(2/18) While containing some of Ito's more bizarre stand-alone shorts, the star attraction here is a grouping of five short stories all dealing with obsession, despair, and a ghostly creature known as the Beautiful Boy of the Crossroads.
(4/18) The protagonist we follow through these stories is a boy named Ryusuke, who returns to his ominous and perpetually foggy hometown after many years away. Lately, rumours have been circulating about a rash of suicides of teenage girls.
(7/18) It's not long before the entire population of the town is obsessed with crossroads fortune-telling, with Ryusuke targeted as the supernatural entity plaguing the town.
(9/18) What starts as a fairly straight-forward (if exceptionally bleak!) ghost story from Ito, grows with each story, into a minor saga of a cursed town with its own deeply compelling mythology. The stakes grow with each tale until the body count is rising at a staggering pace..
(11/18) The attention to detail in these stories, especially the exceptionally gruesome and rotting teenage revenants that begin to populate the town, are wonderful. Junji Ito is as well-versed in rendering the ever-present fog as he is a putrid skull or gouged neck.
Had to
Me trying to socialize after quarantine ends
PASCAGOULA HUMANOID APPRECIATION POST
Me: The perfect character design doesn't exis- Rakshas from Berserk:
"Our Sister of the Cuts" woodcut - 1541 - Magdeburg, Germany - Artist Unknown
I love chainsaw man
The Thing comic appreciation post
I really wish this scene had made it into The Thing 1982, as it for sure would have been an incredible creature showcase, but also because the frankly vicious implications of having Nauls crying for help say a lot about what exactly happens to someone when they're assimilated.