Uzumaki うずまき • Junji Ito
A chilling horror manga where spirals infect a town, its people, and eventually reality itself.
Plot Summary
Uzumaki follows high-school student Kirie Goshima, her boyfriend Shuichi Saito, and the residents of Kurouzu-cho, a quiet Japanese town overtaken by supernatural events involving spirals. As the story progresses, the spiral curse infects the citizens psychologically and physically, causing obsessions, paranoia, grotesque transformations, and eventually total collapse of the town itself. Smoke, weather, architecture, whirlpools, row houses, and even time begin bending around the curse until everything leads back to an ancient spiral city beneath Kurouzu-cho.
What makes the plot so memorable is that it keeps escalating. It starts with strange behavior and personal obsessions, then grows into full body horror, environmental horror, and cosmic inevitability. By the end, the spiral is revealed as something eternal, with Kirie and Shuichi trapped in a cycle that will repeat again when a new town is built over the old one.
Quick Info
Review
Uzumaki is a chilling horror manga that explores the concept of spirals and the nightmarish effects they have on the residents of the small Japanese town of Kurouzu-Cho.
Ito’s art is phenomenal and while I had some issues with the story and characters, I am sure I will never forget this book. One of the biggest things that impressed me is how many sub-genres of horror Ito fits into one story. There is body horror, cosmic horror, supernatural horror, paranormal horror, and even that eerie liminal feeling that comes from watching a normal town become completely wrong.
From the very first page, Ito pulls the reader in with hauntingly beautiful art and meticulously drawn panels. The spirals are both mesmerizing and terrifying, and the characters’ expressions are so detailed that you can feel their fear and anxiety radiating off the page. The stark black-and-white style only adds to the eerie atmosphere and makes the slow descent into madness even more disturbing.
I also love how the story is divided into chapters, each focusing on a different form of spiral horror. From snail shells to whirlpools to hair to storms to scars, Ito keeps finding new ways to make the same motif feel fresh, cursed, and deeply unsettling.
The main strength of Uzumaki lies in its themes and art. The pacing is slow but deliberate, which gives the tension room to build and makes the dread feel heavier with every chapter. There were multiple times where I had to stop and just stare at panels in disbelief because the imagery was that macabre.
One weakness for me is the characterization. The manga is full of interesting and memorable people, but many of them feel more like vehicles for the horror concept of each chapter than fully developed individuals. Even so, the themes and atmosphere are so strong that it never stopped me from being completely engaged.
What Works
- Phenomenal black-and-white artwork
- Creative use of spirals in every kind of horror
- Strong atmosphere and slow-building dread
- One of Junji Ito’s most memorable concepts
Weaknesses
- Some characters feel more symbolic than deeply developed
- The story prioritizes atmosphere over realism
- Emotional attachment can feel secondary to the concept
Important Characters
Main protagonist trying to survive the spiral curse as her town falls apart around her.
Kirie’s boyfriend and one of the first people to understand that the spiral curse is real and dangerous.
Kirie’s father, whose pottery obsession becomes one of the manga’s early spiral horrors.
Kirie’s mother, caught in the worsening disaster surrounding the family.
Kirie’s younger brother, affected by the strange events that consume the town.
Shuichi’s father and one of the earliest victims of spiral obsession.
Shuichi’s mother, deeply traumatized by the spiral phenomena after her husband’s death.
A transfer student whose spiral scar becomes one of the manga’s most iconic and disturbing transformations.
A classmate tied to one of the earliest grotesque spiral body horror moments.
A boy manipulated by Azami during her descent into full spiral horror.
One of the students pulled into the town’s stranger spiral transformations.
A teacher affected by the curse.
Kirie’s cousin and part of one of the manga’s most disturbing pregnancy/body horror arcs.
A jealous classmate caught up in one of the hair-related spiral conflicts.
A pair whose romance becomes twisted through spiral obsession.
A class clown whose fate turns into one of the manga’s eerie recurring images.
An outsider who appears later as the town grows even more dangerous.
Another later victim tied to one of the increasingly grotesque transformations.
The true antagonist: an ancient, recurring force beneath Kurouzu-cho that infects bodies, minds, and the town itself.
Standout Horror Elements
The horror in Uzumaki never stays in one lane. Ito moves from personal obsession to social panic to full environmental collapse. You get contorted bodies, pregnant women behaving like mosquitoes, snail mutations, spiral hair, lighthouse horror, typhoons, labyrinthine row houses, and an ancient underground city made entirely of spirals. That range is part of what makes the manga feel so rich and terrifying. :contentReference
Azami’s scar chapter is still one of the most iconic parts of the whole manga. It takes beauty, rumor, attraction, and rejection and twists all of it into something horrifying. That chapter alone shows how good Junji Ito is at turning ordinary human emotions into nightmare fuel.
Gallery
Final Verdict
Uzumaki is one of those stories that feels bigger than its plot because the imagery, themes, and atmosphere are so strong. Even with weaker characterization in some areas, Junji Ito creates an unforgettable reading experience that lingers long after the final page. It is disturbing, clever, creative, and easily one of the most iconic horror manga out there.
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