Uzumaki (film)

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox film

Template:Nihongo is a 2000 Japanese supernatural horror film based on the manga of the same name by Junji Ito. The feature film directorial debut of Higuchinsky, it stars Eriko Hatsune, Fhi Fan, Hinako Saeki and Shin Eun-kyung. The film takes place in a town plagued by a mysterious curse involving spirals. As the film was produced while the manga was still being written and released, it departs from the story of the original work and features a different ending.

The film was backed by the company Omega Micott, who released it in Japan on a double bill with Tomie: Replay, another film based on a manga by Ito. Simultaneously, Uzumaki received a limited release in the American city of San Francisco. It received mixed reviews from critics.

Plot

High school student Kirie Goshima's first glimpse that something is awry in the small town of Kurouzu-cho comes when her boyfriend Shuichi Saito's father begins to film the corkscrew patterns on a snail; he is also in the process of making a video scrapbook filled with the images of anything that has a spiral or vortex shape to it. His unusual obsession causes him to abandon his responsibilities at work; he proclaims that a spiral is the highest form of art, and frantically creates whirlpools in his miso soup when he runs out of spiral-patterned kamaboko. He then decides to film himself crawling into a washing machine, where he dies.

It is not long before the entire town is infected by the otherworldly spirals. Tamura, a reporter, is intrigued by Shuichi's father's suicide and becomes obsessed with the case. Meanwhile, Shuichi's mother, who has been in hospital since her husband's death, has developed a severe phobia of spirals. She cuts off her hair and fingertips due to their spiral-like shapes, and Shuichi tells the hospital staff to eliminate anything spiral-shaped so his mother may not encounter them. One night, after a millipede tries to crawl into her ear while she is asleep, the millipede claims to be her husband and turns into a spiral, driving her to commit suicide.

Meanwhile, at Kirie's high school, a student named Katayama begins to walk at a snail's pace, dripping in a slimy substance and only attending school on rainy days. He and other members of the student body gradually begin to sprout shells, drink water in copious amounts, and crawl on the walls of the school. Kirie's classmate, Sekino, begins to grow her hair in exaggerated curls, taking over her mind and the minds of other female students. Whirl-like clouds appear in the sky, and during funerals, they are accompanied by smoky, ghost-like faces of victims who perished in spiral-related ways.

Eventually, the entire town succumbs to the curse of the spiral—Kirie's father takes a drill to his eye after obsessively creating spiral-shaped ceramics; a news crew reporting on the phenomenon lose themselves in a tunnel, only to be later found as humanoid yet snail-like corpses; and Sekino's snake-like curls grow to an abnormal height, wrapping around a telephone pole and cables electrocuting herself. A boy named Mitsuru, who is obsessed with Kirie, throws himself in front of Inspector Tamura's car and is twisted around the axle; the car collides with a pole, causing Tamura's head to hit the windshield, leaving a spiral-shaped crack. When Kirie and Shuichi decide to search for Kirie's father, Shuichi's body twists into a spiral-like contortion. He crawls towards Kirie, asking her to "become a spiral too". Refusing to let Shuichi back to his side, Kirie flees, and her fate is left unknown.

Cast

Eriko Hatsune (pictured in 2012) starred as Kirie Goshima in Uzumaki.

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Production

Development

Uzumaki is based on the manga Uzumaki, written and illustrated by Junji Ito.<ref name="ny-times-review">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Ito had stated that for most of his stories, he starts with a visual image and builds a story around the picture.Template:Sfn For Uzumaki, he had a different inspiration of wanting to make a manga about people who lived in a traditional Japanese row-house and seeing what happened.Template:Sfn When drawing the row-houses, he found himself drawing a very long house that coiled into a spiral to fit on his page.Template:Sfn

The film was the debut feature for director Akihiro Higuchi, under his alias of Higuchinsky.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While filming the television series Eko Eko Azarak, director Higuchinsky met Kengo Kaji, to whom he proposed the idea of making a film.Template:Sfn Higuchinsky stated that he originally wanted to make a film like Star Wars but realized that "because I'm Japanese, I should do something different."Template:Sfn

