The Black Belly of the Tarantula

1971 "With needles dipped in deadly venom the victims are paralyzed - so they must lie awake and watch themselves die!"
6.3| 1h38m| R| en| More Info
Released: 07 June 1972 Released
Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Country: Italy
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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Inspector Tellini investigates serial crimes where victims are paralyzed while having their bellies ripped open with a sharp knife.

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Director

Paolo Cavara

Production Companies

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

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The Black Belly of the Tarantula Audience Reviews

Claysaba Excellent, Without a doubt!!
Glimmerubro It is not deep, but it is fun to watch. It does have a bit more of an edge to it than other similar films.
Juana what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Isbel A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
Uriah43 This movie essentially begins with an attractive blonde by the name of "Maria Zani" (Barbara Bouchet) being accused by her husband "Paolo Zani" (Silvano Tranquilli) of having an affair. Not long afterward she is stabbed in the back of the neck with an acupuncture needle and while totally paralyzed is forced to watch as her assailant plunges a knife into her stomach. The scene then shifts to another attractive woman named "Mirta Ricci" (Annabella Incontrera) preparing to close the store where she works and being attacked by the same assailant and killed in a similar manner. At first the police detective in charge of the case named "Inspector Tellini" (Giancarlo Giannini) suspects Paolo of committing these crimes but it soon becomes known that both victims were being blackmailed and Paolo is just as intent on finding the killer as Inspector Tellini. In the meantime the killings continue with Inspector Tellini becoming more and more convinced that he is not capable of solving the case. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that I was pleasantly surprised by this movie as it contained a decent mixture of mystery and suspense that managed to keep my interest for the most part. Likewise, the presence of several beautiful actresses like Claudine Auger (as "Laura"), Stefania Sandrelli ("Anna Tellini") along with the aforementioned Barbara Bouchet and Annabella Incontrera certainly didn't hurt either. In any case, I thought that this film was worth the time spent and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
Rainey Dawn OK I tried, really I did but I could not get into it. I love horror but this is not my style of horror. I was hoping this one was more of a spider creature feature and not a soft-core porn slasher. It's a very early stereo-typical slasher film of the 1970s - that all this movie is. If you are into soft-corn porn and watching beautiful women get slashed then here's your film! I had to keep fast-forwarding through this film - and I saw nothing of interest to me contained within. Nothing that made me wanna stop to watch the film in full, or should I say normal viewing speed.I'm not saying this is an awful horror film - I'm just saying "it's not my type of horror".1/10
Blake Peterson Unless you tend to believe that sub-genres crumble once their prime decade ends, gialli never died — just rested in blood colored coffins until gore hounds rediscovered their artfully minded slasher perks in the 2000s and couldn't help but lap them up. "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" is one of the better known examples, so long as you pretend Dario Argento and Mario Bava don't exist for a moment. Because gialli not helmed by Argento or Bava strove for killer offings rather than smartly nourished whodunit charades, and, unfortunately for this film, which often seems to rank high on those blood soaked "best giallo" lists, does nothing more than pale in comparison to all those damned Argento and Bava pictures. Stylish to a fault but also shoddily dubbed, acted, written, and directed, it intrigues for bits and pieces (those bits and pieces being the murders themselves) and then leaves us in the cold with Giancarlo Gianni, who, despite his later Oscar fame, turns charisma into emotionless leaden material with just the bat of an eyelash.As in all decent giallo films, "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" details a series of murders, all involving attractive women and cringey circumstances. The killer, maniacal and sex obsessed (a shock), practices a particularly cruel method of slaughter — in addition to his butcher knife, he brings along a needle dipped in black wasp venom, causing paralysis for anyone who gets the stuff in their bloodstream. That way, his victims are forced to remain defenseless as they watch (and feel) their insides get ripped open. What a joy! (Vomits.)Young woman after young woman is stalked and slashed; each murder is edited with such impressive precision (cross-cutting is as well-executed as an excruciating long-shot) that we can't help but want to applaud Paolo Cavara for taking a route authentically suspenseful rather than hackish. But I digress. As the madman sneakily wanders around, eyeing potential victims, the killings themselves are being investigated by Inspector Tellini (Gianni), a young policeman not so sure he can stomach such a high amount of atrocities for much longer.While "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" keeps us interested with its frenzied mystery- meets-gore approach, nonexistent are the normally intoxicating images presented by most gialli. Aside for clean-cut edits and assertively framed shots (mostly found within the scope of a murder), the film is mostly dry, thrilling only when action is present. In better giallo pictures, such as "Suspiria" and "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage" (both directed by Argento), terror is always part of the atmosphere — distinctively nightmarish imagery, after all, is what makes giallo so much finer than your average slasher. "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" oft threatens to be your average slasher — so thank goodness so much attention is put into how the killings are shot. Otherwise, we'd have a bad case of sex-and-death- 101 nobody wants. But aside from a grouping of inventive offings (the second victim's demise, photographed in a clothing store, cleverly inserts doll-like mannequins to mirror the soon-to-be dead woman's paralyzed helplessness), "The Black Belly of the Tarantula" is nothing more than a subpar giallo. Considering it was made as a cash-in ready to imitate the success of "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage" at the time, it's only fitting that it hardly compares to the best of Dario Argento and Mario Bava. Dammit! — there are those names again.
billoneil2 Although made during the height of the giallo's popularity in the early 1970s, this film is probably going to disappoint anyone who started out with "Blood and Black Lace," "Bird with the Crystal Plumage" or "Torso." First, the good news: There is style and mood, particularly in the scenes where a gloved killer is preparing his hypodermic needle for the kill. The theme music at these points is excellent. Now, the bad news: The kills themselves are a bit underwhelming despite a fascinating concept (being paralyzed and murdered while conscious but immobile). The plot is so convoluted that after five or six viewings I still don't know why the killer was killing or how he was discovered. Is it because of an excessively convoluted script or because most of the film is so dull one's attention wanders and they miss key clues? You be the judge.Finally, a bone to pick with the producers: This film is rife with the mentality that women are the most fantastic, magnificent creations in the universe (not true). It's typically Italian BS. So if an unending boy meets girl plot bores you or if you are annoyed by a ceaseless parade of homely broads being presented as goddesses, this film is not for you.5 stars for the scenes preceding the kills only.