Subject Two
Subject Two

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- 54/100 based on 1,589 votes

When the antisocial and lonely medical student Adam Schmidt receives a mysterious e-mail inviting him to participate of a unique medical research, he accepts the job opportunity and travels to an isolated snowing area to a cabin in the middle of nowhere. He meets Dr. Franklin Vick that kills him cutting his throat with a hunting knife. When Adam resurrects, Franklin calls him Subject Two and explains that he is engaged in an unethical medical research, bringing dead to life. ... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

When the antisocial and lonely medical student Adam Schmidt receives a mysterious e-mail inviting him to participate of a unique medical research, he accepts the job opportunity and travels to an isolated snowing area to a cabin in the middle of nowhere. He meets Dr. Franklin Vick that kills him cutting his throat with a hunting knife. When Adam resurrects, Franklin calls him Subject Two and explains that he is engaged in an unethical medical research, bringing dead to life. Along the days, Adam is killed and resurrected over and over again, with Franklin improving his research, until the day Adam decides to leave the isolated spot.

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Movie Reviews

Chicago Tribune - 9/10 by Michael PhillipsBringing back the dead ... feels old hat by now, a feeling mitigated only in bits and pieces by this decently crafted plod.
Variety - 7/10 by Robert KoehlerEven if it overplays its ghoulish central concept, Subject Two honorably reps the neglected cerebral horror sub-genre.
Film Threat - 7/10 by Pete Vonder HaarThe resulting isolation lends an unnerving quality to the film, in which we are left to ponder what price we'd be willing to pay for immortality, and what would we refuse to sacrifice?
eFilmCritic.com - 6/10 by Scott WeinbergA slick take on the Frankenstein concept, a pair of excellent lead performances, and a crisp, austere directorial style are the highlights, but the thing moves at such a glacial pace that it nearly stops time.
Movie Habit - 6/10 by Marty Mapesfor a completely independent and truly local film, Subject Two is good
Cinema em Cena - 5/10 by Pablo VillaçaO curioso roteiro passa perto de algumas boas questões filosóficas, abandonando-as por aparente falta de ambição. Ainda assim, prende a atenção até o fim; não com suspense, mas com seus personagens.
Boulder Weekly - 4/10 by Thomas DelapaShot on high-definition video, Chidel's grisly indie draws as much blood as in any Roger Corman quickie, but it suffers from an anemic storyline.
User Review - 8/10 by sage mI liked it. It's about a mad scientist working on people.
User Review - 8/10 by Will KI liked it in a low budget, well done movie sort of way. Most original flick I've seen in awhile.
User Review - 8/10 by Brian SI went into this flick knowing nothing about it and had no expectations. What I found was one of those pleasant surprises that occasionally await horror fans. "Subject Two" is a smart, subdued, slow-burn of a sci fi/horror film with strong performances by the entire cast and a compelling story that asks interesting questions about what it means to be alive. It also has a good twist ending that requires the viewer to pay attention from the outset. It does get a bit bogged down toward the end, but it's a small flaw in an otherwise good movie that will reward the patient viewer. A struggling, migraine-afflicted college student volunteers to be an assistant to a reclusive scientist and winds up much more intimately involved in the experiments than he'd thought he would be. He is killed and brought back to life again and again, each time losing a little more of his nervous system and his connection to the world and to himself. This is not a gore-fest. We do see some blood, and the climactic scene is pretty gruesome in a perfectly nonchalant manner. Most of the story takes place between just two characters, the scientist and Adam, the student who becomes Subject Two. It's a good thing that the actors are both very good, because everything hangs on their performances. Dean Stapleton channels a sort of subdued Jack Nicholson from "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" in his performance and Christian Oliver evinces a sort of increasingly vacant melancholy that could have not been easy to pull off while keeping his character interesting; it's a performance worthy of some real recognition. There are story elements from Frankenstein here, but fans of HP Lovecraft will pick up on what might be some influence from the story "Cool Air," particularly at the end. Much of this film is allegorical and while you may have seen similar themes before, the lack of originality is more than compensated for by the strength of the flick itself. All of it's good, and if you're the sort of horror fan who likes a good story, not just blood and guts, "Subject Two" is definitely worth checking out. This is a good little film whose appeal should go beyond just devotees of fright cinema.

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