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Black Belly of the Tarantula

Original title: La tarantola dal ventre nero
  • 1971
  • R
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Barbara Bach in Black Belly of the Tarantula (1971)
A series of victims are paralyzed while having their bellies ripped open, much in the same way tarantulas are killed by the black wasp. The victims all seem to have a connection with a spa.
Play trailer1:57
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90 Photos
GialloPsychological ThrillerSlasher HorrorHorrorMysteryThriller

An inspector investigates a string of murders, which are committed by paralyzing the victims before eviscerating them - the same way a wasp kills a tarantula - and are connected to a spa.An inspector investigates a string of murders, which are committed by paralyzing the victims before eviscerating them - the same way a wasp kills a tarantula - and are connected to a spa.An inspector investigates a string of murders, which are committed by paralyzing the victims before eviscerating them - the same way a wasp kills a tarantula - and are connected to a spa.

  • Director
    • Paolo Cavara
  • Writers
    • Lucile Laks
    • Marcello Danon
  • Stars
    • Giancarlo Giannini
    • Claudine Auger
    • Barbara Bouchet
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paolo Cavara
    • Writers
      • Lucile Laks
      • Marcello Danon
    • Stars
      • Giancarlo Giannini
      • Claudine Auger
      • Barbara Bouchet
    • 59User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 1:57
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    Photos90

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    Top cast24

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    Giancarlo Giannini
    Giancarlo Giannini
    • Inspector Tellini
    Claudine Auger
    Claudine Auger
    • Laura
    Barbara Bouchet
    Barbara Bouchet
    • Maria Zani
    Rossella Falk
    Rossella Falk
    • Franca Valentino
    Silvano Tranquilli
    Silvano Tranquilli
    • Paolo Zani
    Annabella Incontrera
    Annabella Incontrera
    • Mirta Ricci
    Ezio Marano
    • Masseur
    Barbara Bach
    Barbara Bach
    • Jenny
    Stefania Sandrelli
    Stefania Sandrelli
    • Anna Tellini
    Giancarlo Prete
    Giancarlo Prete
    • Mario
    Anna Saia
    • Maria's Friend
    Eugene Walter
    • Ginetto - Waiter
    • (as Walter Eugene)
    Nino Vingelli
    Nino Vingelli
    • Inspector Di Giacomo
    Daniele Dublino
    Daniele Dublino
    • Entomologist
    Giuseppe Fortis
    • Psychiatrist
    Guerrino Crivello
    • Informer
    Fulvio Mingozzi
    • Surgeon
    Giorgio Dolfin
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Paolo Cavara
    • Writers
      • Lucile Laks
      • Marcello Danon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews59

    6.33.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7Bunuel1976

    The Black Belly Of The Tarantula (Paolo Cavara, 1971) ***

    From the recent spate of giallo releases via the Blue Underground label, this was the one I was most looking forward to; still, now that I've watched the film, the proclamation on the DVD sleeve of its being "The Best Giallo Ever Made" is an exaggeration - as it's not quite in the same league as the best of Mario Bava, Dario Argento, or even Lucio Fulci!

    Despite being made by people not usually associated with the sub-genre (director Cavara had started out in "Mondo" documentaries!), most of the requisite elements are present - and this, I have to say, is its major weakness: though the killer's modus operandi here is undeniably original and particularly vicious, the settings, (mostly irrelevant) plot complications and the unconvincing explanation at the end are all-too-typical, thus making the whole somewhat predictable (down to the identity of the murderer!), if never less than enjoyable and occasionally exciting (the rooftop chase scene above all). Still, as shot by Marcello Gatti, the film is stylish enough (even if the technique isn't really pushed to the limit as in, say, the films of Argento) and, in any case, it has two major assets in the performance of Giancarlo Giannini (as bewildered a giallo protagonist as one can get though, for once, he is a cop and a fairly intelligent, albeit disillusioned, one at that) and a typically unforgettable, indeed irresistible soundtrack courtesy of the tireless and ever-inspired Ennio Morricone.

