NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAlan Whitmore, a young American researcher, goes to Budapest to visit Professor Roth, with whom he collaborated on a secret project called "Intextus" while a mysterious killer in on the loos... Tout lireAlan Whitmore, a young American researcher, goes to Budapest to visit Professor Roth, with whom he collaborated on a secret project called "Intextus" while a mysterious killer in on the loose...Alan Whitmore, a young American researcher, goes to Budapest to visit Professor Roth, with whom he collaborated on a secret project called "Intextus" while a mysterious killer in on the loose...
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Attila Lõte
- Professor Roth
- (as Lote Attila)
Avis à la une
This one starts off pretty slow. After a brief scene involving two boys playing, a man is sent to Budapest to investigate what is going on with a professor there who was supposed to have sent something. It starts to pick up once he gets there and meets the professor. The professor is a nervous man who slips him something once his wife leaves. The investigator says he'll come back later that night to talk more. When he does, the police are there, and it seems some of the people he met may not have been who he thought.
Clearly the movie had a budget. It has lots of locations, some nice special effects, and camera-work that involves cranes.
What seems initially to be a giallo movie (and arguably still is) becomes a bit more supernatural than is usual for that subgenre. There's a woman with enormous strength, an exhibitionist research assistant, an old man with a warning, spider-shaped scars, heavy rolling balls, and it just keeps getting stranger. Some good murder set pieces, and a totally bizarre climax. The ending was pretty satisfying.
Clearly the movie had a budget. It has lots of locations, some nice special effects, and camera-work that involves cranes.
What seems initially to be a giallo movie (and arguably still is) becomes a bit more supernatural than is usual for that subgenre. There's a woman with enormous strength, an exhibitionist research assistant, an old man with a warning, spider-shaped scars, heavy rolling balls, and it just keeps getting stranger. Some good murder set pieces, and a totally bizarre climax. The ending was pretty satisfying.
A professor sent to Italy to check on a reclusive colleague finds himself in a world whose reality seems less and less certain. That's about all one needs to know about the plot. Most Italian horror is mood driven not plot focused. The Spider Labyrinth certainly owes a debt to Dario Argento. We have a mystery, a sect, a hotel with strange residents, and the unsettling feeling that the protagonist left reality behind the moment he stepped off the airplane. The world of the film is one of magic, just like in Suspiria or Inferno, yet the film does not fall into the trap of being a rip-off of those films. Only one scene, the murder of a maid in a room with hanging sheets, suffers from being overly familiar. Otherwise, the film has the feel of an Argento film without coming across as theft. While The Spider Labyrinth is not without problems (some hokey FX; an at times easy to predict plot), it seems more daring and evocative than Mother of Tears, Argento's last Three Mothers film. I am surprised by how little attention the film has gotten in the U.S. even with horror film fans like myself.
This is some of the most weak, limp, almost insouciant direction I've ever seen. Scenes generally progress with a flummoxing carefree ease that suggests a stroll in the park instead of a genre flick, and much the same goes for the acting. Nevermind the curiously flimsy, meager, lackadaisical dialogue - actors' delivery, expressions, and even their movement are mostly casual and unbothered even as strange goings-on begin to mount. There are exceptions, sure, and sometimes the direction or acting are more vibrant, as seen in the first death sequence we witness nearly halfway in. Sometimes filmmaker Gianfranco Giagni does manage to strike the right tone or infuse some easy atmosphere, aided by the original music of Franco Piersanti. Yet even Piersanti's music sometimes struggles in a similar manner. One may reasonably suppose that the proceedings would suitably intensify as the plot develops, and they'd be correct in part, but it continues to be the case to an astounding degree that 'The spider labyrinth' carries itself with a relaxed, indifferent nonchalance more closely resembling a television program about, I don't know, tracing the history of recipes for chocolate cake.
All this is more bizarre still as I recognize how well the picture is made in other regards. The filming locations are gorgeous; the production design and art direction are very easy on the eyes, with some fabulous detail to come. There are some extra fetching shots throughout, some that would look right at home if framed on a wall. The stunts and practical effects are excellent, and gnarly, including some terrific stop-motion animation; there's even fine consideration for lighting, and sound effects. At its best I really do like the score; at its best this movie does boast some nice touches of atmosphere (predominantly in the last stretch). Broadly speaking the costume design, hair, and makeup are swell. And there are some solid ideas in the story and screenplay: a man unwittingly drawn into something he doesn't grasp, ties between ancient relics and sinister conspiracies in the modern world, and something still more monstrous lurking on the edges. The notions underlying the plot, the scenes, and even the characterizations are pretty fantastic and ripe for cinematic treatment, and intermittently - again, predominantly in the last stretch - the feature really does discover some welcome strength, the vitality that one would hope to find in horror at large.
