The Web of Death
The Web of Death
| 28 October 1976 (USA)
The Web of Death Trailers

Lo Lieh is the ringleader of the Snake Sect, intent on reviving a deadly faction known as the "Five Poison Web." In order to do so, he has an affair with the sexy ringleader of the Scorpion Sect, Angela Yu Chien. However, there is also the Centipede Sect to contend with, as well as other assorted martial artists, among them played by Shaw Brothers talents Yueh Hua, Ching Li, and Lily Li.

Reviews
Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
Tobias Burrows It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.
Aspen Orson There is definitely an excellent idea hidden in the background of the film. Unfortunately, it's difficult to find it.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
poe426 "Snake" Liu Shen (Lo Lieh), aware that The Five Venom Spider has been used to kill innocents, suggests using it at a tournament to crown "The King Boxer" of The Martial Arts World. His suggestion is rejected... so he seduces one of The Chief's concubines. They decide to spread the rumor that The Spider Sect will be using The Five Venom Spider in the upcoming tournament. Fei Ying Sung (Yueh Hua) is sent to investigate. Ying Jie (Wang Chung) is also dispatched. Fei intervenes on a Keystone Kops-like fight between a "beggar" (Hong Susu) and a group of cooks, then battles The Three Saints of Shaolin." (Which he does because HE'S "The Three saints of Shaolin," so called because he specializes in sword play, the lute, and chess.) The misunderstanding is straightened out by a priest (Ku Feng). The "beggar," who has been hiding and watching, tells Fei to be at Silver Lake that night- where she reveals herself to be female. "Meet me back here in ten days' time," she tells him, and she'll have info on The Spider Sect. From her father, leader of the sect, she learns that only by ingesting The Nether Plant can The Five Venom Spider venom be withstood. Clans begin to fight for the map to the graveyard where The Five Venom Spider is buried. Wang Chung ends up with the map and sees the members of one clan succumb to the booby traps in the temple, enters... and finds The Five Venom Spider. While some of the fx in THE WEB OF DEATH may not be "up to snuff" for some people, I didn't find them too troubling: the twists and turns the story never stops taking keeps the mind occupied (the eyes can take care of themselves). The spider shoots acidic, electrified webbing and poisonous gas and is a fairly decent monster as far as monsters go. Give it a look.
Chung Mo Yuen Chor is possibly the most Chinese culture based of all of the Shaw directors. HIs films are almost always based on a work of literature and his film sets are designed like classical Chinese illustrations. On the other hand he has directed some of the most absurd costume dramas that came out of the studio. Web of Death is an entertaining mix of both Yuen Chor styles.The film starts out immediately with the crazy stuff as the Five Venom Spider is used to kill a group of fighters. Unlike other films of this nature, the spider is an actual spider that is kept in a metal lamp. Open the lamp and the tarantula sized spider roars like an elephant and shoots out an enormous amount of smoke and multi-colored rays that turn into poisonous web. That sets the tone of the film. Actually the script is much better then later Yuen Chor martial world dramas that are less crazy. The story based around the daughter of the Poison clan leader is compelling and reminiscent of "Crouching Tiger". The story moves with a good pace although the editing gets uneven at the end. The sets are opulent and the lighting is very moody. Some of the film approaches a magical realism, at one point the heroine, for example, boats across a lake on a large cherry blossom branch that moves with a wave of the hand. Later the film gets surreal as we are treated to the spectacle of ten super martial artists fearfully surrounding a life size tarantula.Fun and strange with better drama then normal for this genre.
