Cat People

1982 "They are something more than lovers who are about to become something less than human."
6.2| 1h58m| R| en| More Info
Released: 02 April 1982 Released
Producted By: Universal Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

After years of separation, Irena Gallier and her minister brother, Paul, reunite in New Orleans. When zoologists capture a wild panther, Irena is drawn to the cat – and zoo curator Oliver to her. Soon, Paul will have to reveal the family secret: that when sexually aroused, they revert into predatory jungle cats.

Genre

Horror, Thriller

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Cat People (1982) is now streaming with subscription on Starz

Director

Paul Schrader

Production Companies

Universal Pictures

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Cat People Audience Reviews

SoTrumpBelieve Must See Movie...
Tedfoldol everything you have heard about this movie is true.
AnhartLinkin This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.
Jonah Abbott There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.
jellopuke Sometimes not showing is better and in this case, the original was superior, but what's here is still solid. It takes the erotic level up a notch and the gore yet another, but somehow loses something when compared to the classic version. Some great scenery and gonzo performance from McDowell, but Kinski sometimes loses it. Liked it, but didn't love it.
Nigel P The late David Bowie (I still can't get used to using his name in a past tense) lends his voice to Giorgio Moroder's heavily synthesised soundtrack to this remake of Val Newton's 1942 original. Sadly, the music dates the production more than anything else.At nearly two hours long, 'Cat People' takes a while to get going, and even when it does, it comes in fits and starts. Nastassia Kinski and Malcolm McDowell are superbly cast as a somewhat creepy brother and sister – Kinski managing to exude both a virginal and sultry air that attracts John Heard as hunky-but-bland zoologist Oliver Yates. More than once, the film threatens to become too brooding for its own good and stumbles into dullness. But as things roll on, as Kinski's splendid Irena embraces her blooming sexuality, her brother Paul experiences a disappointing turn in his sex-life, indicating their sibling relationship polarizes aspects of each other's lives – and things become infinitely more interesting (and graphic). The incestuous relationship between them was echoed by their parents, suggesting in-breeding as one reason for their heightened personalities.The film comes full circle, with Paul and Aretha making their way across the surreal dusty, orange landscape that opened 'Cat People', towards a magnificent tree with its branches occupying resting black leopards. This scene brings with it a sense of surreality which acts as a welcome break from the comparatively unexceptional normalcy up until this point.Unlike the original film, Director Paul Schrader is unable to resist actually showing the transformation between human and feline. It comes far too late in the story to carry any real frights, rather it emerges as a tragic inevitability, sowing the seeds of Aretha's eventual, haunting fate. I think this is too slow moving to be truly great, but 'Cat People' remains an intelligent and enjoyable, sensuous fantasy.
blazesnakes9 Paul Schrader's version of Cat People is a movie that I've heard of, but never seen. After reading some of the reviews of the movie, I've decided to see on my own for the first time. I must say that I wasn't expecting a whole lot out of this movie because a lot of people who have seen it compared it to the original 1942 Val Lewton picture from RKO. Well, I was very impressed by this version of Cat People and I must say that it's a exceptionally well made, well acted psychological horror film.Irena, (Nastassja Kinski), arrives in New Orleans, visiting her brother, Paul, (Malcolm McDowell), for the first time. As the movie begins, Schrader sets up the movie very well. Hundreds of years ago, the feline group of mysterious people, called the Cat People, have the ability to change into a black leopard after mating. Unknowable to Irena, Paul starts to develop a incestuous feeling toward her as in one scene, which is, one of the best scenes in the movie, he stalks her while she sleeps in his house for the first time.Soon enough, Irena is given a job at the local zoo in New Orleans by Oliver Yates, (John Heard). Yates soon starts a relationship with Irena after he witnesses her watching a black leopard, roaming around its cage, milling for food. Irena doesn't tell Oliver about her family secret. Instead, the movie gets even better when Heard and Kinski start a relationship between the two while McDowell takes a turn of the worse, using his cat-like instinct to kill and prey on women, living in New Orleans. Almost some of Paul Schrader's films walk a tightrope between sexual tensions. He never back away from that particular theme in Cat People. Schrader, as you may know, written the screenplay for Taxi Driver and also directed two feature films, Hardcore, which shares some of the same elements in this film and American Gigolo. His films are quite daring, but nevertheless, interesting and engaging.Some people might look at this movie as a sleazy exploitation horror film. But, to the tell you the truth, it is not. This is a very good looking movie, with great cinematography, showcasing many colorful sets and sights in New Orleans. Some of the scenes are quite suspenseful, almost ranking up there with the Master of Suspense, Alfred Hitchcock. The imagery that is used in this movie are very well shot and photographed. One scene that sums it up at all up is when Kinski witnesses a leopard, tearing out a zookeeper's arm. What makes that scene work is that Schrader cuts that with a shot of a pool of blood, running through Kinski's shoes and into a drain in the floor of the zoo. That's very well done, indeed. You can almost feel the darkness and mystery of the picture itself, thanks to the superb music score by Giorgio Moroder.Nastassja Kinski, I think, steals the movie, away from John Heard and Malcolm McDowell. She is one of the most interesting and mysterious actresses I've ever seen. She provides the movie with a spice of eroticism that lights up the scenes. You can't talk your eyes off of her nor ignore her. She is really something in this movie. Unlike so many other female characters in horror movies, she gives Irena a mind of her own when she develops sexual feeling toward the two completely different men. That's very daring for a actress to do in the movies.Cat People is a very scary horror film that's very well made by Paul Schrader and also scored very effectively by Giorgio Moroder. An very good movie for adults to see. ★★★ 1/2 3 1/2 stars.
SnoopyStyle A village sacrifices their young women to black leopards who mated with them to create a new breed of people, Cat People. Irena Gallier (Nastassja Kinski) travels to New Orleans to meet her birth brother Paul Gallier (Malcolm McDowell) for the first time. Female (Ruby Dee) is his mysterious caretaker. A black leopard and mauls a hooker in a motel. Dr. Oliver Yates (John Heard), Alice Perrin (Annette O'Toole) and Joe Creigh (Ed Begley Jr.) captures the animal for the zoo. Irena is drawn to the leopard at the zoo and befriends Dr. Yates.This remakes a 40s horror that is honestly a bit boring and slow to me. What director Paul Schrader does is to elevate the eroticism and the visceral horror. Ed Begley Jr. getting his arm ripped off is classic. Kinski has great exoticism. Heard is a solid lead and O'Toole is a great girl-next-door. The swimming pool scene was a classic in the original and continues to be a great scene in this one.