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Web of the Spider

Original title: Nella stretta morsa del ragno
  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
948
YOUR RATING
Web of the Spider (1971)
Horror

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.

  • Director
    • Antonio Margheriti
  • Writers
    • Bruno Corbucci
    • Giovanni Grimaldi
    • Antonio Margheriti
  • Stars
    • Anthony Franciosa
    • Michèle Mercier
    • Klaus Kinski
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    948
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • Writers
      • Bruno Corbucci
      • Giovanni Grimaldi
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • Stars
      • Anthony Franciosa
      • Michèle Mercier
      • Klaus Kinski
    • 32User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos57

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    Top cast13

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    Anthony Franciosa
    Anthony Franciosa
    • Alan Foster
    Michèle Mercier
    Michèle Mercier
    • Elisabeth Blackwood
    • (as Michele Mercier)
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Edgar Allan Poe
    • (as Klaus Kinsky)
    Peter Carsten
    Peter Carsten
    • Dr. Carmus
    Silvano Tranquilli
    Silvano Tranquilli
    • William Perkins
    Karin Field
    Karin Field
    • Julia
    Raf Baldassarre
    Raf Baldassarre
    • Herbert
    Irina Maleeva
    Irina Maleeva
    • Elsie Perkins
    • (as Irina Malewa)
    Enrico Osterman
    • Lord Thomas Blackwood
    Marco Bonetti
    • Maurice
    Vittorio Fanfoni
    Carla Mancini
    Carla Mancini
    Omero Capanna
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • Writers
      • Bruno Corbucci
      • Giovanni Grimaldi
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    5.6948
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Decent But Can't Hold a Candle to the Original

    Web of the Spider (1971)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Journalist Alan Foster (Anthony Franciosa) is having a conversation with Edgar Allan Poe (Klaus Kinski) when a bet is made. The bet is that Alan can't spend an entire night inside the Blackwood Castle where there are rumors of strange things inside.

    I've always enjoyed watching remakes because it gives someone a new stab at some familiar material. There were a handful of directors like John Ford and Alfred Hitchcock who managed to remake their own works, which is an even more interesting thing to do. Italian director Antonio Margheriti made CASTLE OF BLOOD in 1964 and seven years later he'd do a color remake with WEB OF THE SPIDER.

    As I said, I really do enjoy watching remakes but there's no question that this film is really lacking when compared to the original. I think the biggest issue that this film has is the fact that it's in color and this just takes away so much from the story. The original film contained some great B&W cinematography that actually added to the atmosphere and it actually helped make a rather eerie picture. The sets and costume design look great here and the cinematography is great but the color just really doesn't help matters.

    I'd also argue that the slow nature of the film really doesn't help matters either. The problem is that there's really not much of an atmosphere here and it's certainly not creepy so the slow-burn that the director goes for just isn't as successful as I'm sure he was hoping. Yet another problem is that there just isn't anything fresh or original done with the material outside of the opening scenes with Kinski playing Poe. These early scenes were actually quite good and it's too bad that Kinski doesn't stick around for long.

    I thought Franciosa was good in the lead role and Michele Mercier is good as the mysterious Elisabeth. Kinski clearly steals the film but he's only at the beginning and end. As I said, WEB OF THE SPIDER is technically well-made but on its own it just doesn't have enough to really work. When compared to the original, it makes this one all the more forgettable.
    TheCapsuleCritic

    Color Remake Of CASTLE OF BLOOD Has Its Own Virtues

    THE WEB OF THE SPIDER (1972) is director Antonio Margheriti's color remake of his 1964 DANZA MACABRA (CASTLE OF BLOOD) which, along with Mario Bava's LA MASCHERA DEL DEMONIO (BLACK SUNDAY) is considered one of the twin pillars of Italian Gothic Cinema. This genre flourished between 1957-1972 making SPIDER one of the last examples of Italian Gothic Cinema to be made before this style would be eclipsed by the Giallo genre which consisted of contemporary crime stories that, thanks to the abandonment of censorship standards, included gratuitous nudity and graphic, misogynistic violence. DANZA was not a success at the box office so Margheriti decided to redo it in color. This time it was a success, but the director later dismissed SPIDER saying that the addition of color had robbed the story of its atmosphere.

    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.
    8crystalart

    I was surprised...and surprised again...!

    I REALLY like Klaus Kinski. He made some wonderful movies like Aguirre: Wrath of God, Fitzgaraldo, Android and Nosferatu...so I buy anything with him in it.