Yet for all the strong craftsmanship, and all the good ideas on hand, how the screenplay is fleshed out is decidedly more questionable. By Jove, we don't particularly get plot development or an unfolding mystery, we very gawkily and inelegantly get a wealth of plot and most answers all at once at about the one-hour mark. Through to the end there are troubled spots in the music. Through to the end the acting is too often marked by glaring unconcern - for the majority of the length Roland Wybenga rarely comes off well, the poor guy - and Giagni's direction is peculiarly easygoing. The last twenty minutes or so are notably vivid, building into a superb climax, and the ending is a delight (and also the one time when Wybenga's informal composure specifically works). Even observing clear influences (some giallo here, some John Carpenter there, and so on), 'The spider labyrinth' is splendid and enjoyable when it's firing on all cylinders. And that makes it all the more odd that so much of the title is kind of anemic. On the one hand I want to like it more than I do; on the other hand, for it to be so uneven, I wonder if I'm not being too generous.
When all is said and done this is worth watching, for the payoff rewards our patience. But one should surely temper their expectations in light of how the last stretch especially needs to compensate for such infirm dominant construction. Don't go out of your way for 'The spider labyrinth,' and don't necessarily get your hopes up, but it's good enough overall to warrant checking out if you have the opportunity.
All this is more bizarre still as I recognize how well the picture is made in other regards. The filming locations are gorgeous; the production design and art direction are very easy on the eyes, with some fabulous detail to come. There are some extra fetching shots throughout, some that would look right at home if framed on a wall. The stunts and practical effects are excellent, and gnarly, including some terrific stop-motion animation; there's even fine consideration for lighting, and sound effects. At its best I really do like the score; at its best this movie does boast some nice touches of atmosphere (predominantly in the last stretch). Broadly speaking the costume design, hair, and makeup are swell. And there are some solid ideas in the story and screenplay: a man unwittingly drawn into something he doesn't grasp, ties between ancient relics and sinister conspiracies in the modern world, and something still more monstrous lurking on the edges. The notions underlying the plot, the scenes, and even the characterizations are pretty fantastic and ripe for cinematic treatment, and intermittently - again, predominantly in the last stretch - the feature really does discover some welcome strength, the vitality that one would hope to find in horror at large.
Yet for all the strong craftsmanship, and all the good ideas on hand, how the screenplay is fleshed out is decidedly more questionable. By Jove, we don't particularly get plot development or an unfolding mystery, we very gawkily and inelegantly get a wealth of plot and most answers all at once at about the one-hour mark. Through to the end there are troubled spots in the music. Through to the end the acting is too often marked by glaring unconcern - for the majority of the length Roland Wybenga rarely comes off well, the poor guy - and Giagni's direction is peculiarly easygoing. The last twenty minutes or so are notably vivid, building into a superb climax, and the ending is a delight (and also the one time when Wybenga's informal composure specifically works). Even observing clear influences (some giallo here, some John Carpenter there, and so on), 'The spider labyrinth' is splendid and enjoyable when it's firing on all cylinders. And that makes it all the more odd that so much of the title is kind of anemic. On the one hand I want to like it more than I do; on the other hand, for it to be so uneven, I wonder if I'm not being too generous.
When all is said and done this is worth watching, for the payoff rewards our patience. But one should surely temper their expectations in light of how the last stretch especially needs to compensate for such infirm dominant construction. Don't go out of your way for 'The spider labyrinth,' and don't necessarily get your hopes up, but it's good enough overall to warrant checking out if you have the opportunity.
In the late eighties, it seemed like the Italian film industry went full out to create an interest in their horror movies, resulting in cheeseball films like The Red Monks, Ghosthouse and Witchery. Fulci gave us House of Clocks (good), Aenigma (okay), Demonia and Sweethouse of Horrors (painful), and Lenzi had House of Lost Souls (good) and House of Witchcraft. You've Lamberto Bava's Graveyard Disturbance and Demons 3 The Ogre out there too, not to mention those Zombi sequels and Marcello Avalone's Spectres and Maya and etc etc. None of those are as effective or genuinely scary as Spider Labyrinth. Why, I'm not quite sure, but this film lacks the cheese factor of any of those films and seems to go all out for creating a surreal, creepy atmosphere.
In America, a company who are working on an international project have lost touch with a Professor Roth in Budapest, so they send one of their own, Professor Whitmore, out to Hungary to find out what's going on. He's driven to Roth's house by Roth's beautiful assistant, only to be warned by Roth's wife that he's been acting strangely. Roth himself does appear to be freaked out by something, and when alone with Whitmore, gives him some notes and Polaroid photographs and tells him to meet him later that evening.
