Uzumaki (film)
Uzumaki | |
---|---|
Directed by | Higuchinsky |
Produced by |
Sumiji Miyake Dai Miyazaki |
Written by |
Takao Nitta Chika Yasuo Kengo Kaji (supervising screenwriter) |
Based on | Uzumaki by Junji Ito |
Starring |
Eriko Hatsune Fhi Fan Hinako Saeki Shin Eun-kyung |
Music by |
Tetsuro Kashibuchi Keiichi Suzuki |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Lighthouse Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Budget | $1 million |
Uzumaki (うずまき, "Spiral") is a Japanese horror film directed by Higuchinsky.[1] Uzumaki, released in 2000, is based on Junji Ito's episodic manga of the same name.
The plot concerns a town infected with malevolent spirals. This abstract concept manifests in grotesque ways, such as a teenager's long hair beginning to curl and take over her mind, or a corpse wound around itself.
Among many bizarre features of the film is a heavy treatment with green colour filters, aping the style of the colour plates in the manga, and the fact that the trailer for the film is a pastiche of Jean-Luc Godard's seminal trailer for À bout de souffle (1960).
The movie covers some of the notable stories from the manga, with varying degrees of faithfulness. The movie and the manga have different endings because the movie was filmed before the manga had finished.
Its theme song was "Raven" by the band Do As Infinity, which was on their "Yesterday & Today" single.
Also in 2000, Higuchinsky adapted Junji's Nagai Yume ("Long Dream") for Japanese television.
Plot
Consisting of four parts ("A Premonition", "Erosion", "Visitation", and "Transmigration"), the film uses a different ending than the manga, as a result of the film's being produced before the manga's conclusion.[2] High school student Kirie's first glimpse that something is awry in the small town of Kurouzu comes when the father of her boyfriend (Shuichi) begins to film the corkscrew patterns on a snail; he is also in the process of making a video scrap book filled with the images of anything that has a spiral or vortex shape to it. His weird obsession threatens to go out of control. 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 becomes one with Uzumaki when he decides to crawl into a washing machine to get a 'point-of-view' shot for his film.
It is not long before the entire town is infected by the otherworldly whirls. Tamura, a reporter, is intrigued by Shuichi's dad's suicide and becomes obsessed with the case. Meanwhile, Kirie's high school is populated by a host of twitching teachers, preening pretty girls, and the slimy Katayama, who begins to walk at a snail's pace and only comes to school when it rains. Making matters worse, the student body is starting to sprout shells, drink water in copious amounts, and crawl on the walls of the school. Sekino, Kirie's classmate, begins to grow her hair in medusa-like curls that eventually take over not only her mind but the minds of all the girls in the school (save for Kirie). Meanwhile, in the hospital, Shuichi's mother, who was hospitalized after her husband's death, cuts off her hair and fingertips in order to get rid of anything spiral-shaped on her body, and grows so afraid of spirals that Shuichi is forced to tell the hospital to eliminate anything spiral-shaped so his mother may not encounter them (even going so far as to throwing away the cakes that Kirie had brought for her mother, since the frosting on the cakes were like whirls). Eventually Shuichi's mother succumbs to her phobia and kills herself when a millipede tries to crawl into her ear to inhabit her cochlea and causes her to hallucinate about her husband, who tells her that "there's another vortex in the deepest part of your ear". It is not long before even the sky itself is cursed, with whirl-like clouds and the eerily smoky, ghost-like faces of the victims who perished in the grip of Uzumaki appearing during funerals.
Soon everyone in Kurouzu has been caught in the curse of the vortex—Kirie's dad, who takes a drill to his eye after obsessively creating spiral shaped ceramics; the reporter who gives a special report on the horrors of the town and her crew, all of whom lose themselves in a tunnel only for their corpses to be found as snail-people; Sekino, whose body has been devoured by the snake-like curls; Kirie's stalker, who throws himself in front of Inspector Tamura's car and is twisted around the axle, the impact by Tamura's head leaving a spiral crack in the windshield; a police officer, who while he was admiring the spiral rifling in the barrel of his gun, shot himself in the eye, leaving a spiral hole in his head; and even Shuichi himself, whose body twists into a spiral and becomes possessed by it. Only Kirie is left in the cursed town of Kurouzu, and in the end her final fate is whether or not she lives or dies.
Cast
- Eriko Hatsune as Kirie Goshima
- Fhi Fan as Shuichi Saito
- Keiko Takahashi as Yukie Saito
- Ren Osugi as Toshio Saito
- Shin Eun-kyung as Chie Maruyama
- Hinako Saeki as Kyoko Sekino.
- Denden as Officer Futada
- Masami Horiuchi as Reporter Ichiro Tamura
- Taro Suwa as Yasuo Goshima
- Toru Tezuka as Yokota Ikuo
- Sadao Abe as Mitsuru Yamaguchi
- Asumi Miwa as Shiho Ishikawa
Promotion and release
Uzumaki was released in Japan in February 11, 2000. For the US release, the film premiered on April 2000 in San Francisco at the Four Star theater. In Singapore, the film was released in the Cathay Cineleisure Orchard and Causeway Point theater from January 2, 2003 to January 30, 2003.
Reception
The film received a 54 percent approval rating on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, with the general consensus that "Uzumaki uses its creepy, David Lynch-inspired atmospherics to effectively build a sense of dread, but ultimately fails to do anything with it."[3]
References
- ↑ Mitchell, Elvis (2002-05-01). "Movie Review – Uzumaki – Film Review". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
- ↑ Thompson, Jason. "Reviews – Uzumaki Manga-Movie Comparison: Autopsy of an Adaptation". Jpopcinema. pp. 1–3. Archived from the original on 2002-08-16. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
- ↑ "Uzumaki". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2014-04-21.