The Giant Spider (2013)
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1FTuPH_r2H0Ig8x_jI0NlQcP_vRT-nwdotz6WNPs6DlcELQ_gQe-gB74UbFmx83wf8nW2XqXrOR7MbcOcV_lxAEdGPRrqhRsWglmGc6fcEVYm3C3IHVBGkSj6Qu_qe9zF2CKj3lEh5BNa/s400/Giant-Spider-poster.jpg)
When radiation left behind by atomic weapons testing creates a gigantic killer mutant arachnid, it's up to a trio of scientists, an Army general, and a newspaper reporter and his fiancée to figure out how to stop the hungry beast from devouring the entire county. REVIEW: The Giant Spider is the 8th movie in the ever-growing filmography of Christopher R. Mihm's micro-budget films done in black and white and as a loving and beautiful fun-filled throwback to the classic 1950s Drive-In B-Movies of yesteryear. All of the films made by Mihm and his crew, films such as: The Monster of Phantom Lake It Came From Another World! Cave Women on Mars Terror From Beneath The Earth Destination: Outer Space Attack of the Moon Zombies House of Ghosts all take place in the same shared movie universe, but are also mostly stand-alone from one another other than some recurring characters and the occasional brief throwback to a previous movie here and there, so it's not i