under her long,
dark hair.
For Samara's body, Baker did a lot of forensic research about what happens
to the skin of a body immersed in water for a long time. "You know
when you take a long bath and your hands get all puckered-it gets much
worse over time," Baker explains. "We wanted that look."
To achieve that look, hundreds of individual appliances had to be created
for each section of Stables' hands, arms, legs and feet. There were so
many separate pieces, Baker says, "it was hard to tell what was what
and where it went, so we had them laid out on little maps so we knew the
order to put them on." In addition, every appliance had to be duplicated
many times over because each one was used only once and then thrown away.
Perhaps the biggest challenge for the makeup team was to make the appliances
last in water. "We developed a new technique, casting our appliances
out of the same material we use as an adhesive, which also gave them a
neat translucent appearance. We liked the look of the material, but more
importantly, it stayed on really well in water. It was a very tenacious
glue."
The downside was that it took Kelly Stables almost as long to remove the
appliances as it took to put them on, but despite the hours in the makeup
chair at the beginning and end of every day, Baker says, "She was
a trooper. She was always in good spirits throughout the whole demanding
process."
Samara's most notable feature, her long black hair, was a wig of real
human hair. Stables also had to wear white prescription contact lenses
to make her look blinded, which had the effect of making it difficult
for her to see. Putting on the signature white gown completed Stables'
transformation into the evil Samara.
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