![]() And after that the movie kinda goes off the rails. When they’re ripping out the woman’s teeth and suffocating her through forced oral sex, I know that’s pretend. I know when they’re having sex with the baby that it’s not a real baby. But it didn’t actually affect me nearly as much as "The Human Centipede," because I could tell it was all makeup and effects. ![]() People talk about "The Human Centipede" and they go, "Yeah, but have you seen ’A Serbian Film’?" It’s becoming that movie. Among the horror geeks, it’s kinda the movie that’s making the rounds right now. Let’s just say I became familiar with the term "newborn porn." Well, "The Human Centipede"-the ass-to-mouth scene, when the guy eventually has to shit, was unwatchable. How has the year in horror been so far? Any particular scenes or movies that really impressed you? Stop rubbing it."ĭoes your character get a spectacular death scene?Ĭome on-you think they’re just gonna have me judge some boobs and leave? There’s no way I’m getting outta there alive. The doctor asked me what’s wrong, and I said, "I have a motorboat injury." He goes, "Really?" I said, "Yeah, you know the thing where you put your face between a girl’s tits?" And he told me, "No, you just have sun block in your eye. I got injured shooting a motorboat scene in a wet t-shirt contest. You got injured shooting a wet T-shirt contest? So I literally had to leave Lake Havasu after I was done filming to go to the emergency room. They filmed a motorboat scene-you know, my face mashed between a Playboy playmates breasts-and my eye started swelling up. I was like, "What are you doing? Stop it." The best part is, because I’m such a neurotic Jew, at one point I thought I had conjunctivitis because the water was so disgusting. There was a moment when I was on the raft, just hosing away, and my wrist started to get tired, and I actually caught myself complaining. Click here to watch the film’s ingenious ChatRoulette marketing campaign.) Roth, a nice boy from suburban Boston who just happens to have made some of the sickest movies in the last decade, spoke with GQ about his two grueling days on the "Piranha" set and his favorite horror scenes of the year-including one that even he could barely watch. ![]() Starting today, you can see him onscreen again, at least briefly, in the flesh-eating-fish B-flick "Piranha 3D." (Next week, on August 27, he’ll be back in familiar behind-the-scenes territory with "The Last Exorcism," which he produced and is already getting rave notices from horror aficionados. His pal Quentin Tarantino handed him a plum role in the Oscar-winning "Inglourious Basterds": Roth played the Bear Jew, a notorious Nazi killer whose specialty is bashing SS brains with a baseball bat. In the past year, horror maestro Eli Roth-director of "Hostel" and "Cabin Fever"-has spent as much time in front of the camera as he has behind it. ![]()
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