The Grudge 2 is the 2006 sequel to the 2004 American horror film
remake The Grudge. The Grudge 2 is the second
film in Sony's The Grudge
series and is directed by Takashi Shimizu (director of the original series)[3] and written by Stephen Susco.[4] The film is produced by Sam
Raimi and stars Sarah Michelle Gellar, Amber Tamblyn, Arielle Kebbel, Jenna
Dewan, and Edison Chen. As stated by Takashi Shimizu the film is not a
remake of Ju-on: The Grudge 2 and does follow
a different storyline.[5]
The film is rated PG-13 by the MPAA, M by the OFLC and 15 by the BBFC for its content of mature thematic material, disturbing
images/terror/violence, and some sensuality.[6] The
film was released in North America on October
13[7] after being pushed forward a week from the
original October 20 release date.[8][9]
The film was released in United Kingdom on October 20
and in Australia on October 26, 2006.[10]
Taglines: What Was Once Contained, Will Now Be Unleashed
What Began With One....Will End With Many.
Synopsis
The Grudge
In The Grudge, Kayako Saeki (Takako Fuji) was a young Japanese woman who developed an unhealthy obsession with an American professor
working in Japan. She chronicled her obsession in her diary, which was found by her husband Takeo (Takashi Matsuyama). Takeo then broke his wife's neck and
drowned their son Toshio (Yuya Ozeki) in the bathtub along with their cat. He placed his wife
in an upstairs closet, before hanging himself. Kayako's vengeful spirit haunted the house, using Toshio and their cat to
terrorize and ultimately destroy anyone who came into contact with them, except for a young American social worker named Karen
Davis (Sarah Michelle Gellar). The Grudge 2 finds Karen in a hospital after
attempting to burn down the house following the death of her boyfriend. The movie encompasses three stories following the lives
of Karen's sister Aubrey, three schoolgirls living in Japan, and a family living in Chicago in different time periods.
Aubrey Davis
Aubrey Davis (Amber Tamblyn) arrives home in Pasadena, California, where she learns from her ill mother
(Joanna Cassidy) that her sister Karen (Sarah
Michelle Gellar) has been in an accident in Japan. Despite a strained relationship, Aubrey is forced to fly to Tokyo to
help her sister, where she meets a reporter named Eason (Edison Chen). Aubrey is led to
Karen's room, where Karen begs for her freedom. She is then strapped to her bed, and the doctors tell Aubrey she can't see her
sister again until tomorrow. Outside the room, Eason confronts Aubrey in the waiting room, wanting to know if he can speak with
Karen because he wants to write a story on her.. Meanwhile, in Karen's room, the lights begin to flicker as Karen tries to break
free of the restraints. Kayako rises behind her just as she breaks free. The guards hear this and unlock the door, letting Karen
escape into the hallway. She runs past a group of nurses, where Kayako is standing behind them. She finds herself at a dead end
and turns to see the lights at the end of the hallway slowly blinking out as Kayako comes toward her. Karen manages to make it
into a staircase and onto the roof. She backs up to the edge of the roof, as Kayako appears behind her and grabs her. As Aubrey
and Eason are exiting the hospital, Karen falls to her death on the cement in front of them. Aubrey collapses, stunned, while
Eason sees Kayako holding onto Karen's body.