    One can't have a giallo without the presence of a bevy of beauties - most of whom get to shed their clothes and are soon shown on the receiving end of the killer's paralyzing poison-tipped needle: Barbara Bouchet (appearing, all-too-briefly, as the first victim in one of the most effortlessly erotic openings to any film!), Barbara Bach and Stefania Sandrelli (who, alas, is too often left by the wayside - though she does share a love scene with Giannini - and whose voice, as far as I can tell, was dubbed even in the Italian version!). The notable cast also features Claudine Auger, Silvano Tranquilli, Rossella Falk and Eugene Walter (as a patronizing gay waiter, whose vaguely androgynous features were later utilized to startling effect in another solid giallo, Pupi Avati's THE HOUSE WITH LAUGHING WINDOWS [1976]). Trivia note: I got to see Giannini, Sandrelli and Bouchet at the 2004 Venice Film Festival (the latter on more than one occasion, since she was a guest of honor during the Italian B-movie retrospective!).
    Dethcharm

    Serial Acupuncturist...

    After an opening sequence featuring a beautiful woman enjoying a lovely massage, BLACK BELLY OF THE TARANTULA finds the woman and her husband fighting over her having an affair and subsequent blackmail. This leads to a rubber-gloved, mask-wearing murderer using a unique method to dispatch the unwary, unfaithful wife.

    Inspector Tellini (Giancarlo Giannini) suspects the husband, that is, until more, identical murders follow. As Tellini delves deeper into the case, he finds himself the target of the maniac he's trying to catch.

    Stylish and suspenseful, this is a classic giallo from the genre's high point. Giannini's character is more human than the typical cop role. He plays a man ready to chuck his whole career, just as the vicious killer gets going, making Tellini more believable.

    Co-stars Barbara Bach as the unfortunate Jenny...
    7ferbs54

    A Unique And Exciting Giallo Experience

    In the 1971 Italian giallo thriller "The Black Belly of the Tarantula," we meet a very unusual policeman, Inspector Tellini. He is unusual, insofar as these gialli are concerned, because he's unsure of himself, not certain if he should stay with his job, and makes many mistakes. Then again, his adversary here is a bit unusual, too: a killer who paralyzes his victims with an acupuncturist's needle in the back of the neck before ever so slowly (and excruciatingly...for this viewer, anyway) slicing their abdomens open. For the life of me, I could not figure out where this picture was headed or what it had on its mind; forget about figuring out the identity of the killer! Thus, I just sat back and enjoyed the ride, and was pleased when everything did congeal, plotwise, at the end. And there ARE many things to enjoy here. Tellini is played by Giancarlo Giannini, a year before he would commence a string of some half dozen hits with director Lina Wertmuller that would catapult him to international stardom. He is as fine an actor as has ever appeared in a giallo film, and he is here surrounded by some truly gorgeous women, including no less than three former/future Bond girls: Barbara Bouchet (whose exposed, superperky buttocks automatically earn this film 5 stars!), Claudine "Domino" Auger and Barbara Bach, here looking younger than I've ever seen her. Other things to enjoy: a creepy, arrhythmic, discordant score by the great Ennio Morricone, flashy direction by Paolo Cavara, some good action scenes (I love that three-way rooftop chase) and, like I mentioned, a meaty story to sink your mental teeth into. Not to mention those grisly murders! Don't believe the Maltin book, which gives a paltry 1 1/2 stars to the cut, 88-minute version of this film. Check out this fine-looking, uncut DVD from Blue Underground, with excellent subtitles and extras, for a unique and exciting giallo experience.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Great Giallo

    When the nymphomaniac Maria Zani (Barbara Bouchet) is murdered, her ex- husband and insurance broker Paolo Zani (Silvano Tranquilli) becomes the prime-suspect of Inspector Tellini (Giancarlo Giannini). Then the saleswoman Mirta Ricci (Annabella Incontrera) is murdered in the same modus operandi – both victims had been paralyzed by acupuncture needles with poison introduced in their necks and their bellies had been ripped open with a knife with the victims still alive, in the same way that tarantulas are killed by tarantula hawks. The police find that she was also a drug dealer,

    Paolo meets Inspector Tellini to tell him that he is innocent. Further, he hires the private eyes La Catapulta that finds the last man that had met Maria, the photographer Mario (Giancarlo Prete). Paolo pursues Mario but they both die and Inspector Tellini finds an envelope addressed to Franca Valentino with Mario. Inspector Tellini discovers that he was a blackmailer and meanwhile Franca becomes the third victim of the serial killer. When the masseuse Jenny (Barbara Bach) is found dead wrapped in plastic bag, Inspector Tellini goes to the massage parlor to meet the manager Laura (Claudine Auger) and he believes that an employee may be the serial-killer.

