40 out of 54 people found the following comment useful :- Brilliant film, but should not be thought of as a remake, 11. Februar 2005
Author:
Brandt Sponseller von New York City
After looking for years for his long lost sister, Irena Gallier
(Nastassja Kinski), Paul (Malcolm McDowell) finally finds her and has
her come to New Orleans, where he's currently living. While there, she
gradually discovers the truth about their bizarre past and falls for a
zoo curator.
First, a caveat. Director Paul Schrader, in his interview on the Cat
People DVD, says that he regrets that he didn't just change the name of
the film to remove some of the perception that this is a remake of
Jacques Tourneur's Cat People from 1942. It is wrong to look at this as
a remake. Aside from mostly superficial similarities, Schrader's Cat
People really has little to do with the original--no more in common
than, say, The Grudge (2004) and The Ring (2002), assuming that
"Kayako" from The Grudge would have been named "Samara" instead, or no
more similar than any two random vampire films. Irena's first name is
the same, there are similarities in her background story and what she
is, she visits a zoo, she falls in love with a man with the same first
name of "Oliver", and there are maybe two and a half scenes similar to
Tourneur's film. That's it. Yes, I'm a fan of Tourneur's film,
too--it's my favorite out of his collaborations with producer Val
Lewton. But you have to forget about Tourneur's film when watching this
one. This is a remarkable work of cinematic art in its own right, with
its own story and goals.
Schrader's Cat People deserves a 10 on visual terms alone. The
cinematography, production design and lighting are nothing short of
genius throughout the film. Almost every shot is one that deserves to
be paused and studied. Director of photography John Bailey never ceases
to find interesting perspectives, angles and tracking. The sets are
elaborate and exquisitely constructed for visual impact. In conjunction
with the lighting, the film is mired in a rich, varied palette of
colors similar to (and as good as) Dario Argento's best work.
Of course the film is more graphic than Tourneur's--it would be almost
impossible for it not to be, both in terms of blood/gore and nudity,
and all of that is shot brilliantly as well. The only cinematic
instance of blood that I can think of that is as effective as the scene
in this film where blood runs by Irena's shoes and down a drain is the
shower scene from Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). The event leading
up to this image has more impact of most similar scenes, as well. The
copious amounts of nudity throughout the film are never gratuitous (not
that I have anything against gratuitous nudity, mind you), but always
interestingly blocked, with some grander artistic purpose. These scenes
range from creating juxtapositions between prurient voyeurism and
horror, to surrender to and (sometimes perverse) domination of
animality, to interior psychological conflicts--just look at the
ingenious placement of a window frames during a full frontal nudity
shot in Oliver's "swamp cabin".
The music--both the score and the incidental songs, are just as good.
Most of it is an eerie, synthesized score by Giorgio Moroder. It often
approaches the tasty moodiness of Brian Eno's excellent work with David
Bowie (Low, Heroes, Lodger), which is perhaps ironic in light of the
fact that Bowie contributed a great song for the closing credits. The
limited incidental music--such as Jimmy Hughes' "Why Not Tonight?"
during the cab ride to the zoo--fits the mood of the film perfectly.
Of course, the film isn't all just visuals and music. There's an
intriguing, surreal story here, and great performances from a seemingly
odd combination of actors--ranging from Kinski and McDowell to Ed
Begley, Jr. and John Laroquette. Setting the film in New Orleans was an
inspired choice, as it allowed for eerie voodoo-weirdness ala Angel
Heart (1987) and moody swamp vistas ala Down By Law (1986) to seep into
the already creepy story. Setting the more dreamlike imagery in a
desert (albeit a studio-created desert) also helped draw me into the
film, as there is probably no environment I find more aesthetically
captivating.
I first saw Cat People as a teen during its theatrical run. I didn't
like it near as much then, and that fact caused me to put off
re-watching it for a number of years. I think at that time, the film
may have been too slow for me, I may not have understood it very well,
and I certainly didn't have the visual and overall aesthetic
appreciation that I currently have. Now, I think it's a
masterpiece--perhaps one of the better films of the 1980s. It's worth
checking out at least once, and if you've seen it awhile ago and think
you didn't like it so well, it's worth giving a second chance.
23 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :- Sex, Violence, Silliness, and an Emerging Cult Favorite, 20. Mai 2005
Author:
gftbiloxi (gftbiloxi@yahoo.com) von Biloxi, Mississippi
In general terms, the basic premise of both original 1942 CAT PEOPLE
and the 1982 Paul Schrader remake are the same: an exotic European
beauty is given to transforming into a black panther when sexually
aroused. But Schrader unravels this fantasy concept in some very
overtly Freudian directions, setting his version in against the
decadent charm of New Orleans, introducing a theme of incest, and
ramping up the original with a lot of nudity, a lot of sex, and some of
the most graphic violence around. The result is an American
blood-and-gore horror film with a hypnotic European sensibility that
equates both sexual frustration and orgasm with violent death.
The story line concerns two orphaned siblings (Natasha Kinski and
Malcom McDowell) who are reunited in New Orleans as adults--but they
are, unbeknownst to the sister, the descendants of a mutant race who
can only mate with their own kind without transforming into ravening
beasts who must then kill to regain their human form. When sister
Natasha rejects her brother's advances and then falls in love with a
hunky zoo director all hell breaks loose.
In some respects the film is extremely, extremely frustrating, often
sliding over the edge from a sexually provocative shocker into moments
of annoying silliness--but on the whole it works extremely well as a
both a sexual fantasy and a semi-camp statement in gratuitous sex and
violence. Kinski is ideally cast as the sexy but virginal Irena; you
can literally see the "cat" side of her nature emerge more and more as
the film progresses. McDowell is equally interesting as her mad
brother, and John Heard, Annette O'Toole, and particularly Ruby Dee
offer excellent performances in the supporting cast. The New Orleans
backdrop is extremely effective, and (speaking as one who has been
there) the darker side of the city is perfectly captured; the Moroder
score--which includes some sultry vocals by David Bowie--is also
extremely good.