Aubrey sleeps at her sister's old apartment, after she finds herself unable to tell her mother about her sister's death. Eason
is watching a video, where he interviews Detective Nakagawa, when he hears a noise in the background. He slows the video down and
turns up the volume, going frame by frame, when he sees Kayako looking in on Nakagawa in the background. The death rattle grows
louder, forcing him to shut off the video, at which point he sees Kayako behind him in the reflection of the television. However,
when he turns around Kayako is not there. He goes to Aubrey, who was told by the police that Eason is the one that pulled her
sister from the burning house, and tells her of Karen's story and how he is experiencing the same things. They go to the Saeki
house and Eason tells Aubrey to wait outside. While inside, Eason finds Kayako's diary, while outside Aubrey sees Kayako in the
window. She goes to run in when she hears Karen's voice telling her to stay out of the house. Suddenly, a hand grabs her and
pulls her in. After he reads Kayako's diary, the two go to Eason's friend's apartment, who is an expert on Japanese folklore, and
decide to find Kayako's mother after being told that she was an "exorcist" of evil spirits who used her daughter as a "vessel" to
trap the spirits. As Aubrey sleeps, Eason develops pictures of the Saeki house when suddenly the ink expands into the dish,
making Kayako rise from it and attack Eason. Aubrey awakens the next morning and finds Eason's body in the room. She goes to pull
him out when the body turns into Kayako. She jumps back and runs out of the room, all of the pictures hanging around the room
show Kayako, staring at her.
Aubrey is haunted by Toshio, who plays peek-a-boo with an old man on a bus, as she travels to find Kayako's mother. She
discovers Kayako's mother is an exorcist, who would feed the freed evil to her then young daughter. After Kayako appears and
kills her mother, Kayako's first victim that hasn't been infected by the curse and so seems to be killed for personal reasons,
Aubrey calls her own mother in Pasadena and tells her of Karen's death. She returns to the house, in an attempt to find what
Kayako really wants. After seeing an image of Karen from the past climbing the stairs, she follows only to be dragged into a
residual haunting, another side of the curse, watching Takeo reading Kayako's journal.
Takeo suddenly lurches towards her, as Aubrey attempts to escape. She trips, breaking her ankle, and falls onto the stairs. Takeo
follows her down the stairs, as she crawls desperately down them. As the house's curse obviously has grown strong enough to tear
down the barrier between the residual haunting and the physical world, he grabs her and breaks her neck, just as he did to
Kayako. As Aubrey tries to breathe, she is only able to make the same death rattle noise that Kayako is always forced to make. As
Takeo kills his son and his cat, Kayako materializes in an unhurt, human form and watches Aubrey die after experiencing the same
pain, rage and suffering Kayako went through when she herself died. Blood drips down her face, coming from her eyes and mouth and
it shows a flash back of Kayako dying in the same way, with blood in the same spots.
The schoolgirls
Allison (Arielle Kebbel) is a new student at the international high school in Tokyo,
and there she meets students Vanessa (Teresa Palmer) and Miyuki (Misako Uno). They take Allison to the Saeki house in order to play a prank on her. The girls convince her to
enter the closet Toshio's body was stored in, and force the door closed. After Allison screams, the other girls try to open the
door but can't, and Allison is unable to exit the closet until she sees Toshio and what appears to be Kayako.
Later, Allison is in class when she feels Toshio's cat brushing between her legs. She then senses human hands on her thighs.
Pushing her supplies forward on her desk, she peers under her desk to find Toshio curled in a ball at her feet. As she jumps up,
she realizes that he is not there, causing her to be embarrassed in front of her fellow classmates. As she sits down, she notices
Toshio's cat proceeding to Miyuki's desk, and the two exchange nervous glances.
After they return to school, all three girls deal with hauntings from Toshio, the cat, and Kayako. After taking a shower in
which Kayako haunts Vanessa in a fashion similar to the somewhat iconic scene in The Grudge, Vanessa then sees a ghostly
image in the locker room. Miyuki leaves school for an afternoon rendezvous with her boyfriend Michael (Shaun Sipos) at a love
hotel. While Michael is in the shower, Miyuki feels something grabbing her beneath the covers. She smiles and laughs, thinking it
is Michael who has shortly left the shower. When she looks towards the bathroom, she sees that Michael has returned to the
shower, meaning that something else is beneath the covers. Miyuki looks under the cover to see Toshio staring at her, and backs
away toward the mirror behind her. Suddenly, Kayako emerges from the mirror and grabs Miyuki, pulling her within the mirror.
