The internet watches live, as reality-show contestants struggle against time to see who will stay in solitary confinement the longest and take home the one million dollar prize.The internet watches live, as reality-show contestants struggle against time to see who will stay in solitary confinement the longest and take home the one million dollar prize.The internet watches live, as reality-show contestants struggle against time to see who will stay in solitary confinement the longest and take home the one million dollar prize.
Kristyn Evelyn
- Contestant 113
- (as Kristyn Chalker)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThere are four characters in the auditions that do not make it to the cells. The two left in the waiting room, the guy who walks out and the punk rocker girl that is afraid of drowning. They all were written into the sequel. The only one that had additional scenes, the punk rock girl, had her scene cut when the doctor scenes were cut from the film. It explains that she was not put in a cell because of her confrontation with the doctor.
- SoundtracksPlease Stop!
Original Music Composed by John E Seymore
Performed by John E Seymore
Used by Permission of Seymore Films
Featured review
Brought together for a secretive reality show, a group of contestants learns they're competing in a show about the effects of isolation and psyche about the human mind, and once they've come together to begin the show find themselves subjected to something far more dangerous than they expected.
Overall, there's not a whole lot to like here. The only real positive this one manages to come out with is the statement about the current state of reality TV by having obnoxious people doing nothing interesting in front of cameras for people to watch. The simplistic approach, keeping them in a simple undecorated room with the leaders running everything with a deadly smirk behind everything as they keep the sinister motivations of everything starts everything off with an intriguing note. The very fact that this is kept a secret not only from the audience but the participants as well speaks to the modern state of how the concept of everything's put together and distributed to the public. That, though, is such a small part of the film as very little else works here. With no idea of what the purpose behind the group being contained and filmed is supposed to represent, the fact that the majority of the film's unwieldy running time is spent on random, unrecognizable figures running through the same motions of screaming at themselves or the cameras watching as to what's the point of it all becomes repetitive and jarring. None of it has any impact with no point or purpose at all, there's little to say about the fact that so much of it becomes a blur due to running nearly two hours with everyone doing the same thing and there's no payoff to what's being experienced rendering it all an exercise in futility. These here really drop this one down considerably.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
Overall, there's not a whole lot to like here. The only real positive this one manages to come out with is the statement about the current state of reality TV by having obnoxious people doing nothing interesting in front of cameras for people to watch. The simplistic approach, keeping them in a simple undecorated room with the leaders running everything with a deadly smirk behind everything as they keep the sinister motivations of everything starts everything off with an intriguing note. The very fact that this is kept a secret not only from the audience but the participants as well speaks to the modern state of how the concept of everything's put together and distributed to the public. That, though, is such a small part of the film as very little else works here. With no idea of what the purpose behind the group being contained and filmed is supposed to represent, the fact that the majority of the film's unwieldy running time is spent on random, unrecognizable figures running through the same motions of screaming at themselves or the cameras watching as to what's the point of it all becomes repetitive and jarring. None of it has any impact with no point or purpose at all, there's little to say about the fact that so much of it becomes a blur due to running nearly two hours with everyone doing the same thing and there's no payoff to what's being experienced rendering it all an exercise in futility. These here really drop this one down considerably.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Jun 10, 2020
- Permalink
- How long is Human Zoo?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $86,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 49 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content