A great many people will loathe CAT PEOPLE, and the reasons will be
diverse. The film is extremely bloody, often to a
can-you-stand-to-look-at-the-screen degree; there is tremendous nudity
and considerably sexual activity; and the combination of sex and
violence into a sadomasochistic eroticism is quite disturbing. Beyond
this, more critically inclined viewers may find themselves annoyed by
the script's silliness and the fact that it does not always go as far
over the top as it leads you to expect, and certainly the film's very
literal depiction of fantasy elements will not be to every taste. But
if you have a hunger to walk on the wild side, CAT PEOPLE (which is
rapidly gaining status as a cult film) will suit your need as guilty
pleasure.
Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
15 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :- Great erotic thriller, 20. Januar 2000
Author:
James D. Buttram (DaCritic-2) von Fairfax, VA
"Cat People" is one of those movies that, by all rights, shouldn't be shown
on network TV. That's not a comment on quality; it's one of the best erotic
thrillers ever made (next to "The Hunger"). But when you have a movie
where, for the last half hour, the female lead is mostly undressed ... how
can you *show* the last half of the movie?
Very simply stated, they *don't* show it. I tried to watch Cat People on
USA or some other network one night, and the last half hour had been cut
down to about five minutes and made absolutely no sense. Worse, I was
watching it with someone who had never seen it before, and when it was over,
she was thoroughly confused and unimpressed.
So, number one: See this movie, if you haven't already! And number two,
when you do ... rent or buy the video, or catch a revival on one of the
premium cable channels.
12 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- Not as Good as the Original, but Still Interesting, 29. März 2004
Author:
James Hitchcock von Tunbridge Wells, England
Like many horror films, `Cat People' has at its centre an inherently
absurd
concept. The central characters, Irena and Paul, are brother and sister
and
the descendants of a long line of human/animal hybrids. In their normal
form, they are human, but they turn into black panthers whenever they have
sex with a normal person (but not when they have sex with one of their own
kind). After such a transformation, they can only revert to human form by
killing.
Absurdity, however, is not always a bad thing in the context of horror
films; indeed, the success or failure of such films frequently depends
upon
the director's ability to persuade his audience to believe six impossible
things before breakfast. Once the ground-rules have been laid down, they
have to be developed with strict logic; if this is done convincingly
enough,
the audience can overlook the fact that those rules are implausible or
even
impossible. In `Cat People' this is largely achieved. At the start of the
film, Irena is an innocent girl, still a virgin and unaware of her true
nature. Paul, by contrast, is well aware of the truth, and has no
compunction about killing to regain human form after his many promiscuous
sexual encounters. Irena finds out the truth about herself after she moves
to live with Paul in New Orleans. He proposes that they should have an
incestuous relationship as this would mean they were free to indulge
themselves sexually without transforming. Irena, however, recoils from the
idea of incest, and falls in love with Oliver, a curator at the local zoo.
`Cat People' reminded me of another early eighties horror film, Tony
Scott's
`The Hunger'. Both are frankly erotic, both have an absurd concept at
their
core, and both are shot in a self-consciously stylish manner reminiscent
of
a pop video, aiming for a deliberately aesthetic look. (Another link is
that
David Bowie, who starred in `The Hunger', sings the song at the end of
`Cat
People' as the final credits are playing). `Cat People', however, is in my
view the better film, precisely because it remains true to the rules
inherent in its central concept whereas `The Hunger' does not. To take an
example, Catherine Deneuve's character in that film is supposed to be
ageless and immortal, yet nevertheless dies at the end. `Cat People' can
develop its basic concept without departing from it. Moreover, it develops
the idea in such a way as to arouse sympathy for the characters, or at
least
for Irena. She is confronted with an essentially tragic dilemma; she must
either resign herself to a life without the man whom she loves and without
any possibility of sexual love, or else become a killer. She is aware of
this dilemma, and her conscience is troubled by it. As a result, we find
that she is a character with whom we can identify, even though she is only
half-human. In `The Hunger', by contrast, the vampires played by Catherine
Deneuve and David Bowie have absolutely no conscience about killing in
order
to feed, and therefore seem more alien.
As she showed in `Tess', Nastassja Kinski has a great ability to suggest a
disturbing mixture of innocence and sensuality, and this was much in
evidence in `Cat People'. While the film is not on the same level as
Polanski's, and does not test her as an actress to the same degree, it
probably shows off her beauty to even greater effect. With her lithe, slim
figure, her piercing gaze and her short, dark hair, she seems physically
perfect for the role of Irena. It would be difficult to think of another
actress who could have suggested the feline side of her nature more
convincingly. Malcolm McDowell, as Paul, showed that he is much practised
in
the art of combining the charming with the sinister. John Heard gave a
more
stolid performance as Oliver, but this was not necessarily a fault; the
intention could have been to contrast the safe, conventional Oliver with
the
dangerous but fascinating Paul.
The film is not as good as the Jacques Tourneur original from 1942,
lacking
the earlier film's ability to convey mood and emotion through suggestion
and
nuance. Schrader's film is much more direct and less subtle, but
nevertheless it is still worth watching. 6/10.
