Director: Eduardo Sánchez (The Blair Witch Project, Lovely Molly)
Starring: Dave Bautista, Alexandra Daddario, Tony Todd
Genre: Horror / Thriller / B-Movie
Release Date: 2024
Runtime: 92 minutes
Introduction
If Snakes on a Plane (2006) was a campy, self-aware B-movie, then Spiders on a Plane (2024) is its even crazier, more unhinged cousin. Directed by Eduardo Sánchez (co-creator of The Blair Witch Project), this creature feature embraces its absurd premise with gusto, delivering a non-stop barrage of spider-related chaos, cheesy one-liners, and over-the-top deaths.
Dave Bautista stars as a tough-as-nails air marshal, while Alexandra Daddario plays a scientist trying to contain the eight-legged menace. Horror legend Tony Todd (Candyman) even shows up as a doomed passenger, because why not? The result is a movie that knows exactly what it is—a schlocky, ridiculous good time—and leans into it with reckless abandon.
Plot Summary (Spoiler-Free)
A routine red-eye flight from Los Angeles to New York takes a terrifying turn when a smuggled crate of genetically modified spiders (because of course) breaks open mid-flight. These aren’t your average house spiders—they’re fast, venomous, and very hungry.
Enter Jack Slade (Bautista), an air marshal with a tragic past, and Dr. Elena Carter (Daddario), an arachnologist who knows just how deadly these creatures are. As the spiders multiply and pick off passengers one by one, Slade and Carter must work together to land the plane before everyone becomes spider chow.
Highlights include:
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A poor soul getting cocooned in webbing mid-air
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A spider bursting out of a guy’s mouth (Alien-style)
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A ridiculous but awesome flamethrower vs. spiders showdown
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Tony Todd delivering a gloriously hammy death scene
The film doesn’t bother with deep themes—it’s pure, dumb fun from takeoff to crash landing.
Analysis & Themes
1. “So Bad, It’s Good” Energy
This movie knows it’s ridiculous. The dialogue is intentionally cheesy (“We’ve got a bug problem!”), the spider CGI is hilariously over-the-top, and the deaths are so absurd they’ll make you laugh instead of scream.
2. A Love Letter to B-Movies
From the overacting to the claustrophobic setting, Spiders on a Plane feels like a throwback to ‘90s creature features (Anaconda, Arachnophobia). It’s the kind of movie you watch with friends and heckle.
3. Practical Effects & CGI Mashup
Some spiders are CGI, but others are real (or at least puppets), giving the film a fun, tactile grossness. The best scene involves a tarantula crawling into a guy’s ear—shudder.
4. Dave Bautista as an Action Hero
Bautista is clearly having a blast, delivering lines like “I hate spiders” with perfect deadpan seriousness. He’s the ideal B-movie lead—charismatic, tough, and just self-aware enough.
Performances
Dave Bautista – The Perfect B-Movie Hero
Bautista channels his Guardians of the Galaxy Drax energy but with more punching and spider-stomping. He’s the only reason some of this script works.
Alexandra Daddario – Screaming & Science-ing
Daddario does her best “smart but terrified” routine, and she sells every horrified reaction. Also, yes, there’s a very unnecessary shower scene—because of course there is.
Tony Todd – Horror Royalty Slumming It
Todd’s role is small but memorable. He gets one gloriously overacted death scene, and it’s worth the price of admission.
The Spiders – The Real Stars
From tiny jump-scare crawlers to a giant mutant queen in the cargo hold, these spiders are the MVPs.
Direction & Technical Craft
Eduardo Sánchez’s Playful Horror Touch
Sánchez knows how to build tension (Blair Witch), but here, he just lets the insanity fly. The pacing is breakneck—no boring moments.
Cinematography – Claustrophobic & Chaotic
The plane setting works perfectly, with tight corridors and overhead bins hiding jump scares.
The Score – Cheesy Synth & Dramatic Strings
The music swells at all the right (wrong) moments, making every spider attack feel like a melodramatic telenovela death.
Final Verdict: Is Spiders on a Plane Worth Watching?
Rating: ★★★ (3/5) – But a solid 3/5 for fans of B-movies
This isn’t high art—it’s a Midnight Movie experience. If you go in expecting Jaws-level filmmaking, you’ll be disappointed. But if you want dumb, spider-filled fun? This is your movie.
Who Will Love It?
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Fans of Snakes on a Plane, Sharknado, or Anaconda
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Viewers who love riffing on bad movies with friends
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Anyone who wants to see Dave Bautista punch a giant spider
Who Might Not?
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People who take horror movies seriously
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Arachnophobes (seriously, do not watch this)
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Critics who hate “so bad it’s good” films
Final Thought:
Spiders on a Plane is the kind of movie you watch at 2 a.m. with pizza and friends. It’s stupid, it’s fun, and yes, there’s a spider in the toilet.
Would I watch it again? Only if I’ve had enough tequila.