Arachnophobia is a 1990 American natural horror comedy film directed by Frank Marshall, starring Jeff Daniels and John Goodman. It is about an army of deadly spiders infesting and terrorizing a small California town, with the title referring to the "fear of spiders". It was the very first film released by Hollywood Pictures.
Plot[]
A group of scientists, led by entomologist Dr. James Atherton, head to the Amazon with the hope of discovering new species of insects. The scientists identify a new species of spider, which is pretending to be dead and carries a type of venom, that causes near-instantaneous death to its victims. The spider is captured and chloroformed for research. A nature photographer Jerry Manley takes a rest under the tree, where the spider was found, and the 'general' (leader) spider jumps into his backpack, where it later sneaks into his sleeping bag and kills him with a venomous bite. The remainder of the scientists take his body back to the US, in a wooden box, with the original spider from Venezuela inside, blaming Jerry's death on fever.
Jerry's body arrives at the morgue in his hometown, Canaima, and the mortician does not notice the general spider inside the coffin, when he opens it. He is disgusted to find Jerry's body mummified, and completely drained of bodily fluids. As the mortician is speaking on the phone with Jerry's family about funeral arrangements, the general heads outside. It eventually makes its way to the barn of the Jennings family. Ross Jennings is a family physician, who had moved to the small town from San Francisco, and faces a lack of patients due to elderly rival Sam Metcalf, who was supposed to retire and shift his patients to Ross.
The general spider mates with a domestic house spider and makes a nest in Jennings's barn, producing a queen, then mates with the queen and makes a second nest in the family's basement. Hundreds of soldier spiders are born in the barn. Ross, along with his son, who has arachnophobia (fear of spiders), making them targets of ridicule among their family. His first patient, Margaret Hollins, dies after being bitten, which the town's residents believe was a heart attack. After a football player is also killed by another spider, Ross is known to the town as Dr. Death, because each of his patients dies after having seen him. Soon, when Metcalf himself is bitten on the toe and killed by another spider, giving Ross the idea, that the town could be infested by deadly arachnids. After Ross performs an autopsy with the town's coroner Milton Briggs on the victims and confirms his suspicion, he, along with Dr. Atherton, his assistant Chris Collins, Briggs, Sheriff Lloyd Parsons, and insect exterminator Delbert Mclintock investigate and eventually discover, that the killer spiders are descendants of the new species Atherton discovered earlier. Dr. Atherton is bitten on the neck and killed by the general after he discovers the primary nests' location and disturbs its web.
After Ross, Chris, and Delbert trace the nests to Jennings' own property, Ross sends Delbert to destroy the first nest at the barn, while he and Chris try to help the family escape from their own house. For some reason, as soon as Ross enters the now infested house, the spiders, that were once hiding, start coming in through all different places in the house. Ross's wife, his children, and Chris make it out through a window, but Ross finds himself trapped until he falls through the basement into the spiders' second nest. After electrocuting the queen, Ross battles the male, attempting to destroy the second egg sac along with burning the spider with fire spray. When the spider is about to deliver the killing strike, Ross flings it into the fire with a board on his chest.
When the egg sac hatches, the male, now on fire, jumps out still pursuing Ross. Ross shoots it with a nail gun and the projectile sends the burning spider flying into the nest's egg sac, effectively destroying the nest with fire and finally killing the spider, ending the plague. Delbert is able to reach Ross and get him to safety. Having had enough of the country along with the near-death experience, the Jennings family immediately move back to San Francisco, appreciating city life once more, only to have an earthquake hit, as soon as they get back.
Cast[]
- Jeff Daniels as Dr. Ross Jennings
- Harley Jane Kozak as Molly Jennings
- John Goodman as Delbert McClintock
- Julian Sands as Dr. James Atherton
- Brian McNamara as Chris Collins
- James Handy as Milt Briggs
- Peter Jason as Henry Beechwood
- Henry Jones as Dr. Sam Metcalf
- Frances Bay as Evelyn Metcalf
- Mark L. Taylor as Jerry Manley
- Roy Brocksmith as Irv Kendall
- Kathy Kinney as Blaire Kendall
- Stuart Pankin as Sheriff Lloyd Parsons
- Mary Carver as Margaret Hollins
Production[]
Filmmaker Steven Spielberg was involved with Arachnophobia, with one of his earlier producers Frank Marshall directing for the first time. Spielberg and Marshall are both the executive producers of the film. Marshall meant for the film to be like Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, and added, "People like to be scared but laughing, like a roller coaster. No one wants to be terrified."
Jamie Hyneman, of MythBusters fame, stated in Popular Mechanics that Arachnophobia was one of the first movies he worked on and that he often relied on simple magnets for several of the effects.
The film made use of 374 Avondale spiders, which were picked for their large size, unusually social lifestyle, and because they are essentially harmless to humans. They were guided around the set by the use of heat and cold, but the large "queen" was an articulated model.
The movie was actually filmed in Cambria, California. All the school scenes were filmed at Coast Union High School. Students and staff were used in the football scenes and group events. The locker room and players were the actual students and players from CUHS.
To create the sound effects of spiders being stepped on or squished, people stepped on mustard packs or squashed potato chips.
Merchandising[]
A soundtrack album for the film, also called Arachnophobia, was released in 1990. It included instrumental music from the film as well as songs such as "Blue Eyes Are Sensitive To The Light" by Sara Hickman, "Caught in Your Web (Swear to Your Heart)" by Russell Hitchcock, and "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" by Tony Bennett.
Soundtrack[]
- Blue Eyes Are Sensitive to the Light - Sara Hickman
- Atherton's Terrarium (Score)
- Arachnophobia - Brent Hutchins
- Miller's Demise (Score)
- Spiders and Snakes (Score)
- Off Spring (Score)
- Boris the Spider (Score)
- Delbert Squishes the Spider (Score)
- Spider and the Fly (Score)
- Web Photo (Score)
- Caught in Your Web (Swear to Your Heart) - Russell Hitchcock
- Main Title (Score)
- Don't Bug Me - Jimmy Buffett
- Casket Arrives (Score)
- Delbert's Theme - Tony Bennett
- Canaima Nightmare - Poorboys
- Along Came a Spider (Score)
- Cellar Theme - The Party
- End Title (Score)
- I Left My Heart in San Francisco - Tony Bennett
Songs that arent included with the soundtrack are:
- Summer Wind - Frank Sinatra
- Goin' Ahead - Pat Metheny
Videos[]
External links[]
- Arachnophobia (1990) at the Internet Movie Database
- Arachnophobia (1990) at AllMovie
- Arachnophobia (1990) at Rotten Tomatoes
- Arachnophobia (1990) at Wikipedia
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Arachnophobia (film). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Horror Film Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |