Spider

audience Reviews

, 68% Audience Score
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    The odyssey of Telemachus, brought to the present day, in the person of a psychiatric patient, in a journey of introspection that is more destructive than sobering. The highlight is Ralph Fiennes who expresses much with few words.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    Powerful and tragic story, kept me processing it for days after I watched the movie. Pity that intro on RT is a spoiler.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    While difficult to follow at first and leaving the audience with too many unanswered questions for my liking, Spider does offer interesting and compelling filmmaking with the audience piecing together the story alongside the protagonist. However, the opacity is too much for my taste. I would only watch this again if there were nothing better to choose from.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    Despite Ralph Fiennes' exquisite performance and the shocking plot twist ending, Spider is painstakingly slow and dull. I'm not sure its pros outweigh the cons.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    A fiftysomething man endeavours to reconstruct his past.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    As disturbingly depressing as it's meant to have been
  • Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    Dennis Cleg (Ralph Fiennes), a schizophrenic man who has just been released from a mental institution. He is given a room in a halfway house catering to mentally disturbed people, ran by an unrelenting landlady, Mrs. Wilkinson. While in his new abode, he starts piecing together in his memory an apparently fateful childhood event... Rotten Tomatoes critical consensus reads, "Ralph Fiennes is brilliant in this accomplished and haunting David Cronenberg film." Roger Ebert gave the film 3/4 stars, writing, "The details of the film and of the performances are meticulously realized; there is a reward in seeing artists working so well. But the story has no entry or exit, and is cold, sad and hopeless. Afterward, I feel more admiration than gratitude." Nev Pierce from the BBC awarded the film 3/5 stars, calling it "dour, thoughtful, and oppressive". Stephen Holden from New York Times praised the film, calling it "as harrowing a portrait of one man's tormented isolation as the commercial cinema has produced." Peter Travers of The Rolling Stone awarded the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, writing, "What catches us in Spider‘s web — besides the indelible performances of Fiennes and Richardson — is the director's sympathy with this freak man-child who struggles to order his confused memories into a kind of truth. That's what makes Cronenberg a world-class provocateur: His movie gets under your skin." Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian rated the film 4/5 stars, calling it " an intensely controlled, beautifully designed and fascinatingly acted account of Patrick McGrath's original novel". Mike Clark from USA Today awarded the film 3/4 stars, commending the film's direction, cinematography, and performances, while also stating that it was not particularly "sizzling" as in his previous films The Fly and eXistenZ. This psychological thriller produced and directed by David Cronenberg and based on the 1990 novel of the same name by Patrick McGrath, is a bit different from Cronenberg´s "normal" work. It´s a descend into schizophrenia and that haunting state of mind. The storyline is tragic and difficult and we get great performances specifically from Ralph Fiennes. The film premiered at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival and enjoyed some media buzz; however, it was released in only a few cinemas at the year's end by distributor Sony Pictures Classics. Nonetheless, the film enjoyed much acclaim by critics and especially by Cronenberg enthusiasts. The film garnered a Best Director Award at the Canadian Genie Awards. The stars of the film, Ralph Fiennes and particularly Miranda Richardson, received several awards for their work in the film. Trivia: Spider's difficulty with his family history is a real psychological syndrome called the Capgras delusion. Persons afflicted with the syndrome are convinced that a person close to them has been replaced by an identical-looking impostor.
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    Ralph Fiennes delivers one of the best performances I've ever seen on film. this is a movie which actually requires the audience to think, which is too rarely the case.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    This doesn't feel like your typical David Cronenberg film (he's known for surreal body horror films, Viggo Mortensen crime thrillers, and most recently impenetrably cold and detached Robert Pattinson arthouse flicks). This psychological thriller feels like a mix between Villeneuve's "Enemy" and the extremely underrated "Possum" (It's free with ads on Vudu, I highly suggest you watch it now. I can't stop nerding out over that film.) With a wonderful cast that includes Ralph Fiennes and Gabriel Byrne turning in strong performances, and a puzzle of a narrative that you need to piece together (wish the ending was more ambiguous on that front, leaving us to put it together ourselves), this is yet another highly underrated film partly because of how impossible it is to watch. I couldn't find a bluray, nor could I find it on VOD, so I settled for a used DVD just to SEE the thing! It's still flawed, and the conclusion is predictable once you've put it all together and a couple steps removed of how far I thought it should've gone, but that's not a reason to avoid the film if you can see it. I recommend it. 8.5/10
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    Esta película la vimos y la analizamos en la universidad, es un excelente ejemplo para entender las teorías de Melanie Klein. Además la actuación de Ralph es espectacular.