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Exploring the Visceral Horrors of the Legendary Junji Ito

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Junji Ito is a name that’s been popping up with increasing regularity lately. Alexandre Aja will be adapting Ito’s Tomie manga series for Quibi, Toonami announced an Uzumaki anime for 2020, and the prolific manga artist even made a sly cameo in Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding video game. For horror comic and manga fans, Ito is a name that’s been familiar for a while; he’s been delivering distinct and unsettling horror manga for decades. Because he’s on the cusp of reaching a much larger horror audience, it’s time to delve into the visceral horror of Junji Ito.

Think of this as a primer to his unique horror aesthetic; one that’s not so easily adaptable.

Ito’s first published work was Tomie, a manga series that ran from 1987-2000. The collection of stories center around the eponymous Tomie, a beautiful girl who enchants those she meets and drives them insane with jealousy; jealousy that crescendos in violence and drives the people who fall in love with her to homicide. Inevitably, the violence turns on Tomie, but she’s unable to die. Whether it’s disfigurement, maiming, or even death, Tomie’s flesh can regenerate and repair itself. Her beauty is her weapon, a tool she wields to get people to do her bidding, and yet it’s also ultimately her downfall. Power always comes at a price.

This long-running manga series inspired a film series spanning nine entries and an anthology TV series to date, making it one of the most recognizable works of Ito.

The other most well-known of his works, of course, is Uzumaki. Translated as “spiral,” this 1998-1999 manga series tells of the citizens of a small town coping with a supernatural curse centered around spirals. In Ito’s hands, a silly concept on paper becomes downright unsettling. Spirals infect the suburb like a plague, spreading and growing to the point of distorting the citizens’ minds and bodies. Something that starts so innocuous slowly builds to an oppressive force, a perversion of the ordinary rendered bone-chilling in Ito’s hands.

Ito’s tales of terror become something else entirely thanks to his exceptional artistic aesthetic. A casual image search of his works makes it easy to see why Ito has left such an indelible mark on the world of horror comics/manga. Stark black and white art with minimal shading- at least for the human characters- and bold strokes and line work creates drama. Ito’s art is densely intricate and detailed, and he typically uses shading to create texture, namely for the horror and gore elements. That his horror tends to lean heavily into body horror and the surreal makes his bold style all the more horrifying. It works in perfect (or terrifying) harmony with his stories, which tend to fixate on the unraveling of humanity. Often that means insanity, but it also tends to mean unnerving body transformations. Above all, Ito’s brand of horror tends to be bizarre.

That inimitable art style isn’t one so easily adapted for live-action. Uzumaki received a live-action film adaptation in 2001, which captures the tonal weirdness of the manga but not so much Ito’s visual style. It’s a worthy adaptation in terms of atmosphere and building madness, but as with most things, the manga is even better.

For works beyond Ito’s two most prominent manga series, look to 2018’s Junji Ito Collection anime. The twelve-episode anthology series, plus two OVA episodes, adapted several Ito stories. Stalwart Ito fans agree that it doesn’t manage to capture the haunting imagery of the source manga, but as an entry point to Ito’s works, it offers up a solid eclectic mix. From the gross-out “Greased” to the surreal “The Long Dream” to the hilarious “Smashed,” there’s a little bit of everything in this anime show. Including appearances by Tomie.

Upcoming adaptations of Tomie and Uzumaki have the potential to bring more international attention to the prolific mangaka than ever before. That, in turn, creates the potential for more adaptations of his lesser-known works. Whether any manage to come close to capturing his unique and haunting horror aesthetic doesn’t matter much; more interest in one of horror’s most singular voices is always a good thing.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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‘The Toxic Avenger’ Returns with Cover Artwork for First Issue of New Comic Book Series [Exclusive]

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With a remake on the way and a new 4K restoration of the original classic now streaming, it’s a good time to be a fan of Troma’s The Toxic Avenger. Additionally, Matt Bors — the founder of The Nib and a political cartoonist who has twice been named a Pulitzer Prize finalist —and acclaimed artist Fred Harper (Snelson) are collaborating on an all-new 5-issue comic book series starring the satirical superhero of the Troma Films cult classic films!

TOXIC AVENGER #1 will land in stores on October 9, 2024.

While you wait, you can exclusively check out the issue #1 cover art from Fred Harper below, along with a set of emojis designed by Harper for the extremely online teens of Tromaville.

“The Toxic Avenger delivers what Troma fans want,” said AHOY Comics Editor-in-Chief Tom Peyer. “The series has violent action, gross mutations, bursting pustules, eye-popping visuals, and trenchant humor.” 

“If there was ever a superhuman hero for these toxic, miserable times, Toxie is the one!” said Lloyd Kaufman. “Only AHOY Comics and Bors & Harper could pull this off…er…mop this up! Toxie and the Troma Team can’t wait ‘til you read -no, experience – the art and stories that the Toxic Avenger Comic Book will explode in your brain, your soul, and your heart. Above all, remember – Toxie loves you and so do I.”

This series will combine elements of the original films with the Toxic Crusaders cartoon and characters in familiar ways, updated to tell a story of environmental devastation, corporate control, and social media mutation,” said Bors.The Toxic Avenger is first and foremost an environmental satire, one about a small town and its unremarkable people trapped and transformed by circumstances they don’t control. The story Fred Harper and I are telling is about people frustrated by authorities telling them not to worry about their life, that things are fine, even as their dog mutates in front of their eyes. And at its core it is about a powerless boy, Melvin, who finds out he can be incredibly strong, hideously mutated, well-admired, and incredibly heroic… but still ultimately powerless over human behavior.”

In The Toxic Avengerteenager Melvin Junko helps run his parent’s junkyard in Tromaville, a small town in New Jersey where nothing much ever happens — until an ill-timed train derailment of toxic waste transforms Melvin into a hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength: the Toxic Avenger!

Under a media blackout imposed by Biohazard Solutions (BS) and their PR-spewing Chairwoman Lindsay Flick, Melvin emerges as a hero fighting against BS and the mutated threats that keep popping up around Tromaville.

Eventually Melvin uncovers a vast conspiracy more far-reaching than he could have ever imagined — but he knows if everyone is simply made aware of the crisis, they’ll act to stop it. Right?

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