Curse of the Black Widow (TV Movie 1977) Poster

(1977 TV Movie)

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7/10
CURSE Of The BLACK WIDOW (TV) (Dan Curtis, 1977) ***
Bunuel197614 October 2011
Apparently, this is only considered minor Curtis but I thought it was pretty well-done for TV. Many films have been made associating femme fatales with the black widow spider, but this gives it a literal spin, thus linking it with the 'atomic monster' cycle of the 1950s where various insects caused widespread panic and terror after growing to enormous size. Ingeniously, this adds yet another level to the mystery (and the fun) by making the villainess a twin (though not identical) so that, once one has swallowed the notion (given incontrovertible evidence in the wake of its killing-spree) that a woman could in fact turn into a monster, there still remains the question of identifying her...and, making the process all the more tougher, is the fact that the lady concerned suffers from schizophrenia and assumes this form (for whatever reason, during the cycle of the full moon) once her other personality takes over!

It seems complicated and it is, with a number of questions remaining unanswered by the end of it: a young girl is eventually established as the daughter (born from a rape!) of the villainess (the twist in the final shot making it more than clear in this case) but she calls both her and her sibling "Aunt" – then who does she think is her mother? Likewise, an old woman is addressed as "Granny" but she is not the twins' mother (played by SHE-WOLF OF London {1946}'s June Lockhart), who is thought to be dead but is actually being held, blinded and crazed after an attack by the monster (about to be victimized again at the climax, she is so distraught as to throw herself out the window!), in a back-room of the house! Confused yet? It transpires that Granny (who goes by the name of Olga and is played by June Allyson, formerly a syrupy lead at MGM) knows about the woman's many afflictions and protects her, while the other twin is completely oblivious to the melodrama going on in their family home! By the way, Donna Mills and Patty Duke Astin appear as the twins, one chic and sought by several men (including those supposedly going out with her sister!), the other somewhat frumpy and introverted.

On the other side of the spectrum, we find down-on-his luck private investigator Anthony Franciosa (I wonder whether his reliable turn here landed him the starring role in Dario Argento's TENEBRE {1982}) who actually almost got it himself in the very first scene and, naturally, he subsequently determines to get to the bottom of things and unravel the mystery. In this, he is helped by his adoring but ditzy secretary (Roz Kelly) and hampered by Police Inspector Vic Morrow (who knows what is going on but does not want it to get around so as not to alarm the community: it was weird watching the actor's uneasiness at each grisly scene-of-the-crime when his own tragic and notorious death 5 years later on the set of TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE {1983} must not have been a pretty sight either!). The latter's partner (Max Gail), however, proves more receptive to Franciosa's probing, and also involved are "guest stars" Sid Caesar (operating from an office opposite the hero's and constantly complaining of the cold, aggravating Kelly in the process) and Jeff Corey (as the Indian guide who found the twins, still mere toddlers, and their mother when the plane they were on crashed – with the spider bites received by one of the girls resulting in her current predicament).

Anyway, the film is absorbing and very enjoyable along the way, if not without flaws (apart from those already mentioned): for instance, in the last half-hour or so, when Astin takes center-stage with a bravura performance, a lot of things happen (including two transformations!) in the time it takes Franciosa and Kelly to reach the house (I understand it may have been located some distance from the city but, then, cut-aways to the speeding car should have been incorporated because, as it is, one tends to forget that the hero was even on his way there!). The monster is not too badly rendered, even taking care to have it rush headlong into walls in pain and desperation upon being set on fire (established earlier on as the sole method of destroying the beast).
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6/10
a nice popcorn movie
naylands27 October 2000
After all the movies I have seen, some of the most enjoyable, are those turned out for ABC's Tuesday Night at the Movies in the 1970's. They were B-movies in all their glory. The Curse of the Black Window is one such movie. Filled with good character actors, a fast plot and cheesy special effects, it filled a void for genre movies on tv. Other genre movies created in this time were-The Cat Creature, Black Noon, Dual and the great Night Staker(One of the great Vampire movies.).It was not just horror movies, but detective, war, love and comedies that entertained the viewers. The tv movies of the today are mostly teen flicks, love stories or social pronouncements. I do wish for a good old fashion cheapie horror tv movie.

