16
2024    25minAnimación, Anime
6.480%63%7.0
Watch on Apple TV
On Apple TV
Comprar $2.99Sponsored
La historia de terror sigue a los habitantes de una ciudad en la que ocurren fenómenos extraños relacionados con una figura en forma de espiral.

1 Season

  • Miniseries
    Miniseries4 Episodes
  • Uki SatakeKirie Goshima (voice)
  • Shin-ichiro MikiShuichi Saito (voice)
  • Mariya IseAzami Kurotani (voice)
  • Wataru HatanoOkada (voice)
  • Toshio FurukawaYasuo Goshima (voice)
  • Mika DoiYukie Saito (voice)
  • Takashi MatsuyamaToshio Saito (voice)
  • Katsutoshi MatsuzakiTokuo Katayama (voice)
  • Tatsumaru TachibanaKazuki Tsumura (voice)
  • Ami FukushimaShiho (voice)
  • Koichi TochikaIkuo Yokota (voice)
  • Takaaki UchinoBoy (voice)
  • Shunsuke TakeuchiMan (voice)
  • Kousuke OkamotoAttendee (voice)
  • Gen SatoBoy (Flashback) (voice)
  • Anna NagaseGirl 1 (voice)
  • Momoko MizukiGirl 2 (voice)
  • Junji ItoTyphoon Voice (voice) / Graphic Novel
  • Yuji MoriyamaDirector
  • Shigeki AwaiDirector
  • Nick28 de julio de 2025
    Tbh I’m glad it was only 4 episodes bc the whole premise of it was super weird. Like it was definitely an amazing concept and the horror aspect was really cool and definitely made me feel uncomfortable sometimes. But overall? It’s meh
  • Elli2 de noviembre de 2024
    I like the style of the anime, really felt like it was the manga in motion. Ito has a really interesting style and it's really unsettling. Although it was really all it was, unsettling. The story generally wasn't all that interesting and it was a bit random. Still worth a watch.
  • Daniel Gustavsson2 de noviembre de 2024
    Starts slow and seems really random, but in the third episode it really picks up. Very unsettling.
  • Spoons22 de octubre de 2024
    Uzumaki brings the eerie, spiraling horror of Junji Ito’s masterpiece to life in a way that feels both hypnotic and deeply unsettling. This anime adaptation captures the haunting, bizarre essence of the original manga, diving into the small town cursed by spirals, where reality itself seems to twist and bend in grotesque ways. The first episode is visually stunning, with animation that mirrors Ito’s iconic art style almost perfectly. The black-and-white visuals and intricate shading are exceptional, pulling you into the dark, surreal world in a way that feels true to the source material. However, as the series progresses, there’s a noticeable decline in animation quality, which unfortunately takes away from the immersive experience. The once rich and detailed scenes lose their sharpness, and that gradual drop really affects the overall impact of the horror. The pacing remains deliberate throughout, which might frustrate viewers expecting fast-paced action, but for fans of atmospheric, slow-burn terror, it works well. It’s not about jump scares or gore; instead, it focuses on the psychological horror of watching people lose themselves to the spirals—both physically and mentally. The dread builds slowly, but the drop in visual quality distracts from the creeping tension, dampening the eerie, unsettling vibe that the series initially establishes. Character-wise, Uzumaki keeps things relatively simple, focusing more on the town's collective experience than deep individual arcs. While this may feel underdeveloped to some, it fits the tone of the story, where the town itself becomes the real victim of the spiral’s curse. Overall, Uzumaki starts strong, but the visual decline in later episodes harms what could have been a much more powerful adaptation. For fans of Junji Ito, the series still delivers on unsettling imagery and surreal horror, but it misses the mark in fully capturing the masterpiece's terrifying atmosphere as it progresses. This anime will be popular with people who enjoy unsettling, atmospheric horror like Serial Experiments Lain or Paranoia Agent, and fans of Junji Ito’s surreal, body horror style.

Watch Uzumaki Videos

  • Uzumaki: Official 2024 Trailer (Spanish/Spain Subtitled)
    Uzumaki: Official 2024 Trailer (Spanish/Spain Subtitled)Tráiler

Uzumaki Trivia