The Human Centipede (2009) & Tusk (2014): Turning People into Monsters

The Human Centipede (2009) & Tusk (2014): Turning People into Monsters

Author: James Payne March 12, 2026 Duration: 1:00:51

Two kidnappings and two grotesque transformations. 

Listener discretion advised...

This week on Journey Through Sci-Fi, we head into the grisliest corner of our Mad Science season as we explore The Human Centipede (2009) and Tusk (2014).

From Tom Six's clinically cold, torture-era nightmare to Kevin Smith's surreal walrus transformation, both films twist the mad scientist archetype into something deeply insular... not driven by progress, but by obsession.

In The Human Centipede, Dr Heiter's experiment is cold, clinical and cruel - a Frankenstein figure filtered through torture cinema.

In Tusk, Howard Howe isn't chasing science at all - he's chasing memory, trauma and a warped sense of redemption.

We unpack:

• The torture-porn moment of the 2000s and its legacy
• The "100% medically accurate" myth
• Mad science as private fetish rather than public breakthrough
• God complexes, conditioning and forced transformation
• Comedy vs horror - why Tusk makes you laugh and recoil
• And why these scientists don't want to change the world… just their victims

From surgical body horror to psychological conditioning, this is mad science stripped of romance and left with nothing but obsession.


Ever wondered how a silent film from a century ago connects to the spectacle you saw at the multiplex last weekend? That’s the kind of thread Journey Through Sci-Fi: A Science Fiction Film Podcast follows, tracing the entire arc of the genre from its flickering beginnings to its CGI-drenched present. Hosts Matt and James act as your guides, not just reviewing movies but unpacking the ideas that fueled them. They’re interested in how a particular film’s design changed movie-making, or how a story from the 1950s reflected the anxieties of its time, creating a conversation across decades. You’ll hear detailed discussions that place each film within a larger historical tapestry, making connections you might have missed. This isn't a random list of reviews; it's a curated, chronological expedition. By focusing on one film per episode, the podcast allows for a deep dive into the context, the production challenges, and the lasting cultural footprint of each title. Whether it's the pioneering special effects of a classic or the philosophical questions posed by a modern epic, Matt and James explore how science fiction cinema holds a mirror to our own world. Tune in for a thoughtful analysis that appreciates both the artistic ambition and the pure entertainment value of the genre, discovering how every spaceship, robot, and alien visitor tells us something about ourselves.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Journey Through Sci-Fi: A Science Fiction Film Podcast
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