Just keep your eyes open(0n cable,dvd or video)for the giant black spider of Dan Curtis mind.
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7/10
Absurd, but fun
Caps Fan20 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This one is an old favorite of mine, which I first saw as a teenager when I was starting to get into horror movies. Nice to see it resurface on late night TV recently.

The outline of the story is that a number of men are found dead, drained of blood and encased in what looks like spider silk. Evidence points to one of a pair of rich twin sisters as the culprit, but what's with the spider silk? Tony Franciosa, as the urbane private detective Mark Higbie, investigates and finds the truth.

Taken on its own terms, the story is a lot of fun and does hang together, more or less, building up to a conclusion that works in context, even if it's predictable. The music is fit for purpose.

But there are some delicious absurdities. Patty Duke Astin (as she was then called) can't do a German accent to save her life. Near the end of the film, her character, or rather one of her characters, having been warned to leave home fast to avoid a terrible fate, is seen sedately packing a case as if she were heading off to the beach for the weekend. AND later, when a female character is tossed out of a top floor window by the eponymous black widow, it is clearly a stunt MAN who is taking the fall!

Tony Franciosa turns in a sympathetic performance as Mark Higbie. Even better is his sassy sidekick, who rejoices in the label Flaps and is played with gusto by Roz Kelly.

Better than average for this kind of thing then. Rating: 7/10.
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Complete Camp & Lots of Fun
carrowsboy19 March 2000
This movie was great! Patty Duke & Donna Mills as (fraternal) twins?!? Guess there have been stranger things...like a man-sized Black Widow spider terrorizing Los Angeles! I won't give away who the "spider woman" is but within the first 2 minutes all you have to do is hear her voice & you'll know instantly it is either her or her proper twin cousin from Brooklyn Heights! Fortunately the fx in this film are so realistic you too may even believe that 6ft spiders are made of paper mache. Of course we also get the creature-point-of-view, and since spiders have 8 eyes we see 8 victims at once. If you have the opportunity to see this, you must watch it.
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7/10
If you you enjoyed this...
ohroonoko10 October 2021
ABC produced some entertraining, fast paced monster movies in the late 70's. This movie wastes no time getting to the action. Since it was made for TV and premiered on a Friday night, it had to be action filled before every commercial break to keep you tuned in. The twist at the end was neat. It's also interesting to see some TV star veterans who you might recognize from popular shows of the 60's, 70's and 80's, like Donna Mills from Knots Landing, June Lockhart from Lost in Space, and Rob Kelly who was one of two actresses that played Pinky Tuscadero on Happy Days.

If you enjoyed this movie, a couple other hidden gems that were ABC made for TV films are The Bermuda Depths starring Carl Weathers and Connie Seleca, about a legendary woman who turns into a giant sea turtle, and Cruise into Terror starring Dirk Benedict and John Forsythe about a cursed Egyptian mummy sarcophagus being transported on a cruise ship. These films won't win any Emmys, and some of the stars were embarrassed to be in them, but nevertheless they are memorable because they were so schlocky and yet well-cast with TV all-stars, and broadcast in an age of television where there were only three networks to choose from.
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7/10
Jaw-dropping made-for-TV Dan Curtis nonsense
h23076i4 September 2000
Take Patty Duke, Donna Mills, June Allyson and June Lockhart. Add schizophrenia, were-spiders (similar to -wolves, but with eight legs), 1977 Los Angeles and Dan Curtis. Sprinkle with a bit of nepotism (Tracy Curtis, daughter of director Dan, has 15 seconds showing off on a balance beam that's grafted on like a third arm), add a pinch of bad cinematography and annoying commercial fade-outs, and bake well for what seems like forever.

Garnish with stereotypical "Injuns", gay morgue directors and sassy streetwalkers, then soak in brine for two hours. Prop dialogue firmly on stilts and spit in its eye. That's this movie. I loved it.

Right down to the meaty, slappable smile of the implausible leading man, every detail seemed just a bit ... off. And happily so. If this one doesn't generate derisive howls of laughter at your next homocockail soiree, sweetie, you need to redecorate or something.
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4/10
Don't fall into the LOVE TRAP, baby!
capkronos22 August 2002
Valerie Steffan is a mysterious woman with dark hair and eyes, who talks like Adolf Hitler and likes to pick up men in bars. Only problem is instead of having a fab time, the guys end up drained of blood and wrapped in a webbed cocoon. And it's because she's actually a giant black widow spider! Several of the victims are former fiances or lovers of star Donna Mills. Is the killer jealous of her perfectly feathered blonde locks or white flare pant suits? Or is it just the nature of the "freak-o human fly?"

