One of several ’70s
shockers about disturbed young people controlling animals for nefarious
purposes—alongside Willard (1971) and
Jennifer (1978)—the cheaply made but
somewhat effective Kiss of the Tarantula
combines creature-feature thrills with the icky sexual shenanigans of a
screwed-up family. At the beginning of the picture, young Susan Bradley (shown
at ages five and 10), develops a weird preoccupation with spiders and
eventually trains one of her tarantulas to attack and kill Susan’s mother. No
one suspects Susan’s involvement, so when the story proper catches up with
Susan as a young adult, her father perceives Susan’s spider fixation as a
peculiar but harmless hobby. Yet when various people start causing trouble in
Susan’s life—a boy plays with her affections, a mean girl taunts her at school,
an uncle tries to get inappropriately intimate—she unleashes her arachnids in a
series of attacks. Starring ethereal and willowy Suzanna Ling as the grown-up
Susan, Kiss of the Tarantula does
fairly well in terms of character development, at least by the low standards of
drive-in horror pictures. Susan’s behavior makes sense in a deranged sort of
way because we see all the events that trigger her homicidal outbursts, and the
way Susan reacts with guilt whenever her attacks go too far show that she’s a
victim as well, suffering from epic mental problems. Herman Walter gives a
decent performance as Susan’s meek father, who can’t read the obvious clues
about trouble within his own family, and Eric Mason makes a solid villain as
the lascivious uncle. To be clear, none of the acting in Kiss of the Tarantula is memorable, but the cast helps realize the
impact of a highly efficient script credited to Daniel Cady and Warren Hamilton
Jr. And even though the jolts in the movie are relatively timid, there’s
something enjoyably creepy about the spider-attack scenes that take place in an
air vent and in a car at a drive-in theater. Plus, the filmmakers get points
for taking an unexpected direction during the finale, utilizing the central
location of a funeral home—the family business run by Susan’s father—instead of
taking the obvious route by presenting a final spider attack.
Kiss of the Tarantula: FUNKY
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