Vanessa and Allison are later interviewed by Principal Dale (Eve Gordon) over the events surrounding Miyuki's disappearance and
their trip to the haunted house. Allison is overcome and leaves followed by the principal, while Vanessa attempts to text Miyuki.
Hauntings by Toshio and the cat drive her from the school and into a phone booth, where she is consumed and killed by Kayako.
Allison is again called to the principal office, where she reveals her belief that she and anyone who enters the Saeki house
have been cursed. Principal Dale reveals that she went to the house, as ghostly versions of Miyuki and Vanessa appear. Principal
Dale then turns into a ghost as well and advances on Allison. Allison, completely horrified, runs out of the room screaming.
Chicago
In Chicago, Bill (Christopher Cousins) has recently married Trish (Jennifer Beals), and is moving into the apartment he shares with his daughter Lacey (Sarah Roemer) and son Jake (Matthew Knight). While Lacey and her friend
Sally (Jenna Dewan) are friendly with Trish, Jake is distant. The young boy is troubled when
the child of his neighbors, the Flemings, moves back in after going insane. At night, he is awakened by a series of loud
knockings from the Flemings apartment. Curious, he follows one of the apartments tenants and sees the person, who is wearing a
sweatshirt, getting old newspapers from the trash. When the person turns around to leave, Jake hides behind an object. He then
notices two pairs of feet following the person out the basement. Jake looks out, only to see that there is no one behind the
person. After Bill leaves for work, Jake and Lacey leave for school, and Jake notices that all of the windows in the Flemming's
apartment are covered with newspaper. Bill, doubting his wife's fidelity, returns home unexpectedly, under the pretense of having
forgotten his keys, only to find Trish on the phone with a coworker she identifies as Nate. It is revealed, that Bill is
squeezing his keys so hard that they cut his hands, though Trish doesn't notice.
After school, Lacey decides to show off her cheerleader outfit to Sally, who appears ill. Sally drinks then regurgitates milk.
Lacey returns home to find Jake shivering in his closet, afraid because Trish and Bill have been fighting. Jake is again awakened
by pounding on the walls, and upon investigation discovers his sweatshirt wearing neighbor is a young woman, who is banging her
arm on the wall as she furiously cuts her own hair. After seeing the ghostly eyes of Vanessa and Miyuki staring in the window,
Jake returns home and spends the night with his sister. That night Toshio appears by Sally's bed as she dies after a too large
intake of milk.
The next morning, after Trish listens to the banging from next door, she begins to make breakfast in a trance. Bill, all this
time having been influenced by the spirit of Takeo, accuses her of having an affair, but she does not respond. After Bill
criticizes her for burning the bacon, Trish pours the oil from the pan onto his head before killing him with a blow to the head.
Lacey and Jake return home to a dark and messy apartment, while the banging from next door continues. As his sister looks for a
flashlight, Jake discovers his father's body. Searching for Lacey, Jake finds that she has been drowned in the tub. As he hears
Trish calling his name, Jake attempts to revive his sister. An already dead Trish rises from the tub, telling him it's time for
his bath, before Kayako pulls her under the water.
Jake flees his apartment as he hears screams from the Flemings' apartment. The girl in the sweatshirt turns out to be Allison,
haunted by Vanessa and Miyuki, from the school in Tokyo. Through a series of flashbacks, it is learned that the ghost Allison saw
in the house was actually the spirit of Aubrey Davis. Jake accuses her of bringing something back with her, and she confirms that
"they" have followed her to Chicago. Allison sees Kayako climbing down the hallway stairs, and Jake shortly after sees Toshio
inside the hood of Allison's sweat shirt. Kayako's hands emerge from the hood and pull Allison into her clothing, her body
disappearing into it. Jake reaches for the sweatshirt as a ghostly hand grasps his arm; Kayako then rises from the hood and
lurches towards him as the movie ends.
