Junji Ito (ä¼è¤ 潤äº, ItÅ Junji, born July 31, 1963) is a Japanese horror manga artist. Some of his most notable works include Tomie, a series chronicling an immortal girl who drives her stricken admirers to madness, Uzumaki, a three-volume series about a town obsessed with spirals, and Gyo, a two-volume story where fish are controlled by a death stench. His other works are Itou Junji Kyoufu Manga Collection, a collection of different short stories with the occasional appearance of a certain character named Souichiro and his family, and Itou Junji No Neko Nikki: Yon and Mu, a light-hearted story about moving in a new house with new "company".
§Biography
Junji Ito was born in the Gifu prefecture of Japan in 1963. He was inspired from a young age by both his older sister's drawings and the work of Kazuo Umezu. Ito first began writing and drawing manga as a hobby while working as a dental technician in the early 90's. In 1987, he submitted a short story to Gekkan Halloween that won an honorable mention in the Kazuo Umezu Prize (with Umezu himself as one of the judges).
In addition to Kazuo Umezu, Ito has cited Hideshi Hino, Koga Shinsaku, Yasutaka Tsutsui, and H.P. Lovecraft as being major influences on his work.
Some of the recurring themes of Ito's work include body horror, seemingly ordinary characters who begin to act out of irrational compulsion, the breakdown of society, deep sea organisms, and the inevitability of one's demise.
Ito's universe is also very cruel and capricious; his characters often find themselves victims of malevolent unnatural circumstances for no discernible reason or punished out of proportion for minor infractions against an unknown and incomprehensible natural order.
§Bibliography
§Manga
- The Junji Ito Horror Comic Collection (collects stories from Halloween, ComicsOne, English editions have flipped pages):
- Volume 1 and 2: Tomie (å¯æ±) (does not include Tomie: Again, English: 2001, ISBN 978-1-58899-084-6 and ISBN 1-58899-085-0, respectively)
- Volume 3: Flesh-Colored Horror (èè²ã®æª, Nikuiro no Kai) (English: 2001, ISBN 1-58899-086-9)
- Volume 4: The Face Burglar (é¡"æ³¥æ£')
- Volume 5: Souichi's Diary of Delights (åä¸ã®æ¥½ããæ¥è¨, Souichi no Tanoshi i Nikki)
- Volume 6: Souichi's Diary of Curses (åä¸ã®å'ªãæ¥è¨)
- Volume 7: Slug Girl (ãªãããã®å°'女)
- Volume 8: Blood-bubble Bushes (è¡ç樹)
- Volume 9: Hallucinations (é¦å¹»æ³)
- Volume 10: House of the Marionettes (ããã¤ãã®å±æ·)
- Volume 11: The Town Without Streets (é"ã®ãªãè¡)
- Volume 12: The Bully (ãããã£å¨ )
- Volume 13: The Circus is Here (ãµã¼ã«ã¹ãæ¥ã)
- Volume 14: The Story of the Mysterious Tunnel (ããã«ã®å¥è)
- Volume 15: Lovesick Dead (æ»ã³ã¨ã®æãããã)
- Volume 16: Frankenstein (ãã©ã³ã±ã³ã·ã¥ã¿ã¤ã³)
- Museum of Terror (ææåç©é¤¨, KyÅfu Hakubutsukan) (collects stories from Halloween in order of publication, Asahi Sonorama, first 3 volumes translated into English by Dark Horse Comics)
- Volume 1 and 2: Tomie (å¯æ±) (Volume 2 includes Tomie: Again, Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72159-8 and ISBN 978-4-257-72160-4, Dark Horse, 2006, ISBN 978-1-59307-542-2 and ISBN 978-1-59307-612-2, respectively)
