The Spider Woman Strikes Back
The Spider Woman Strikes Back is a 1946 American horror film starring Gale Sondergaard, with a running time of 59 minutes. Despite the similar title and role played by Sondergaard, the film is not a sequel to the Sherlock Holmes film The Spider Woman. In The Spider Woman, Sondergaard's character is named Adrea Spedding. This time it is Zenobia Dollard.
In 1977 Lubin called the movie one of the three "notable failures" of his career and said he had never seen it.
Plot
A young woman comes to a small rural town to serve as secretary for a blind woman, the town's wealthiest person. The town is awash in mystery owing to the inexplicable deaths of local ranchers' cattle. The young woman becomes entangled in a web of horror as she discovers that her employer, aided by the hideously deformed household servant, has used the blood of her predecessors to create a death serum when it is mixed with spider venom - and that her own blood is now being harvested at night, while she is in a drugged sleep, to continue the experiment.Cast
- Gale Sondergaard as Zenobia Dollard
- Brenda Joyce as Jean Kingsley
- Kirby Grant as Hal Wentley
- Milburn Stone as Mr. Moore
- Rondo Hatton as Mario the Monster Man
- Hobart Cavanaugh as Bill Stapleton
- Tom Daly as Sam Julian
- Norman Leavitt as Tom
- Guy Beach as Cal
- Horace Murphy as Angry Older Rancher
Production
The film was announced in March 1945. It was to be the first in a series starring The Spider Woman, like the ones Universal had for Dracula and Frankenstein. It was the second time Universal had spun off a horror series from their Sherlock Holmes movies, the first being The Creeper from The Pearl of Death. The film was originally called The Spider Woman Strikes Again and was based on an original story by Eric Taylor. Ford Beebe was the original director attached. Much more production information can be found on the Tom Weaver-David Schecter audio commentary on Kino Lorber's 2021 Blu-ray release of the movie.In September Universal announced the film would be directed by Arthur Lubin. Lubin said he "hated" the movie and did not want to do it but the studio threatened to put him on suspension otherwise. The lead roles went to Sondegaard, Brenda Joyce, Kirby Grant and Rondo Hatton.
Lubin said "it was a stupid story" and that "I don't think" producer Howard Wlesh "liked it any better than I liked it" but that he enjoyed working with Sondegaard.