    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.
    9Steve_Nyland

    Needs Restoration: CALLING BLUE UNDERGROUND ...

    I recently found myself an original Italian widescreen print of this film that is gorgeous, and helps explain some of the negative user comments about it. Nella stretta morsa del ragno, as I have been taught to call it, is more than just a technicolor revisitation of Antonio Marghetti's CASTLE OF BLOOD. The problem is that he tried to make it much too more -- to explore the period detail in particular -- and in doing so the focus of the film became muddled.

    One of the aspects that made CASTLE OF BLOOD so remarkable was Marghetti's use of light and dark in such a calculated manner -- whenever Alan Foster strikes a match or lights a candle, it is an EVENT within the framework of the shot. In NELLA STRETTA, candles and matches become props to be carried around by characters to establish the sense of place & setting.

    Marghetti's greatest miscalculation, though, was in lighting his sets to show off the rich, exquisite detail his larger budget could afford. The result is a series of events that look like they were filmed on a movie set, not a nightmare playing out in front of our eyes in living black and white. On that plane of reasoning, NELLA STRETTA has more in common with Marghetti's VIRGIN OF NUREMBERG with Christopher Lee, which is all about color picture texture and the musical score. NELLA STRETTA also amps up the music, with a Robert Fripp-ish atonal guitar riff that pops up whenever something weird is about to happen. The film this becomes almost formulaic, and the suspense generated in CASTLE OF BLOOD becomes more of a slog to get to the good parts.

    And there is one really, REALLY good part: I still remember it scaring me so much as a kid I refused to go into our basement for weeks afterwards ... It is the segment when Dr. Carmus takes his little trip down into the Blackwood family crypt and finds something that should probably have best gone undisturbed.

    'Tis a pity, though, that an adventurous company like Blue Underground or Anchor Bay Entertainment doesn't resurrect and "restore" this bizarre, flawed but interesting bit of Eurohorror; With his widescreen shot compositions and color schemes intact, the Italian cut I found not only runs circles around the prints turning up on the Brentwood and Diamond DVD sets, but it does away with the "another film where every shot is a closeup" charge -- those closeups are the result of a widescreen image being chopped, reformatted and blown up to play back on television sets. And, as is evident in the latest DVD release by Diamond, some of the distributors looped, slowed down or even froze individual frames to cover up what little graphic luridness that Marghetti used and was deemed unacceptable.

    Yet right there we come to the meat of the thesis on why NELLA STRETTA MORSA DEL RAGNO will always be looked upon as less than a success -- it is too tame for the time period it was made in. The Italian print does include some very brief nudity and, like the Synapse DVD release of CASTLE OF BLOOD, spends more time establishing the illicit lesbian relationship between Elizabeth and Julia ... But it's nothing too thrilling, and by today's standards the whole affair has the shock effect of a good DARK SHADOWS episode.

    Yet it is worth checking out, especially if you are a fan of atmospheric 1970's period Eurohorror with a touch of the erotic. Timeless Video's VHS runs 94 minutes but has really awful color rot to the print. Brentwood's print from the CIRCUS OF DEATH and TALES OF TERROR box sets runs about 96 minutes and looks a bit better, but not much. For the present, the version to go with for US buyers is to be found on Diamond's double bill DVD with CIRCUS OF FEAR, runs about 98 minutes, has a somewhat richer color range and much better quality audio, and for it's budget line price you really can't beat it.

    I give WEB OF THE SPIDER/NELLA STRETTA MORSA DEL RAGNO *** out of ****, but only because I have a soft spot for it, and still feel the hair rise up on my neck whenever Dr. Carmus lights his candle and goes looking for that breathing sound .... shiver!
    6BA_Harrison

    Castle of Blood v.2

    Seven years after giving us the very enjoyable Castle of Blood (1964), one of the most gothic of '60s gothic Euro horrors, director Antonio Margheriti decided to tell the exact same tale again, only this time in colour and without cult favourite Barbara Steele. The result is entertaining enough but also rather redundant if you've already seen his earlier, better movie.

    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...

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Director 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!

    • Connections
      Featured in A Dance of Ghosts (2015)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 17, 1975 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Dracula in the Castle of Blood
    • Filming locations
      • Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica S.p.A., Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Paris-Cannes Productions
      • Produzione DC7
      • Terra-Filmkunst
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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