Which the grudge character are you quiz




















Kayako is basically impossible to avoid, as there's no way to rid yourself of the curse, a reference to the fact that it's nearly impossible for prey to escape a spider's web. Though the film is primarily a remake of the original film Ju-On: The Grudge , there are several plot elements that are lifted from every other film in the Japanese film series of the same name.

Detective Nakagawa is a composite character of sorts, as he shares the name and profession of Detective Kenichi Nakagawa from the original Ju-On: The Grudge , but his personality and actions are closer to that of retired Detective Yuji Toyama, also from the original film.

Like Toyama, he lost his colleagues to the curse, and also tries to burn the house down in this film. In the Director's Cut of the film, Susan comes across a small cat ornament when first viewing the Saeki family home, an homage to the cat ornaments that seem to stare at Yuki in Ju-on The mother and daughter that give Karen directions to the Saeki home are played by real-life mother and daughter Junko and Nana Koizumi.

Mar the cat was killed in the original film Ju-on: the Curse by stabbing, when Takeo threw him into the bathtub and slashed him repeatedly with a box cutter. In order to keep a PG rating, his death had to be altered to Mar being drowned instead and the murder itself being off-screen.

Despite this, it was still a massive success and became the first horror film to top the Halloween box office since House on Haunted Hill When the film was released in Japan, it was retitled The Ju-on, similar to the original Japanese films.

The theatrical release also used the unrated director's cut of the film, instead of the theatrical version that was released in America. Sam Raimi helped Sony Pictures Entertainment option the remake rights to the Japanese films, as he was a big fan of the original films. Karen's research reveals that the Saeki house is located in Suginami.

This ward is 4 miles away 2 miles if driving from the Nerima ward, where the house from the original Ju-on films is located. The only film in the American remake trilogy that features Kayako covered in blood. In all subsequent films she is completely clean with no blood stains although in The Grudge 3 , Jake Kimble mentions that he saw her covered in blood. The only film in The Grudge franchise to have received a VHS release and, until the release of The Grudge , was the only film in the series to have received a Blu-ray in the US at least.

Aside from the Saeki family, the only other characters to keep their original names from the Japanese films are Detectives Igarashi and Nakagawa and the real estate agent Suzuki, a character from Ju-on The film, which received 1 star out of 4, is included on Roger Ebert's "Most Hated" list.

Peter Kirk was named after one of this film's co-producers, Michael Kirk. Is this interesting? Spoilers The trivia items below may give away important plot points. Takako Fuji , being a trained contortionist and ballet dancer, performed the stunts herself. The effect was not a result of trick shots or digital manipulation. The film reveals that Kayako got her revenge on her homicidal husband Takeo by ripping his jaw off then strangling him with her hair to death. Toshio's ghost then proceeds to swing his hanging corpse in the room causing the loud banging noises.

Although this plot element was not present in the original Ju-on: The Grudge Takeo's death had already been seen in Ju-on , the previous film, where he's killed in the streets by Kayako it was actually lifted from the original film's sequel, where a similar thing happens to Tomoka and Noritaka, who visited the house, in Ju-On: The Grudge 2 Kayako hangs them both with her hair.

Yoko is killed when Kayako drags her into the attic and rips her jaw off, and then, either her possessed corpse or her Onryo kills Alex. This is a plot element that was not present in the original Ju-on: The Grudge film but was instead lifted from Ju-on: The Curse , the straight to video film that preceded the former film, where Kanna seemingly arrives back home and her mother see's her jawless ghost, who promptly kills her off-screen. The infamous bedroom scene where Kayako attacks Susan from underneath the gap of her bedsheets was inspired by the old Japanese urban legend of The Girl in the Gaps, a ghost which is said to enter our world only through small gaps in the real world.

There is a deleted scene after Toshio attacks Matthew, where Matthew becomes possessed by Takeo's ghost and kicks a visiting Susan out of the house.

Director Takashi Shimizu cut it because it took focus off Kayako, despite being present in the original film. When Susan is in the taxi, if one looks closely at one of the adverts on the back of the front passenger seat, one will notice a staring eye printed on one of them.

Later in the apartment, when Susan discovers Kayako under her covers, look closely at the wall. For a split second, you can see Susan's shadow and the shadow of Kayako, even though she isn't above the bedcovers. Takako Fuji has pyrophobia, a fear of fire, which made filming the ending rather difficult when Karen attempts to burn the house down to finally end the curse. Peter Kirk, who Kayako had an obsessive crush on in this film, is an American incarnation of Shunsuke Kobayashi, a character from Ju-on Kobayashi was a college friend of Kayako and they reunited when it turned out that he was Toshio's school teacher, and she fell in love with him again and began writing about him in her journal.

Takeo found the journal and in a fit of rage, killed Kayako and Toshio, under the deluded belief that Toshio wasn't his son. When Kobayashi investigates their home because of Toshio's repeated absences, he encounters their corpses and Kayako gives him a romantic kiss of death in this film, Peter does the same thing as well but commits suicide at his home instead after escaping the Saeki home. During these events, Takeo had killed Kobayashi's wife and unborn child, and while carrying the dead fetus in a garbage bag in the city, Kayako emerged from a nearby dumpster and promptly killed him.

In an alternative ending, after Karen is recovered from the burning Saeki home, and wheeled into an ambulance, she has another vision of the Saeki family, seeing them entering their home with Toshio's new pet cat. Toshio then looks back at Karen in the ambulance, before Kayako calls for him. This ending was scrapped because it spoiled Karen's survival of the house fire for the audience, and because the test audiences were confused and thought it was a happy ending.

Karen uses Doug's cigarette lighter to set fire at the Saeki house. When she is with Doug at the Yoyogi cemetery, explaining to him that the rising incense of the Buddhists reaches the departed spirits and relieves the troubled spirits of the living, Doug picks the lighter as she talks, a foreshadowing technique for Karen burning the house.

A common criticism of this film, comparing it to the original, is the inclusion of the jawless Yoko scene as being an example of the filmmakers making the movie gorier than the original version for the sake of gratuity.

A teacher. A doctor. A care worker. What manifestation appeared in the shower with Karen? A hand. A whole ghost. A face. What did Susan first find in her bed, that shouldn't have been there? Cell phone. A keychain. A rabbit's foot. Karen was able to stop the curse by burning the house down. What color was the cat that was usually seen with the little boy ghost?

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