Cat People (1982) Movie Review
Cat People (1982) Review

"Cat People (1982)" Overview

Rating: R
1982
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul SchraderProducer : Charles W. Fries
Screenwiter : Alan Ormsby
Starring : Nastassja Kinski,Malcolm McDowell,John Heard,Annette O'Toole,Ed Begley Jr.,Scott Paulin,Frankie Faison,John Larroquette
I've never seen the original 1942 Cat People (I have now -Ed.), but I have a
hard time imagining it bears much resemblance to this 1982 remake, courtesy of
director Paul Schrader (American Gigolo), writer Alan Ormsby (who wrote Porky's
II and four of the Substitute movies), and stars Nastassja Kinski and Malcolm
McDowell.
Bizarre from frame one, the story tells of an ancient race of werewolf-like cat
people, doomed to turn into black leopards (is that the same thing as a
panther?) if they mate with humans. The only way to maintain human form, they
say, is to mate with another cat person -- or, apparently, to devour a human in
a lusty rage.
The story plays out as McDowell's Paul encounters his sister Irena (Kinski),
with whom he has long been separated. He goads the virignal girl into sleeping
with him but to no avail -- Irena ends up falling for a zookeeper named Oliver
(John Heard), despite the supposed danger of becoming a leopard for good.
Strange, moody, and rarely involving the actors in their clothes, Cat People is
probably most remembered for Kinski's "Totally '80s" boyish haircut than its
plot stylings. The film is gory and erotic, punctuated by a synth-heavy
soundtrack in the vein of Tangerine Dream (with David Bowie on the title
track). And of course, it doesn't make a heck of a lot of sense. Cat people
have to mate with their own kind to become human, but there's only two cat
people left on earth (conveniently brother and sister)? So Paul has been
massacring people left and right to stay in human form? He doesn't seem to
have a problem with this -- why bother becoming human for good? Or would
sleeping with his little sis even accomplish that?
Cat People is less intent on answering those questions than on showing Kinski,
Annette O'Toole, and various other women (and men) naked and/or covered in
blood. There's a certain air of romance to the movie, but it's more Red Shoe
Diaries than Sense And Sensibility.
This new DVD adds a reasonably interesting commentary from Schrader who
reveals, among other things, that yes, animals were harmed in the making of
this movie.
Cat people got your tongue?
Reviewer: Christopher Null





