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"Web
of the Spider" it's the remake of "Castle
of Blood", one of Antonio
Margheriti's masterpieces, which Antonio decide, pressed by the
same producer of the film made in 1964, to make it again almost ten years
after. This time he lose the magic of the effected black and white and
also the director of photography change: instead of Riccardo
Pallottini he works with Guglielmo and Sandro
Mancori, two brothers who Antonio likes and he will work a lot with
them after the tragic death of Riccardo
Pallottini (His favourite among all DoP).
The movie,
on an technical and emotional level, equalize his predecessor, and in some
sequences it's even better. The additional scene on the main credit, based
by Edgar Allan Poe's "Berenice"
it's impressive and full of suggestion. The amazing actor Klaus
Kinski in the role of Edgar Allan Poe
it's perfect, probably one of his better interpretation in his Italian
working period. For some critics and cinephiles, like the author of
the review at the bottom of the page: Squonkamatic,
or the Italian writer and critic Davide Pulici,
this film it's a lot better then the original.
It wasn't
like this for Antonio, who was preferring "Castle
of Blood", a film that he particularly loves. For my
opinion, "Web of the Spider"
it's a lot richer, the decors are better made, the music more effective,
and all denote a better care, especially in the details. Anthony
Franciosa stand perfectly the paragon with Georges
Riviere, but the absence of the queen of horror Barbara
Steele it's important, she was an actress unique, and no other
actress, even if good and beautiful, will ever compete, Michelle
Mercier was very good and very beautiful, but like I said
before... She can't compete with the "Queen".
With this
film Antonio made something like "Guinnes of
Records" at that time: The only film director who ever remake
one his own movie.
Edoardo
Margheriti
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Technical
Data
Title
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Web of the Spider
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Aka
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Nella stretta morsa
del Ragno (Ita) - Prisonnier de l'araignée (Fra)
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Genre
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Horror
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Year of Production
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1971
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Time
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109'
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B/W - Color
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C
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Distribution
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Panta Cin.ca
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Produced by
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DC 7 - Terra
Filmkunst - Paris Cannes Production
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Director
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Antonio
Margheriti (Anthony M. Dawson)
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Story by
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Bruno Corbucci
Giovanni Grimaldi
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Screenwriter
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Bruno Corbucci
Giovanni Grimaldi
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Photography by
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Guglielmo Mancori
Sandro Mancori
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Art Director
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n.a.
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Editor
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Otello Colangeli
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Music by
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Riz Ortolani
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Cast
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Anthony Franciosa
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Role
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Alan Foster
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Michele Mercier
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Elizabeth Blackwood
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Klaus Kinski
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Edgar Allan Poe
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Karin Field
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Julie
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Peter Carsten
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Camus
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Silvano Tranquilli
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Blackwood
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Irina Malewa
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Reviews
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Why
WEB OF THE SPIDER?
by Squonkamatic, Jan 04 2005

Antonio
Margheriti's WEB OF THE SPIDER
is my favorite Eurohorror film, and possibly my favorite movie regardless
of genre.
While the court is still out on that particular verdict, one of the
questions I have never formally posed to myself before, is what is it
about this dingy, obscure, misunderstood movie that appeals to me so
deeply and on such a profound level? Is it just the "deformed/mutant
kid" affection one feels for a sadly twisted freak? Or is there some
quality, or perhaps a series of qualities, about the film that strikes a
chord? And if so, what qualities, and why do they resonate with me so
much?
One of the reasons why I have avoided this essay -- while fully intending
to write it -- is that such an approach to critical discourse is more
about the writer than the work of art in question. This may very well end
up being an essay about my own predilections & tendencies as a
consumer of the film medium, something that would presumably be of zero
interest to your everyday/casual reader who does not know me nor care
about what I may think makes for a good movie experience.