10 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- I'm a cat person...and I liked "Cat People", 26. Mai 2003
Author:
Jonny_Numb von Hellfudge, Pennsylvania
Like Joe D'Amato's "Buried Alive," this remake of "Cat People" is
technically a love story with a tough horror exterior. Both aspects of
these genres fit quite well to create an unconventional entertainment. The
movie gets especially high mileage out of two inspired leads--Nastassia
Kinski as the young, attractive virgin (she also looks like a more predatory
version of Isabella Rossellini); and Malcolm McDowell, who still glows with
all the playful malevolence he brought to "A Clockwork Orange," as her
brother, who morphs into a panther when sexually aroused. In spite of an
ill-defined supporting cast, Paul Schrader's assured direction, the bizarre
script (by "Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things" star Alan Ormsby),
those lush New Orleans locations, and the chemistry between Kinski and
McDowell keep "Cat People" afloat. It's a sexually charged horror story
told with a straight face, and it works.
7/10
13 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- Not as good as the original but still worth watching, 7. Mai 2004
Author:
sol1218 von brooklyn NY
****SPOILERS**** Paul Schrader's remake of the 1942 horror classic "Cat
People" this time set in New Orleans La. not in New York City. Irena
Gallier, Nastassja Kinski, comes to live with her older brother Paul,
Malcolm McDowell, in the hot and sweltering southern city. Feeling for
the first time in her life wanted Irena was orphaned at the age of four
when her parents killed themselves. She spent her formidable years in
and out of orphanages and it wasn't until her brother tracked her down
that she fond a home of her own in Louisiana. It turns out later in the
movie that what Paul wants from her is more then what Irena is willing
to give him.
Nastassja Kinski in one of her most sexiest roles is both seductive and
innocent as Irena and gives the film the electricity that keeps the
movie going even though the cast has trouble keeping up with her
performance at times. Malcolm McDowell is both creepy and unnerving as
Irena's older brother Paul who's like a Tom-Cat in heat during the
entire movie having no trouble getting women for his sexual pleasures.
Paul also ends up murdering them because of his submerged animal
instincts that those affairs bring to the surface. John Heard, Oliver
Yates, is very good as the zoo curator and Irena's frustrated lover who
Irena, who loves him, avoids having an affair with Oliver in order not
to be forced to kill him. Annette O'Toole, Alice Perrin, is also very
good in a small but important role as Oliver's co-worker in the New
Orleans Zoo. Alice later becomes the focus of Irena's jealousy and
resentment for being the woman who's standing between Oliver and her.
The movie recreates a number of scenes from the 1942 version with the
cat-like woman coming up to Irena at a bar, in the first film it was at
Irena's wedding party, and greets her in a foreign language calling her
"My sister" or, what it obviously meant, fellow cat person. There's
also the classic indoor swimming pool scene with Alice. This time
around with Alice being topless which of course she couldn't have been
in the 1942 version due to the censorship of nude scenes by the
Hollywood Watchdog Hayes Commision. Alice taking a swim in the indoor
swimming pool has the lights suddenly shut off and what seemed to be
some kind of big cat in the shadows hounding her in the dark.
Unlike the original movie the new version of "Cat People" has a number
of extremely gory scenes that are really shocking. With the black
leopard in the movie who both Irena and Paul turn into being so
horrific and terrifying that he makes the villains in horror/slashers
movies today look as scary as Pee Wee Herman in comparison. With his
eerie green eyes and ferocious and deadly fangs and claws you just
cringe with fear every time the big cat comes on the screen. There's a
blood splattered sequence where the enraged leopard grabs the
zoo-keeper's Joe Creigh's, Ed Bagley Jr, arm between the bars of his
cage. The sight of the big cat, who was really Paul, going wild when as
saw Joe together with Irena, his sister, was one of the most terrifying
scenes I've even seen in a motion picture. Joe foolishly tried to
settle the leopard down with an electric prong as the dangerous feline
suddenly and cat-like grabbed and ripped Joe's arm off with the ease as
if it was attached to his body with just a rubber band. The frighting
thing about the leopard's actions is that, unlike the killers in most
horror films, it was so realistic knowing that a big dangerous jungle
cat like that can do that in real life just like in the movies.
Even though Paul Schrader's "Cat People" doesn't in any way measure up
to the original the ending was more interesting and innovative with
Irena not being killed and Oliver ending up together with her instead
of leaving Irena for Alice like Oliver did in the 1942 movie. In the
end of the movie we see that Oliver finally accepts Irena for what she
is with the knowledge that the only way he can be with her is between
the bars that separate them.
12 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- Unlike The Original, This Doesn't Leave Much To The Imagination, 12. Juli 2007
Author:
ccthemovieman-1 von Lockport, NY, United States
This is almost the opposite of the original Cat People movie of 1942
which was mostly suggestive violence, sexuality, horror, etc. In that
"oldie," everything was implied and gave the film a moody, creepy
atmosphere.
Of course, by the 1970s, a lot of that sort of movie-making subtlety
went out the window. In the last few years, it's even more the case.
Few things are implied today. They are just thrown at us, like raw meat
to a hungry lion.
Here, we have plenty of blood-and guts, nudity and - for extra bonuses
- incest and bestiality. Wow, that's a little too much "information"
for us discriminating movie viewers, don't you think?
It's too bad they wasted a nice cast of Malcom McDowell, Nastassja
Kinski, John Heard, Annette O'Toole and more names you know. Kinski, as
"Irena Gailier," spends most of the movie with her clothes off and
McDowell, as he was in "A Clockwork Orange," isn't shy, either. Well,
at least she looked pretty and he looked effectively evil. The growl of
the panther was pretty scary, too. However, this a two-hour film that
is mostly stupid, filled with unlikable characters.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- A nation of animal lovers? Yeah, but this is quite literally going too far., 10. März 2005
Author:
Paul Andrews (poolandrews@hotmail.com) von UK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Irena Gallier (Nastassja Kinski) arrives in New Orleans for the first
time. Irena is greeted at the airport by her brother Paul (Malcolm
McDowell) who she has never met. Paul takes Irena back to his house but
soon disappears. A prostitute named Ruthie (Lynn Lowry) is late for a
client. She enters the seedy room and finds a strange slimy substance
on the bed. She also notices a black fury thing sticking out from under
the bed, she kicks it with her high heeled shoes and it turns out to be
the tail belonging to a huge black Leopard which mauls her ankle but
she manages to escape. Oh, and her bra 'rips' in the middle exposing
her breasts. The massage parlour's manager (John H. Fields) traps the
Leopard in the room and calls the authorities. The city zoo's curator
Dr. Oliver Yates (John Heard) and his team, Alice Perrin (Annette
O'Toole) and Joe Creigh (Ed Begley Jr.) are called in to capture the
Leopard. Irena decides to see the sights that New Orleans has to offer.
