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Ryuji Takayama (高山 竜司, Takayama Ryūji) is a major character in the series, first appearing in Ring. In Ring, Ryūji Takayama is a strange man with a dark sense of humor, who as such claims to be an occasional rapist and seems to fear nothing. As soon as Asakawa explains the story, Ryuji believes him, and wants nothing other than to see ...
Cram-school math instructor Seiji Kashiwada is a creation of the supercomputer LOOP, and the biological information implanted in him reflects the lives of Ryuji Takayama, who appeared in both Ring and Loop, and Kaoru Futami, who appeared in the latter volume; but due to a system error, portions of his memory have become lost.
Ryuji Takayama: Asakawa's friend whom he enlists to help him solve the riddle of the tape. He was a doctor but later became a philosophy professor of a famous university due to the time the story occurred.
Further into his research, Takanori realizes that he has met Kashiwada, known as Ryuji Takayama, years ago. Considering the physical similarities of Kashiwada's victims, Kihara theorizes that they were all clones of Sadako Yamamura, the originator of the ring virus. Kashiwada might be hunting Sadako clones and Akane is also a Sadako clone ...
Sanada brings gravity to the film as the clairvoyant Ryuji Takayama, who tries to break the curse. Shop Now Shop Now. See the original post on Youtube. Royal Warriors.
"Ryuji Takayama Dies" - March 18, 1999 "The Curse Was Not Lifted. The Thirteenth Day, a New Dead Person Destroys the World" - March 25, 1999; References
Ryuji Takane (高嶺 竜児), the main character of the manga and anime series Ring ni Kakero; Ryuji Takasu (高須 竜児), one of the main characters in the anime and light novel series Toradora! Ryuji Takayama (高山 竜司), a central character in the Ringu Trilogy; Ryuji Toramaru (虎丸 龍次), a character in the manga series Sakigake ...
Ring (Japanese: リング, romanized: Ringu), also known as The Ring, is a media franchise, based on the novel series of the same name written by Koji Suzuki.The franchise includes eight Japanese films, two television series, eight manga adaptations, three English-language American film remakes, a Korean film remake, and two video games: The Ring: Terror's Realm and Ring: Infinity (both 2000).