Deaths (in order of appearance)
| Character |
Killer |
| Bill |
Trish (possessed by Curse) |
| Karen |
Kayako |
| Miyuki |
Kayako |
| Vanessa |
Kayako |
| Eason |
Kayako |
| Jess |
Kayako |
| Sally |
Toshio (she was possessed by Curse) |
| Sam |
Kayako |
| Principal Dale |
Unknown |
| Kayako's mother |
Kayako |
| Lacey |
unknown |
| Trish |
Toshio |
| Aubrey |
Takeo |
| Allison |
Kayako |
| Jake (undetermined) |
Kayako |
Chronology
The Grudge 2 does not follow a linear time line, as events taking place at different times are interspersed between
each other.
Deleted scenes
The names of the deleted scenes are taken from the DVD's 'Special Feature' section.
- When Closet Door Opens: After Allison was freed from the closet, she finds herself with Eason, who seems somewhat
surprised upon seeing her in the closet. Two years earlier, when Eason first entered the house, he found the closet after hearing
noises from it. The closet was sealed in tapes, and when he removed them, finds Allison in the closet, completely surprised of
seeing her. Revealing they are both in a time-loop inside the house within two years period. This would make the chronology of
the storyline more complicated and would remove the fact of having three different time periods.
- Itako's Film: When Aubrey and Eason are at Itako's apartment, they were watching a documentary film of Japanese
exorcisms.
- The Passport: After being terrorized by the ghostly Principal Dale, Miyuki, and Vanessa, Allison ran back to her
apartment to pack her belongings and grabbed her passport, trying to get back to Chicago.
- Aubrey's Dream: On the bus, Aubrey was dreaming of having a loving relationship with her mother. However, the dream
slowly deteriorate into a nightmare, and her mother coughs up a gland and forces Audrey to ingest it, much like when Kayako's
mother would force her to swallow evil spirits when she was a girl. Aubrey then woke up, finding on old man playing peek-a-boo
with no one.
- Alternate Ending & Epilogue: After Jake finds his family dead, he runs to neighbors apartment. On arrival he finds
his neighbors dead. Jake finds Allison, and instead of Kayako's hand appearing and pulling Allison into her clothing subsequently
having Allison's body disappear, she crawled from the apartment's stairs and chases Allison and Jake. Parts of this scene were
used in the official trailer for the film.
In the epilogue Karen's and Aubrey's mother received a delivery from Japan, a box full of Karen's belonging and Kayoko's
journal. When Mrs. Davis takes a look at it, she finds some black hairs are attached to the page of it. She drops the journal,
and when she picks it up again, finds an eye moving on it. She soon coughs up a decapitated, ghostly head which is wrapped in
black hair. This kills Mrs. Davis, detaching her jaw from her head, and her face is similar to Yoko's jawless face in the first
film.
Cast
Characters
-
Production
The Grudge 2 was announced 3 days after the release of The Grudge in
2004[11] and was
officially fasttracked[12][13] after a positive box office response with
the film grossing $110,175,871.[14] In early January 2005
Takashi Shimizu suggested ideas regarding the film's plot. Ideas included the origin of
the curse and new character subplots.[15]
The film was later placed into production hell for almost a year until December
2005, where the first few cast (Sarah Michelle Gellar and Teresa Palmer) members were cast. Other production details were also revealed including the original
scheduled date for principal photography which was due to begin January 30, 2006 but was
postponed until February.[16] Principal photography for The Grudge 2 was
held at Toho Studios[17] in
Tokyo, Japan and production wrapped up on April 25, 2006. During an interview on Dread Central with Amber Tamblyn,
it was reported that sets were created in Chicago, Illinois[18] for Tamblyn to re-shoot several scenes.[19]
Production history
- October 24, 2004 - The film was green lit by Sony Pictures after The Grudge had a positive box office response in North America.
- December 4, 2005 - Several details emerged online with
film production set to begin on January 30,
2006.
