Anatomy 2
Anatomy 2

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- 50/100 based on 3,869 votes

Dr. Jo Hauser--soccer player in his leisure time--decides to move to Berlin to be an intern in a famous clinic, expecting to increase his knowledge and expertise, and to help his handicapped brother Willi Hauser. He joins a secret fraternity of doctors under the leadership of Prof. Muller-LaRousse, who is researching the use of bionic muscles in human beings with no ethics or respect for laws. to the laws. The team also volunteers in experiments and is under investigation by ... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

Dr. Jo Hauser--soccer player in his leisure time--decides to move to Berlin to be an intern in a famous clinic, expecting to increase his knowledge and expertise, and to help his handicapped brother Willi Hauser. He joins a secret fraternity of doctors under the leadership of Prof. Muller-LaRousse, who is researching the use of bionic muscles in human beings with no ethics or respect for laws. to the laws. The team also volunteers in experiments and is under investigation by Paula Henning. When Jo gets close to a Filipino nurse and becomes addicted in the drugs used in experiments, he realizes the truth hidden in the methods used by the secret society in the development of science.

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Movie Reviews

Hollywood Reporter - 7/10 by Kirk HoneycuttWhere the first film was something of a teen horror film, the follow-up, again from writer-director Stefan Ruzowitzky, is more of an unintentional comedy.
User Review - 8/10 by Chuck CMuch better than the first. I liked this one. :]
User Review - 6/10 by Angélique Cjust like the first, it was ok but nothing special.
User Review - 6/10 by Robert HWhile not seeming to be a direct sequel to the film Anatomy film, it clearly deals with the same general subject matter and the idea of a medical system gone wrong. In this film we get some kind of weird muscle experiments combined with excessive drug use meets the illuminati and the obligatory romance involving med students to create a gory, fantastical portrayal of evil medicine. The film isn't perfect by any stretch but I still enjoyed it and despite a couple leaps of story, managed to hold together pretty well. Not entirely a film I'd just outright recommend to someone, Anatomy and this sequel both manage to be enjoyable enough with gore, nudity, and bizarre medical experiments, that fans of the genre should find enough in the films to come away not being disappointed. I just wish there had been more suspense here as the film could have been genuinely creepy if it had tried harder.
User Review - 6/10 by Carlos IPretty cool sequel. I like the idea of the muscle implants.
User Review - 4/10 by Matthew PIt seems to me that the people who created Anatomy 2 and I are at a fundamental disagreement about what made the first Anatomy good. I liked Franka Potente in the lead role, I liked the humor the film had, I enjoyed the mystery, and I found the ever-present threat of a secret organization that anyone could be apart of chilling. The filmmakers seemed to think that the organization itself was most important, so the sequel disregards the parts I liked about the first film and focuses on that. It also doesn't feature much of Franka Potente. Oh, she's included (and featured prominently on the DVD artwork and in the advertising), but she has two or three scenes, none of which amount to anything. It's more of a glorified cameo than anything else, and apart from the connection with the AAA, a cult which performs medical experiment while disregarding laws and morality, she's the only tie we have to the previous film. Here, she's a police investigator trying to shut down the AAA. Her character is unnecessary, as is that subplot, especially considering that's not the direction that Anatomy 2 wants to take. Anyway, this film is more concerned with a branch of this illegal organization. We start with a character who already can practice as a doctor. His name is Joachim (Barnaby Metschurat), and while working as a doctor, he wants to somehow find the time to research a way to cure his brother's disability (muscular dystrophy). He ends up meeting up with a couple of people who might be able to help him achieve this goal, and before you know it, he's having his own tendons and muscles replaced with synthetic ones. "In the name of science," right? Essentially, this man gets into the group and because of this, we get to see its inner-workings. The problem with AAA in the first film was that it never seemed all that evil. Sure, they had questionable practices, but their motives weren't all that questionable. A few bad seeds ruined it, sure, but it doesn't make for a particularly heinous operation. The same is true here, and as a result, some of the character overreactions seem completely ridiculous. Once we get inside of this group, we learn much more than we did in the first Anatomy. We find out that their goal in life is to win a Nobel Peace Prize by finding out a way to cure the seemingly incurable. If it costs a few lives along the way, then that's okay for them. They don't test on animals for some reason, presumably because they have willing test subjects (the other members of the group), and moving directly into human testing helps skips a few steps and save a few years. What happens to the plot now that our lead has been accepted into the group? Well, it degenerates and there's not much to it. Detective work about the group is being done, but that's happening thanks to characters we don't know or care about. Someone shows up at one point to try to tell Joachim about the group's nefarious goals (like curing Joachim's brother's illness), but is stopped and then killed. That's about as much mystery as there is to this film; everything is left wide out in the open for us to see, and as a result, there's no tension or anything to learn. Once again, one twist occurs that results in absolutely nothing. The character in question only appeared once previously, and after her true