As such I usually confine my writings to advocating the movie itself: I
want people to watch and enjoy this film if possible regardless of what my
particular feelings for it may constitute. I cannot stand by someone's TV
set and provide a commentary about the film as it plays out to explain,
elucidate or expound upon what takes place onscreen. Folks have to figure
that stuff out for themselves, though I will assure you that WEB
OF THE SPIDER is not just about a shook who takes up a sucker
bet that he can't stand an entire night alone in a supposedly haunted
castle. There is much, much more going on here, open to interpretation on
so many different levels that to impose my own take on the affairs would,
to a certain degree, ruin the fun of those who have not seen it and
arrived at their own conclusions.
But let's assume, for the sake of this one body of writing, that we all
have. And that we are also familiar with Margheriti's CASTLE
OF BLOOD/Danza Macabra from 1964, WEB
OF THE SPIDER's immediate predecessor & essentially the
same story told with a different cinematic approach and different players
in the various roles. We know who Allan Foster is: American writer,
sometimes poet, with a tendancy to observe the philosophical aspects of
life, and a pre-disposition towards being a romantic. We also know that
the film's two Allan Foster's are very different people plugged into the
same role: CASTLE OF BLOOD's Foster is
realized by a British actor named Georges Reviere,
a distinguished & sensitive actor who's Allan Foster is a man of a
certain amount of sophistication and wit. WEB OF
THE SPIDER's Allan Foster is embodied by Anthony
Franciosa, and American/Italian actor of the method variety,
known for his ability to play both high class/societied types and gritty
western gunfighters effectively, with equal amounts of histrionics as
required by the nature of whatever script is at hand.
I had a professor who used to advocate the idea that movies should always
be about people and things that happen to them, usually resulting in a
change in their basic character -- for better or worse. The process of
watching a film is usually about watching this happen to the character,
and it is very important to note that the ordeals that the two films
subject their Allan Fosters too are very different experiences, if only
for the sheer elemental fact that one film was made in 1964 -- a period of
relative restraint & naivite about what films could portray -- and one
was made in 1970, at a period when both film in general and the horror
genre in particular were changing their attitudes about what is permissible
or appropriate to show an audience. By 1970 horror audiences in particular
were becoming more "jaded" and "worldly", not only
accepting but to a certain extent demanding explicit or graphic content to
the films they would patronize. Blood, gore, profanity, heaving bosoms and
even outright graphic sexual displays became a part of the formula for
ensuring a movie's success or failure. Especially to the horror movie
audience, in that horror films have always been about taboo issues --
Horror movies are sex movies, to a certain extent, because they are about
the base, gutteral responses we have to visual & audio stimulations.
So in 1970, Margheriti and his collaborators were allowed to indulge this
nature of their craft to a greater degree than in 1964. CASTLE
OF BLOOD is a fine movie, one of the best ever made -- it is an
experimental horror film in that Margheriti and his collaborators
specifically chose to work with the Black & White film medium, and as
such the film is a study in how light can be used as a storytelling motif
in itself. CASTLE OF BLOOD revels in
it's "artiness", where the reality depicted onscreen is murkily
defined & other-worldly, with every flaring of a match to light a
candle an event within the framework of a shot. It's depiction of an
alternate reality of ghosts, shadowns, crumbling crypts and ghostly wooded
English manors is served well by Margheriti's choice of B&W film, and
he himself often lamented that WEB OF THE SPIDER
was ruined by the addition of the element of color photography to it's
still very potent concoction.
While it is more likely that Margheriti preferred CASTLE
OF BLOOD due to romantic feelings for his female lead Barbara
Steele [for which he can be naturally forgiven: Steele is one of cinema's
great beauties and her exquisite presence helps to define CASTLE
OF BLOOD's singularly unique & often imitated experience as
a film], he was essentially correct, but perhaps too close to the subject
at hand to be dispassionate or clinical in assessing WEB
OF THE SPIDER's strengths & weaknesses when directly
compared to the earlier film. My main thesis about the two films maintains
that they were made with different objectives, motivations and during very
different times, resulting in movies that while they may tell the same
basic story could not be more different.