- December 5, 2005 - It was confirmed that Sarah Michelle Gellar will return to play role of Karen Davis.
- January 24, 2006 - It was confirmed that Amber Tamblyn would be the lead, playing the Karen's sister Aubrey Davis.
- February 10, 2006 - Several more cast members were added
including Jennifer Beals, Arielle Kebbel and
Teresa Palmer.
- March 13, 2006 - Matthew Knight and Shaun Sipos were added into the cast.
- March 22, 2006 - Eve
Gordon, Edison Chen, Takako Fuji,
Ryo Ishibashi and Misako Uno were added into the
cast.
- April 1, 2006 - The teaser site went online and the release
date was set for October 13, 2006.
- April 16, 2006 - Sarah Michelle Gellar filmed her role on the
53rd day out of a 64 day shoot.
- April 25, 2006 - The film finished production and entered
post-production.
- May 15, 2006 - The first pictures from the movie went onto the
internet.
- May 31, 2006 - The teaser poster was released.
- July 24, 2006 - The trailer was previewed at Comic Con
06.
- August 1, 2006 - Trailer hits the net.[20]
- September 18, 2006 - The full website was available to
the public.
Director Takashi Shimizu stated in an
interview with Sci Fi Wire: For The Grudge 2, I was going for this mystery that was
never there in The Grudge, and I think that's going to fulfill the audience. ... There's a
secret about Kayako's childhood life, so that's part of the big mystery. And the other mystery is, this grudge will never stop,
and it's going to ... spread. And how is it going to get spread? That's another mystery." [21]
He also stated that: "The Grudge was a complete remake of Ju-on, meaning the storyline was very similar. Basically, it's the same. But Grudge 2 is actually different from
Ju-on 2, and I don't think I would have accepted this job if it was going to be the same
storyline. And because it was a different story, you know, my motivation was a bit higher, and I actually enjoy doing this."
[22]
Promotion
Teaser Site
On April 1, 2006 a teaser
site was launched with details revealing the October 13
release date. Many Database forum sites such as
IMDB were swamped with claims that Sony was playing an April Fool's joke. A few days
later, the site's authenticity was proven, and claims that it was a hoax were dismissed.
Missing Person File: Jason C
To promote the film, Sony released a missing persons file on its official blog[23] stating a student filmmaker known as "Jason C" disappeared a few weeks after
visiting the set of the film. The blog originally broadcast interviews with the film's stars including Sarah Michelle Gellar and Amber Tamblyn but has been taken
over by his roommate who filed the report.[24]
Short films
On September 19, 2006 Yahoo! Movies was the first site to release three short films titled
"Tales from the Grudge" with an introduction from one of the producers of The Grudge Sam Raimi. The series of short expands on the story of The Grudge curse.[25] The shorts also appear on the film's official site Sony Pictures Entertainment, here
fans who volunteer their mobile phone number, will get surprise calls from Kayako or Toshio. The films are also available on
other film and horror related web sites as part of a wide reaching and unique digital
marketing strategy.[26]
The shorts were directed by Toby Wilkins Official Site, IMDb page, and
Written by Ben Ketai.
Tales from The Grudge
These short films are also available in the DVD's "Special Feature' section. There is an introduction by Sam Raimi.
- Part 1: - is the first in the series of shorts. It introduces Ross (played by Daniel Sykes) as he wakes
up in a Tokyo hotel room and coughs up quantities of Kayako's black hair (a possible reference to The Ring). He wakes from this nightmare to the sound of his
mobile phone he answers to his girlfriend's voice, Abby (played by Stefanie Butler)
who is safe at home in the US. Ross explains that his attempts to investigate the house and the woman with long black
hair have lead to a dead end. When the phone call ends, we stay with Ross as he takes a photo of himself with his mobile
phone. He does not notice as Kayako passes by behind him at the precise moment he takes the shot. He then sends the picture to
Abby. Ross then goes to brush his teeth and finds black hair in his toothbrush before being grabbed through the mirror by
Kayako.
