A journalist bets he can stay overnight in haunted Blackwood Castle. He discovers real ghosts seeking blood on All Soul's Eve and falls in love with Elizabeth Blackwood.A journalist bets he can stay overnight in haunted Blackwood Castle. He discovers real ghosts seeking blood on All Soul's Eve and falls in love with Elizabeth Blackwood.A journalist bets he can stay overnight in haunted Blackwood Castle. He discovers real ghosts seeking blood on All Soul's Eve and falls in love with Elizabeth Blackwood.
- Elisabeth Blackwood
- (as Michele Mercier)
- Edgar Allan Poe
- (as Klaus Kinsky)
- Elsie Perkins
- (as Irina Malewa)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The promise of Klaus Kinski as Edgar Allen Poe is undoubtedly a draw, and sure enough the actor chews up the scenery with a typically wild-eyed performance, but his appearance is little more than an extended cameo to kick off proceedings. The majority of the film follows American reporter Alan Foster (Anthony Franciosa) as he endeavours to spend an entire night in a haunted castle for a wager. As in Castle of Blood, he meets several mysterious characters, all of whom turn out to be ghosts who feed on the blood of the living to ensure their existence.
The film is atmospheric enough and the performances adequate, but I had hoped that Margheriti would have moved with the times, opting for a more exploitative approach this time around, just to make the film a little different from its predecessor (I'd have happily seen more of Michèle Mercier and Karin Field, who play ghostly babes Elizabeth and Julia). It's not to be: Web of the Spider is remarkably reserved, aiming for style over sleaze. Oh well...
I bought Web of the Spider because of Klaus. Well, you can forget about that. I peered into the darkness of the opening scenes and tried with some difficulty to tell if I was looking at K.K. or not.
At the end of the movie there was more of the same, and most of it could have been left out...plotwise.
I was a little let down, but I stuck with it, and was surprised at the quality of this little gem! It's atmospheric and moody and well done.
I enjoyed my first viewing of it tonight, and I'm looking forward to watching it again.
It would be easy to dismiss this movie as a compendium of Gothic horror cliches. Easy but unfair, I feel. Like any other highly stylised art form (Romantic ballet, bel canto opera...) a Gothic tale rests on a set of unreal and perhaps arbitrary conventions. Much of a fan's pleasure depends on how faithfully, how stylishly, these conventions are played out. In truest Gothic horror tradition, Nella Stretta Morsa del Ragno does very little that's new - but does it in grand style!
In a nutshell, the fiendishly deranged Poe inveigles a young journalist (Anthony Franciosa) into spending a night in a creepy old mansion. The family who inhabit this mansion seem to spend all their time dying and coming back to life. The rest of the 'plot' is predictable enough, but Michele Mercier (as the most glamorous ghoul) looks stunning whether dead or undead. Her romantic agonies are offset by Ottavio Scotti's splendid Gothic art direction. If the editing and camerawork look a little choppy at times, I blame the ghastly pan-and-scan job on my video copy.
Franciosa's convincing, enjoyable performance stays just the right side of 'over the top'. The rest of the French, Italian, and German cast (unknowns to me) are good (the two female leads, Michele Mercier and Karin Field, are gorgeous). And there's a framing sequence, featuring Klaus Kinski as Edgar Allan Poe! The story's a good one, the effects aren't bad for the time, and the Castle location and sets are fantastically atmospheric. In fact the whole thing has a really strong 'Dark Shadows' vibe (in a good way!). Some of the voice dubbing is rough (for some reason they even dubbed American star Franciosa!) and once or twice the editing doesn't quite match up, but it's pretty gripping.
I haven't seen the original (something I hope to put right soon), so I can't say how the two versions compare; but this one gets 7/10.
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Antonio Margheriti filmed this story six years earlier as Castle of Blood (1964).
- Quotes
Elisabeth Blackwood: [in Alan's arms] I feel alive only when I'm loved!
[being showered with his kisses]
Elisabeth Blackwood: Yes! Yes...
Julia: [listening behind door] That little harlot! The Bitch! That dirty filthy slut! I knew she'd get him into bed!
- ConnectionsFeatured in A Dance of Ghosts (2015)
- How long is Web of the Spider?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Dracula in the Castle of Blood
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 33m(93 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1