Unlike Western eco-horror, which often features monstrous mutations (e.g., The Host ), Suzuki’s tide is silent, colorless, and patient. It does not roar; it seeps . This reflects the Japanese shinden-zukuri aesthetic of horror—fear as a slow, wet mist rather than a sudden attack.
The central image of Ring is the well at the Boso Peninsula lodge. Critics often view the well as a womb or a tomb. However, in Suzuki’s universe, the well functions as a tidal pool —a contained space where unseen gravitational forces (the moon, or in metaphor, Sadako’s psychic rage) cause periodic upheaval. When the protagonists descend into the well, they are entering a liminal zone between fresh water and salt, life and death. The rising water level within the well is not random; it follows the logic of a tide, responding to a non-human clock. Suzuki writes that the curse spreads like an “epidemic of time,” and the tide is the oldest biological clock on Earth. koji suzuki tide
It is crucial to differentiate Suzuki’s use of standing water (wells, lakes) from moving water (tides). The well represents stagnation and memory —Sadako’s trapped rage. The tide, conversely, represents communication and inevitability . The curse spreads like a tide: you cannot stop it, only ride it or drown. In Ring , the only way to survive is to copy the tape and pass the tide to another shore. This creates a moral tidal system—one of mutual destruction or viral propagation. The central image of Ring is the well
Suzuki’s later works, such as Edge (1996) and the Ring sequels ( Loop , 1998), reveal the tide as a cosmological principle. In Loop , the characters discover that their reality is a simulation infected by a digital cancer—a “Morphic Resonance” that behaves like a tide. The simulated ocean begins to rise without meteorological cause. This is not a flood; it is a tidal correction . Suzuki suggests that the universe, whether digital or organic, has a homeostatic mechanism akin to the moon’s gravity: when a species (humans) becomes too dominant, the tide rises to reassert equilibrium. When the protagonists descend into the well, they