Spiders (2000)

Stick a spider in a movie, and I’ll see it. While this movie’s title (Spiders, duh) promises more than one arachnid, it really only features one … but the damn thing grows to be about 30 feet tall, so who’s complaining?

Here, a shuttle mission goes awry when the spider on board for experimental purposes goes crazy and kills the crew. The shuttle crash-lands at an Area 51-sorta place, where some annoying college newspaper reporter and her two pals — a hacker geek and a photographer who uses a point-and-shoot number — are snooping around for a story. (For the three leads, Mosquito director Gary Jones cast three of L.A.’s most unappealing young actors, resembling the poor man’s Sandra Bullock, Brendan Fraser and Chris O’Donnell, respectively.)

They enter the shuttle wreckage and then the bowels of the secret base, only to find themselves trapped and menaced by this very angry, very aggressive, big-ass spider, who seems to be growing in size at an alarming rate. The U.S. Army’s also running around looking for the thing, so the movie quickly becomes a mix of Aliens and, um, itself. Created by KNB, the spider effects are mostly pretty cool, especially in the balls-out finale, where the eight-legged creature terrorizes a retirement home — excuse us, we mean college campus — in broad daylight.

What’s not so hot is the by-the-numbers screenplay, which seems to have been assembled using every stock line from the horror genre. To wit: “We’ve got to stop it!,” “You go that way,” “Let’s get out of here!,” “Save yourself!” and the ever-popular, spoken-too-soon “I think we made it!” Although it doesn’t quite know when to quit, you’ll be cheesily entertained for most of Spiders’ running time. While it’s not scary, a lot of the arachnid’s appearances gave me the shivers. (Aside: See if you can spot all the vaginal imagery in the spider’s mouth.) —Rod Lott

Buy it at Amazon.

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