The Spider Woman
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The Spider Woman | |
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Universal Pictures | |
Release date |
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Running time | 62 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Spider Woman (alternatively titled Sherlock Holmes and the Spider Woman and Spider Woman) is a 1943
Plot
Consulting detective Sherlock Holmes fakes his own death in Scotland in order to investigate a number of bizarre apparent suicides that he is convinced are part of an elaborate plot by "a female Moriarty". Returning to his assistant Dr. Watson in secret, Holmes notes that all the victims were wealthy gamblers, so disguised as "Rajni Singh", a distinguished Indian officer, he stalks London's gaming clubs.
It is not long before he encounters the archvillain, Adrea Spedding. Holmes discovers that she seeks out men short of money, persuades them to pawn their life insurance policies with her accomplices, then kills them. Holmes sets himself up as her next victim, discovering that she uses the deadly spider, Lycosa Carnivora, whose venom causes such excruciating pain that the victims kill themselves. Holmes also finds the footprint of a child nearby.
Searching for evidence Holmes and Watson visit eminent arachnologist Matthew Ordway, who may have supplied the deadly creatures. Holmes soon realizes that the man he is speaking to is an impostor, but the man makes his escape. Searching the premises, Holmes finds the corpse of the real Ordway, as well as his journals, which allude to something or someone from Central Africa immune to the spider venom. This baffles Holmes until he finds the model skeleton of a child. However, Dr. Watson points out that the relation of the skull and the circumference of the chest prove it is not a child, and Holmes deduces that the Central African thing described in the journal is a
Holmes and Watson continue their investigations at a nearby fairground, where Holmes allows himself to fall into the clutches of Spedding and her gang. Bound and gagged, Holmes is tied behind a moving target in a shooting gallery, at which Inspector Lestrade and Watson take pot shots with a .22 rifle. However Holmes manages to escape, and Lestrade and the police arrest Spedding, her gang, and the pygmy. As an indication of respect for her intellect, Holmes tells Lestrade to spare Spedding the indignity of handcuffs, saying "she'll go quietly" (to which Spedding appreciatively smiles and thanks Holmes for).
Cast
- Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes
- Dr. John Watson
- Gale Sondergaard as Adrea Spedding
- Vernon Downing as Norman Locke
- Dennis Hoey as Inspector Lestrade
- Alec Craig as Radlik
- Arthur Hohl as Adam Gilflower
- Mary Gordonas Mrs. Hudson
- Teddy Infuhr as Larry
- Angelo Rossitto as The Pygmy
- Harry Cording as Fred Garvin (uncredited)
- Robert Milasch as Carnival Barker (uncredited)
- Belle Mitchell as Carnival Fortune Teller
- Frank Benson as Kewpie Doll Vendor
- Gene Roth as Taylor
Allusions to the Sherlock Holmes canon
- Though The Spider Woman has an original plot, the film heavily features elements from various stories by Arthur Conan Doyle. Holmes faking his death at a waterfall is similar to the climax of "Professor James Moriarty. (Although she bears some traits in common with Irene Adler.)[1] Holmes' request that Watson whisper "pygmy" in his ear if he becomes overconfident is from "The Yellow Face", in which the word was "Norbury".
- Elements of The Spider Woman were given homage in the Sherlock episode "The Empty Hearse", including Watson mistaking a genuine client for a false-bearded Holmes in disguise.
- Gale Sondergaard starred in a similar role in the misleadingly-titled The Spider Woman Strikes Back also produced by Universal, with which there is no canonical relation.
- Filmed during World War II, the moving targets in the shooting gallery are Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito cartoons. Previous films Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror and Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon featured Nazis as antagonists, but all succeeding sequels downplayed their propaganda purposes.
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-85768-776-0, page 268
External links
- The Spider Woman at IMDb
- The Spider Woman at AllMovie
- The Spider Woman at the TCM Movie Database
- The Spider Woman at the American Film Institute Catalog