Editor’s Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on April 30, 2010, and we’re proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.
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The Human Centipede (First Sequence) is one of the bigger shams to appear on the horror scene in recent years. This isnโt a movie, itโs a 93-minute stunt, one that takes a single idea that could have sufficed as the punchline for a 10-minute short and wraps it in a featureโs worth of ineffective genre tropes and clichรฉs.
That idea, as youโve likely heard, involves three people surgically attached at their mouths and anuses, creating a โhuman centipedeโ with one long digestive system. Itโs the brainchild of one Dr. Heiter, who lives in a big house in the German woods and is played by Dieter Laser, who resembles Christopher Walken with a glandular disorder. Apparently his looks and low, sonorous voice are supposed to do all the work as far as building a sense of menace around Dr. Heiter, since Laserโs English-language line readings are rather less than persuasive. Heโs also not very scary because he tends to explain himself and his actions in the most on-the-nose way possible. โI donโt like human beings,โ he announces to two visitors/victims moments after letting them in, and once heโs got his trio of subjects strapped to hospital beds in his basement, he spends several minutes explaining the โhuman centipedeโ operation in such exacting detail that it kills any sense of dread.
And then, having established his twisted premise with lip-smacking enthusiasm, writer/director Tom Six becomes paradoxically coy about following through with the gory details. We only see brief glimpses of Dr. Heiterโs surgical process, as if Six, who clearly made this movie in order to get a gross-out rise out of his audience, has suddenly become a convert to the power of suggestion. He also hasnโt done much to explain why Dr. Heiter goes to all this trouble; thereโs little sense of any purpose or pleasure the mad medico derives from his self-made hybrid.
His victims donโt fare much better. Two-thirds of the centipede are visiting Americans Lindsay (Ashley C. Williams) and Jenny (Ashlynn Yennie), who are ostensibly hip New Yorkers but, after they develop car trouble in the middle of nowhere in pouring rain, decide to go traipsing through the woods instead of following the road to find help, and ignore the glaringly obvious signs that Dr. Heiter means them no good once theyโve taken shelter in his home. When one of them (please donโt ask me to distinguish between the two) manages to free herself from his bondageโoccasioning the one honest shock in the whole movieโshe makes a series of head-slappingly stupid moves while attempting to escape from Dr. Heiterโs house, in a lengthy sequence that feels like padding in the absence of any actual plot. Thereโs no way to be engaged with or sympathetic for these idiots, yet if Six is attempting to push their genre-foolish behavior into the realm of satire, he isnโt pushing nearly hard enough.
In any case, the girls are silenced once the operation is complete, since the โheadโ of the centipede is tourist Katsuro (Akihiro Kitamura), who is given nothing to say but rants and threats in Japanese, instead of expressing a personality. Lacking much idea of how Dr. Heiter and his creation might interact, Six devotes a good chunk of the third act to a couple of nosy cops, who, in the time-honored tradition of dumb B-movies, are as inept at investigation as that briefly freed girl was at survival. Indeed, too much of The Human Centipede is numbingly familiar: The sleazy motorist who crudely propositions the stranded Lindsay and Jenny, the coldly sterile surfaces of Dr. Heiterโs dwellingโyouโve seen them all before, no doubt in movies that didnโt expect you to be distracted by how mind-blowingly bizarre the central concept supposedly was.
And perhaps this one would be, in a film that bothered to provide a story with a sense of purpose. The Human Centipede isnโt scary because thereโs no point of audience identification, and it isnโt truly shocking because thereโs no way to emotionally engage with whatโs happening on screen. (How sad that recent movies like Martyrs and Inside, which pushed boundaries to the extreme while paying equal attention to their human interest, couldnโt parlay their notoriety into the kind of U.S. theatrical release The Human Centipede is receiving.) Some have suggested that the film is really intended as black comedyโbut absent true wit or satirical twists on the conventions it indulges in, whatโs left to be amused byโthe spectacle of its principalsโ suffering? The movieโs true desperation becomes clear in the final minutes, which attempt to generate irony via a confession that comes completely out of nowhere, and pathos on behalf of a person who has long since ceased to exist as a character.
All that said, Iโll admit Iโm in the minority here; I could provide links to a dozen fawning reviews proclaiming this to be some kind of great achievement in confrontational horror, many of them comparing the film to the works of David Cronenberg. But thereโs really no comparison at all. The genius of Cronenbergโs body-horror fantasies is that they always stand in for genuine real-world anxieties: fear of venereal disease, fear of hereditary madness and violence, fear of cancer or AIDS. Thereโs no such subtext anywhere in The Human Centipede, whose only conceivable metaphor could be for a group of people lining up to kiss assโwhich, come to think of it, suits this film just fine.