- Volume 3: The Long Hair in the Attic (å±æ ¹è£ã®é·ã髪, Yaneura no nagai kami) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72164-2, Dark Horse, 2006, ISBN 978-1-59307-639-9)
- Volume 4: Kakashi (æ¡å±±å) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72169-7, 2007 ISBN 978-4-02-267008-3)
- Volume 5: Rojiura (è·¯å°è£) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72173-4)
- Volume 6: SÅichi no katte na noroi (åä¸ã®åæãªå'ªã) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72177-2)
- Volume 7: Umeku haisuikan (ãããé 水管) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72179-6)
- Volume 8: Shirosunamura chitan (ç½ç æ'è¡è) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72184-0)
- Volume 9: Oshikiri idan (æ¼åç°è«&ãã©ã³ã±ã³ã·ã¥ã¿ã¤ã³) (Asahi Sonorama, 2002, ISBN 978-4-257-72187-1)
- Volume 10: Shibito no Koi Wazurai (æ»ã³ã¨ã®æãããã) (Asahi Sonorama, 2003, ISBN 978-4-257-72191-8)
- Uzumaki (ããã¾ã)
- Gyo (ã®ã§)
- The Sad Tale of the Principal Post (大é»'æ±æ²è©±)
- The Enigma of Amigara Fault (é¿å¼¥æ®»æ層ã®æª, Amigara DansÅ no Kai)
- Cat Diary: Yon & Moo (ç«æ¥è¨ ãã"&ãã¼, Neko Nikki Yon to MÅ«)
- Black Paradox (ãã©ãã¯ã'ã©ãã¯ã¹, Burakku Paradokusu)
- Hellstar Remina (å°çæã¬ãã)
- Yami no Koe (éã®å£°)
- Shin Yami no Koe Kaidan (æ°ã»éã®å£° æ½°è«)
- Mimi no Kaidan (ããã®æªè«)
- Yuukoku no Rasputin (æå½ã®ã©ã¹ãã¼ãã³)
§Adaptations
Tomie was adapted into a series of films, beginning in 1999. Several other works of Ito's have subsequently been adapted for film and television:
- The Fearsome Melody â" (æ¦æ ã®æå¾ senritsu no senritsu), 1992
- Tomie â" (å¯æ± Tomie), 1998
- Tomie: Another Face â" (å¯æ±:ã¢ãã¶ãã§ã¤ã¹ Tomie: anaza feisu), 1999
- Tomie: Replay â" ( å¯æ±:re-play Tomie: re-play), 2000
- Uzumaki â" (ããã¾ã Uzumaki), 2000
- Gravemarker Town â" (å¢"æ¨ã®ç"º bohyou no machi), 2000
- The Face Burglar- (é¡"æ³¥æ£' kao dorobou), 2000
- The Hanging Balloons â" (é¦åãæ°ç kubitsuri no kikyuu), 2000
- Long Dream â" (é·ã夢 nagai yume), 2000
- Oshikiri â" (æ¼å Oshikiri), 2000
- Kakashi â" (æ¡å±±å Kakashi), 2001
- Lovesick Dead (also known as Love Ghost) â" (æ»ã³ã¨ã®æãããã shibito no koiwazurai), 2001
- Tomie: Re-birth â" (å¯æ±:Rebirth Tomie: Rebirth), 2001
- Tomie: The Final Chapter â" Forbidden Fruit â" (å¯æ± æçµç«  ?ç¦æã®æå® Tomie: Saishuu-sh? â" kindan no kajitsu), 2002
- Marronnier â" (ããã㨠Marronnier), 2002
- The Groaning Drain â" (ãããæ'水管), 2004
- Tomie: Beginning, 2005
- Tomie: Revenge, 2005
- Tomie vs Tomie, 2007
- Tomie Unlimited, 2011
§Anime
- Gyo, 2012
§Notes
§References
- Ito, Junji (October 2007) [1998]. Uzumaki, Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Viz Media. ISBNÂ 1-4215-1389-7.Â
§External links
- Junji Ito at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Junji Ito at the Internet Movie Database
- English Fansite
- September 2007 Video Interview with Junji Ito
- Into the Spiral: A Conversation with Japanese Horror Maestro Junji Ito, 78 Magazine, Februaryâ"March 2006
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