If you enjoy funky music, flashy fashions, cheesy acting from a classic TV-movie cast, eight-eyed POV bug shots, puppet monsters that look like they time-warped in from the 1950s and dialogue like, "Why don't I hold a press conference and tell them it's a big spider killing people and I'll issue all my men giant cans of Raid and send them out after it?," then this one's for you.

Score: 4 out of 10.
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7/10
A truly creepy movie. Absolutely unforgettable.
mark.waltz14 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Looking much like Angelica Huston, a European accented dragon lady entices a bar patron into helping her with her car, causing him to live to regret it as she all of a sudden morphs into something sinister. That's the opening of this Dan Curtis directed TV movie that has some of the most horrific visuals of any TV movie, and that makes it one of the better ones.

Patty Duke and Donna Mills are sisters as different as night and day, with Duke rather severe in her tight hairstyle and spinster glasses and Mills blonde and beautiful. Suspicions are evident that one of them is the sinister dragon lady who can morph into a huge black widow and suck out the insides of its victims, probably creepier to look at than be fed to. Cameos by veteran actors June Allyson, June Lockhart, Jeff Corey, Vic Morrow and Sid Caesar add to the classiness of this above average TV film, with Anthony Francisosa very good as Mills' boyfriend and Rosanna Locke as the young girl he is trying to protect.

When the giant black widow confronts Francisosa in the conclusion, don't try to squelch the heebie-jeebie's you'll feel by its gruesome appearance. This is one fierce female, as dangerous as the alien out to destroy Sigourney Weaver years later, and the explanation of its curse is greatly detailed with a twist at the end that could have opened up for a sequel but never happened. Some twists make no sense or have little explanation (just what is Allyson's purpose for being here is one, as why Lockhart, as the girl's mother, is believed to be dead, but obviously isn't), so this is far from flawless. Still, in spite of those flaws, this is very enjoyable, although perhaps not the right movie to watch before you go to bed.
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5/10
Along came a sexy, hairy-legged spider
Coventry9 March 2010
Peculiar but entertaining and strangely compelling TV-horror from the 70's, directed by one of the masters of the era – Dan Curtis – and revolving on an atmospheric albeit terribly grotesque basic premise. The dead bodies of multiple strong, handsome and successful males are discovered completely drained of all bodily fluids and with two giant chest wounds. They're always seen last in the company of Valerie Steffan, a dark-haired and dark-eyed beauty. Since the police investigation leads nowhere, one of the victims' fiancée hires private detective Mark Higbie to investigate. He may not be Carl Kolchak – from Curtis' popular movie franchise "The Night Stalker" – but with the help of some inside police sources and previous witnesses, Higbie finds out the murders are committed exactly like a black widow spider kills and consumes its preys. So we have a giant life-sized spider woman walking around, that's already quite fantastic, but wait until you hear the explanation of HOW this lady obtained her curse! I always like a little bit of far-fetched imagination in my horror movies, but the development of "Curse of the Black Widow" is a tad bit too much. Still, if you manage to switch off all your normal brain functionalities, the film is a good and enjoyable piece of TV-horror, with only a couple of moments of slowness. Obviously not recommendable to people with arachnophobia, since there are quite a bit of cameo appearances by hairy little eight-legged critters. The spider-kills and Valerie's metamorphosis are pretty cool, but unfortunately too brief. First her eyes turn orange and glassy and we see how she observes her victims through a maze of beady little eyes. I always had a weakness for this particular special effect, regardless of how cheesy and stupid it is. It also features in plenty of bee movies. "Curse of the Black Widow" is slightly overlong with an extended climax and one too many plot twist in the last 10-15 minutes. I really don't understand why Dan Curtis only showed a couple of brief shots of the impressive and massively constructed spider monster at the end. It looked really cool.
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7/10
Hilariously bad
mls41828 April 2022
In the late 1970s, you had to buy a movie ticket to see this many stars humiliate themselves, I.e., The Swarm, Hurricane, Beyond the Poseidon Adventure, etc.

This is just bad. It is bad in a fun way though. You might wince seeing such a great talent like Patty Duke being so awful but you'll forget the more you start laughing.

