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Not only one of the year’s worst films, nor is it merely one of the worst movies ever made; it represents all that we as human beings should strive to evolve against.
Six’s cinematographer, David Meadows, photographs all this in black and white, arguably in the least artistic way possible. Did anyone making this movie honestly believe that, by employing a cinematic device as dreamlike as black and white, the material would somehow be elevated? No amount of technique would have made this movie work. Like the film that preceded it, it shouldn’t have been made at all. The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) is not only one of the year’s worst films, nor is it merely one of the worst movies ever made; it represents all that we as human beings should strive to evolve against. Under no circumstances should we be amused by cruelty, suffering, and exploitation. The sooner we realize this, the sooner we can make that next step.
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| Release: | October 7, 2011 |
| Rating: | R |
| Studio: | IFC Films |
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Written by Chris Pandolfi (editor-at-large)
I detested The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence), and yet I’m well aware that
it was made with me in mind – me and anyone else who thought that last year’s
The Human Centipede (First Sequence)
was a disgusting, pointless, morally
bankrupt pile of garbage. Writer/director Tom Six made a promise as he was
promoting the original film, namely that the sequel would “go full force in
graphic details, making part 1 look like My Little Pony”; by living up to that
promise in spades, he has given his harshest critics the cinematic equivalent of
the one-fingered salute. If you’re reading this, Mr. Six, let me be the first to
congratulate you on telling me off with such incredible flair. Let me also
reassure you that you’re absolutely right about people like me. We’re not
persuaded by the “artistry” or “entertainment value” of torture porn.
I’ve just been made aware that Six is currently working on a third chapter,
which, according to an interview with Empire.com, he promises will “make the
last one look like a Disney film.” That’s a pretty tall order considering the
imagery he subjects us to in this film, including (but not limited to) a man
masturbating with sandpaper, people defecating into other people’s mouths, and
the head of a just-born fetus being crushed under the gas pedal of a car.
Incidentally, are these supposed to be symbolic of something? I’m asking this
because I tend to overlook symbolism when I’m actively trying to keep myself
from vomiting in sheer revulsion. Earlier this year, when I had to endure the
wretched A Serbian Film, a reader happily explained to me the meaning behind a
newborn baby being raped, which, I admit, went completely over my head. I expect
that same person will tell me how I’ve failed to see the genius in The Human
Centipede 2.

What a sick, depraved, repugnant movie this is. Why do producers, writers,
and directors believe such films need to be made? How is it that they actually
gain a following? I’m greatly disturbed by the fact that there’s a demand for
them. We don’t need movies like this in our lives, not even for the purposes of
entertainment – which is a funny word to use, because it’s inconceivable to me
how anyone could possibly find this kind of trash entertaining. If stories like
this appeal to you, if you get some kind of dizzy thrill at the sight of
degrading, pointless exploitation, you inhabit a world I officially want no part
of. There are enough screwed up people in the world without their sadistic
perversions being gleefully celebrated in a movie theater.
The film is not a sequel in the strictest sense. Six adopts a meta-fictional
approach, telling the story of a British security guard obsessed with the first
Human Centipede film. His name is Martin (Laurence R. Harvey). He’s short,
overweight, asthmatic, and by all accounts, mentally ill. Apart from some groans
and a good deal of maniacal laughter, he says not a single word throughout the
entire film. He lives with his mother (Vivien Bridson), who verbally berates him
at every available opportunity. She blames him for putting her husband in
prison, apparently in denial or completely unmindful of the fact that he
sexually abused Martin on a regular basis. A psychologist (Bill Hutchens) has
frequent sessions with Martin in his living room. Are we supposed to find it
funny that this doctor is a pervert who lusts after Martin?
When he’s not at home, he’s either brooding in his parking garage toll booth
or targeting victims. You see, he wants make his own human centipede, only he
wants to outdo the Dr. Heiter character and increase the chain from three people
to twelve. And so he beats unsuspecting people senseless with a crowbar (how
they survive this is anyone’s guess), piles them in a van, drives them to a
secluded (and conveniently abandoned) warehouse, and leaves them to lie naked in
filth and darkness. He lures in Ashlynn Yennie, who played Jenny in The Human
Centipede, by pretending to be Quentin Tarantino’s casting agent. We eventually
have to endure Martin surgically joining his victims mouth to anus, which in
this case involves such needlessly graphic imagery as knives slicing through
flesh and vital parts being attached with a staple gun. We then have to bear
witness to an ambiguous ending that cheats.
Six’s cinematographer, David Meadows, photographs all this in black and
white, arguably in the least artistic way possible. Did anyone making this movie
honestly believe that, by employing a cinematic device as dreamlike as black and
white, the material would somehow be elevated? No amount of technique would have
made this movie work. Like the film that preceded it, it shouldn’t have been
made at all. The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) is not only one of the year’s
worst films, nor is it merely one of the worst movies ever made; it represents
all that we as human beings should strive to evolve against. Under no
circumstances should we be amused by cruelty, suffering, and exploitation. The
sooner we realize this, the sooner we can make that next step.

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