Higuchinsky had been reading a manga magazine compilation which contained Ito's Uzumaki.Template:Sfn Higuchinsky thought the manga was brilliant and asked Kengo Kaji to adapt the film, finding out that the manga was already in the process of being made into a film and that producers were looking for a director.Template:Sfn Higuchinsky described the lure of Uzumaki using the Japanese word kikai, which translates to "strange and mysterious things (or people)", and that "the allure of Uzumaki is not that the uzumaki itself is scary but rather the changes in the people caught up in it. "Template:Sfn The original production of the film was going to be an independent production and would be part of an anthology film, but during production, Toei Animation decided to have it become a bigger film.Template:Sfn The film was backed by Toyoyuki Yokohama's Omega Project, a company that married Japanese and foreign funding to make J-horror films for an international market.Template:Sfn The company had previously had success with the 1999 film Audition.Template:Sfn

Production

Higuchinsky desired to be faithful to the manga as possible.Template:Sfn At the time, the manga had not been completed yet.Template:Sfn To help his crew express a Japanese style in the film, he had his staff watch Akuma no temari uta.Template:Sfn The film was primarily shot in Ueda, Nagano Prefecture, with a few locations in Tokyo.Template:Sfn Higuchinsky said the film was shot in about two weeks.Template:Sfn

Promotion and release

Uzumaki was released in Japan on 11 February 2000.Template:Sfn It was released as the first half of a double bill with Tomie: Replay,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn a film based on the manga Tomie, also by Ito. The film was released concurrently in the United States as it was in Japan with a limited run in San Francisco.Template:Sfn Omega's vice-president Akiko Funatsu stated that San Francisco was chosen due to "all the internet activity there".Template:Sfn Based on grosses from Japan's nine key cities, the films opened in 14th place for the week.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

The film was shown at the 2000 Fantasia Film Festival.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Reception

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 61% based on 28 reviews, with an average rating of 6.30/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "Uzumaki uses its creepy, David Lynch-inspired atmospherics to effectively build a sense of dread, but ultimately fails to do anything with it."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On Metacritic, the film has a score of 62 out of 100 based on nine critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In his review of the film for The New York Times, critic Elvis Mitchell noted the way the film develops mood, finding it part of the cycle of Japanese films like Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Cure and Hideo Nakata's Ring as "vivid, state-of-the-art scare films that move so swiftly that psychological underpinnings are a luxury".<ref name="ny-times-review" /> Mitchell concluded that in the film that "things really get weird, though not particularly scary", calling the film "ultimately disappointing".<ref name="ny-times-review" /> VarietyTemplate:'s Dennis Harvey described the film as "intriguing, if ultimately unsatisfying", and criticized a perceived lack of atmosphere between set pieces, along with its "typically bland, schoolgirlish heroine."<ref name="variety-review" /> Kim Morgan of The Oregonian described the film as "beautiful, cold, oddly colorful and just plain otherworldly"; she wrote that it contains "many creatively terrifying and effectively gross sequences that stand on their own beautifully", but lamented that it "doesn't flow into a consistent building of terror".<ref name="oregonian">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Ross Williams of Film Threat praised the film's sound design and "cheesy, yet at the same time impressive and effective" special effects, writing: "While not as effectively creepy as The Ring, [Uzumaki] undoubtedly deserves to be watched".<ref name="filmthreat">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Scott Tobias of The A.V. Club noted the style of the film, opining that "Higuchinsky's restlessly kinetic shooting style doesn't pause for anything; like a lot of music-video and commercial directors, his achievement is better considered shot-by-shot than as a whole."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> AllMovie's Josh Ralske gave the film a score of three-and-a-half stars out of five, calling it "visually imaginative and engagingly offbeat horror film, but its willful goofiness and unresolved story line doesn't offer much in the way of psychological resonance."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Higuchinsky stated that, since the film's release, he has received fan mail from Europe, which made him particularly happy as it was his "dream to use film as a way to overcome national borders and have my movies watched by people all over the world. I think that these fans focus not on the story but on the simple images, they sense something through the visuals."Template:Sfn

See also

References

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Bibliography

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ja:うずまき (漫画)