Whitmore then goes to his hotel, run by a creepy lady and apparently full of strange residents who continually stare at Whitmore. He also discovers that Roth's assistant lives across the road and isn't shy about showing of her assets, if you know what I mean. Once he goes back to Roth he finds the man murdered (hanging from the ceiling by cobwebs), and that he never had a wife in the first place. That's bad enough, but the local policeman takes Whitmore's passport, so now he's stuck in a strange land.
He decides to do a bit of investigating and this leads to people (including William Berger) trying to warn him off, him getting lost in Budapest itself (where the city seems to deliberately get him lost), and a strange creature with a nerve shattering shriek going around killing people. I'll go no further than that plot wise.
What works here is the great music, cinematography, and the ending, which took me by surprise. There's no attempts here to connect with the youth eighties style by having youngsters in the film (like Ghosthouse or House of Lost Souls), no cheese (as in Witchouse), and some serious time has been spent making every shot creepy, to give you the feeling that every single person Whitmore encounters has something to hide. I see similarities with Argento in some respects, but this film unfolds a lot more slowly and there's not a drop of blood until 40 minutes in.
I'd never even heard of this film until last week, and I've been actively seeking out Italian horror for over fifteen years! It's available on Youtube in a blurry, Japanese subtitled version, so you can watch it for free, but this needs to be released on DVD. It's brilliant.
In America, a company who are working on an international project have lost touch with a Professor Roth in Budapest, so they send one of their own, Professor Whitmore, out to Hungary to find out what's going on. He's driven to Roth's house by Roth's beautiful assistant, only to be warned by Roth's wife that he's been acting strangely. Roth himself does appear to be freaked out by something, and when alone with Whitmore, gives him some notes and Polaroid photographs and tells him to meet him later that evening.
Whitmore then goes to his hotel, run by a creepy lady and apparently full of strange residents who continually stare at Whitmore. He also discovers that Roth's assistant lives across the road and isn't shy about showing of her assets, if you know what I mean. Once he goes back to Roth he finds the man murdered (hanging from the ceiling by cobwebs), and that he never had a wife in the first place. That's bad enough, but the local policeman takes Whitmore's passport, so now he's stuck in a strange land.
He decides to do a bit of investigating and this leads to people (including William Berger) trying to warn him off, him getting lost in Budapest itself (where the city seems to deliberately get him lost), and a strange creature with a nerve shattering shriek going around killing people. I'll go no further than that plot wise.
What works here is the great music, cinematography, and the ending, which took me by surprise. There's no attempts here to connect with the youth eighties style by having youngsters in the film (like Ghosthouse or House of Lost Souls), no cheese (as in Witchouse), and some serious time has been spent making every shot creepy, to give you the feeling that every single person Whitmore encounters has something to hide. I see similarities with Argento in some respects, but this film unfolds a lot more slowly and there's not a drop of blood until 40 minutes in.
I'd never even heard of this film until last week, and I've been actively seeking out Italian horror for over fifteen years! It's available on Youtube in a blurry, Japanese subtitled version, so you can watch it for free, but this needs to be released on DVD. It's brilliant.
An American professor of archeology Alan Whitmore is ordered by his superiors at his university to go to Budapest.He travels there to work with another researcher and stumbles into pagan worshippers of a giant subterranean spider monsters.A crazed demonic killer is slaughtering those who stumble unto the secrets of 4000 year old cult and there seems no way out of the labyrinth."Spider Labirynth" is an eerie and very stylish homage to Italian horror as well as the film with extremely dense Lovecraftian atmosphere of terror and menace.The use of colors in "Spider Labirynth" reminds me Dario Argento's brilliant "Suspiria" and "Inferno".The special visual effects by Sergio Stivaletti are gruesome and bloody and the suspense slowly builds up.9 out of 10.Along with Michele Soavi's "Deliria" definitely the best Italian horror movie of late 80's.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe original script for this movie, written by Tonino Cervi, Riccardo Aragno and Cesare Frugoni, dated from a few years earlier its release. As director Gianfranco Giagni explained, "It seemed a bit dated to me, so I called scriptwriter Gianfranco Manfredi and together we tried to give it a more modern framing story." Firstly, Giagni and Manfredi changed the setting from Venice to Budapest, frequently visited by Italian cinema in those years: "It is a city with many Gothic elements, with disquieting buildings in an apparently rational context ... cities like Budapest, Prague or Sarajevo suggest a sense of anxiety: behind their 'normality' there lies in fact a hidden 'abnormality."
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Spider Labyrinth
- Lieux de tournage
- Trammell Crow Center - 2001 Ross Ave, Dallas, Texas, États-Unis(Office tower with fountain)
- Sociétés de production
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