Mai Takano (Nakatani Miki), the assistant/girlfriend of the professor and “ex” in Ringu joins with a journalist colleague of the reporter from Ringu to investigate the strange occurrences around a video tape that kills anyone who watches it seven days later. When Yoichi, the child from Ringu, starts exhibiting strange powers, Mia and a scientist
The Road Pictures
Road to Utopia (1946)
Duke and Chester (Bing Crosby, Bob Hope) find themselves in snow-covered Alaska, disguised as killers and innocently carrying a stolen treasure map. The real owner of the map, Skagway Sal (Dorothy Lamour), attempts to seduce the map from them. The local gangster, Ace Larson (Douglass Dumbrille), and the killers, Sperry and McGurk, also want the
The Road Warrior “Mad Max 2” (1981)
Loner Max travels the wastelands of post-apocalyptic Australia in his souped-up car. Finding an oil refinery defended by average people is under siege by punk marauders led by the masked Humungus (Kjell Nilsson), Max makes a deal to find them a truck to move their gasoline in exchange for as much fuel as he can
Roadside Attraction (2004) & Human (2003)
Robin Hood (1991)
Sir Robert Hode (Patrick Bergin) insults the petty Norman lord, Sir Miles Folcanet (Jürgen Prochnow), creating a rift between Robert and Baron Daguerre (Jeroen Krabbé). Robert, renamed Robin Hood, and Will Scarlett (Owen Teale) join with a band of thieves lead by Little John (David Morrissey) and they begin robbing from the rich. Meanwhile, Maid Marian (Uma
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991)
You know the story of Robin Hood. He robs from the rich and gives to the poor, etc., etc. Well, maybe you don’t know it this time. Robin (Kevin Costner) now has a Moorish sidekick, Azeem (Morgan Freeman), his father has been accused of Satanism and murdered, and Will Scarlett (Christian Slater) hates him. There’s no Prince John
Robin and Marian (1976)
After the pointless death of King Richard (Richard Harris), that culminated many pointless years of crusades, an old and tired Robin Hood (Sean Connery) and Little John return to England to find Marian (Audrey Hepburn) a nun, Friar Tuck (Ronnie Barker) and Will Scarlett (Denholm Elliott) thieves in Sherwood forest, the Sheriff (Robert Shaw) still
RoboCop (1987)
In a near-future, crime-ridden Detroit, policeman Alex Murphy (Peter Weller) is murdered by a local gang. This is perfect timing for an unprincipled, wiz-kid moving up the corporate ladder at the corrupt Omni Consumer Products Corporation, which manages the police department. He turns Murphy’s dead body into a cyborg, RoboCop. A prime example of cinematic Cyberpunk, RoboCop
RoboCop 2 (1990)
Since the events in the first film, the situation in Detroit has gotten even worse. The police are on strike, crime is everywhere, half the city is addicted to a new drug called nuke, Detroit is in default and will be taken over by OCP corporation, children beat up storeowners, and RoboCop is a scab. In
Rodan (1956)
A mine disaster releases enormous ancient insects that go on a killing spree. As the safety officer, police, and eventually the military hunt the bugs, an earthquake releases a greater foe in the form of a supersonic flying reptile. With the same director, producer, composer, and FX artist as Gojira/Godzilla, King of the Monsters, it
Rogues of Sherwood Forest (1950)
King John (George Macready) is once again up to his old tricks of excessive taxation and oppression. He has hired five thousand Flemish mercenaries to roll back the rights given by Richard the Lionheart (remember, this is fiction) and regain absolute control for the monarchy, and now he has to find a way to pay