Inspired by a legend about Charlemagne, the ring is rooted in the magic-realism of European story-telling tradition.  Highly theatrical, the film unites striking visuals and mesmerizing music with unique silent acting.  It tells the story of an aging king, disillusioned with worldly affairs, who falls under the spell of a magical ring.  Like a fairytale, it has an eerie, magical quality, emphasised by the unique style of acting, visuals and music.  The theatrical quality of the film is created with the non-verbal acting style, the extensive costumes, the expressionistic make-up and the surrealistic set.  
 
Drawn together by the creative vision of director Tamás Wormser, the film is an amalgam of many artistic efforts.  The cast of the ring, made up of professional and amateur actors, dancers and performers, participated in a series of innovative acting workshops through which the unique acting style of the film evolved.
 
The creation of the ring was also a collaboration of other media artists.  Amongst them was art director Pierre Lefebvre, who built the sets from "post-industrial artefacts" in an old mill in rural Quebec.  A multi-disciplinary collage-artist, from photo-montage to sound and optical sculptures, Lefebvre also included props for the film from his enormous collection of hybrid post-industrial artefacts.  The furniture, such as the thrones and the bed was made by Tibor Timár, a sculptor and furniture-maker.  He worked with drift-wood and scrap metal pieces, which he welded together to create the ornate pieces.  Ivan Gekoff, the Bulgarian-born director of photography, was given the near-impossible task of capturing the surrealistic images on film.   The original soundtrack of this "silent film" was composed by Ganesh Anandan whose music crosses the musical boundaries of classical Indian and "new music".  Often using his own hand-built instruments, he combined his expertise in micro-tonal music with extended voice techniques of harmonic and throat singing to create the exceptional music style of the ring.
 
the ring
Based on a true legend...

PRESS QUOTES:

“Surreal jewelry. Wormser's 50-minute epic based on an actual legend, is certainly ambitious. A sprawling cast populates a bizarre mediaeval world, and Wormser and cast and crew went to great lengths to create an "entirely fictional culture."
Matthew Hayes, Mirror

http://www.montrealmirror.com/ARCHIVES/1998/120398/film1.htmlshapeimage_3_link_0
S'inspirant d'une légende à propos de Charlemagne, la bague prend sa source dans le "surréalisme magique" de la tradition narrative européenne.  Hautement théâtral, ce film unit des images étonnantes, une trame sonore envoûtante et un style de jeu muet unique.   En quête d'un sens à donner à sa vie, un vieux roi désabué tombe sous le charme d'une bague magique.
Cast
 
King: Gilles Pelletier
 
Archbishop: Attila Bertalan
 
Queen: Mélanie St-Onge
 
 Fou: Don Reider
 
Dancer: Sheila Ribeiro
 
Little girl: Adèle Cote
 
Water Fairy: Doris Pók
 
Ministers: Julien Bouchard Adams
Cid Leslie Dixon, Luigi Rantucci
Septimiu Sever, Martin Stone
 
Soldiers:  Antonio Muggeo, Joseph Muggeo
Jimmy Fachetty, Gilles Martin, Patrick Marziali
 
Servants:
Marie-Lynda Bilodeau, Isabelle Gingras
Ana Kramar, Alexandra Anolesco
Rachel Robicheaud
Crew

Writer, Director, Editor, Producer: Tamás Wormser

Director of Photography: Ivan Gekoff

Art Director: Pierre Lefebvre

Composer, sound design: Ganesh Anandan

Ass’t Director and Production Manager: Charles Faubert and Audrez Beuzet

Costumes: Nathalie Paule Dumas

Make-up: Julie Chabot

Hair: Marc Mayrand

Furniture: Tibor Timár

Sound editor: Scott Lutes

Sound Engineer: Dino Giancola
Broadcast History
Bravo!
 
the King
Gilles Pelletier
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
with his wife
 
 
 
 
                                      with the Archbishop
(Attila Bertalan)