The Ring (1998) and this film were released in Japan at the same time. The studio hoped this would increase revenues, because the Ring story was already a successful novel and television series. The two films shared a few cast members and had the same production team, but different directors and screenwriters; The Spiral (1998) was written and directed by Jôji Iida whereas Ring was written by Hiroshi Takahashi and directed by Hideo Nakata. After their release, Ring became an enormous success while Rasen floundered, quickly becoming the "forgotten sequel".
Sadako 3D (2012) and Sadako 3D 2 (2013) are sequels to The Spiral (1998), based on Kôji Suzuki's 2012 follow-up novel S. This creates a branched off continuity with the franchise.
After this film's failure, Hiroshi Takahashi and Hideo Nakata were later recruited to produce another sequel, Ring 2 (1999), which replaced The Spiral (1998) as the sequel to The Ring (1998), not based on Kôji Suzuki's works, and thus ultimately ignores the story of Rasen.
The author of the book, Kôji Suzuki, makes an appearance as the smiling father with his family in the fairground train.
With the exception of Hiroyuki Sanada and Miki Nakatani, many of the original cast from The Ring (1998) actually refused to take part in The Spiral (1998).