- Part 2: - is the second short film in which we follow the story of Abby as she ends the phone call from the
first short. Abby then proceeds to call her friend, Brooke (played by Ginny Weirick) to ask about plans that evening. When
the call ends, Abby receives a photo message from her boyfriend Ross (from
the first short). When Abby looks closer at the image, she sees that Kayako is in the hotel room with Ross. Abby attempts to call
her boyfriend and warn him, but she only hears Kayako and then it hangs up. Abby looks over at the girl that was sitting beside
her to see Kayako.
- Part 3: - is the third short film that overlaps during the events in School. The film opens with Brooke
(as introduced in the second short) receiving a phone call from Abby. As the call ends, Brooke agrees to play hide and seek with the child, Josh, who she is babysitting and
chooses a walk-in closet as her hiding place. Brooke soon finds herself trapped and is dragged violently into the
underworld by Kayako. Josh then gets up and says "Come out, come out,
wherever you are." before Brooke's cellphone begins ringing.
Release
Premiere
The Grudge 2 premiered at Knott's Berry
Farm in Buena Park, California on October 8, 2006. During the premiere, the
theme park was open to the public and featured a Grudge 2 maze as part of its 2006
Halloween Haunt.[27]
Reception
The film was one of three films not shown to film critics on the release date (others
included The Marine and One Night With The
King).[28] It received generally negative reviews
from critics, with a freshness rating of 11% on Rotten Tomatoes (7 out of 59
reviews counted fresh).[29]
The film has received a weighted average[30] rating of 4.6/10 at the Internet Movie
Database.[31] The
film has received criticisms from several critics regarding a poor plot. Keith Phipps from
The A.V. Club stated, "While The Grudge 2 deserves some credit for creating and
sustaining a creepy atmosphere, it doesn't matter much when the plot doesn't go
anywhere".[32] Pete Vonder Haar from
Film Threat stated, "The same problems that plagued the original are on display here.
Most notably, the lack of any coherent plot".[33]
Paul Debrudge from Variety stated, "The Story is incidental, as auds merely
anticipate the scares".[34] Tim Goernert from
Joblo stated, "For the most part, I found it really hard to follow the story as well, as
there were three of them happening at the same time".[35]
The film has also been criticised as being eye candy. Terry Lawson from
Detroit Free Press stated, "The Grudge 2 is just a mélange of images, some mildly disturbing, but mostly just variations on a theme".[36] The film has generated "generally negative reviews" with an
average score of 34/100 on Metacritic and 4.2/10 from members.[37] Also, an 0/5 from The New York Post.
Box office
The film opened in 3,211 theatres and was expected to generate $27 Million on the October 13 - 15th weekend[38] but generated $10,018,039 on its opening day[39] and $20.8 million on its opening weekend. The film showed
exceptionally poor staying power and earned $39.1 million in North America making it the first ever film to open over $20 million
yet gross less than 50% of its earnings after opening weekend. It goes without saying that it also easily set the record for
lowest gross of a $20 million opener. It earned an additional $30 million internationally.[40] The movie made 70 million world wide.
Sequel
-
During post-production on the film, Takashi
Shimizu discussed ideas of creating another sequel, "During the script meeting, Our ideas didn't go anywhere good, and
we couldn't come up with anything interesting to stop the curse, so if that's the case, I would rather just go for something that
could never be stopped. But who knows, maybe something can be stopped in The Grudge 3.[41] During Comic Con 06,
Sony officially announced plans of creating the sequel.[42] Takashi Shimizu stated he has offered to direct the sequel but
would rather produce the film instead.[43]
Release information
The following is a list of the films release dates worldwide.
DVD
The Grudge 2 was released on DVD and UMD video for the
PlayStation Portable on February 6,
2007. Both are available in a rated and unrated director's cut format. The unrated format is 6 minutes
longer than the rated version.
