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The Giant Spider Invasion

  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
3.3/10
4.9K
YOUR RATING
The Giant Spider Invasion (1975)
Giant spiders from another dimension invade Wisconsin.
Play trailer3:49
1 Video
78 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

Giant spiders from another dimension invade Wisconsin.Giant spiders from another dimension invade Wisconsin.Giant spiders from another dimension invade Wisconsin.

  • Director
    • Bill Rebane
  • Writers
    • Richard L. Huff
    • Robert Easton
  • Stars
    • Steve Brodie
    • Barbara Hale
    • Robert Easton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.3/10
    4.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Rebane
    • Writers
      • Richard L. Huff
      • Robert Easton
    • Stars
      • Steve Brodie
      • Barbara Hale
      • Robert Easton
    • 128User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Original Trailer
    Trailer 3:49
    Original Trailer

    Photos78

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    + 73
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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Steve Brodie
    Steve Brodie
    • Dr. Vance
    Barbara Hale
    Barbara Hale
    • Dr. Jenny Langer
    Robert Easton
    Robert Easton
    • Kester
    Leslie Parrish
    Leslie Parrish
    • Ev
    Alan Hale Jr.
    Alan Hale Jr.
    • Sheriff
    • (as Alan Hale)
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • Dutch
    Kevin Brodie
    Kevin Brodie
    • Perkins
    Diane Lee Hart
    • Terry
    • (as Dianne Lee Hart)
    Tain Bodkin
    • Preacher
    Paul Bentzen
    • Billy
    J. Stewart Taylor
    • Deputy
    Christiane Schmidtmer
    Christiane Schmidtmer
    • Helga
    • (as Christiana Schmidtmer)
    William W. Gillett Jr.
    • Rider
    David B. Hoff
    • Helicopter Pilot
    • (voice)
    Joel Thingvall
    • Gas Pump Kid
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Bill Rebane
    • Writers
      • Richard L. Huff
      • Robert Easton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews128

    3.34.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6gavin6942

    Not Nearly the Tripe People Make It Out to Be

    A black hole hits northern Wisconsin and opens a door to other dimensions. Giant 15-meter spiders emerge from it, who have an appetite for human flesh! Dr. Jenny Langer and Dr. Vance from "the NASA" try to save the world.

    First, I must confess it was a huge oversight on my part not to have seen this film sooner. As a fan of "bad movies" and a Wisconsin resident, I should have watched this many years ago. But, I just never did. Sorry, Bill Rebane, you cantankerous old coot.

    That being said, this is not a bad film. I mean, you know, it is far from a good film. But the acting is actually quite good, and it is immensely entertaining, which counts for a lot. Is the lighting atrocious? Yes. Are the giant spiders a bit cheesy? Certainly. And there are sound issues. But at its heart, this is a fun creature feature and one I could enjoy on repeat viewings, which is more than I can say for most turkeys.
    5Sandcooler

    The one they'll remember him for

    You've got to hand it to a guy like Bill Rebane. I mean, you can laugh at his movies all you want (or be incredibly bored by them), but the man made a living as a filmmaker with virtually no money or talent in filmmaking. The guy was a brilliant salesman. This horrible movie was a huge box office hit, it was among the fifty most successful movies of 1975. Impressive for a director with no major studio backing who shot all his features in Wisconsin rather than Hollywood.

    The movie itself is nearly unwatchable, but it's a great time document of how easy it used to be to find a cinema release for your movies. This is not worse than whatever you used to find at the bottom shelf at a video store, but paying good money to see this on a big screen? That's a whole different animal. Particularly because you have to wait a really long time to actually see the huge spider (which is clearly a Volkswagen with legs) the trailer promised you. Up until then you see a bunch of people that you never want to see again talk and talk and talk. By the time that thing actually shows up, you're already too numb from the tedium to even laugh at it.

    Bill Rebane's movies can best be enjoyed when you know all the background to them. Rebane has a charming mom&pop style of filmmaking, mom (Barbara Rebane) is even credited as the assistant director. One of his daughters 'plays' one of the huge spider's legs. He sure writes great parts for women. It's made by a cast and crew that genuinely seems to be trying to their best, it's one of those movies that seemed way more thrilling to make than it is to watch. But you can't blame Rebane, he certainly did the best he could. He made a giant spider movie with 250.000 dollars, spent a lot of time with family and friends, actually sold the thing to theatres and somehow people still talk about it more than forty years later. That alone should earn him a place in film history.
    9gein

    There were giants in those days.

    I try to watch this movie every year or so. It reminds me of my youth when I didn't have any preconceived notions about what a film should or shouldn't be. A time when I had total suspension of disbelief.

    I remember when my ten-year-old eyes first caught a glance at the greatest horror movie poster that ever hung in the hallowed foyer of our local movie theatre, The D&R in Aberdeen, Washington. The poster featured a gargantuan spider bearing down on a group of terrified people. Suspended in the air above the monster were three helicopters and lying crumpled at the spider's legs were a couple of burning cars while spotlights filled the sky. One of the terrified was a busty young blonde wearing only a negligee. I was sold.

    Every kid in town must have seen the `coming soon' poster because the next day in school all halls were abuzz with nervous anticipation of what was going to be the greatest cinematic experience of our young lives: THE GIANT SPIDER INVASION! Our local newspaper (The Daily World) had a beautiful half-page advertisement featuring the glorious poster art. I cut it out and hung it on the refrigerator so my mom wouldn't forget.

    After a torturous week of school, the opening day finally arrived. Packs of kids, with parents in tow, rushed to secure a place in line at the D&R. The line wrapped around the block. Aberdeen hadn't seen this much excitement since Jaws played there the previous year.