CASTLE OF BLOOD is more of an
experimental art house film masquerading as a ghost story and is very
classical in nature, complete with an orchestrated, harpsichord dominated
fully "cinematic" sounding musical score by the great Italian
composer Riz Ortolani, who won an
Oscar in 1963 for his John Barry/007-esque brassy, jazzy soundtrack for
Margheriti's THE VIRGIN OF NUREMBERG
starring Christopher Lee and CASTLE
OF BLOOD's George Reviere.
Ortolani also returned to do the score for WEB OF
THE SPIDER, and like the film's visual qualities his music --
while also serving the same role within the framework of the story --
could also not have been more different. Instead of "quaint"
sounding chamber music themes contrasted with an almost Kitsch like use of
the Ferriman, an electronic musical device that produces the "wwoooOoOoOo"
monster movie music sounds that flavor CASTLE OF
BLOOD's creepy sections, Ortolani's WEB
OF THE SPIDER score is an all-out aural assault of acid rock,
freakout atonal jazz, atmospheric frenetics and contrasting lyrical ballad
sections. It is a totally unconventional & unique musical score, more
reminiscent of the "progressive" jazz/rock sound of British
"art rock" bands like King Crimson than anything from the
Hollywood approach to film scores that is more evident in CASTLE
OF BLOOD's music.
So along with a different "sound", WEB
OF THE SPIDER also embraced a different look, which is the
world of decorated sets, costumed Eurobabes in push-up bra's and more
blatant onscreen sexual conduct that was being popularized in 1970 by
Britain's Hammer Films. Director Roy Ward Baker's sumptuous 1970 film THE
VAMPIRE LOVERS appears to be the main inspiration for the
"look" of the film, right down to the casting of the very Ingrit
Pitt-esque Karin Feild in the role of
Julia. Where CASTLE OF BLOOD had
existed in a sparse, poorly lit and defined netherworld, WEB
OF THE SPIDER exists in a realm of tightly packed &
decorated sets abounding with the accouterments of Eurohorror: Candleabras
and candlesticks, bookshelves, long wooden tables, suits of armor &
mounted weapons displays, paintings, draperies, cushioned dias and couch
like chairs, sweeping hallways lined with sitting chairs and wall hangings
... There is even a costumed ball, where the dolled up actors &
actresses dance a fully orchestrated waltz that is remarkably similar to
the one shown in THE VAMPIRE LOVERS
[which in itself was no doubt inspired by the waltz scenes in
CASTLE OF BLOOD:
history repeats itself].
In order to display all of these wonderful sights -- and to do so with the
then popular and inexpensive Eastmanstock coloring process common to so
much of Eurohorror -- Margheriti found
he had to light designer Octavio Scotti's
sets to not only allow viewers to see what was onscreen but to do so with
color film stock.
The
result was a completely different viewing experience from the arty
surrealism of CASTLE OF BLOOD, which
was so strikingly original in 1964/1965 that it's appeal crossed genre
lines: CASTLE OF BLOOD is widely
regarded as a masterpiece even by those who may not usually be drawn to
Italian made horror films.
By contrast, WEB OF THE SPIDER is a
much more conventional looking movie, and in fact it is prescient to
observe that one of it's objectives was to have the "look" of
Eurohorror be one of it's main selling points. It lacks the novel visual
invention of CASTLE OF BLOOD, is less
"arty" in nature and as such was widely regarded as a
disappointment by both those who went to see it and those who participated
in it's creation. The fact that Margheriti and company opted to further up
their ante in the film by featuring a big name star [Klaus Kinski] further
added to the confused reception that the film continues to receive even
thirty five years later. It had a bigger budget, a bigger cast, a higher
profile "A-list" sensibility, and yet the result was almost a
null sum gain. By telling the same story the effort inevitably engendered
comparison to the earlier film, an effort that reveled in it's almost
purely cinematic nature. In comparison [and
especially in the truncated, dingy, full-frame English language version
that most readers of this essay will be familiar with], WEB
OF THE SPIDER plays out more like a Soap Opera, with elegantly
costumed actors reciting lines and engaged in various activities while
photographed on brightly lit sets to show off their faces & the pretty
trappings of the medium. WEB OF THE SPIDER
seems to have more in common with the Dan Curtis DARK
SHADOWS television series that Margheriti was doubtlessly aware
of by 1970, itself an inspiration of the Hammer Horror effect translated
for daytime TV audiences in a serialized form.