Brian Camp THE WEB OF DEATH (1976) is another of director Chor Yuen's masterful costume and swordplay adventures done for Hong Kong's Shaw Bros. studio in the 1970s. It ranks with some of his other fine work, such as THE MAGIC BLADE, KILLER CLANS, CLANS OF INTRIGUE, SWORDSMAN AND ENCHANTRESS and HEROES SHED NO TEARS. Those films were based on literary works by novelist Ku Lung, while WEB OF DEATH may not be since Ku Lung gets no on screen credit, nor do I find anything similarly titled in a bibliography of his. But it sure plays like a Ku Lung adaptation, with its intertwining clan rivalries and intense competition among a large cast of characters to take over the "boxers' world." It's a wild, fast-paced, entertaining ride, with a host of intriguing characters played by a superb cast of Shaw Bros. regulars. And, given its preponderance of magical special effects, it looks forward to Taylor Wong's similarly-styled BUDDHA'S PALM (1982).The plot, in a nutshell, has to do with the Five Venoms Clan and its hidden, not-so-secret weapon, the Five Venom Spider, a lethal creature that causes great carnage when unleashed. The Snake Chief of the Venoms Clan (played by Lo Lieh) wants to unearth the spider to use against the other clans when they all meet on Mount Wudang for an upcoming festival. These other clans all want to find the spider first to keep the Venom Clan from using it on them. Complicating matters is the fact that Fei, the senior student of the Wudang clan (played by Yueh Hua), meets and falls for Susu (Ching Li), who doesn't tell him she's the Venom Clan chief's daughter and decides to secretly help him get the spider. Misunderstandings and near-fatal complications result, making it very hard for the course of true love to prevail. It all leads up to a magnificent finale on Mount Wudang involving all the clans and the spider. Things move at a rapid clip with surprises and twists every step of the way. There are a lot of major characters and the script and editing keep pretty good track of them all, never once plunging the viewer into confusion. Without giving away any details, I should point out that the ending is a real tearjerker.The explosive, smoke and lightning effects employed during the spider attacks are not, I have to admit, the most convincing of effects work. Nor does the "web" that's supposed to encircle and suffocate its victims seem particularly threatening. The spider appears to be a real tarantula in some shots and a mechanical creation in others. Still, there's so much else to admire in the production that the effects take on far less importance. The sets are spectacular, ranging from the massive castle interior that marks the Venom Clan headquarters and the dangerous trap-filled Clan Chiefs' Graveyard to the picturesque mist-shrouded vistas on Mount Wudang and the exquisitely beautiful lakeside pavilion on Silver Lake where the two lovers first meet in the moonlight. All are created in the studio.The big news here is that Ching Li, as the Venom chief's daughter, clearly has the dominant role in the film, a point of major interest for fans of this pretty and versatile Shaw Bros. star known for her work with Chang Cheh (BLOOD BROTHERS, ANONYMOUS HEROES) and Chor Yuen (KILLER CLANS, SWORDSMAN AND ENCHANTRESS). Often simply a romantic object in these films, she's actually seen here performing a lot of action (with considerable help from an acrobatic stunt double, of course) and she gets to dress up as other characters on more than two occasions. She has to go through the greatest emotional turmoil of any character in the film. She's also more strikingly beautiful here than I've ever seen her. Yueh Hua, the nominal leading man, was usually seen to better effect in supporting roles (HEROES SHED NO TEARS), making him ideal for this film by allowing Ching Li to shine in a way that a more charismatic male star might not have. Also in the cast are such Chor Yuen regulars as Lo Lieh, Wang Hsieh, Lily Li, Wang Chung, Ku Feng, Norman Chu, Chan Shen, and Cheng Miu. The big finale with the last spider-and-web attack features nearly a dozen major Shaw Bros. actors in one scene together. Chor Yuen liked large casts and large-scale confrontations like this and he certainly knew how to stage them for maximum effect. The Five Venoms Clan and its subdivisions, Snake, Centipede, Toad and Scorpion will, of course, remind viewers of Chang Cheh's THE FIVE VENOMS, which was made two years later (1978). The only connecting tissue between the two films is screenwriter I Kuang, who wrote both scripts. Perhaps he simply wondered what would happen to the Five Venoms Clan after the events of WEB OF DEATH and took off from there, with Chang Cheh adopting a more no-nonsense kung fu-oriented approach to the material.THE WEB OF DEATH is a remake of an earlier Shaw Bros. film, THE THUNDERING SWORD (1967), which starred Cheng Pei Pei in the role that Ching Li plays here. Interestingly, Ching Li played a supporting role in that film, as Cheng Pei Pei's maid.
David Austin Not the best Chu Yuan I've ever seen, but quite fun. The sets and costumes are great - the acting is fine but nobody is outstanding. Personal favorite - the Centipeded leader and his excellent metal centipede shield weapon.Basic Plot - Lo Lieh, a member of the 5 Venom Clan plots to regain their powerful ancient artifact, the 5 Venom Spider (a tarantula that emits elephant roars, and a sound approximating the noise that every Bond villain's lair makes when the self-destruct switch is activated). Assorted heroes and renegade Venom Clan members must work together against Lo Lieh and several 3's Company-esque misunderstandings.Not as good as Chu Yuan's masterpieces starring Ti Lung, but worth a watch.