IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,0/10
5297
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Sherlock Holmes untersucht eine Serie von sogenannten "Pyjama-Selbstmorden". Er weiß, dass der weibliche Bösewicht dahinter so gerissen wie Moriarty und so giftig wie eine Spinne ist.Sherlock Holmes untersucht eine Serie von sogenannten "Pyjama-Selbstmorden". Er weiß, dass der weibliche Bösewicht dahinter so gerissen wie Moriarty und so giftig wie eine Spinne ist.Sherlock Holmes untersucht eine Serie von sogenannten "Pyjama-Selbstmorden". Er weiß, dass der weibliche Bösewicht dahinter so gerissen wie Moriarty und so giftig wie eine Spinne ist.
Jimmy Aubrey
- News Vendor
- (Nicht genannt)
Mary Bayless
- Carnival Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Brandon Beach
- Carnival Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Frank Benson
- Toy Doll Attendant
- (Nicht genannt)
Lydia Bilbrook
- Susan
- (Nicht genannt)
John Burton
- Radio Announcer
- (Nicht genannt)
James Carlisle
- Casino Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Harry Cording
- Fred Garvin
- (Nicht genannt)
Jack Deery
- Casino Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Herschel Graham
- Casino Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesAt one point Holmes says to Watson, "If you ever see me getting too sure again, fancying myself more clever than Adrea Spedding, just whisper one word to me: pygmy." This line was inspired by the short story "The Adventure of the Yellow Face," in which Holmes tells Watson, "If it should ever strike you that I am getting a little over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be infinitely obliged to you."
- PatzerWhen the impostor posing as Matthew Ordway knocks a terrarium of black widow spiders onto the floor and Watson reaches for the gun among them, Holmes shouts "Stop it, Watson! Those insects are deadly!" Spiders are not insects, and Holmes, having just revealed Ordway to be an impostor on the basis of the man's lack of knowledge about spiders, should know this.
- Zitate
Artie - Shooting Gallery Attendant: Hey gov', sir, try your luck on Mussolini, Hiro Hito, or Hitler. Hit 'em where their hearts ought to be and listen to the 'ollow sound.
- VerbindungenEdited into Who Dunit Theater: Sherlock Holmes and the Spider Woman (2021)
- SoundtracksLoch Lomond
(uncredited)
Traditional
Heard as a theme
Ausgewählte Rezension
One of the best in Universal's Sherlock Holmes series, The Spider Woman dispenses, for the most part, with the overt WWII subject matter (which was also reasonably sparse in the previous outing, Sherlock Holmes Faces Death). The climax does make use of the image of Hitler and other Axis figures, but this was (aside from a brief mention in Dressed to Kill) the final direct war reference in the series. This bears mentioning because the film benefits strongly from the general lack of wartime subterfuge. Rather than battling Nazi agents, Rathbone's Sherlock is embroiled in a truly Holmesian mystery, surrounding several apparent suicides...which Holmes, naturally (and correctly), deduces to be homicides.
Though the opening credits proclaim "Based on a Story by Arthur Conan Doyle," The Spider Woman adapts (quite freely) major incidents from no less than five of Conan Doyle's tales...The Sign of Four, The Speckled Band, The Final Problem, The Empty House (also referenced in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon), and The Devil's Foot. False advertising, maybe...but the script (courtesy of Bertram Millhauser) manages to weave them all into a framework that makes for a fun and intriguing mystery.
Other assets include the performances, which are better than in some of the earlier films (though Rathbone and Bruce never disappointed), and the more sure-handed guidance of regular directer Roy William Neill...by this time, a vast improvement over the direction in his first Holmes outing, Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon. It's also appropriate (if somewhat superficial) to note that Holmes's hairstyle, which changed for the better in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death, thankfully does not revert in this one (nor at any time for the duration of the series) to the shambles that it was in the first three films.
All in all, one of the best made, and most entertaining, films in the Universal series. It doesn't quite rise to the heights of The Scarlet Claw, but it's easily one of the best.
Though the opening credits proclaim "Based on a Story by Arthur Conan Doyle," The Spider Woman adapts (quite freely) major incidents from no less than five of Conan Doyle's tales...The Sign of Four, The Speckled Band, The Final Problem, The Empty House (also referenced in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon), and The Devil's Foot. False advertising, maybe...but the script (courtesy of Bertram Millhauser) manages to weave them all into a framework that makes for a fun and intriguing mystery.
Other assets include the performances, which are better than in some of the earlier films (though Rathbone and Bruce never disappointed), and the more sure-handed guidance of regular directer Roy William Neill...by this time, a vast improvement over the direction in his first Holmes outing, Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon. It's also appropriate (if somewhat superficial) to note that Holmes's hairstyle, which changed for the better in Sherlock Holmes Faces Death, thankfully does not revert in this one (nor at any time for the duration of the series) to the shambles that it was in the first three films.
All in all, one of the best made, and most entertaining, films in the Universal series. It doesn't quite rise to the heights of The Scarlet Claw, but it's easily one of the best.
- james_oblivion
- 14. Feb. 2006
- Permalink
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By what name was Das Spinnennest (1943) officially released in Canada in English?
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