Notable for pioneering J-horror with his literary masterpiece, The Ring, which was later adapted for the big screen on both sides of the Pacific, author Koji Suzuki has passed away at the age of 68. Japan’s Asahi Shimbun newspaper first broke the news of his death, revealing that Suzuki died at a hospital in Tokyo on Friday, May 8.
It’s hard to overstate Suzuki’s influence on the modern horror landscape, even though the author himself wasn’t a huge consumer of the genre. Just a year after marking his debut with Paradise, which won him the Japan Fantasy Novel Award, his 1991 novel, Ring, would go on to become a phenomenon far beyond Japan’s borders.
Koji Suzuki’s The Ring Redefined Modern Horror
Prior to the publication of his revered novel, the horror landscape was heavily dominated by slashers, a trend that commenced following the success of John Carpenter’s Halloween.
Suzuki’s work, which was rooted in atmospheric and psychological dread and sci-fi horror, helped usher in a new era of J-horror, and the subsequent 1998 adaptation from director Hideo Nakata further popularized these tropes.
While it was Hideo Nakata’s 1998 adaptation that cemented Sadako as a global horror icon, Gore Verbinski’s 2002 American remake, The Ring, introduced the franchise’s core imagery to Western mainstream audiences on an unprecedented scale, fueling a worldwide boom in J-horror remakes.
Although Suzuki’s sequel to the novel, Spiral, leaned even further into the original’s sci-fi and metaphysical roots, subsequent adaptations increasingly drifted away from his source material. The American sequels, in particular, eventually became their own separate entity, and reflecting on them, the author added (via The New York Times):
It’s a little like the virus idea of ‘The Ring,’ itself. It just keeps getting replicated, and I have no control over it.
Nevertheless, Koji Suzuki’s impact on the horror landscape remains indelible, which makes the fact that he wasn’t a major consumer of the genre himself all the more surprising.
Koji Suzuki Wasn’t a Big Fan of Horror Himself
A still from The Ring | Credit: DreamWorksDespite being touted as the godfather of J-horror, the author was pretty vocal about his disinterest in the genre, especially the ones riddled with supernatural.
In one interview, Suzuki confessed that he doesn’t read horror at all, and while speaking to The New York Times in 2004, the author stated that he wasn’t a fan of most horror writing. Elaborating on his approach to The Ring, Suzuki hoped his work would frighten readers not by tapping into the supernatural, but by dealing with more grounded subjects, featuring scientific and technological subjects.
I actually don’t like all that supernatural stuff. I really dislike most horror writing.
As a result, the author gravitated toward plot elements concerning DNA and smallpox in the sequel novel to explain the more creepy aspects of his breakout horror hit.
Suzuki is survived by his wife and daughters.
The Ring is available to rent on Apple TV (USA).
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