Manga Written and illustrated by
Junji Ito,
Uzumaki was
serialized in
Shogakukan's
manga magazine
Big Comic Spirits from January 19, 1998, to August 30, 1999. Shogakukan compiled the chapters into three
bound volumes and published them from August 29, 1998, Shogakukan released another omnibus edition on August 30, 2010, with the same content and additional commentary from Masaru Sato. In North America,
Viz Media serialized an English-language translation of the series in its monthly magazine
Pulp from the February 2001 issue to the August 2002 issue. It published volumes of the series from October 2001 to October 2002. The series has also been translated into other languages, such as Spanish, French,
Brazilian Portuguese, Polish, Swedish, Mandarin, Korean, and
Serbian.
Video games Two video games were developed and published by Omega Micott for the
Bandai WonderSwan. The first, , was released on February 3, 2000, and is a
visual novel retelling the events of the manga. Kirie Goshima's actor,
Eriko Hatsune makes a special appearance. The second game, titled , was released on March 4, 2000, and is a
simulation game. Players are tasked by the to spread the spiral curse. The objective is to spread the curse across the town and find hidden objects to gain more "Spiral Power" and progress the story. The title also includes a
mini-game involving one of the snail-human hybrids.
Live-action film On February 11, 2000, a live-action adaptation of
Uzumaki was released in Japan. Directed by
Higuchinsky, it featured
Eriko Hatsune as Kirie Goshima,
Shin Eun-kyung as Chie Maruyama, Fhi Fan as Shuichi Saito,
Keiko Takahashi as Yukie Saito,
Ren Osugi as Toshio Saito, and
Hinako Saeki as Kyoko Sekino. The film consists of four parts ("A Premonition", "Erosion", "Visitation", and "Transmigration"), and as a result of being produced before the manga's conclusion, uses a different ending than the manga.
Anime At 2019's
Crunchyroll Expo, a 4-episode
anime television miniseries adaptation was announced. The miniseries is co-produced by
Production I.G USA and
Adult Swim's in-house production arm
Williams Street. The anime is directed by
Hiroshi Nagahama, with
Colin Stetson composing the music. It premiered on Adult Swim's
Toonami programming block before its Japanese premiere. This is the fourth time that
Cartoon Network, as an entire network, was directly involved in the production of a Japanese anime, with
The Big O II,
IGPX (both the 2005 micro-series and 2006 anime), and the
FLCL sequels, all receiving some form of animated production that was backed by the network. Creative director Jason DeMarco stated that as of March 25, 2020, production was still in progress, and that the
COVID-19 pandemic had no effect on production. In an interview with Ito, he speaks of Hiroshi Nagahama in respect calling him "quite talented". He also said that being faithful to his original manga made him "quite happy". Ito confirmed that the screenplay of the series was finished since he checked. He said "Four episodes are way shorter than the original manga. They did a good job of rearranging the series. For example, someone who dies early on now plays an important role later on. They did a fantastic job of crafting things together like that. The screenwriter is a very talented individual." The anime is produced entirely in black and white. On June 10, 2020, the anime's official Twitter account presented some pictures of storyboards. On July 22, 2020, the official Twitter announced the Japanese voice cast. On July 26, 2020, Adult Swim reran the same teaser trailer during its Adult Swim Con and presented an interview with series director Nagahama. In addition to this, it was confirmed that the series was being moved back a year from its originally planned 2020 release. On July 29, 2020, the Japanese voice cast officially started recording. A second teaser video was posted on June 15, 2021, with comments from director Hiroshi Nagahama describing how the pandemic forced the team to "restructure" their plan for the anime from scratch. The video also confirmed that the anime would be delayed again to October 2022. In June 2022,
Corus Entertainment confirmed through a press release that the series would also be broadcast on
Adult Swim in Canada. Later that same month, the anime was once again delayed indefinitely at the request of the production staff. In 2023,
Ari Aster and
Lars Knudsen's company Square Peg was revealed to be involved with producing the series. On July 22, 2023, during Adult Swim's "Toonami on the Green" panel at
San Diego Comic-Con, the network debuted a new clip from the series. Despite it not unveiling any release timeframe at the end, Jason DeMarco later stated on Twitter that the series would premiere later in 2023, although that did not happen. The series premiered in Japanese with English subtitles on September 29, 2024, and its English dub premiered on October 4 of the same year.
Netflix announced on October 25, 2024, that the series is set to be streamed on the platform in Asia by the end of the year. The series was originally announced as being animated by
Drive by producer Maki-Terashima Furuta. The second and third episodes were credited as being produced at Akatsuki; however, Nagahama was only credited for the storyboards, with
Yuji Moriyama credited as director in his place. The fourth and final episode credits neither Nagahama nor Moriyama as director, and omits the title entirely. == Reception ==