Some movies hit you like a punch in the jaw, others like a long night in a bus station where the fluorescent lights hum and nobody bothers to clean the toilets. Horrors of Spider Island (1960) falls somewhere in the middle. It isn’t the worst horror flick to stumble out of Europe in the Cold War years, but it sure as hell ain’t the best. It’s a film stitched together out of two things producers thought the public would buy: monsters and half‑naked women. And to their credit, they weren’t wrong.
But just because something sells doesn’t mean it’s good.
A Plane Crash, A Spider, and A Whole Lot of Legs
The setup’s simple: a talent agent named Gary Webster hauls a gaggle of women — dancers, models, starlets, whatever label you want to slap on them — across the ocean. Their plane bursts into flames and belly flops into the Pacific, leaving the survivors stranded on some godforsaken island. Inside the island’s cabin, they find a dead professor strung up in a web like yesterday’s laundry. Before long, Gary gets himself bitten by a giant spider and mutates into a half‑man, half‑tarantula beast. From there it’s the usual horror shuffle: people scream, people die, torches get lit, and the monster sinks into quicksand like it’s all been rehearsed a thousand times before.
It’s the kind of story you could write on a cocktail napkin, and it feels like that’s exactly what they did.
Beauty in the Beasts
Let’s be honest: the real stars aren’t Gary or the spider, but the women in skimpy outfits. You get the sense the producers thought, “Hell, who needs character development when we’ve got ten pairs of legs and a lagoon?” It’s exploitation cinema at its most obvious — a nudie cutie dressed in horror clothes.
And yet, there’s a strange charm in its honesty. Unlike art‑house horror trying to impress the critics, this film knows exactly what it is: a carnival sideshow with a monster costume thrown together after three beers and a cigarette break. The women shriek on cue, the men flex their jaws, and the camera leers at bodies like a dirty uncle at a wedding. It’s trash, but it doesn’t pretend otherwise.
The Monster Problem
The trouble is, the monster just isn’t scary. Gary’s transformation into a spider‑man looks like a guy who fell asleep in his Halloween mask. He’s supposed to be terrifying, prowling the island with violent urges, but he’s about as menacing as a drunk crawling out of the restroom at last call. He flails, he growls, but you never believe anyone’s in danger. The spider is big, sure, but it has all the life of a stuffed animal forgotten in a prop closet.
The island should feel like a deathtrap. Instead, it feels like a bad vacation that went two days too long.
Credit Where It’s Due
Still, I can’t write it off completely. The film has its moments. The cinematography, shot by Georg Krause (the same man behind Kubrick’s Paths of Glory), gives the film an atmosphere it doesn’t deserve. Shadows stretch across the trees, women huddle in the dark, and the island sometimes looks like it’s hiding something sinister just out of frame.
The climax, with the torch‑lit hunt and the monster stumbling into the swamp, almost redeems the film. For a brief moment, the atmosphere clicks, and you feel like you’re watching something worthy of the “horror” label. But it doesn’t last.
The Problem With Mediocrity
Here’s the thing: bad movies can be fun. They can be wild, messy, drunk on their own stupidity. And great movies can be transcendent, taking you somewhere you never expected. But middle‑of‑the‑road films like Horrors of Spider Island are the hardest to deal with. They don’t thrill, and they don’t crash spectacularly. They just linger, like a lukewarm beer you’re too polite to dump out.
The dubbing is atrocious, the acting wooden, the monster costume a joke, and yet you can’t quite hate it. It’s a relic of its time, a shameless drive‑in special made for teenagers more interested in necking in the back seat than watching the screen. And maybe that’s the only way it works — half ignored, muffled screams in the background while you do something better with your night.
Final Thoughts
Horrors of Spider Island is neither a lost masterpiece nor a total disaster. It’s a film that squats firmly in the swamp of mediocrity, waving a few spider legs and hoping somebody will mistake it for a classic. It’s got some atmosphere, some sleaze, and a monster that looks like it lost a fight with a glue gun.
You watch it once, you shrug, and you move on.
The horror genre deserves better, but it’s also seen worse.