Irena eventually ends up at the zoo where she sees the Leopard, now
safely behind the bars of a cage. Irena stays behind after the zoo
closes and is found by Oliver. They strike up a friendship and within a
few hours Oliver has given Irena a job in the zoo's gift shop. One day
while Joe tries to feed the Leopard it rips his arm off and Joe dies,
Oliver decides to shoot the Leopard but when he returns with a gun he
finds the Leopard gone and a strange slimy substance on the floor. That
night Paul returns home and confronts Irena, making sexual advances
towards her. Irena runs from Paul and stops a police car. Back at
Paul's house they make a grisly discovery in the basement. Paul needs
Irena and will do whatever it takes to convince her she needs him too.
Things become even more complicated when Irena and Oliver fall in love
but Irena refuses to have sex with him, as events unfold it becomes
clear that Irena and Paul both harbour a dark secret.
Extensively re-written and directed by Paul Schrader I thought this was
one of the dullest and most boring nothing horror films that I have
seen in some time. The script that was originally written by Alan
Ormsby before the re-write by Schrader is so slow it's frightening, and
at almost two hours long the Cat People outstays it's welcome well
before the end credits roll. For most of the first hour, maybe a little
more, it's no more than a drama as the film focuses on Oliver's and
Irena's relationship and not much else. The film also has many
unnecessary sequences and drags, badly. Another small problem is that
the film tries to present it's story as some kind of mystery, well I
don't want to seem fussy but the films title is 'Cat People' and that
sort of gives it away and it doesn't come as a surprise that people
turn into Leopards if you know what I mean. One more thing I don't
understand, if these cat people turn into Leopards during or after
sexual contact why has Paul already turned into one before the
prostitute even enters the room? Most of the characters are a little on
the bitty side and somewhat underdeveloped. I also think it was a
mistake to cast Kinski who can't act and on occasion looks like a man
with her short hair (hey, it's true) and McDowell seems uninterested
and unsuited to the role of the bad guy. I have to say that I didn't
care about any of the characters involved which is never a good thing
in a film. The film has lots of nudity with Kinski the main culprit as
she exposes her breasts and body numerous times during the last 30 or
so minutes, having said that though most of the female cast take their
tops off at some point. There are some strong sex scenes too,
especially at the end when Oliver ties a naked Kinski to the bed by her
wrists and ankles and then has fairly explicit sex with her.
Unfortunately the horror element of the story is severely lacking, in
fact there is very little horror in it. There is very little gore
either, an autopsy on a Leopard, a bitten off arm and a mangled dead
body is about it. The transformation sequence is so short as to be
almost inconsequential, although the meagre screen time it does get the
transformation looks quite cool. However I will admit that the film has
a really nice look throughout and great cinematography by John Bailey
which captures the New Orleans locations extremely well. Personally I
really didn't find much in this film to like, I will admit that it's
well made and tells a story competently enough but I just found the
whole thing so dull and uneventful. This is not a film that I can
recommend, there are much better horror films out there.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Beauty and the Beast in one , 8. März 2004
Author:
Coventry von the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls
I'm writing this review after just having finished watching Cat People and
I'm suffering from mixed feelings a bit.... I certainly expected it to be
better and more valuable than this especially because the I heard so much
praising on it. Paul Schrader remakes the brilliant 1942 classic with the
same title. The original Jacques Tourneur version was terrific because of
the simple yet very effective basic plot story, but Schrader adds so
many elements to this that it loses its charm. Also, there were the stress
was on the mystery in the original Schrader fully goes for the erotic
undertones (like incest, virginity or just plain voyeurism) . And
unfortunately the negative elements don't even stop there. As a viewer, you
never really have feeling with the main characters in Cat People and the
whole film just is too slow! For a movie that constantly features a black
leopard it could have used a little more tempo. Still, this film can't be
bashed entirely of course, as it still is a stylish and very brutal 80's
horror highlight. Nastassja Kinski basically makes every film look good and
she's damn sexy here, as the confused beauty torn between incest
prepositions (by Malcolm McDowell famous for other cult-hits like Caligula
and A Clockwork Orange) and sincere declarations of love by John Heard
(C.H.U.D) . Some of the sequences in Cat People are really fascinating and
fairly gore like for example the thrilling arm-amputation, Kinski's colorful
hunting adventure and the descent in Malcolm McDowell's terror dungeon. You
can almost smell death in that scene. Unfortunately, the pivot scene are
practically copied from the original shot by shot. Like the pool-scene only
updated with a little bit of naked Anette O'Toole flesh
If you're intrigued by the synopsis of Cat People, I strongly recommend to
hunt down the original version and most likely the sequel `Curse of the Cat
People' as well. I haven't seen that one myself, but I can easily imagine
it's more than decent. Or, if you want to learn more about Paul Shrader's
work in cinema, you'll be better off by renting Mishima, Light Sleeper or
even American Gigolo. Cat People doesn't really represent his talent if you
ask me.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- kinky, stylish, hard to forget, 2. Februar 2005
Author:
inkslave von Midwest USA
This is not a great movie. But you won't soon forget it. It has some of
the more explicit sex scenes you'll see in a movie from this period,
including one that, well, let's just say it's amazing what people will
do for those they love. And it is decidedly creepy when it wants to be,
which is more than you can say about of lot of movies. Good
performances, especially by Kinski, who had to be a pretty brave soul
to sign up for this after reading the screenplay -- especially the last
four pages.