A working example of this "Dark Shadows Effect" is in the use of
light itself: One of the phrases I like to coin is that in CASTLE
OF BLOOD the striking of a match or the lighting of a candle is
an event within the framework of any particular shot. In WEB
OF THE SPIDER, the matches, candlesticks and candelabras are,
by comparison, reduced to being props that the actors carry around to help
establish a mood or moment. The densely packed & overtly designed sets
are even already fully lit when Franciosa's Allan Foster first enters
Providence Castle, making a viewer wonder why finding a torch or a
candlestick is such a big deal. The big deal is to give the actor a prop
to better define or characterize his or her actions and the meaning of the
scene in question, rather than provide actual illumination. The light
brought into Providence Castle by George Reviere
in CASTLE OF BLOOD is not only used to
illuminate sets, but to define the reality presented onscreen: Move out of
the flickering candle light and you enter the world of the dead, but
strike a match and you create a small pocket of reality inside of this
netherworld. By shunning that narrative construct, WEB
OF THE SPIDER plays out more conventionally, cues into the
imagination of it's viewers less, and leaves only the sets, actors, music
and story as it's fodder of consumption.
And that is ONE of the reasons why I respond to WEB
OF THE SPIDER more acutely: It is equally about it's narrative
story and the genre that it is a part of, and less about the artistic
nature of film as a medium. We are able to spend more time engaging the
story without being swooned by the visual dynamic -- by being a more
"boring" and straight forward visual telling of it's story WEB
OF THE SPIDER seems to serve it better. Another catch phrase
about the films that I like to use is that CASTLE
OF BLOOD may be a better film, but WEB
OF THE SPIDER is better Poe, though current research indicates
that the base story for both films may have been more accurately inspired
by the works of British supernatural author Algeron Blackwood crossed with
certain themes from two or three Edgar Allan Poe
stories. In either event it's literal visual depiction of a Victorian era
setting with all of the trappings of a European gothic horror film speaks
more clearly to me of these roots than CASTLE OF
BLOOD's intoxicating, arty, cinematic melange of sight &
sound. Some things are better left to the imagination for some, and as
such CASTLE OF BLOOD will probably
always be the more preferred version of the story amongst devotees of the
genre: It is a much more dynamic and self-aware experience that exists in
the realm of the fantastique. WEB OF THE SPIDER
is more of a gross elaboration on it's storytelling ideas, with the bright
stage lights needed for a Technicolor production washing out the ir-reality,
and replacing it with a more documentarian approach to telling it's tale
of madness, supernatural manifestations, and death.
WEB OF THE SPIDER allows us to more
directly participate in the fantasy of Poe himself, or perhaps more
correctly the irrational, macabre and mouldering realities that Poe and
Algeron Blackwood's writings suggest. When seen in it's properly
widescreened Italian form the results are breathtaking: This is a movie
with a much more aggressive and sweeping agenda than CASTLE
OF BLOOD, which was happy to seduce and intoxicate and exist in
the realm of the imagination. By staking it's claim in a more cold bright
of day "reality", WEB OF THE SPIDER
places it's emphasis upon The Strange Tale of Allan Foster, and the
traditions of the Eurohorror genre it is relegated to by those insistent
upon classifying forms of expression.
Review
by Squonkamatic |
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