Both DVD formats include the following extras:
- Tales from The Grudge
- Cast & Crew reel change montage
- Four Featurettes:
- Holding a Grudge: Kayako & Toshio
- East meets west
- Grudge 2 Storyline Development
- Ready when you are: Mr. Shimizu
- Deleted Scenes
A Blu-ray version of the movie was supposed to be released the same day as the DVD, but
was cancelled. Then in 2007 when The Messengers was released on Blu-ray, it features a
trailer for The Grudge 2 coming to Blu-ray. As of now it is TBA.
Trivia
| Country |
Date |
| Netherlands |
October 13, 2006 |
| Canada |
October 13, 2006 |
| USA |
October 13, 2006 |
| Malaysia |
October 13, 2006 |
| United Kingdom |
October 20, 2006 |
| Philippines |
October 22, 2006 |
| Australia |
October 26, 2006 |
| Germany |
October 26, 2006 |
| Brazil |
October 27, 2006 |
| Sweden |
October 27, 2006 |
| India |
July 20, 2007 |
| Finland |
November 3, 2006 |
| Croatia |
December 07, 2006 |
| France |
December 27, 2006 |
|
|
|
Trivia sections are discouraged under
Wikipedia guidelines.
The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The old man playing peek-a-boo with Toshio is featured in many Japanese horror films including the original
Grudge(Ju-on)
- Toshio isn't portrayed by Yuya Ozeki, the actor from Ju-on 1 and 2 (theater versions),
instead he is portrayed by a newcomer Oga Tanaka, due to the fact that Ozeki had aged
considerably since the last film. They gave him credit for being in some scenes and flashbacks.
- The scene where Vanessa's friend Miyuki is pulled through the mirror in the love motel is a possible reference to the manga
series 'Miyuki-chan in Wonderland', a spin-off of some of Lewis Carol's books.
- A poster of the Vancouver band The Manvils, can be seen displayed on the wall of the
teenagers room in the movie.
- In the scene with were Vanessa cowers under the desk while her phone is ringing, after she stands up and answers the phone
and hears the death rattle, she throws the phone onto the ground. There is a brief moment
where the camera shows the phone on the floor. The phones display is illuminated even though the battery cover and battery have
detached from the back of the phone. This scene occurs at 1:00:11.
- The role of Vanessa, now played by Teresa Palmer was originally written for
Vanessa Lengies, who eventually turned it down to film My Suicide; the part still
bears her name.[44]
- Actresses Sarah Michelle Gellar and Amber
Tamblyn previously worked together on an episode of Buffy the
Vampire Slayer titled "All the Way". While the two were sisters
in the film, in the episode Tamblyn played the friend of Gellar's character's
sister.[45]
- Kayako's makeup took 2 hours to apply before filming.[46]
- Writer Stephen Susco claims that the movie went through 5-6 versions of the script. Sarah Michelle Gellar's role was the hardest. In one version, she's in almost every scene. In
another, she's in about half of the film. In one, she's only in a couple scenes; and in one, she's not in the story at all.
Because the circumstances of the production kept changing, the role of Karen Davis was mutable through much of the development
process.
References
- ^ Box Office Mojo (October 5, 2006). Grudge 2 runtime. Box Office
Mojo. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Box Office Mojo (October 16, 2006). Grudge 2 production budget. Box
Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ IMDB (October 5, 2006). Grudge 2 directed by original Ju-on director. IMDB. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Counting Down (October 5, 2006). Sony hires original Grudge
screenwriter. Counting Down. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Sci Fi (September 10, 2006). Grudge 2 not a
remake. Sci Fi. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) (October 6th 2006). Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ IMDB (September 10, 2006). North American Release Date. IMDB.
Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ House of Horrors (October 5, 2006). Original release
date. House of Horrors. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ The Grudge 2 Move.Com (October 6, 2006). Previous Release Date.
The Grudge 2 Move.Com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ IMDB (September 10, 2006). Australian Release. IMDB. Retrieved
on 2006-09-10.
