Samara Morgan
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The Ring character | ||
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Samara Morgan | ||
Gender: | Female | |
Appearances: | The Ring, The Ring Two, The Ring 3 | |
Family: | Evelyn (Mother), Anna Morgan (Adoptive mother), Richard Morgan (Adoptive father) | |
Homes: | Washington, Moesko Island, Saint Mary Magdalen Women's Shelter | |
Status: | Deceased |
Samara Morgan is a character in the 2002 movie, The Ring. She is loosely based on Sadako Yamamura from the original Japanese Ringu series, who at her turn was inspired by the traditional onryō.
A viral marketing campaign before the release of the film implied that she had been a real person (see below). Samara Morgan has a very strong cult following among fans.[citation needed]
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[edit] Character outline
Samara Morgan was born to a single mother, identified only as Evelyn, at Saint Mary Magdalen Women's Shelter in Washington state. Evelyn was aware early on that Samara was no ordinary baby, as she had been born mentally unstable and would never sleep, but only complained if she was near water. Evelyn tried to drown Samara in a decorative pool at the shelter, later claiming that Samara telepathically told her to drown her. After that, shelter administrators put Samara up for adoption, and Evelyn was sent to a psychiatric hospital.
Samara was adopted by horse ranchers Richard and Anna Morgan from Moesko Island, who had tried and failed to have a child of her own. Soon after, Anna began to go insane, disturbed by horrifying visions Samara was somehow feeding into her mind. Shortly afterward, Samara was placed in a psychiatric hospital, where medical studies showed the girl possessed a rare psychic ability known as projected thermography, allowing her to psychically "burn" images from her mind onto surfaces, or even into the minds of others. She never slept and was completely insensitive to pain. She also apparently didn't know how to control her abilities. Eventually, she was released from the hospital at Richard's request (despite doctors' objections) and subsequently forced to live in the barn in the hope that the distance would alleviate Anna's visions. The visions continued, however, and most of the horses living in the barn also went insane, driving themselves off a cliff to be away from Samara. Unable to deal with the continuing torment, Anna murdered Samara (likely encouraged by Richard). She suffocated her with a black garbage bag before dropping her into a watery grave at the bottom of a well on remote, mountainous land the Morgans owned and later sold. Samara survived the suffocation attempt and the fall however, and lived in the well for seven days, tearing her own fingernails off trying to get out by climbing up the sides. The only visible light came from the edge of the well covering, forming a faint ring. Anna committed suicide soon thereafter by jumping off a nearby cliff on the Washington coastline.
However, Samara's spirit lived on. Eventually a camping resort was built on the site, with a log cabin built over the well. Samara's spirit created a curse in the form of a blank, home-made VHS tape, which contained a series of grainy, disturbing black and white images that were inspired by her life and death. Those who watched the tape would immediately receive a phone call; when they answered they would hear Samara whisper "Seven days." After seven days they would die. After journalist Rachel Keller's niece fell victim to the curse, she investigated and discovered the tape and its origins.
Towards the end of the first film, Rachel discovered Samara's corpse at the bottom of the well and gave her a proper burial, presumably putting her spirit to rest. Samara was not appeased, however, and killed the last person to have watched the tape -- Rachel's ex-boyfriend, Noah. The way in which people die from watching the tape was revealed. Samara's body, a waterlogged corpse, passed into the real world from the video as it played on the VCR, and passed upon them, paralyzing them with fear. While it was apparent that people died of fear at the idea that the television would come on and show the deaths, this aspect is new, and was is the fear of Samara coming to them in person which killed them, possibly in combination with something she does (this is still not shown). Rachel and her son Aidan realized that the only way to escape the curse was to copy the tape and show it to someone else.
In The Ring Two, Rachel found out Samara's true origin. Samara's spirit then tried to possess Aidan but was thwarted in the end. When Rachel managed to get her out of her son, she returned again, pulling Rachel through her television down into the well seen on the video. Rachel managed to climb out of the well, pushing the cover over Samara. Rachel would have been dragged down, but was saved when part of the wall broke off, the water sending Samara and delaying her enough. The second time she still nearly managed to escape, as she climbed with increased speed. Whether or not she will get out remains to be seen, in the third film.
[edit] Portrayals
In The Ring, Samara is played by Daveigh Chase. Archival footage of Chase was also used in The Ring Two. For the remaining scenes in Ring Two, Samara is played by Kelly Stables.
The depiction of Samara Morgan in "The Ring" followed very closely that of Sadako Yamamura in the 1998 film. Both intermittently retain the grainy black-and-white texture of the cursed videotape even after they have entered the "real world", and both are seen manifesting only from a TV set. Samara appears to lack Sadako's power of "blacking out" her image from footage taken before her death, presumably because this would have made the hospital footage of her impossible.
The Samara of the "The Ring Two" has a more conventionally undead appearance, with make-up on her arms suggesting long immersion. She frequently appears without the flickering videotape texture, and in a much more varied range of situations. Her movements are faster and semi-bestial, and she seems to be associated more with water and less with electricity.
[edit] Continuity errors concerning her origin
It is interesting to note that, while Noah is looking through Samara's files in the first film, a Certificate of Live Birth citing Richard as the father can briefly be seen.[1] Also, it is mentioned that Anna was able to give birth to Samara with assistance from a New Age/Eastern medicine. It's possible that the continuity could be accurate if these were forged documents, or if the story about her real mother trying to kill her was fabricated.
[edit] See Also
- The Ring
- The Ring Two
- The Ring 3
- List of Characters in The Ring
- Anna Morgan
- Richard Morgan (The Ring)
- Scary Movie 3
[edit] Viral marketing
- Two websites, www.morganranch.com and www.themorganranch.com, were supposedly operated by B. Brooks, a niece of Anna Morgan, and were part of a viral marketing campaign to promote the film. They have since been discontinued, though they were briefly resurrected for marketing The Ring Two.
- www.she-is-here.com is a website where people share their unexplainable experiences with the cursed videotape. Originally created by DreamWorks, the site is now run by fans of the franchise.
[edit] References
Novels: Ring • Spiral • Loop • The Birthday
Japanese Films: Ring 0: Birthday • Ring • Ring 2 • Rasen
American Films: The Ring • Rings • The Ring Two • The Ring 3
Korean Films: The Ring Virus
Curses: Samara Morgan • Sadako Yamamura • Eun-Suh Park • The Video • Towel-Headed Man
Other topics: Anna Morgan • Richard Morgan • Moesko Island Lighthouse • Hideo Nakata • She Is Here • Koji Suzuki • Terror's Realm
Iconic Horror Characters in Cinema | |
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Classic: | Creature from the Black Lagoon | Count Dracula | The Fly | Frankenstein's monster | The Invisible Man | The Mummy | Count Orlok | The Phantom | The Wolf Man |
Modern: | The Alien | Norman Bates | Chucky | Ghostface | Jigsaw |The Fisherman| Freddy Krueger | Leatherface | Hannibal Lecter | The Living Dead | Regan MacNeil | Michael Myers | Pinhead | Kayako Saeki | Damien Thorn | Jason Voorhees | Samara Morgan/Sadako Yamamura |