motivations are revealed, she never appears again. I understand the point behind it (AAA is more powerful and wide-reaching than you might initially think), but do it with a character that matters, or establish this one more before attempting to surprise us. At least Anatomy 2 doesn't even want us think it's a horror film. The film's tagline, "A new experiment in terror," might want you to assume that, but the way it was shot and edited didn't even attempt scares or even suspense. This is really just a drama with a couple of moral message moments mixed in. I can't remember a point where the film tried to build tension or scare me. It almost turns into an action film at one point as well, when a chase scene occurs. I suppose that might be tense if we thought the villain was truly evil or if we liked the main character, but neither is the case with this movie. Of course, there's another love story in this one, although it's not featured as prominently as it was in Anatomy. I was thankful for that, even if I wasn't for the dialogue this time around. Perhaps the person writing the subtitles got lazy, or maybe the actual German dialogue just wasn't as strongly written, but Anatomy 2 felt much more bland and uninspired. I laughed a lot with the first effort, but this one had far fewer of those moments. Maybe it was an effort to make the story feel more serious and make us aware of the real issues that the film wants to focus on, but it made for a less enjoyable watch. Anatomy 2 doesn't even feel like a sequel to Anatomy. It takes the idea of a cult of doctors who don't care about rules and regulations, and makes an entire film around it. All attempts at horror and suspense are gone in favor of a drama. The humor has also been removed, but then again, they're not working primarily with cadavers this time around. It's a much different film, and I didn't really have a good time, although I can admire it for at least changing things up. But fans of Franka Potente will be disappointed, as she's barely in this film. Don't believe their advertising lies!
User Review - 4/10 by Bryan GI went to rent [i]Swimming Pool[/i] at my local video store and was faced with a choice: the R-rated or unrated edition? Although I am partial to unrated versions of movies ([i]Requiem for a Dream, Happiness[/i]), it really depends on what the film was rated when it was released theatrically. If the artist intended to make an R film and then added a whole lot of sex and blood for the DVD release, well, that's exploitative, and I like to think of myself as a discerning viewer. So, I heard from some movie dork friends that [i]Swimming Pool[/i] was a dirty, sex-crazed French film, but still I didn't feel guilty about renting the unrated version, because the film was released unrated, and the last thing I want to is tamper with some director's artistic vision. However, I didn't find the film all that sexually explicit. It stars [b]Charlotte[/b] [b]Rampling[/b] as a British crime writer mired in late middle age and looking for a change of pace. She travels to France to stay in the empty home of her editor. She enjoys this personal reverie until the editor's daughter ([size=1][size=2][b]Ludivine Sagnier[/b][/size]) [/size][size=2]comes to stay at the house as well. The daughter is promiscuous and is constantly nude, which pushes the mental and social barriers of the totally repressed crime writer. They're unusual and tempestuous relationship as unlikely roommates is what provides most of the plot of the film.[/size] I found [i]Swimming Pool[/i] to be well-paced and suitable Hitchcockian; I truly had no idea where the film was going. It's billed as a thriller, but its a quieter film than this genre description alludes. I found it very similar in substance and tone to [b]Ingmar Bergman's[/b] [i]Persona[/i]. The relationship between the two women is central to the film and rife with psychological subtext. And Sagnier's bare chest was also central to the plot, obviously, since it was featured prominently in every other scene. I found myself contemplating this film for several hours after I finished watching it, which is some of the best praise I can give a film. I also watched [i]Anatomy 2[/i], which is the sequel to the monumentally shitty [i]Anatomy[/i], a Dutch pseudo-horror film released a few years ago. I didn't like the first film at all, but the second film was covered extensively by [b]Fangoria[/b], and I was hoping for some over-the-top gore or maybe just something a little MORE than the first film. The plot of [i]Anatomy 2[/i] is similar to the first film: a group of anti-Hippocratic doctors are bent on performing aggressive tests on humans in an attempt to achieve scientific advancement. In this film, the doctors have produced a new artificial muscle, and they peer-pressure all the members of their strange sect/Lodge/cult into volunteering for procedures to implant these new muscles. So all of these doctors operate on each other, filling each other's bodies with these fake muscles (which can be controlled from a remote location, via PC, thanks to a chip imbedded in each and every artificial muscle) and nobody seems in the slightest bit concerned about the experimental nature of the project or the fact that they are handing their bodily muscle control over to a group of elitist cult zealots. The plot was interesting, but the mentality behind some character actions was severely in question. Some good gore is featured in a shocking opening scene, but most of the medical gore featured throughout the rest of the film was poorly produced and unrealistic. [b]Franka Potente[/b] (who starred in the first film) makes an appearance as a police officer. And I find it funny, as I watch more Dutch films ([i]Run, Lola, Run, The Princess and the Warrior, Winter Sleepers[/i]), how many of the same actors pop up in one Dutch production after another. The Dutch branch of the Screen Actor's Guild must not haul in a lot in annual dues.
User Review - 4/10 by Joshua Bit was an "interesting" movie. It was not good at all.

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