And David Bowie's music is used to great effect in most scenes.
Rent it and watch it with someone you'd like to nibble and scratch
behind the ears.
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Cat People (1982)
40 out of 54 people found the following comment useful :-

Brilliant film, but should not be thought of as a remake, 11. Februar 2005
Author: Brandt Sponseller von New York City
After looking for years for his long lost sister, Irena Gallier (Nastassja Kinski), Paul (Malcolm McDowell) finally finds her and has her come to New Orleans, where he's currently living. While there, she gradually discovers the truth about their bizarre past and falls for a zoo curator.
First, a caveat. Director Paul Schrader, in his interview on the Cat People DVD, says that he regrets that he didn't just change the name of the film to remove some of the perception that this is a remake of Jacques Tourneur's Cat People from 1942. It is wrong to look at this as a remake. Aside from mostly superficial similarities, Schrader's Cat People really has little to do with the original--no more in common than, say, The Grudge (2004) and The Ring (2002), assuming that "Kayako" from The Grudge would have been named "Samara" instead, or no more similar than any two random vampire films. Irena's first name is the same, there are similarities in her background story and what she is, she visits a zoo, she falls in love with a man with the same first name of "Oliver", and there are maybe two and a half scenes similar to Tourneur's film. That's it. Yes, I'm a fan of Tourneur's film, too--it's my favorite out of his collaborations with producer Val Lewton. But you have to forget about Tourneur's film when watching this one. This is a remarkable work of cinematic art in its own right, with its own story and goals.
Schrader's Cat People deserves a 10 on visual terms alone. The cinematography, production design and lighting are nothing short of genius throughout the film. Almost every shot is one that deserves to be paused and studied. Director of photography John Bailey never ceases to find interesting perspectives, angles and tracking. The sets are elaborate and exquisitely constructed for visual impact. In conjunction with the lighting, the film is mired in a rich, varied palette of colors similar to (and as good as) Dario Argento's best work.
Of course the film is more graphic than Tourneur's--it would be almost impossible for it not to be, both in terms of blood/gore and nudity, and all of that is shot brilliantly as well. The only cinematic instance of blood that I can think of that is as effective as the scene in this film where blood runs by Irena's shoes and down a drain is the shower scene from Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). The event leading up to this image has more impact of most similar scenes, as well. The copious amounts of nudity throughout the film are never gratuitous (not that I have anything against gratuitous nudity, mind you), but always interestingly blocked, with some grander artistic purpose. These scenes range from creating juxtapositions between prurient voyeurism and horror, to surrender to and (sometimes perverse) domination of animality, to interior psychological conflicts--just look at the ingenious placement of a window frames during a full frontal nudity shot in Oliver's "swamp cabin".
The music--both the score and the incidental songs, are just as good. Most of it is an eerie, synthesized score by Giorgio Moroder. It often approaches the tasty moodiness of Brian Eno's excellent work with David Bowie (Low, Heroes, Lodger), which is perhaps ironic in light of the fact that Bowie contributed a great song for the closing credits. The limited incidental music--such as Jimmy Hughes' "Why Not Tonight?" during the cab ride to the zoo--fits the mood of the film perfectly.
Of course, the film isn't all just visuals and music. There's an intriguing, surreal story here, and great performances from a seemingly odd combination of actors--ranging from Kinski and McDowell to Ed Begley, Jr. and John Laroquette. Setting the film in New Orleans was an inspired choice, as it allowed for eerie voodoo-weirdness ala Angel Heart (1987) and moody swamp vistas ala Down By Law (1986) to seep into the already creepy story. Setting the more dreamlike imagery in a desert (albeit a studio-created desert) also helped draw me into the film, as there is probably no environment I find more aesthetically captivating.
I first saw Cat People as a teen during its theatrical run. I didn't like it near as much then, and that fact caused me to put off re-watching it for a number of years. I think at that time, the film may have been too slow for me, I may not have understood it very well, and I certainly didn't have the visual and overall aesthetic appreciation that I currently have. Now, I think it's a masterpiece--perhaps one of the better films of the 1980s. It's worth checking out at least once, and if you've seen it awhile ago and think you didn't like it so well, it's worth giving a second chance.
23 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :-

Sex, Violence, Silliness, and an Emerging Cult Favorite, 20. Mai 2005
Author: gftbiloxi (gftbiloxi@yahoo.com) von Biloxi, Mississippi
In general terms, the basic premise of both original 1942 CAT PEOPLE and the 1982 Paul Schrader remake are the same: an exotic European beauty is given to transforming into a black panther when sexually aroused. But Schrader unravels this fantasy concept in some very overtly Freudian directions, setting his version in against the decadent charm of New Orleans, introducing a theme of incest, and ramping up the original with a lot of nudity, a lot of sex, and some of the most graphic violence around. The result is an American blood-and-gore horror film with a hypnotic European sensibility that equates both sexual frustration and orgasm with violent death.
The story line concerns two orphaned siblings (Natasha Kinski and Malcom McDowell) who are reunited in New Orleans as adults--but they are, unbeknownst to the sister, the descendants of a mutant race who can only mate with their own kind without transforming into ravening beasts who must then kill to regain their human form. When sister Natasha rejects her brother's advances and then falls in love with a hunky zoo director all hell breaks loose.
