Well, kinda.
It’s implied by director Tom Six, at least, in this VICE interview I just read:
In the movies, characters keep repeating that this stuff is 100 percent medically accurate, and that you could really do it. It almost seems like it’s your intention to make somebody copy it. Do you want someone to create a real human centipede?
Uh… It would be great marketing, of course, if it ever… I don’t think it will ever happen, of course, because it’s so out there. That’s why I made part two, because people kept saying, “What if a guy copies it?”
.______.
If you’re not familiar, “Human Centipede” is this ongoing series of gorror films about unhinged surgeons (or maybe it’s always the same guy – who knows – I never made it past part 1, to be honest) who create a giant centipede creature by recruiting recently abducted homo-sapiens to be the segments of it. “But, Ashley, how would he do that?” Why, exactly the manner in which you’d expect, my poor clueless friend! By stitching the mouth tube of one person to the poop tube of the next until you create a mile long dermal digestion duct. Obviously.
Well, actually, the initial films didn’t start out quite so grandiose. But in this latest installment they use inmates to link up sphincters to kissers. (Great move ‘cause A.) less individual kidnapping to worry about with a captive audience and B.) who in the audience cares about prisoners’ rights and lives anyway, right? Even though it could be your brother or father in there for a legal misunderstanding?) And the result? Well, I feel like that one bit of the trailer with the aerial view of the prison yard says it all:
(If you’re easily queasy, fast forward to 59 seconds.)
Or simply envisage a bunch of hoodless haz mat workers awkwardly dancing a quadraped conga line.
Or simply enjoy this screen cap still I’ve provided:
Segment 2: “MphmhPHHH!”
Surgeon: “What did segment 2 just say, dear?”
Segment 1: “Oh. He was just saying the food tastes pretty much the same as before.”
And what’s my preconceived judgment?
After only seeing part 1 and vowing to stop there?
This trilogy looks like it links up about as elegantly as the main characters in each film do.