I'm not going to bother explaining the pmit. Its really irrelevant.
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3/10
Is she a barfly or a bar spider????
tamstrat14 April 2005
Shall I say not one of Dan Curtis' best made for TV horror film. This is a strange little movie about the danger of picking up strangers in bars, no you won't get an STD but you might just get killed and wrapped up in a spider's web. This story was bizarre even by 1977 Dan Curtis standards. I usually love anything Patty Duke is in, but I don't know what she had been smoking or snorting when she agreed to appear in this mess. This involves twins, spiders, police, plane wrecks and houses burning down and some other calamities I just have blacked out of my head. Certainly not the worse movie I have ever seen, but not even really funny. I loved Dan Curtis's Kolchak the Night Stalker movies and series, but this is just a little much.
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8/10
Great supernatural mystery
lordzedd-37 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Now let's see. I was about five years old when CURSE OF THE BLACK WIDOW came out and it took a mighty argument to with my Grandmother to stay up and watch it. It went past 10 O'Clock, but it was Saturday. I won and watched it. I loved it, it has a great mystery that leaves you guessing until the killer transforms. It has a great cast and great dialog, I must admit I think the spider effects could have been a little better even for 1977, but it was made for TV so I will cut them some slack on that. But I don't for the lighting issue, after all it was a BLACK WIDOW, they could have done a better job in the lighting department and I wish you don't have to wait until the end to see the spider, they could have shown the spider without spoiling the mystery. The characters were well written and every jump was right in the right place. Yes, if you like spider movies or a good scary Halloween mystery rent the tape for this movie. I wish they would put this on DVD. I give CURSE OF THE BLACK WIDOW...8 STARS.
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7/10
Better Of The Dan Curtis Made For TV Movies
ladymidath27 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
With a stellar cast, this is one of the better offerings of the 70s made for tv movies. A woman turns into a giant spider. This is awesome in itself, but throw in a multiple/split personality and you have yourself a tv gem. The over the top action is great, the acting is good and the effects are cheesy. This is pure fun. Patty Duke, Donna Mills, June Lockhart, June Allyson, Sid Caesar, Tony Franciosa ,Roz Kelly Vic Morrow. This is a great cast and they are very good. The story is ridiculous and shlocky in an entertaining way. They just don't make movies like this any more and that is a shame. This is for fans of great B movies.
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5/10
A Private Detective Involved in a Bizarre Murder Case
Uriah437 February 2023
This film begins with three men having some drinks at a local nightclub when an attractive woman with a European accent asks one of them to help her with her car in a nearby parking lot. While at her car, she attempts to seduce him but, because he is married, he resists her advances. It's then that she changes into something horrifying and within seconds he is dead. Hearing his screams, the other two men go rushing out only to find their friend lying there with two large puncture wounds in his chest and no trace of the woman. It is then revealed that one of the men at the nightclub is a private detective by the name of "Mark Higbie" (Tony Franciosa) and--because of his connections with the Los Angeles Police Department--learns that there have been several other murders just like this and he is given strict orders to stay clear of this case. Not long afterward, a beautiful woman named "Leigh Lockwood" (Donna Mills) walks into his office and informs him that the police believe that she is somehow involved and wants him to investigate the case to clear her name. Needless to say, this immediately puts him at odds with the local investigator named "Lieutenant Conti" (Vic Morrow) who had warned him not to become involved. What neither of them realize, however, is just how bizarre their independent investigations will become. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was one of those made-for-television horror movies which would have clearly benefited from better special effects or a bit more suspense. Even so, it was still worth the time spent and for that reason I have rated it accordingly. Average.
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"Looks Like Someone Gave Him A Hug With A Pair Of Pickaxes!"...
azathothpwiggins15 October 2018
CURSE OF THE BLACK WIDOW opens with the violent death of a man by what appears to be a monster. It turns out that several such incidents have occurred recently.

Private investigator, Mark Higbie (Tony Franciosa) is drawn into the case while investigating the disappearance of a woman's (Donna Mills) husband. Her name is Leigh Lockwood, and her family might just have some connection to all of this.

Police officers Conti (Vic Morrow) and Ragsdale (Max "Wojo" Gail) are also on the bizarre case. It is discovered that in all of the deaths, the victims were totally drained of blood, and injected with some sort of venom. It seems that a mysterious woman named Valerie Stephen is somehow involved. Could the crazy theories and first-hand accounts that Higbie has been hearing, actually be true? What, if anything does this have to do with Leigh and her family?