In some respects the film is extremely, extremely frustrating, often sliding over the edge from a sexually provocative shocker into moments of annoying silliness--but on the whole it works extremely well as a both a sexual fantasy and a semi-camp statement in gratuitous sex and violence. Kinski is ideally cast as the sexy but virginal Irena; you can literally see the "cat" side of her nature emerge more and more as the film progresses. McDowell is equally interesting as her mad brother, and John Heard, Annette O'Toole, and particularly Ruby Dee offer excellent performances in the supporting cast. The New Orleans backdrop is extremely effective, and (speaking as one who has been there) the darker side of the city is perfectly captured; the Moroder score--which includes some sultry vocals by David Bowie--is also extremely good.
A great many people will loathe CAT PEOPLE, and the reasons will be diverse. The film is extremely bloody, often to a can-you-stand-to-look-at-the-screen degree; there is tremendous nudity and considerably sexual activity; and the combination of sex and violence into a sadomasochistic eroticism is quite disturbing. Beyond this, more critically inclined viewers may find themselves annoyed by the script's silliness and the fact that it does not always go as far over the top as it leads you to expect, and certainly the film's very literal depiction of fantasy elements will not be to every taste. But if you have a hunger to walk on the wild side, CAT PEOPLE (which is rapidly gaining status as a cult film) will suit your need as guilty pleasure.
Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
15 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :-
Great erotic thriller, 20. Januar 2000
Author: James D. Buttram (DaCritic-2) von Fairfax, VA
"Cat People" is one of those movies that, by all rights, shouldn't be shown on network TV. That's not a comment on quality; it's one of the best erotic thrillers ever made (next to "The Hunger"). But when you have a movie where, for the last half hour, the female lead is mostly undressed ... how can you *show* the last half of the movie?
Very simply stated, they *don't* show it. I tried to watch Cat People on USA or some other network one night, and the last half hour had been cut down to about five minutes and made absolutely no sense. Worse, I was watching it with someone who had never seen it before, and when it was over, she was thoroughly confused and unimpressed.
So, number one: See this movie, if you haven't already! And number two, when you do ... rent or buy the video, or catch a revival on one of the premium cable channels.
12 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-

Not as Good as the Original, but Still Interesting, 29. März 2004
Author: James Hitchcock von Tunbridge Wells, England
Like many horror films, `Cat People' has at its centre an inherently absurd concept. The central characters, Irena and Paul, are brother and sister and the descendants of a long line of human/animal hybrids. In their normal form, they are human, but they turn into black panthers whenever they have sex with a normal person (but not when they have sex with one of their own kind). After such a transformation, they can only revert to human form by killing.
Absurdity, however, is not always a bad thing in the context of horror films; indeed, the success or failure of such films frequently depends upon the director's ability to persuade his audience to believe six impossible things before breakfast. Once the ground-rules have been laid down, they have to be developed with strict logic; if this is done convincingly enough, the audience can overlook the fact that those rules are implausible or even impossible. In `Cat People' this is largely achieved. At the start of the film, Irena is an innocent girl, still a virgin and unaware of her true nature. Paul, by contrast, is well aware of the truth, and has no compunction about killing to regain human form after his many promiscuous sexual encounters. Irena finds out the truth about herself after she moves to live with Paul in New Orleans. He proposes that they should have an incestuous relationship as this would mean they were free to indulge themselves sexually without transforming. Irena, however, recoils from the idea of incest, and falls in love with Oliver, a curator at the local zoo.
`Cat People' reminded me of another early eighties horror film, Tony Scott's `The Hunger'. Both are frankly erotic, both have an absurd concept at their core, and both are shot in a self-consciously stylish manner reminiscent of a pop video, aiming for a deliberately aesthetic look. (Another link is that David Bowie, who starred in `The Hunger', sings the song at the end of `Cat People' as the final credits are playing). `Cat People', however, is in my view the better film, precisely because it remains true to the rules inherent in its central concept whereas `The Hunger' does not. To take an example, Catherine Deneuve's character in that film is supposed to be ageless and immortal, yet nevertheless dies at the end. `Cat People' can develop its basic concept without departing from it. Moreover, it develops the idea in such a way as to arouse sympathy for the characters, or at least for Irena. She is confronted with an essentially tragic dilemma; she must either resign herself to a life without the man whom she loves and without any possibility of sexual love, or else become a killer. She is aware of this dilemma, and her conscience is troubled by it. As a result, we find that she is a character with whom we can identify, even though she is only half-human. In `The Hunger', by contrast, the vampires played by Catherine Deneuve and David Bowie have absolutely no conscience about killing in order to feed, and therefore seem more alien.
As she showed in `Tess', Nastassja Kinski has a great ability to suggest a disturbing mixture of innocence and sensuality, and this was much in evidence in `Cat People'. While the film is not on the same level as Polanski's, and does not test her as an actress to the same degree, it probably shows off her beauty to even greater effect. With her lithe, slim figure, her piercing gaze and her short, dark hair, she seems physically perfect for the role of Irena. It would be difficult to think of another actress who could have suggested the feline side of her nature more convincingly. Malcolm McDowell, as Paul, showed that he is much practised in the art of combining the charming with the sinister. John Heard gave a more stolid performance as Oliver, but this was not necessarily a fault; the intention could have been to contrast the safe, conventional Oliver with the dangerous but fascinating Paul.
The film is not as good as the Jacques Tourneur original from 1942, lacking the earlier film's ability to convey mood and emotion through suggestion and nuance. Schrader's film is much more direct and less subtle, but nevertheless it is still worth watching. 6/10.