- ^ IMDB (September 10, 2006). Grudge 2 announced 3 days after the release of The Grudge. IMDB. Retrieved on
2006-09-10.
- ^ The Grudge 2 Move.Com (October 6, 2006). Grudge 2 fasttracked.
The Grudge 2 Move.Com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ The Grudge 2 Move.Com (October 6, 2006). Sequel officially
announced. The Grudge 2 Move.Com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ IMDB (October 6, 2006). Box office gross for The Grudge.
IMDB. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ IMDB (September 10, 2006). Plot details discussed. IMDB.
Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ IMDB (October 5, 2006). Grudge 2 begins productiong in February.
IMDB. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Horror.com (October 6, 2006). Filming at Toho Studios.
Horror.com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ IMDB (October 5, 2006). Grudge 2 re-shoots in Chicago.
IMDB. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Dread Central (September 10, 2006). Grudge 2 will
reshoot. Dread Central. Retrieved on 2006-08-17.
- ^ Movies @ AOL (September 10, 2006). Trailer goes online.
AOL. Retrieved on 2006-08-01.
- ^ Sci Fi (September 10, 2006). Director discusses Grudge
2. Sci Fi. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ Sci Fi (September 10, 2006). Director discusses Grudge
2. Sci Fi. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ Official Blog (September 10, 2006). Missing Person File for Jason C.
Sony. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ Coming Soon (September 10, 2006). Details regarding Jason C.
Coming Soon. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ Yahoo Movies (September 20, 2006). Yahoo Movies screening 3 short films.
Yahoo Movies. Retrieved on 2006-09-10.
- ^ Counting Down (October 5, 2006). Films designed as a
marketing strategy. Counting Down. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ The Grudge 2 Movie.Com (July 24, 2006). Premiere of The Grudge 2
announced. The Grudge 2 Movie.Com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ Rotten Tomatoes (October 13, 2006). Grudge 2 not screened for
critics. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ Rotten Tomatoes (October 13, 2006). Freshness count. Rotten Tomatoes.
Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ IMDB's weighted average and rating system
explained.
- ^ [1] at IMDB, including breakdown by
ages, sex, nationality etc.
- ^ A.V. Club (October 13, 2006). A.V. Club review. A.V. Club. Retrieved
on 2006-10-13.
- ^ Film Threat (October 13, 2006). Film Threat review.
Film Threat. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ Variety (October 13, 2006). Variety review.
Variety. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ JoBlo review (October 13, 2006). JoBlo review. JoBlo review. Retrieved on
2006-10-13.
- ^ Detroit Free Press (October 13, 2006). Detroit Free
Press review. Detroit Free press review. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ Metacritic (October 14, 2006). Metacritic score. Metacritic.
Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Rotten Tomatoes (October 13, 2006). Grudge 2 expected to gross $
27 Million. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2006-10-13.
- ^ Box Office Mojo (October 14, 2006). Opening Box Office figures. Box
Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Box Office Mojo (2006). The Grudge 2. Box
Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2007-03-13.
- ^ Coming Soon (October 5, 2006). Grudge 3 ideas. Coming
Soon. Retrieved on 2006-10-05.
- ^ Bloody Disgusting (July 25, 2006). Grudge 3
announced. Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved on 2006-07-25.
- ^ Movie Hole (July 24, 2006). Takashi
Shimizu talks about The Grudge 3. Movie Hole. Retrieved on 2006-10-03.
- ^ IMDB (September 29, 2006). Role of Vanessa written for Vanessa Lengies.
IMDB. Retrieved on 2006-10-29.
- ^ The Grudge 2 Movie.com (October 6, 2006). Gellar and Tamblyn both
starred in Buffy episode. The Grudge 2 Movie.Com. Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
- ^ Horror.com (October 6, 2006). Kayako's makeup. Horror.com.
Retrieved on 2006-10-06.
External links
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