![]() ![]() But what sold Boss on Butler’s idea is that the prisoner’s would always be in a position of submission to Boss. This would lower costs significantly, he argued, because the prisoners wouldn’t require food (they’d just feed off the excrement of the inmate in front of them) and all the prisoners would always be on their knees, which would reduce the amount of guards on duty. Butler was convinced he has the solution: He wanted to turn the 500+ inmates into a human centipede. Hughes tells Boss and Butler that if they don’t get the out-of-control costs of the prison under control, they’re both fired … and they have two weeks to do so. The prison is a complete mess and has been going way over budget for too long. ![]() One prisoner in particular, inmate 297 (Robert LaSardo) was a large thorn in Boss’s side. Harvey as Dwight Butler, the prison’s accountant Bree Olson as Daisy, Boss’s secretary and concubine Eric Roberts as Governor Hughes and many, many actors playing prisoners. The film stars Dieter Laser as Bill Boss, the warden of the prison Laurence R. ![]() HUMAN CENTIPEDE 3 took place at a maximum security prison in an unspecified American desert (I assumed it was in Arizona). The look on Dieter’s face here pretty much sums up his entire performance. Everything that went right and (mostly) wrong in part three was deliberate and turned out exactly the way Six wanted. I didn’t particularly like part three, but if you’ve paid close attention to what Tom Six was doing with this trilogy then you’d realize it was inevitable that part three be exactly the way it was. What went wrong in part three? This, I believe, will take some discussion. I loved part two and after seeing it I was eager for the third and final film in the series.Īnd then I watched THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE III (FINAL SEQUENCE) and yearned again for part two. It was bloody, it was excessively gory, it was disturbing, and it was over the top (in a good way). Then THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE 2 comes along and makes up for all the failings of the original. I kept waiting for the disgusting parts, but before I knew it the end credits were rolling and I was left more disappointed than when I saw THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT in the theater. Sure the original gets credit for its originality, but the first film was completely void of any gore, didn’t show any of the operation, and didn’t pack any punch whatsoever. Maybe for non-horror fans the film could be considered hardcore, but even hardened genre fans jumped on the PR bandwagon and agreed that the original film was the sickest thing they had ever seen. When THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE opened, it was hailed as the grossest, most disgusting film you could see. What started out as a little film back in 2009 evolved into a bigger, more disgusting cult hit. It’s been a long road for writer-director Tom Six. ![]()
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