10 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

I'm a cat person...and I liked "Cat People", 26. Mai 2003
Author: Jonny_Numb von Hellfudge, Pennsylvania
Like Joe D'Amato's "Buried Alive," this remake of "Cat People" is technically a love story with a tough horror exterior. Both aspects of these genres fit quite well to create an unconventional entertainment. The movie gets especially high mileage out of two inspired leads--Nastassia Kinski as the young, attractive virgin (she also looks like a more predatory version of Isabella Rossellini); and Malcolm McDowell, who still glows with all the playful malevolence he brought to "A Clockwork Orange," as her brother, who morphs into a panther when sexually aroused. In spite of an ill-defined supporting cast, Paul Schrader's assured direction, the bizarre script (by "Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things" star Alan Ormsby), those lush New Orleans locations, and the chemistry between Kinski and McDowell keep "Cat People" afloat. It's a sexually charged horror story told with a straight face, and it works.
7/10
13 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

Not as good as the original but still worth watching, 7. Mai 2004
Author: sol1218 von brooklyn NY
****SPOILERS**** Paul Schrader's remake of the 1942 horror classic "Cat People" this time set in New Orleans La. not in New York City. Irena Gallier, Nastassja Kinski, comes to live with her older brother Paul, Malcolm McDowell, in the hot and sweltering southern city. Feeling for the first time in her life wanted Irena was orphaned at the age of four when her parents killed themselves. She spent her formidable years in and out of orphanages and it wasn't until her brother tracked her down that she fond a home of her own in Louisiana. It turns out later in the movie that what Paul wants from her is more then what Irena is willing to give him.
Nastassja Kinski in one of her most sexiest roles is both seductive and innocent as Irena and gives the film the electricity that keeps the movie going even though the cast has trouble keeping up with her performance at times. Malcolm McDowell is both creepy and unnerving as Irena's older brother Paul who's like a Tom-Cat in heat during the entire movie having no trouble getting women for his sexual pleasures. Paul also ends up murdering them because of his submerged animal instincts that those affairs bring to the surface. John Heard, Oliver Yates, is very good as the zoo curator and Irena's frustrated lover who Irena, who loves him, avoids having an affair with Oliver in order not to be forced to kill him. Annette O'Toole, Alice Perrin, is also very good in a small but important role as Oliver's co-worker in the New Orleans Zoo. Alice later becomes the focus of Irena's jealousy and resentment for being the woman who's standing between Oliver and her.
The movie recreates a number of scenes from the 1942 version with the cat-like woman coming up to Irena at a bar, in the first film it was at Irena's wedding party, and greets her in a foreign language calling her "My sister" or, what it obviously meant, fellow cat person. There's also the classic indoor swimming pool scene with Alice. This time around with Alice being topless which of course she couldn't have been in the 1942 version due to the censorship of nude scenes by the Hollywood Watchdog Hayes Commision. Alice taking a swim in the indoor swimming pool has the lights suddenly shut off and what seemed to be some kind of big cat in the shadows hounding her in the dark.
Unlike the original movie the new version of "Cat People" has a number of extremely gory scenes that are really shocking. With the black leopard in the movie who both Irena and Paul turn into being so horrific and terrifying that he makes the villains in horror/slashers movies today look as scary as Pee Wee Herman in comparison. With his eerie green eyes and ferocious and deadly fangs and claws you just cringe with fear every time the big cat comes on the screen. There's a blood splattered sequence where the enraged leopard grabs the zoo-keeper's Joe Creigh's, Ed Bagley Jr, arm between the bars of his cage. The sight of the big cat, who was really Paul, going wild when as saw Joe together with Irena, his sister, was one of the most terrifying scenes I've even seen in a motion picture. Joe foolishly tried to settle the leopard down with an electric prong as the dangerous feline suddenly and cat-like grabbed and ripped Joe's arm off with the ease as if it was attached to his body with just a rubber band. The frighting thing about the leopard's actions is that, unlike the killers in most horror films, it was so realistic knowing that a big dangerous jungle cat like that can do that in real life just like in the movies.
Even though Paul Schrader's "Cat People" doesn't in any way measure up to the original the ending was more interesting and innovative with Irena not being killed and Oliver ending up together with her instead of leaving Irena for Alice like Oliver did in the 1942 movie. In the end of the movie we see that Oliver finally accepts Irena for what she is with the knowledge that the only way he can be with her is between the bars that separate them.
12 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-

Unlike The Original, This Doesn't Leave Much To The Imagination, 12. Juli 2007
Author: ccthemovieman-1 von Lockport, NY, United States
This is almost the opposite of the original Cat People movie of 1942 which was mostly suggestive violence, sexuality, horror, etc. In that "oldie," everything was implied and gave the film a moody, creepy atmosphere.
Of course, by the 1970s, a lot of that sort of movie-making subtlety went out the window. In the last few years, it's even more the case. Few things are implied today. They are just thrown at us, like raw meat to a hungry lion.
Here, we have plenty of blood-and guts, nudity and - for extra bonuses - incest and bestiality. Wow, that's a little too much "information" for us discriminating movie viewers, don't you think?
