Uzumaki’s Body Horror Isn’t Even the Scariest Thing About It

As a seasoned connoisseur of the macabre and the bizarre, I must say that “Uzumaki” has left me utterly spellbound. Having traversed the labyrinthine realms of Lovecraftian horror and delved into the psychedelic terrors of David Lynch’s surreal landscapes, I can confidently assert that this anime series stands shoulder to shoulder with the greats.


Spoilers follow for all four episodes of Uzumaki, which concluded its season on Adult Swim on October 19 and is available to stream on Max. 

In the disturbingly disquieting world of Uzumaki, bodies undergo transformations that defy all logic and reason. Skins become adorned with intricate nautilus shell patterns, limbs stretch into wriggling lengths of flesh, mouths sprout additional teeth, eyes darken into swirling abysses, and spines appear to dissolve, allowing individuals to twist, contort, and coil themselves into unrecognizable shapes. Trying to understand this curse, Doctor Odyssey, or even attempting to administer Substance, Elisabeth Sparkle, is a futile endeavor. This Halloween season, Uzumaki offers the ultimate body-horror experience!

In a span of five years, the collaboration between Adult Swim and Production I.G brought forth a four-episode series titled “Uzumaki: Spiral Into Horror“, an adaptation of Junji Ito’s horror manga. This was premiered on Adult Swim on September 28, over 25 years after the original three-volume run ended. The title “Uzumaki” means “swirl”, and the story unfolds in the small village of Kurouzu, which translates to “black vortex”. This name fittingly describes the terrifying state that envelops the town and turns its inhabitants into countless victims. The narrator and protagonist Kirie notices an abrupt appearance of spirals everywhere: clouds blotting out the sun, storms tearing through streets, whirlpools forming in bodies of water, plants twisting into complex patterns. After establishing themselves in nature, these symbols begin to infect the town’s residents, transforming them into grotesque embodiments of this cosmic terror. The father of Kirie’s boyfriend, Shuichi, is the first victim: He becomes so consumed by his obsession with the spiral that he distorts his body to mimic it, shattering all his bones, contorting his face into a hideous scream, and leaving his lifeless body in the family home for Shuichi and his mother to discover.

In a unique blend of horror and psychological suspense, the anime “Uzumaki” presents its chilling debut image, which is certainly one of the most unsettling, yet it faces strong contenders. Each episode meticulously chronicles another stage of the town’s deterioration as fear grips the residents, causing them to distrust each other, while Kirie and Shuichi struggle against what he calls “the spiral curse.” Although the animation quality dips slightly after the premiere, with its dark, swirling blacks, undulating backdrops, and 3-D depth giving way to a more sketchy and sparse look (particularly in the second episode), the series compensates for this decline by staying true to Ito’s original work – terrifying, grotesque, hideous, bizarre, and spot-on faithful. “Uzumaki” never wavers from its central concept that the human body is a pliable, spongy entity capable of absorbing both kindness, empathy, and positive energy, as well as malice, cruelty, and violence. This world harbors forces intent on crushing resistance, individuality, and love, and their depravity can be literal, transformative, and inexplicable. Lovers of Lovecraft, gather!

Uzumaki’s Body Horror Isn’t Even the Scariest Thing About It
Uzumaki’s Body Horror Isn’t Even the Scariest Thing About It
Uzumaki’s Body Horror Isn’t Even the Scariest Thing About It
Uzumaki’s Body Horror Isn’t Even the Scariest Thing About It

In the captivating series Uzumaki, the narrative unfolds at an astonishing pace, continually introducing fresh, chilling manifestations of its central theme with each episode; every half-hour contains enough bizarre occurrences drawn from Ito’s original manga that even David Lynch would be taken aback. The curse is spread throughout the town by Shuichi’s deceased father, and as his corpse is cremated, we witness his soul transform into a colossal black smoke spirit looming in the sky, its gaping maw attempting to swallow all of Kurouzu. A girl infatuated with Shuichi metamorphoses into a spiral in an effort to entice him; the vortex within her body pulls her limb by limb until she vanishes completely. Two of Kirie’s classmates, who don’t want to be apart, see a mating pair of snakes and will themselves to imitate them, their bodies elongating and merging into a single braided rope of living tissue. Women become pregnant with swarms of mosquitoes and use power drills to bore holes into human men, drinking their blood. Once the babies are born, they continuously regenerate their placentas, growing massive mushroom caps adorned with spirals from their abdomens. Shuichi’s mother, who envisions her late husband as a centipede trying to burrow into her spiral-shaped cochlea, stabs a pair of scissors into her ear.

In this monochrome world, the intense contrast adds a heavy sense of seriousness. The crimson stains on the women’s lips appear more profane, while the smoke from each cremation is made all the more ominous. Even seemingly trivial events carry weight, such as Kirie’s hair mysteriously transforming into sentient curls that defy brushing. When another girl forces her hair to grow similarly, a fight ensues, with their hair attacking and strangling each other. The violence could be comical if it weren’t so reminiscent of an alien clinging, and Uzumaki skillfully maintains this delicate balance between humor and horror. What initially appears cute or odd soon serves as another example of human tribalism, demonstrating how easily people can succumb to their most primitive urges.

It’s no surprise that a tormented teenager transforms into a massive snail, and the residents of Kurouzu view their once familiar faces as nothing but flesh. Unsurprisingly, the undamaged rowhouses are swarmed by survivors, and these occupants are far from hospitable to newcomers seeking refuge. As expected, Kirie and Shuichi’s love becomes tainted, offering no salvation when they descend into an otherworldly realm beneath their village, discovering that Kurouzu’s curse is old, its land doomed, and its destiny unavoidable. A post-credits scene set many years later, featuring a revived Kurouzu and a new teenage couple questioning the village’s obsession with spirals, underscores the unsettling “time repeats itself” theme of the series, serving as an ominous extension of all the preceding bodily horrors. Uzumaki subtly illustrates how we are all ensnared in cycles of destruction and how it may feel instinctive for freedom and individuality to be swept away by the tide of collective despondency. The final message of Uzumaki about human behavior is more terrifying than its body horror, and its pervasive nihilism is even harder to escape.

Read More

2024-10-22 22:54