COTBW is another of Director Dan Curtis' made-for-TV horror creations. Sporting an intriguing creature and an all-star cast, it's enjoyable, though formulaic, following a similar pattern as Curtis' THE NORLISS TAPES, THE NIGHT STALKER, etc.

Franciosa is quite believable in his role. Co-stars the inimitable Patty Duke as Laura Lockwood. June Lockhart makes a brief, though exciting cameo as Mrs. Lockwood. Also, watch for June Allyson in a tiny, but memorable role as Olga.

P.S.- The title beast doesn't look too bad at the end, as long as you don't look too close!

P.P.S.- It's interesting that the family members are listed as "Lockwood", but are called "Lockridge" in the movie...
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7/10
"All right, I can't protect you anymore."
classicsoncall5 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The most amazing thing about this flick is how straight it's played by all the principals. Even the rationale for the existence of the 'Black Widow' is made to seem credible, unlike all the pseudo-scientific babble that went into monster movies of the Forties and Fifties. And the cast is a pretty good one for the Seventies, with a good helping of mainly television celebrities of the era. You even have Sid Caesar on hand, not so much for comic relief, but there are humorous moments surrounding the need to keep his apartment building at a sweltering eighty five degrees. Which seemed kind of odd to me, since it looked like the story took place in the summer in Los Angeles, where the temperature would have hit that high pretty regularly anyway.

Now even if you're paying attention, things do tend to get a little murky around the relationship among the characters. Leigh (Donna Mills) and Laura Lockridge (Patty Duke) are introduced as fraternal twins by 'Granny' Lockridge (June Lockhart), but it turns out later that Granny is not their mother. You might catch a hint of this when 'Granny' mentions to the visiting Laura that she (Laura) might want to explain her relationship to her own daughter Jennifer (Rosanna Locke)! The teenager doesn't even know who her mother is! By the way, I'm using the name 'Lockridge' to describe these characters because that's what they go by in the movie, and not 'Lockwood' as appears in the credits. Between Lockridge, Lockwood, Locke and Lockhart, maybe it's an understandable mix up.

Cutting to the chase, it was a series of spider bites to the infant Laura Lockridge that turned her into the spider version of a vampiric werewolf with every full moon, targeting male victims with pick-ax style stabs to the chest, allowing the blood to be drained from their bodies. It was the intrepid investigation of private detective Mark Higbie (Anthony Franciosa) that uncovered the mysterious murders, with a little help from characters portrayed by Max Gail, Jeff Corey, and his google-eyed secretary Roz Kelly. Vic Morrow adds to the festivities as the dubious police lieutenant Gully Conti. A hint as to how the 'Black Widow' can be stopped is offered early on when it's mentioned that fire is the only way to go. That would have been the end of the story, except for young Jennifer's birthmark making an appearance in the closing frame, a tease that never earned this film a sequel.
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6/10
Spider-Woman
claudio_carvalho9 March 2023
The private investigator Mark Higbie (Tony Franciosa) is drinking in a bar with his friend Frank, who is waiting for his fiancée Leigh Lockridge (Donna Mills), and the bartender Carlo Lenzi (Michael DeLano). Out of the blue, a young woman asks Frank to help her to go to her car, but something happens and Frank screams, and his friends find his severed body. Soon Leigh goes to Mark's office and hires him to find what happened to her fiancé since Lt. Gully Conti (Vic Morrow) believes she is involved in the murder. Her last husband vanished in a ship during a voyage with her and her twin sister Laura (Patty Duke). Mark visits Gully in the precinct and learns that the suspect is a woman named Valerie Steffan. His further investigation shows that there were three previous cases similar to Frank's one, and all the bodies had their fluids sucked out of them. Mark's assistant and secretary Flaps (Roz Kelly) researches the Lockridge family and learns that their parents died in a plane crash and an old Indian found the sisters, but one of them almost died bitten by spiders. Further, in accordance with ancient legends, women affected by a curse turn into giant spiders during the full moon and under stress, killing their victims. Mark proceeds his investigations and starts to believe that the legend might be true. Now he wants to know whether Leigh or Laura was the child bitten by spiders. And who is Valerie Steffan?

