Arachnophobia (1990)
Facts
| Directed by | Frank Marshall |
| Cast | Jeff Daniels, Julian Sands, John Goodman, Harley Jane Kozak and Stuart Pankin |
| Theatrical Release | July 18, 1990 |
| Running Time | 103 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| Buy this item ... | 1 used from $40.12 |
About Arachnophobia
Most horror movies depend on giant monsters; Arachnophobia gets just as many thrills out of creatures only a few inches long. A scientist (Julian Sands, Warlock, A Room with a View) who's hunting a vicious new species of spider in Venezuela unknowingly ships one back to the U.S. It ends up in a small town where a new doctor (Jeff Daniels, The Purple Rose of Cairo, Something Wild) is trying to establish a practice. When his patients start suddenly dying, Daniels suspects spiders--but no one takes him seriously because he's had a phobia about spiders since childhood. Arachnophobia builds a slow but relentless sense of menace and creepiness, mixed with a sneaky satire of small town life. If you're squeamish about spiders, this will get under your skin. Also featuring the ever-dependable John Goodman (The Big Lebowski, Barton Fink) as a comically zealous exterminator. --Bret Fetzer Amazon.com
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User Reviews
Average user review:| FUN AND CREEPY! 3 1/2 STARS! |
| A little too corny, but it has its moments... |
The film opens with scientist who specializes in spiders trying to find a new species in Venezuela. When one of the spiders makes its way back to the states in a coffin (it bit someone) it soon begins breeding and infesting a small country town. The new doctor, Ross Jennings, is deathly afraid of spiders and so when he starts suspecting that the sudden deaths taking place within the town are spider bite related he isn't taken very seriously, by anyone. But when he calls in Doctor James Atherton (the scientist who discovered this deadly breed) his suspicions are confirmed and the hunt for the queen mother bug (go Ashley Judd ~ inside joke, sorry) is on.
This film is really pure camp when you look at it objectively. Certain scenes are truly terrifying (when they are trapped in the bathroom I was seriously squirming in my seat) but the overall film is more laughs than thrills, some of which are unintentional (true definition of camp).
The acting is decent, at times even great. Jeff Daniels is not one of my favorite actors (he was Oscar worthy in `The Purple Rose of Cairo' but aside from that he's never really reached me) but he does a decent job here as Dr. Jennings. His fear of spiders is beyond believable (yeah, that would be me pressed against the wall in fear while the spider crawled along the table) and his heroic turn in the end is only a tad forced. Harley Jane Kozak floats through this as Daniels wife and both Stuart Pankin and Henry Jones are effectively horrible (not in performance but in character). The real star here is John Goodman who delivers a `Bill Murray in Caddy Shack' type performance as the dim-witted exterminator Delbert McClintock. His delivery is a little annoying at first but quickly grows on you as he transforms into the films comic relief.
The one thing that disappointed me about this film was the ending. When Jennings has to `battle' the spider the film turns from effectively funny to borderline ridiculous and it loses the edge it helped create with the whole `spiders are infesting the house' tactic. When the spiders start coming from all corners of the home it creates this truly claustrophobic and utterly terrifying vibe, but the corny fight sequence better Daniels and the mother bug is so ridiculous it kills the fear and inserts irritation.
So, in the end I say that `Arachnophobia' works to an extent. It has its chilling moments and it has its funny moments, and then it has its ridiculously mind-numbing moments. All together they build a decently satisfying film that is not all it could have been but no where near as bad as it could have been either. It's serviceable, and sometimes that's all that matters. September 23, 2008
| Just barely within the tolerance level for real arachnophobics |
strongest among those subject to it. I tend to be one of those and so
have never much enjoyed horror films featuring giant or menacing
spiders. Although I was uncomfortable during "Arachnophobia", it was
tolerable. This and "Eight Legged Freaks" are my two favorite spider
films.
"Arachnophobia" benefits from an excellent script, great casting,
uniformly good performances, and the injection of enough comic relief
to calm anyone from getting too uncomfortable. Jeff Daniels is as
reliable as ever, but it's John Goodman's gung-ho exterminator
character that balances what would otherwise be a really uncomfortable
movie. This isn't to say that it's light entertainment, as was "Eight
Legged Freaks". It's not, it's a real horror film. But it will only
make you squirm, not run for the theater exit. July 28, 2008
| Great spider horror film! |
I don't really have arachnophobia. But after watching this movie, I think I did for a while! This movie is just full of creepiness. After watching it I think we all feel a little different about spiders! If you love spiders and enjoy watching them crawl on you-this is the perfect movie for you. For any of you out there who have arachnophobia-I'd stay clear of this movie if I were you! June 20, 2008
| Arachnophobia |
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