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
"Nella..." is certainly an underrated work:it does not rely on special effects or on gore and sex is kept to the minimum.Probably influenced by Bava,Margheriti creates fear with his camera ,using elements of the settings ,a mirror for instance.His lead is an earnest thespian,Anthony Franciosa, a former student of the Actor's Studio,not a mediocre amateur as we often meet in European horror movies.Supernatural is smartly introduced and the screenplay is much more elaborated than usually.Many people will disagree but Amenabar's style in "the others" is not that much different,even if that director is infinitely superior to Margheriti."Nella..." was also certainly influenced by Robert Wise's classic "the haunting " (1963!!!) as far as the conclusion is concerned.
Poe's presence (Klaus Kinski) and the fact that the hero's first name is "Allan" do not bring much to the movie.
In spite of the poor rating,I sincerely believe that fantasy and horror buffs won't waste their time if they watch "nella...."
Set in the mid-19th century so that Edgar Allan Poe could be included as a character, the story concerns skeptical reporter Alan Foster who accepts a wager that he cannot spend one night alone in a nearby haunted castle. Dropped off by Poe and the castle's owner, he unexpectedly encounters a number of people inside this castle, including a beautiful woman he falls in love with. He later discovers she and the others who inhabit the castle are dead and must relive their deaths on this one night of the year, November 2nd, which is All Souls Day. He witnesses their various demises before realizing he is to be next, thus enabling the dead to prolong their unholy existence and return next November 2nd. Will he be able to escape the castle with his life intact and collect the bet? The ending is a surprise.
It's true that SPIDER lacks the overpowering atmosphere of the B&W original and also doesn't feature Italian Gothic icon Barbara Steele as did the first film. However it benefits from a bigger budget and better acting by the principal players. The reporter is played by American actor Anthony Franciosa who brings an earnest intensity to the role especially after discovering the castle's secret. Euro favorite Klaus Kinski is a suitably deranged Poe. Most IG fans may dismiss this version but I personally find SPIDER stylishly lit, well photographed, and as enjoyable as its predecessor, just in a different way. Like most European horror films SPIDER exists in several bad public domain copies so you've been warned. The original, uncut versions of both movies are now available on streaming services and on home video...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
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.
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.
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