
Color, 1960, 84 mins. 8 secs. / 77 mins. 2 secs.
Directed by Jamie Nolan (Fritz Böttger)
Starring Alexander D’Arcy, Barbara Valentin, Harald Maresch, Helga Franck, Rainer Brandt, Helga Neuner, Dorothee Parker, Walter Faber
Severin Films (Blu-ray) (R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9), Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC) / WS (1.85:1)
famous as a ridiculous
episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 than an actual movie, Horrors of Spider Island is one of the odder fusions of monster mashing and cheesecake girlie ogling from the early days of European exploitation. The German/Yugoslavian co-production was filmed as Ein toter hing im netz (A Corpse Hangs in the Web) but christened with the more direct Horrors of Spider Island for its general U.S. assault on movie houses from coast to coast. However, a spicier adult variant called It’s Hot in Paradise also surfaced, and it’s under that title that this oft-maligned little slice of lunacy hit home video on VHS and then DVD from Something Weird, the latter format in 2000 through its deal with Image Entertainment. Clarifying things considerably in 2020, Severin Films brought the film back into circulation on both Blu-ray and DVD featuring both the longest English-language version and the complete German cut. No matter which option you choose, it's a wild experience from the golden age of grindhouse cinema that often feels like it's being beamed in from another planet.
web, and then poor Gary is nipped by an eight-legged horror out in the woods. Soon he’s transformed into a fanged beast, running rampant
through the island and scaring the poor models out of their wits.
could
have stepped from the pages of Diabolik. The MST3K version is also easy to find on DVD in a few iterations, which fans most likely own already; that said, this one’s loony and funny enough to stand quite well on its own, thank you very much.
Düsseldorf dupe negative," and while much of the film looks very nice, a few
chunks have obviously been pulled from a lesser, more flickery source (part of a dance routine in D'Arcy's office and a shot of the girls clambering across the beach being the most obvious, not to mention a cigarette burn or two popping up). It's all part of the charm really and doesn't account for that much of the running time; to put it mildly, this is a very substantial upgrade. The shorter, all-English It's Hot in Paradise version is also included (complete with its longer jazzy musical intro at the beginning) and is advertised as being from a "pristine low con print;" it's also far better than the transfers we've had before (and is in the correct 1.66:1 aspect ratio to boot). Though we're deprived of the deep scholarly commentary the film clearly deserves, you do get a great video analysis of the film by Prof. Dr. Marcus Stiglegger, "The History of Spider Island" (15m2s), which goes into the Anglicized nature of the credits, the nature of exported German genre fare like this and The Head, the background of director and onetime choreographer Fritz Böttger, and the sometimes amusing backgrounds of the actors like Rainer Brandt's tendency to do local dubs with some offensive flourishes. A very brief audio interview with D'Arcy (2m36s) by David Del Valle is also included along with a reel of alternate clothed sequences (8m6s) from an SD and the familiar American theatrical trailer.SEVERIN (Blu-ray) (Uncut Version)
SEVERIN (Blu-ray) (It's Hot in Paradise)
IMAGE ENTERTAINMENT (DVD)