    Once inside the lobby, ushers showered the crowd with little black plastic spiders. Kids scrambled everywhere – clawing and climbing over each other to get their hands on these rare collector's items. I snagged a few off the ground and then rushed into the theatre to secure a seat for my Mom, my brother and me.

    The theatre was filled to capacity. Those who did not make it in for the first show were forced to wait until the 9:00 p.m. show. Back in the seventies there were only two show times during the weekdays: 7:00p.m. and 9:00p.m. It was truly Darwin's `survival of the fittest' in action.

    At precisely 7:00p.m., the theatre grew dark and the screen was illuminated with the coming attraction: Squirm! The theatre was filled with whoops and screams as slime-coated killer worms with fangs tore into flesh, but soon a collective kid-groan could be heard as the rating `R' flashed after the preview. Thankfully, our attention was focused off the fact that most of our parents would not permit us to see the `R' rated film when the title: The Giant Spider Invasion filled the screen.

    For the next 85 minutes, we were treated to a town exposed to a `miniature' black hole' that creates a `space warp' inviting in alien-spiders that grow to mammoth proportions. The film really delivered the goods! A grungy farmer discovers a half-eaten body whose rib-cage is partially exposed, a girl comes out of the shower baring her breasts and, in a glorious shower of blood, the spiders suck up a couple of people into their puckered-festering mouths! Cries of horror and disbelief could be heard throughout the auditorium. A couple of ushers had to remove a bawling friend of mine after he saw the partially eaten remains of one of the victims – too much for his delicate sensibilities. I sat transfixed. This was the greatest movie ever made. The next day, I dragged a few of my friends to watch the matinee – we stayed for the remaining showings and returned the following day. The movie played in Aberdeen for only a week, but I must have seen it a dozen times.

    Years later, I found The Giant Spider Invasion at a video store and immediately purchased it. I watched it with the same glee I did back in 1975 and the fond memories I held came flooding back.

    Watching it now I chuckle as Alan `The Skipper' Hale delivers lines like, `He's a strange man and he's building up a big head of steam.' But, seeing the spiders, which seemed so real back in the good old D&R, crawl over the beautiful Wisconsin countryside, still gives me a small thrill. Even though it's obvious the spiders are badly made up VW Beetles, it still takes me back to a time when all movies I watched were magical.

    There were giants in those days.
    4mwilson1976

    One of ' The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made'

    A very low-budget horror movie (it was shot in six weeks with a budget of $300,000), about a horde of radioactive mutant spiders with a craving for human flesh emerging from the depths of the earth to invade a rural Wisconsin town after a black hole opens up another dimension. Featuring awful special effects, just the one giant spider (which was constructed by covering a Volkswagen automobile with artificial black fur, with the fake legs operated from the inside by seven members of the crew), and a cast made up of a lot of "has-beens," and B movie veterans, it's tacky as hell but a lot of laughs as the spiders go on the rampage at the towns summer fair. The film received a considerable theatrical run and became one of the 50 top-grossing films of that year, even featuring in an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. Listed as one of 'The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made' by Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson in the book The Official Razzie Movie Guide.
    darth_paul-1

    A multi-faceted gem of 70's B-Horror!

    The Giant Spider Invasion is a superb piece of 1970's B-Horror. Of course, by today's synthetic, digitally enhanced, multi-billion dollar, pseudo-artistic, technologically dependent standards it is a poor film, but remember that 'Spider Invasion' only cost $250,000 to produce.

    It is full of small, creepy spiders, developing into mega-bohemoth spiders and laying waste to anything that gets in their way!

    Oh sure you can label it cheesy! You can label it hokey! Label it sub-par! B ut isn't that why people watch B-horror? And is not 70's B-horror the true pinnacle of the genre? And did not Mystery Science Theater think it a worthy piece to cover on their show? Me thinks in the affirmative on both questions!

    This movie is a worthy effort...dealing with such diverse topics as Alien Invasion, to greed & evil in the social context...to even what Camus referred to as the Existential Dilemma (or something like that)...oh you can find almost anything in any piece of art, but my point is that this is a good movie! It's cheesy, but good; and when I saw it at the age of 6, I thought it was very horrifying!

    I still...to this day...cannot drink tomato juice...Thank-you Giant Spider Invasion!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In May 2005, Michael J. Nelson and Kevin Murphy of Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1988) hosted a Bill Rebane film festival, featuring this movie, in Madison, Wisconsin. A 1997 MST3K episode featured this film. Nelson and Murphy said despite lampooning the film, they admired Rebane because he was able to make the film with such a low budget.
    • Goofs
      When Dr.Vance and Dr. Langer are with the Sheriff in his office, the boom mic can be seen at the bottom of the frame, alternately pointing at each actor as they speak.
    • Quotes

      Ev Kester: Sometimes the only way I know you're alive is when I hear you flush the toilet!

    • Alternate versions
      The original UK cinema version was heavily cut for an 'A' (PG) certificate to remove some sexual dialogue and a topless shot, and to edit scenes of gore including victims being eaten, shots of blood, and close-ups of dead bodies. The 2005 Stax DVD release was uncut and upgraded to a 15.
    • Connections
      Edited into FrightMare Theater: The Giant Spider Invasion (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Scorched Earth
      (uncredited)

      Music by Trevor Duncan

      KPM Music Ltd

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 14, 1976 (Japan)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • The Official Giant Spider Invasion Movie Website
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La invasión de las tarántulas gigantes
    • Filming locations
      • University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, 2100 Main Street, Stevens Point, Wisconsin, USA
    • Production companies
      • Cinema Group 75
      • Sanrio Company
      • Transcentury Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $300,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $293,053
    • Gross worldwide
      • $293,053
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 20 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1(original ratio)
      • 1.85 : 1

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