It's too bad they wasted a nice cast of Malcom McDowell, Nastassja Kinski, John Heard, Annette O'Toole and more names you know. Kinski, as "Irena Gailier," spends most of the movie with her clothes off and McDowell, as he was in "A Clockwork Orange," isn't shy, either. Well, at least she looked pretty and he looked effectively evil. The growl of the panther was pretty scary, too. However, this a two-hour film that is mostly stupid, filled with unlikable characters.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

A nation of animal lovers? Yeah, but this is quite literally going too far., 10. März 2005
Author: Paul Andrews (poolandrews@hotmail.com) von UK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Irena Gallier (Nastassja Kinski) arrives in New Orleans for the first time. Irena is greeted at the airport by her brother Paul (Malcolm McDowell) who she has never met. Paul takes Irena back to his house but soon disappears. A prostitute named Ruthie (Lynn Lowry) is late for a client. She enters the seedy room and finds a strange slimy substance on the bed. She also notices a black fury thing sticking out from under the bed, she kicks it with her high heeled shoes and it turns out to be the tail belonging to a huge black Leopard which mauls her ankle but she manages to escape. Oh, and her bra 'rips' in the middle exposing her breasts. The massage parlour's manager (John H. Fields) traps the Leopard in the room and calls the authorities. The city zoo's curator Dr. Oliver Yates (John Heard) and his team, Alice Perrin (Annette O'Toole) and Joe Creigh (Ed Begley Jr.) are called in to capture the Leopard. Irena decides to see the sights that New Orleans has to offer. Irena eventually ends up at the zoo where she sees the Leopard, now safely behind the bars of a cage. Irena stays behind after the zoo closes and is found by Oliver. They strike up a friendship and within a few hours Oliver has given Irena a job in the zoo's gift shop. One day while Joe tries to feed the Leopard it rips his arm off and Joe dies, Oliver decides to shoot the Leopard but when he returns with a gun he finds the Leopard gone and a strange slimy substance on the floor. That night Paul returns home and confronts Irena, making sexual advances towards her. Irena runs from Paul and stops a police car. Back at Paul's house they make a grisly discovery in the basement. Paul needs Irena and will do whatever it takes to convince her she needs him too. Things become even more complicated when Irena and Oliver fall in love but Irena refuses to have sex with him, as events unfold it becomes clear that Irena and Paul both harbour a dark secret.
Extensively re-written and directed by Paul Schrader I thought this was one of the dullest and most boring nothing horror films that I have seen in some time. The script that was originally written by Alan Ormsby before the re-write by Schrader is so slow it's frightening, and at almost two hours long the Cat People outstays it's welcome well before the end credits roll. For most of the first hour, maybe a little more, it's no more than a drama as the film focuses on Oliver's and Irena's relationship and not much else. The film also has many unnecessary sequences and drags, badly. Another small problem is that the film tries to present it's story as some kind of mystery, well I don't want to seem fussy but the films title is 'Cat People' and that sort of gives it away and it doesn't come as a surprise that people turn into Leopards if you know what I mean. One more thing I don't understand, if these cat people turn into Leopards during or after sexual contact why has Paul already turned into one before the prostitute even enters the room? Most of the characters are a little on the bitty side and somewhat underdeveloped. I also think it was a mistake to cast Kinski who can't act and on occasion looks like a man with her short hair (hey, it's true) and McDowell seems uninterested and unsuited to the role of the bad guy. I have to say that I didn't care about any of the characters involved which is never a good thing in a film. The film has lots of nudity with Kinski the main culprit as she exposes her breasts and body numerous times during the last 30 or so minutes, having said that though most of the female cast take their tops off at some point. There are some strong sex scenes too, especially at the end when Oliver ties a naked Kinski to the bed by her wrists and ankles and then has fairly explicit sex with her. Unfortunately the horror element of the story is severely lacking, in fact there is very little horror in it. There is very little gore either, an autopsy on a Leopard, a bitten off arm and a mangled dead body is about it. The transformation sequence is so short as to be almost inconsequential, although the meagre screen time it does get the transformation looks quite cool. However I will admit that the film has a really nice look throughout and great cinematography by John Bailey which captures the New Orleans locations extremely well. Personally I really didn't find much in this film to like, I will admit that it's well made and tells a story competently enough but I just found the whole thing so dull and uneventful. This is not a film that I can recommend, there are much better horror films out there.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

Beauty and the Beast in one , 8. März 2004
Author: Coventry von the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls
I'm writing this review after just having finished watching Cat People and I'm suffering from mixed feelings a bit.... I certainly expected it to be better and more valuable than this especially because the I heard so much praising on it. Paul Schrader remakes the brilliant 1942 classic with the same title. The original Jacques Tourneur version was terrific because of the simple yet very effective basic plot story, but Schrader adds so many elements to this that it loses its charm. Also, there were the stress was on the mystery in the original Schrader fully goes for the erotic undertones (like incest, virginity or just plain voyeurism) . And unfortunately the negative elements don't even stop there. As a viewer, you never really have feeling with the main characters in Cat People and the whole film just is too slow! For a movie that constantly features a black leopard it could have used a little more tempo. Still, this film can't be bashed entirely of course, as it still is a stylish and very brutal 80's horror highlight. Nastassja Kinski basically makes every film look good and she's damn sexy here, as the confused beauty torn between incest prepositions (by Malcolm McDowell famous for other cult-hits like Caligula and A Clockwork Orange) and sincere declarations of love by John Heard (C.H.U.D) . Some of the sequences in Cat People are really fascinating and fairly gore like for example the thrilling arm-amputation, Kinski's colorful hunting adventure and the descent in Malcolm McDowell's terror dungeon. You can almost smell death in that scene. Unfortunately, the pivot scene are practically copied from the original shot by shot. Like the pool-scene only updated with a little bit of naked Anette O'Toole flesh
If you're intrigued by the synopsis of Cat People, I strongly recommend to hunt down the original version and most likely the sequel `Curse of the Cat People' as well. I haven't seen that one myself, but I can easily imagine it's more than decent. Or, if you want to learn more about Paul Shrader's work in cinema, you'll be better off by renting Mishima, Light Sleeper or even American Gigolo. Cat People doesn't really represent his talent if you ask me.
4 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

kinky, stylish, hard to forget, 2. Februar 2005
Author: inkslave von Midwest USA
This is not a great movie. But you won't soon forget it. It has some of the more explicit sex scenes you'll see in a movie from this period, including one that, well, let's just say it's amazing what people will do for those they love. And it is decidedly creepy when it wants to be, which is more than you can say about of lot of movies. Good performances, especially by Kinski, who had to be a pretty brave soul to sign up for this after reading the screenplay -- especially the last four pages.
And David Bowie's music is used to great effect in most scenes.
Rent it and watch it with someone you'd like to nibble and scratch behind the ears.
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