The Plot: Bugs, Revenge, and Zero Pest Management
If Centipede Horror proves anything, it’s that some family feuds just need to be left unresolved. Michael Miu plays Pak, a student whose sister Kay dies in Southeast Asia after vomiting up live centipedes—because apparently food poisoning just wasn’t dramatic enough. The curse comes courtesy of a local magician, who’s still mad that Pak’s grandfather wiped out his village years ago. This raises a lot of questions: Did Grandpa do this out of malice? Did he just have really bad aim with his lawn chemicals?
Pak’s brother, Kai-lum, quickly learns the curse has spread to his girlfriend Yeuk-chee. And when I say “spread,” I mean burrowing arthropods making themselves at home in human flesh. At this point, you’re either glued to the screen or Googling “how to fumigate a human.”
The Magician: Less David Copperfield, More Pest Control from Hell
The villain here isn’t your standard horror bad guy. He doesn’t wear a hockey mask or live in your dreams—he just really, really likes centipedes. His main strategy is “send a swarm of venomous crawlies to live in your body rent-free until you die.” It’s impressive in the sense that it’s creative, but also feels like he’s just one bad day away from working for Orkin.
The Special Effects: Nature Channel on a Bad Acid Trip
If you’ve ever wondered what it would look like if an insect documentary got drunk and wandered into a Hong Kong exploitation film, here’s your answer. We’re talking real centipedes, real writhing, and the kind of gross-out practical effects that make you want to take a shower in bleach. The “centipedes crawling out of wounds” bit is effective, sure, but so is a root canal without anesthesia—it’s just not the kind of “memorable” you necessarily want.
Acting: More Wooden Than the Insects’ Habitat
Michael Miu tries his best to bring pathos to a story about magical bug infestations, but most of the cast delivers their lines like they’re in a low-stakes PSA about malaria prevention. The only person who seems truly committed is Tien-Lang Li, who earns some kind of cinematic Purple Heart for actually vomiting live centipedes on camera. I hope she got hazard pay, a tetanus shot, and maybe a free exorcism after filming wrapped.
Pacing and Logic: A Centipede’s Got More Legs Than This Plot Has Sense
Somehow the movie manages to feel both too long and underdeveloped. One minute we’re talking about a decades-old massacre, the next someone’s hacking up insects like it’s a gross-out piñata. There’s magic, curses, and revenge, but the actual logic holding it together is flimsier than a roach motel.
Final Thoughts: Watch if You Love Bugs… a Little Too Much
Centipede Horror is the kind of movie that sounds like a dare—and watching it feels like losing that dare. It’s a mix of supernatural revenge drama, gross-out creature feature, and inexplicable travelogue for anyone who’s ever thought, “You know what this family curse needs? WAY more arthropods.”
Cast Michael Miu as Pak Tien-Lang Li as Chee Lai Fun Chan as Kay Hussein Abu Hassan as Evil Sorcerer

