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Venom

  • 1971
  • PG
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
285
YOUR RATING
Venom (1971)
Horror

A Nazi scientist and a woman known as a "spider goddess" attempt to develop a nerve gas made from spider venom.A Nazi scientist and a woman known as a "spider goddess" attempt to develop a nerve gas made from spider venom.A Nazi scientist and a woman known as a "spider goddess" attempt to develop a nerve gas made from spider venom.

  • Director
    • Peter Sykes
  • Writers
    • Stephen Collins
    • Derek Ford
    • Donald Ford
  • Stars
    • Simon Brent
    • Neda Arneric
    • Sheila Allen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    285
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Sykes
    • Writers
      • Stephen Collins
      • Derek Ford
      • Donald Ford
    • Stars
      • Simon Brent
      • Neda Arneric
      • Sheila Allen
    • 15User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos41

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    Top cast16

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    Simon Brent
    Simon Brent
    • Paul Greville
    Neda Arneric
    Neda Arneric
    • Anna
    Sheila Allen
    • Ellen
    Derek Newark
    Derek Newark
    • Johann
    Terence Soall
    • Lutgermann
    Gerard Heinz
    Gerard Heinz
    • Huber
    Gertan Klauber
    Gertan Klauber
    • Kurt
    Sean Gerrad
    • Rudi
    Bette Vivian
    • Frau Kessler
    Ray Barron
    • Young Man
    Billy Reid
    • Gang member
    George Fisher
    • Gang member
    Nosher Powell
    • Gang member
    Jimmy Charters
    • Villager in Tavern
    • (uncredited)
    Pat Judge
    • Villager in Tavern
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Sharp
    • Villager in Tavern
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Peter Sykes
    • Writers
      • Stephen Collins
      • Derek Ford
      • Donald Ford
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    4.6285
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    Featured reviews

    7Hey_Sweden

    A fun mishmash of ideas.

    Simon Brent ("Softly Softly") stars here as Paul Greville, an artist / photographer on an outing in the Bavarian countryside. He becomes smitten with Anna (Neda Arneric, "Shaft in Africa"), a mysterious young beauty who really is something of a puzzle. He also finds locals who are deeply into superstition and who mostly prevent him from having a warm welcome.

    It's best not to know too much about the story (concocted by Donald & Derek Ford, "A Study in Terror") going in, because then at least the viewer can be rightfully amused at the places that "Venom" goes. It doesn't mean that the story is airtight - far from it. But it does an entertaining job of utilizing "folk horror" elements and eventually introducing mad scientist tropes. Best of all is the excellent European atmosphere, although the music score (composed by John Simco Harrison) is simply wonderful, and the ethereal attractiveness of the Yugoslavian-born Arneric (just 17 or 18 at the time) is a real selling point.

    The solid European cast also includes the sexy Sheila Allen ("Love Actually"), an effectively brutish Derek Newark ("The Blue Max"), Terence Soall ('Our Miss Pemberton') as the nefarious Lutgermann, Gerard Heinz ("The Fallen Idol") as the amiable Huber, and Gertan Klauber ("Top Secret!") as eager-to-please innkeeper Kurt. Brent is a reasonably engaging hero who refuses to be intimidated, although the antagonists do their best at keeping him in line. For example, he's tied up in the forest with a tarantula for company. The imagery and visuals are enjoyable: one of the hooks here is that spiders are part of the iconography of this region.

    Overall, "Venom" supplies agreeable entertainment, somewhat along the lines of typical Hammer fare. Unsurprisingly, "Venom" director Peter Sykes went on to direct the Hammer pictures "Demons of the Mind" and "To the Devil...a Daughter".

    It's probably best if one doesn't take this one too seriously. Otherwise, people may find themselves getting annoyed with the muddled tale being told.

    Seven out of 10.
    7TheFearmakers

    Decent Dark Forest Horror

    After the grainy, low-budget VENOM aka THE LEGEND OF SPIDER FOREST, British director Peter Sykes landed a job for legendary British horror production Hammer for DEMONS OF THE MIND, with more money, bigger names and continuing the psychological-horror sub-genre, only VENOM is a lot more affective...

    Mostly set in a tree-shrouded, shade-soaked, shadow-splintered forest where lovely Neda Arneric (a combination of Sarah Miles and Mia Farrow) plays Anna, a nature-traipsing wild girl with an enigmatic spider tattoo on her shoulder, following bland/handsome journalist Simon Brent around until he winds up, seemingly safe in a local tavern where, once back in the forest, he has more problems connected to a gang of muscularly rural locals liken to the 60's British thriller THE SHUTTERED ROOM, only these guys are no (and there really needed someone intriguing like an) Oliver Reed...

