๐ Anime Review โข Horror โข Black & White
Uzumaki
ใใใพใ โข Hiroshi Nagahama โข Production I.G / Williams Street โข 4 Episodes
A black-and-white spiral nightmare with a gorgeous start, strong atmosphere, and a frustrating drop in consistency.
Synopsis
Uzumaki follows high-school student Kirie Goshima, her boyfriend Shuichi Saito, and the citizens of Kurouzu-cho, a small Japanese town engulfed by supernatural events involving spirals. As the curse spreads, people become obsessed with or paranoid about spiral patterns, and the town descends into grotesque body horror, environmental distortion, and total psychological collapse.
The spiral curse twists bodies into monsters, turns pregnant women into mosquito-like predators, raises the dead, mutates citizens into snails, and transforms the town itself through whirlwinds, whirlpools, spiral smoke, warped vegetation, and a burning lighthouse. Eventually, time, space, architecture, and the townspeople themselves become part of one endless spiral cycle.
Quick Info
My Review
I would have to say that I am a very big Junji Ito fan. From Tomie to The Whispering Woman to so many other stories of the macabre, I went into this adaptation really wanting it to succeed. I actually think the choice to make it a 4 episode anime was good in theory because the story is short enough to work in a tighter format, and because it is so short I felt like they had enough time to make the animation more consistent and way more detailed.
The first episode was very crisp. The animation looked sharp, the visuals were stylish, and a lot of those scenes were clearly the ones used to sell the anime in the trailers. That first impression really made it feel like this was finally going to be one of the Junji Ito adaptations that got it right.
At the same time, the fact that Max was involved and that it ended up airing through Adult Swim made the final result even more disappointing. Sadly this is also not surprising, because Junji Ito is no stranger to getting poorly animated adaptations. A lot of his work has been turned into something that feels way more like a glitchy slideshow than a fully realized horror anime.
I am very satisfied with certain episodes and scenes, especially Shuichiโs father and the spiral obsession, the smoke in the sky, and the scar chapter for Azami. But the most disappointing part is when the shift happens. After Azamiโs episode it goes downhill, and that says a lot when the whole anime is only four episodes long.
Overall, it is not awful because at least we got animation for such a great book and there are still moments that genuinely hit. But it did fall short compared to the level of care and polish other anime get from other companies. Like Ninja Kamui, Uzumaki ended up feeling like another example of Max trying to make money off anime without really succeeding at retaining anime fans. If anything, projects like these make people more skeptical about future anime from them.
Production Notes
The anime was announced at Crunchyroll Expo in 2019 and delayed multiple times before finally premiering in late 2024. Junji Ito praised the staff for recreating the manga in black and white out of respect for the original and also described Hiroshi Nagahama as talented. The series was produced entirely in monochrome, which is honestly one of its strongest artistic choices.
Behind the scenes, the credits and production involvement shifted over time, and the later episodes reflected that instability. That inconsistency is part of why the adaptation feels so uneven even when the concept and atmosphere are strong.
Main Cast
JP: Uki Satake โข EN: Abby Trott
JP: Shin-ichiro Miki โข EN: Robbie Daymond
JP: Toshio Furukawa โข EN: Doug Stone
JP: Shino Kakinuma โข EN: Dorothy Elias-Fahn
JP: Yuko Sanpei โข EN: Laura Stahl
JP: Takashi Matsuyama โข EN: Aaron LaPlante
JP: Mika Doi โข EN: Mona Marshall
JP: Mariya Ise โข EN: Cristina Vee
JP: Katsutoshi Matsuzaki โข EN: Max Mittelman
JP: Wataru Hatano โข EN: Kaiji Tang
JP: Tatsumaru Tachibana โข EN: Sean Chiplock
JP: Koichi Tochika โข EN: Jonah Scott
JP: Ami Fukushima โข EN: Erica Mendez
JP: Yuto Uemura โข EN: Khoi Dao
JP: Satomi Hanamura โข EN: Brianna Knickerbocker
JP: Kappei Yamaguchi โข EN: Erik Scott Kimerer
JP: Yoko Hikasa โข EN: Jenny Yokobori
JP: Shiori Koshikawa โข EN: Amber Lee Connors
JP: Yuji Ueda โข EN: Stephen Fu
JP: Sumi Shimamoto โข EN: Larissa Gallagher
JP: Ai Kobayashi โข EN: Courtney Lin
JP: Satoshi Mikami โข EN: Patrick Seitz
JP: Yuto Nakano โข EN: Kirk Thornton
JP: Yukito Soma โข EN: Brent Mukai
Episode Guide
Episode 1
Shuichi warns Kirie that his father has become dangerously obsessed with spirals. Kirie witnesses Toshioโs descent into madness, Azamiโs scar begins to reveal its horrifying nature, and the episode builds toward one of the strongest openings in the series with cremation smoke, obsession, and Azamiโs spiral vortex consuming her.
Episode 2
The curse escalates through snail transformations, twisted lovers, hair battles, jealousy, and the lighthouse sequence. This episode throws multiple classic Uzumaki arcs into the mix, including some of the strangest and most surreal body horror in the adaptation.
Episode 3
Hospital horror takes over with mosquitoes, pregnant women, newborn body horror, and Keikoโs terrifying storyline. The episode also continues Yasuoโs pottery obsession and adds typhoon chaos, spikes, and more escalating collapse throughout Kurouzu-cho.
Episode 4
Multiple typhoons, rowhouse labyrinths, snail people, failed escape attempts, the spiral staircase, the ancient underground city, and Kirie and Shuichiโs final acceptance of the eternal curse all bring the adaptation to its bleak conclusion. A post-credits scene hints at the curse beginning again when the town is rebuilt.
Gallery
The black-and-white look is still one of the animeโs strongest choices and the thing that makes it feel the most faithful to the manga.
Spoiler Thoughts
The story gets increasingly hopeless as Kurouzu-cho collapses into a spiral labyrinth and time itself starts behaving differently. Shuichi and Kirieโs final descent into the ancient spiral city keeps the core tragedy of the manga intact: the curse is not just local superstition, it is ancient, sentient, and eternal.
By the end, the two of them do not defeat the spiral. They accept it. Their bodies twist together, the city rises, and the cycle prepares to repeat. That final idea โ that the curse freezes at the center and will return whenever the town is rebuilt โ is one of the bleakest and coolest parts of the whole story.
Watch / Buy
If you want to watch the anime or check the official page, here are the direct links:
This series was also later announced for Netflix streaming in Asia by the end of 2024.
All images, character art, screenshots, logos, and promotional materials featured in this review belong to their respective owners. I do not claim ownership of any third-party visuals used.
Content is shared for commentary, review, and informational purposes only. No copyright infringement is intended. If you are a rights holder and would like something removed, please contact me and I will take it down.
All reviews on Blush & Pixels are written by the Blush & Pixels Founder and Editor. Each review reflects my personal experience with the title and is created with time, care, and thoughtful consideration.
My goal is to be honest and fair while keeping things respectful. Any criticism is directed at the work itself and is never meant to be rude, hateful, or personal toward creators, staff, or fans.
Please do not repost my written review text without permission. If you would like to reference something, linking back is always appreciated.
๐ Character Spotlight Recommendation
Want to dive deeper into one of Uzumakiโs most disturbing characters? Azami Kurotaniโs spiral transformation is one of the most iconic moments.
Read Azami Spotlight โ๐ Thanks for reading! ๐
If you enjoyed this review, donโt forget to check out more otome game content on the site!
๐ธ View All Otome Reviews ๐ธFollow for more otome, manhwa, manga, anime, and gaming updates โจ