WT

The Ring

2002 · Directed by Gore Verbinski

🧘4

Woke Score

57

Critic

🍿71

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 53 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1001 of 1469.

🎭

Representation Casting

Score: 15/100

Female lead in Naomi Watts, but predominantly white cast with no visible diversity. No apparent effort toward inclusive representation by modern standards.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or representation of any kind in the film.

👑

Feminist Agenda

Score: 20/100

Female protagonist demonstrates agency and competence, but this reflects pre-2010s mainstream cinema norms rather than modern feminist consciousness or deliberate progressive messaging.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 0/100

No racial themes, commentary, or consciousness present in the narrative. The film does not engage with racial dynamics.

🌱

Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No climate-related themes, messaging, or environmental advocacy present in this supernatural horror narrative.

💰

Eat the Rich

Score: 0/100

No critique of capitalism or 'eat the rich' messaging present. The film does not engage with economic systems or class struggle.

💗

Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

No body positivity messaging, celebration of diverse body types, or commentary on appearance standards.

🧠

Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No representation of neurodivergent characters or themes related to autism, ADHD, dyslexia, or other neurological differences.

📖

Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

No historical narrative or revisionist treatment of historical events. The film is contemporary supernatural fiction.

📢

Lecture Energy

Score: 0/100

The film does not pause to deliver moral lessons or ideological instruction. It maintains narrative momentum without preachy messaging.

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Synopsis

Journalist Rachel Keller investigates a strange videotape that may be behind the untimely deaths of four teenagers. There is an urban legend about this tape: the viewer will die seven days after watching it. Rachel tracks down the video... and watches it. Now she has just seven days to unravel the mystery of the Ring in order to save herself and her son.

Consciousness Assessment

The Ring represents a curious artifact of the pre-woke era, a film that would likely draw contemporary scrutiny for its homogeneous casting and lack of explicit social consciousness, yet which features a female protagonist of genuine agency and intelligence. Rachel Keller is a working journalist, a single mother, and the film's emotional and intellectual center. She is not rescued by a man, though one appears in a supporting capacity. This is not feminist ideology in the modern sense, however. It is simply a film in which a woman happens to be competent and central to the narrative, which was not uncommon even in 2002 mainstream cinema.

Gore Verbinski's adaptation of the Japanese source material contains no detectable progressive messaging, climate advocacy, anti-capitalist sentiment, or explicit social consciousness. The cast, while featuring Naomi Watts in the lead, is predominantly white and heterosexual, with no indication of neurodivergent representation or body positivity messaging. The narrative concerns itself entirely with the mechanics of supernatural horror rather than any social critique or cultural commentary.

What emerges from this assessment is a film fundamentally unconcerned with the markers of contemporary progressive sensibility. It is a horror film that aims to frighten, not to educate or challenge social structures. The modest woke score reflects only the presence of a capable female protagonist, a baseline that would barely register in the cultural analysis of a 2024 film.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

57%from 36 reviews
San Francisco Chronicle100

So good it's scary.

C.W. NeviusRead Full Review →
Washington Post90

The creepiest, clammiest, twitchiest squealfest in months. It offers, among its many pleasures, the happiness of safe fear.

Stephen HunterRead Full Review →
The A.V. Club80

As a marriage of big-budget filmmaking and old-fashioned scare tactics, it easily ranks alongside last year's "The Others."

Keith PhippsRead Full Review →
Chicago Reader30

It's an utter waste of Watts; there's not a trace here of the talent on display in Mulholland Drive, perhaps because the script doesn't bother to give her a character.

Jonathan RosenbaumRead Full Review →