"Curse of the Black Widow" is an American TV Movie from 1977 with a kind of tribute the sci-fi films from the 50's. The story is not bad, with many details and twists, and certainly attracts the fans of these old movies. There are some silly and confusing things that could have been improved, as follows: (a) The last name of the family is "Lockridge", but the film credits and IMDb write "Lockwood" instead. (b) The successive fade-out for the insertion of TV commercial is annoying and could have been lesser with better edition. (c) Is Olga the Lockridge sisters' nanny, or the mother of Mrs. Lockridge's husband since she is called grandmother by Jenny. (d) Why Jenny calls Laura and Leigh "aunt"? The special effects are poor, but acceptable for a low-budget TV movie. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "A Maldição da Viúva Negra" ("The Curse of the Black Widow")
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6/10
Were-Spider By Night
Wuchakk14 December 2022
Some men are dying in horrific ways in SoCal and a private investigator seeks the answers (Tony Franciosa) while the detective in charge tries to keep a lid on the unusual details (Vic Morrow). A woman hires the private eye, who has a twin (Donna Mills and Patty Duke).

"Curse of the Black Widow" (1977) is similar to other spooky thrillers of the 70s by Dan Curtis, like "The Night Strangler" (1973), "The Norliss Tapes" (1973) and "Scream of the Wolf" (1974), all of which were made-for-TV. One critic said it's unintentionally funny, but I didn't see that. Sure, it's an outlandish state of affairs, which is acknowledged by the players, but the tone is kept serious with the cast respecting the material.

Aside from Duke and Mills on the feminine front, Roz Kelly appears as the private eye's assistant, Flaps. You might recall Roz as Pinky Tuscadero on Happy Days.

I was expecting something along the lines of 1987's "Black Widow" with Debra Winger, Theresa Russell and Dennis Hopper but, no, this is more in the vein of the aforementioned flicks mixed with Marvel's Werewolf By Night.

The F/X at the end aren't bad considering this was a television production long before CGI became in vogue. While a couple things in the story are predictable, e.g. The epilogue, there are also some interesting bits and one or two really creepy scenes at the dilapidated farm. Meanwhile Franciosa makes for a surprisingly good protagonist and his relationship with his spunky subordinate is entertaining.

The film runs 1 hours, 40 minutes, and was shot in 20th Century Fox Studios in Century City and other spots of the Los Angeles area, i.e. Piru Mansion, Malibu, Buena Park, Culver City and West Hollywood.

GRADE: B-/B.
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6/10
Watch it for Rozz Kelly and the last 25 minutes
ebeckstr-119 November 2023
Curse of the Black Widow is one of Dan Curtis's less famous, and in many respect, lesser, contributions (as producer or director) to the 1970s cycle of American made for TV horror flicks. Black Widow includes many of the tropes most commonly used in Curtis productions: "The bodies were all completely drained of blood!"; old, dilapidated structures; a plot centered around a supernatural mystery; a stalwart professional investigator. Unfortunately, it lacks the pacing and suspense of the best projects Curtis was involved with, such as The Night Stalker, (naturally) the Dead of Night anthology (that third segment, wow!), and The Norliss. Tapes (underrated). It outright stalls during an eye-rolling, needles sex subplot halfway through. Still, while Tony Franciosa doesn't have much to work with, he's always a welcome presence, and Rozz Kelly is truly the highlight of the movie. Her confident, sardonic, and intelligent turn as Franciosa's Girl Friday is wonderful by any standard. And the bonkers last 25 minutes of the movie have to be seen to be believed. That alone makes Widow worth watching. It's especially worth watching for fans of Curtis's work or of that particular cycle of 70s horror, even if it's not among the best of either.
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8/10
A 70's made-for-TV camp marvel
Woodyanders3 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Smartaleck private eye Mark Highbie (a spirited and engaging performance by Anthony Franciosa) investigates a series of baffling murders in which the male victims are found drained of blood and pumped full of spider venom.