    Making the only real problem of this otherwise decent gothic programmer the lack of anyone else charismatic enough beyond Anna or secondary seductress Sheila Allen, daughter of the resident doctor who's a Nazi that, as described in the summary, has created some sort of nerve gas using spider venom...

    But all the scientific expository stuff happens so far along it really doesn't matter... making VENOM only really matter when centering on Neda Arneric's energetic prowess and sensually exploitive, ravaging beauty.
    EyeAskance

    Ninety-one minutes of "huh?"

    SPIDER FOREST looks like it had some intriguing ideas in place prior to filming, but the final product is a crabbed and often hard-to-follow farrago with a light smattering of atmospheric moments.

    A lovely young lady dwells within a European forest where super-venomous spiders roam, although she is, it seems, impervious to their deadly bite...her male lovers, however, aren't so lucky.

    When a young artist takes lodging in the aforementioned locale, he becomes smitten with the mysterious spider-girl, pursues her, and becomes inadvertently embroiled in a covert Nazi experiment to create a highly lethal neuro-toxin.

    Far too much going on, and quite sloppily presented. Whatever potential may have been in play here is sadly lost to mishandling of the material, mostly in relation to editing/continuity problems and a knotted-up tangle of a screenplay. Pity.

    4/10
    3The_Void

    Disappointing fantasy horror rubbish from Peter Sasdy

    Peter Sasdy made a lot of films that were disappointing; Demons of the Mind and To the Devil a Daughter were two of the worst of all the Hammer films and House in Nightmare Park was not nearly as entertaining as it could have been. The Legend of Spider Forest is actually Sasdy's least disappointing film, but that's only because I had no expectations going into it. The film really does make little sense and while the fantasy elements of it might have lifted it out of the bottom of the barrel, they unfortunately don't. The plot has something to do with a mad scientist, a mythical 'spider woman' and some spider venom; there's a forest involved too. It actually gets off to an interesting start as we witness an interesting sequence taking place in a forest but the rest of the film is an absolute mess. It's far too easy to get lost in what's going on, and since the film is not very interesting, it's difficult to find the motivation to actually care what is going on - which kind of makes watching this film rather pointless. I guess this might appeal to people who like daft films that don't make sense, but everyone else can feel free to leave this one languishing in obscurity!
    3Platypuschow

    Venom: And I SO wanted to like this

    Before Tom Hardy comes along and ruins one of the most popular Marvel characters (Venom) we had another movie by the same title but no supervilliany is to be found here.

    Venom otherwise known as Spider Venom otherwise known as The Legend of Spider Forest is a curious little tale that I suppose would be horror, but just barely.

    It tells an absolute mess of a story that revolves around a painter visiting a small town, a mysterious girl who lives in the forest who the locals call the spider queen and a Nazi conspiracy to weaponize spider venom.

    It all sounds fairly interesting but the delivery is awful, worse than I could actually put into words. Sure the cast are competent enough, but they can't save a movie with the writing quality of a Sharknado (2013) film.

    Venom is one of those titles I get the impression IMDB do not have the full brief on. It claims this is UK made and filmed exclusively in England but the movie comes across dubbed, has some foreign cast and some of the scenery is certainly not British.

    I really wanted to like this but by about the half way point came to the conclusion that simply wasn't going to happen (And I wasn't wrong).

    It looks the part, it's well acted and the concept is there but the writing is so appallingly bad it leaves the movie DOA.

    The Good:

    Neda Arneric

    Some very interesting ideas

    The Bad:

    Plot is an unfettered mess

    Things I Learnt From This Movie:

    Men simply shouldn't wear scarves of any description

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The print on the wall above Greville's bed depicting a mutilated man impaled on the branch of a broken tree is from Goya's "Disasters of War" series. The triptych that Greville finds in the woods contains a crude copy of the man-eating bird from the right hand panel of Bosch's "Garden of Earthly Delights".
    • Quotes

      Huber: Mr. Greville, superstition also breeds in the forest. There have been many stories and, I'm afraid, some tragic events. Death!

      Paul Greville: Oh?

      Huber: You didn't know? Accidents, apparently. But nonetheless tragic; nonetheless mysterious.

      Paul Greville: How?

      Huber: A strange sort of paralysis, unless there were spiders crawling all over the body. Well, you can't blame the simpler people here from digging into their memories of folklore, attributing the cause of death to the Spider Goddess.

      Paul Greville: Oh, Herr. Huber, you're no simple peasant. What sort of junk are you trying to feed me? Anna, I suppose, is the spider Goddess?

      Huber: It's what the people believe. I have no cause to prove it either way. Wasn't it your English poet who said, "There are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of"?

    • Connections
      Referenced in No Easy Rides: Ken Rowles' Life in Filmmaking (2025)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1971 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Spider's Venom
    • Filming locations
      • Twickenham Film Studios, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Action Plus Productions Ltd.
      • Cupid Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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