A September 28, 2024 premiere date was revealed for the Uzumaki anime at San Diego Comic-Con back in July, and now a new trailer is here ahead of this month's debut. Those familiar with Junji Ito's manga will be treated to a lot of familiar imagery, depicted in stark black and white. Check it out below while we wait for the Japanese language premiere of the series with English subtitles. Both the subbed and dubbed versions of each installment will be available to stream the next day on Max, followed by English-language encore airings every Thursday at 12:30am starting October 3. Uzumaki Trailer Related: Uzumaki Anime Premieres on September 28 The Uzumaki anime was first announced in 2019 and planned for 2020 before being hit with multiple delays. Hiroshi Nagahama ( The Flowers of Evil ) directs, with Aki Itami on the script for the Akatsuki and Drive production. Viz Media currently publishes Uzumaki and describes the title as follows: Kurozu-cho,...
- 9/5/2024
- by Joseph Luster
- Crunchyroll
by Palomo Lin-Linares
Mangaka Shuzo Oshimi tells of an episode from his youth in which he hid in a unisex bathroom with a mirror (his intentions were obvious). More specifically, he tells of the tight-chestedness he experienced upon realizing the distastefulness of his actions, and the feeling of shame which soon followed. This embarrassing anecdote, which inspired “The Flowers of Evil,” is told in the afterword of the manga's first volume. This sincerity on the part of Oshimi, his dedication to laying bare any source of shame, gives his work the feeling that all the events have been lived, and are being recreated by the author with nothing but accuracy and candidness in mind. This honesty is what elevates “The Flowers of Evil” beyond your average daytime drama or angsty serial, into something far more heartfelt, yet still perverted.
on Amazon by clicking on the image below
The story,...
Mangaka Shuzo Oshimi tells of an episode from his youth in which he hid in a unisex bathroom with a mirror (his intentions were obvious). More specifically, he tells of the tight-chestedness he experienced upon realizing the distastefulness of his actions, and the feeling of shame which soon followed. This embarrassing anecdote, which inspired “The Flowers of Evil,” is told in the afterword of the manga's first volume. This sincerity on the part of Oshimi, his dedication to laying bare any source of shame, gives his work the feeling that all the events have been lived, and are being recreated by the author with nothing but accuracy and candidness in mind. This honesty is what elevates “The Flowers of Evil” beyond your average daytime drama or angsty serial, into something far more heartfelt, yet still perverted.
on Amazon by clicking on the image below
The story,...
- 6/8/2023
- by Guest Writer
- AsianMoviePulse
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