Boy, does this 70's made-for-TV horror creature feature offer a wondrous wealth of deliciously kitschy delights: A gloriously ludicrous premise that's played straight by director Dan Curtis, cheesy (less than) special effects, goofy giant spider POV shots, Patty Duke wearing a dark wig and mangling a German accent while acting all crazy, sexy, and mysterious, an obvious stuntman doubling for an actress who takes a fatal spill out of a window, and an "it ain't over yet!" ending that leaves the door wide open for a sequel that was alas never made. Moreover, the able cast do an admirable job of not cracking up over the absurd material: Donna Mills as the distraught Leigh Lockwood, Max Gail as easygoing detective Ragsdale, Vic Morrow as the gruff Lt. Gully Conti, Jeff Corey as sage Native American Aspa Soldado, Sid Caesar as smarmy flesh peddler Lazlo Cozart, and, best of all, Roz Kelly, who provides plenty of spark as Highbie's sassy secretary Flaps. A real hoot and a half.
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8/10
Would-Be Kolchak Rip-off
aesgaard4128 April 2001
Warning: Spoilers
After the success of his his Kolchak movies and series, Dan Curtis tried to spring on us another nearly likeable character in the form of actor Anthony Francioso. The similiarities are obvious as several men are being found butchered with large amounts of black widow venom in their bodies. The incredulous solution is that their must be a giant spider running loose, and then it turns out the giant spider is really a woman. This is one far fetched theory that somehow becomes true with the help of some very phony and shakey "legends" that are stretched even more to seem real. Filled with the recognizable faces of Donna Mills, Patty Duke, Sid Caeser, Vic Morrow, Max Gail and June Lockhart, this movie does have a pretty top notch murder mystery in it. The concept of a beautiful woman turning into a monster is a very unused idea in Hollywood, but which woman is the riddle of the movie. Donna Mills' character inexplicably lives through her attack to keep her to the end, but then we don't see much of the spider, and even less of the transformation of the woman turning into it. What ? No brief flesh under ripping clothes ? I still remember the artwork of this movie, though: the top part of a woman connected to the bottom half of a spider with eight shapely women's legs. I wish had had the fore thought to save it; the effects in the movie are bad but fair. Even if you are blind in one eye and have a glass eye in the other, you ought to be able to see the closure from miles away.
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8/10
What's Scary is What you don't see
cryptotek21 December 2017
Low Budget 'Movie of the Week', but enjoyable. Family curse transforms its women into giant Black Widow spiders who eat their mates. Ironically, the best scares never show the spider - its presence is implied with shadows and victim's horrified screams. When they finally have the big reveal, it's very disappointing, much like the spider in "IT" stupid looking Rod-Puppet.. Good acting, good suspense, lame spider. Scariest scenes in 'Jaws' never show the shark. They should have stuck to that style and would have rated 10 stars.
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TV ad wanted
mensa4-16 November 2006
Do you remember this movie from the 70's (1977)? It is about a woman who was bitten by many spiders as a youth, who can transform into a giant black spider. To this day, in my opinion, this movie is much better than a lot of the crap that Hollywood has recently manufactured.

Also, could tell me, or direct me to, where I could find the original T.V poster ad for this film? I remember that it was a picture of a spider with 8 human female legs, a spider's abdomen, and a human female face attached to it's body. The ad appeared in T.V. Guide.

This would be an awesome collectors item if I could find it.

Let me know.

Thanks
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10/10
So Very Very Strange
michle5326 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Sometimes those of us who lived through the 1970s forget how completely odd that decade was. One need only view Curse of the Black Widow as a reminder. The graphic that ran in the newspapers and TV Guide show an alluring spider-lady, her breasts brushing the ground as she approaches. The reality is Patty Duke, but don't let that scare you away. Others in the cast include stock beauty Donna Mills, one of the Italy-based Francioso actors that proliferated in the 60s, June Lockhart playing way against type, June Allyson, Max Gail, Sid Caesar and Pinky Tuscadaro from Happy Days.

There is a scene in here with a stuntman taking a fall for June Lockhart. The stunt and scene are completely unnecessary. The stuntman's face is clearly visible under the wig; the expression of concentration as he practices his trade is nothing short of inspiring.
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cursed with a stupid concept
thomandybish28 April 2001
On one level, this ill-fated Dan Curtis production is a cornucopia of great TV actors(Patty Duke, June Lockhart, June Allison, Donna Mills)clearly hard-up; this flick is the proof. Duke and Mills are twins who are somehow connected to a series of bizarre murders. Seems the victims are dispatched by a gigantic spider. Coincidentally, the twins late parents were doing research with spiders before they died. Many questions are laid out, such as: why is the spider made of paper-mache? Why is Patty Duke running around in a brunette wig and black jumpsuit and speaking with a bad German accent? What was Dan Curtis on when he conceived this disaster? The cast members could have only been trying to pay down their morgages doing this one.
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