It was short but violently impactful. A grieving family watched in horror as their deceased daughter began to turn into a grotesque, wooden doll inside her coffin. The voice acting here was raw, filled with the desperate, choked sobs of parents witnessing the unnatural violation of their child's memory. The physical transformation drawn in Ito's signature style was repulsive, and the dubbed screams made Arisato’s skin crawl.
The storm outside mirrored the chaos inside Detective Arisato’s mind as he sat in the glow of his computer monitor, the neon light casting sharp, grotesque shadows across his small apartment. He was analyzing Episode 5 of the Junji Ito Collection English dub, a piece of media that seemed to warp his perception of reality with every passing minute. Ito Junji: Collection (Dub) Episode 5
The episode was split into two unsettling tales: "Souichi's Convenient Curse" and "Hellish Doll Funeral." It was short but violently impactful
Then, the second segment flashed on screen: "Hellish Doll Funeral." The physical transformation drawn in Ito's signature style
Arisato shut down the monitor. The room plunged into darkness, but the image of a boy with nails in his mouth stayed burned into his retinas.
The detective leaned closer, noting how the dub highlighted the dark comedy blending with the horror. Souichi’s absolute conviction that he was a dark sorcerer contrasted heavily with his actual status as a socially awkward laughingstock. Yet, the horror was real. The sight of Souichi chewing on nails, spit flying as he cursed those around him, left a metallic taste in Arisato's own mouth.
Arisato focused first on the primary segment. Souichi Tsujii, a pale, spindly boy with a mouth full of iron nails, filled the screen. The English voice actor captured Souichi’s deluded, self-important rasp perfectly. Souichi wasn't just a creepy kid; he was a manifestation of petty malice. Arisato watched as Souichi used straw voodoo dolls to torment his classmates and family over the smallest slights.