    "La Tarantola dal Ventre Nero" is a great "giallo" with the typical structure – a serial-killer that wears gloves and the identity is only discovered in the end; the victims are beautiful semi-naked women; gore deaths; a persistent detective pursues the killer; and wonderful music score.

    The story is well developed, with many plot points. The very young Giancarlo Giannini works with very beautiful women, three of them future Bond girls (Claudine Auger and the Barbaras Bouchet and Bach). The great music score of Ennio Morricone completes the work of the director Paolo Cavara. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "O Ventre Negro da Tarântula" ("The Black Belly of the Tarantula")
    6ma-cortes

    Intriguing and suspenseful Giallo full of grisly killings, red herrings, twists and turns

    La tarantula dal ventre nero is a nice Giallo dealing with a a series of victims being paralyzed by injecting a poison and then their corpses ripped open while they still alive. Inspector Tellini, Giancarlo Giannini, investigates the murder of a nymphoniac : Barbara Bouchet, then other astonishing series crimes are carried out much in the same as tarantulas are killed by the black wasp. There are various suspect people : a husband and insurance broker as prime suspect : Silvano Tranquilli, a drug dealer, a lover, a massage parlor owner, a blind person, a saleswoman and the clues lead to a sauna. With the needles dipped in deadly venom the victims are paralyzed, so they must lie awake and watch themselves die!

    Decent Gialli with well-shot heinous murders , thrills, chills, red herrings, and suspense. This intrigue film contains usual Giallo ingredients : a killer with gloves, barroque style, unsettling and disturbing interiors and sadistic and ritualized murders. Here the main interest resides on finding out the murderer and to see the surprising victims being paralyzed by accupunture needles with deadly venom introduced in their necks and bellies being ripped open with a knife .This is one of several Gialli regarding an animal in the script and its title similar to other Dario Argento films as The bird with crystal plumage, 4 mosche develluto grigio, The cat of 9 tails or La coda dello Scorpione by Sergio Martino. Here stands out some notorious Italian actresses as Stefania Sandrelli, Annabella Incontrera, Rosella Falk and Bond GIrls : 3 young beauties as Barbara Bach who married Ringo Starr and played The Spy who loved me, Barbara Bouchet of Casino Royale and the recently deceased Claudine Auger of Thunderball.

    Stirring and haunting musical score by prolific Ennio Morricone in the Seventies style, including voicalists exhaling mysterious sounds. As well as colorful and brilliant cinematography by Marcello Gatti. The picture was professionally directed by Paolo Cavara. He was a good filmmaker who made a few films until his early death at 56 . At his beginning he directed Mondo films as La donna nel mondo, 1962. Then he directed all kinds of genres as comedy, terror, thriller, Spaghetti Western and mystery, such as La Locandiera, Virilita, The Ravina, Plot of fear and Johnny Ears and Deaf. Rating 6/10. Acceptable and passable Giallu.

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    Related interests

    Jacopo Mariani in Deep Red (1975)
    Giallo
    Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
    Psychological Thriller
    Roger Jackson in Scream (1996)
    Slasher Horror
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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Three Bond girls appeared in this film. They were 1. Claudine Auger, who had the female lead in Thunderball (1965). 2. Barbara Bach, who went on to have the female lead in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). 3. Barbara Bouchet, who appeared in Casino Royale (1967). The first two appeared in Eon Bond movies, while the third appeared in a non Eon Bond movie which was a spoof.
    • Goofs
      The scientist who is arrested for drug smuggling refers to the tarantula as an insect. Spiders have 8 legs and belong to the class of arachnids. No scientist would make such an error.
    • Quotes

      Inspector Tellini: So, to sum it up: Crime victim number one--a nymphomaniac.

    • Connections
      Featured in Celluloid Bloodbath: More Prevues from Hell (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Morning
      Written by Gianni Marchetti

      Performed by Gianni Davoli e il suo complesso

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 9, 1972 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Strele otrovnog pauka
    • Filming locations
      • Roma, Lazio, Italy(location)
    • Production companies
      • Da.Ma. Cinematografica
      • Production Artistique et Cinématographique (PAC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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