This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
Movie Database
(Over 150,000 titles)
Site
Sign In register

Overview for Cat People (1942)

Overview
Full Credits
Full Synopsis
Notes
Music
Screenplay Info
Original Print Info
Genre
Keywords
data from AFI catalog 
User Reviews
Other Reviews
Articles
Money
Awards
Quotes
Trivia
Home Video Reviews
Misc Notes
Alternate Versions
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
Fan Sites
Contribute an image Contribute a video Contribute information Write a review
Send Us Feedback
About TCM's database
This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
Overview
Brief Synopsis
A newlywed fears that an ancient curse will turn her into a bloodthirsty beast.
[+] Read full synopsis
[x] Close full synopsis
Synopsis

While sketching a panther at the zoo one day, fashion illustrator Irene Dubrovna meets Oliver Reed, a maritime engineer, and invites him to her apartment. There, she tells Oliver that she feels strangely calmed by the cries of the lions in the zoo and relates the legend of King John of Serbia, who banished the witches from her home village long ago. Oliver, enchanted by the exotic Irene, buys her a kitten as a gift. When the kitten shrinks in fear from Irene, however, Oliver and Irene return it to the pet shop, where Irene's presence drives the caged animals mad. Later, when Oliver tells Irene that he loves her, she voices her apprehension that feelings of love and passion will unleash a beast within her. Oliver dismisses her fears as fairy tales and convinces her to marry him. When, at their wedding celebration, she is greeted as "sister" by a strange, cat-like woman, Irene begs Oliver for patience in consummating their marriage. One month later, Irene laments her feelings of aberrance and Oliver insists that she seek help from Dr. Louis Judd, a psychiatrist. Under Judd's hypnotic spell, Irene tells of the cat women in her Serbian village, whose passion turns them into bloodthirsty panthers. After her session with Judd, Irene returns home, where she finds Oliver visiting with Alice Moore, a woman who works in his office. When she learns that Oliver has confided her fears to Alice, Irene feels betrayed and later that night, unable to sleep, she paces in front of the panther's cage at the zoo. Upon discovering that Irene has not been keeping her appointments with Judd, Oliver accuses her of not wanting to be helped and warns her that they are drifting apart. After Oliver's accusations arouse jealousy in Irene, he angrily storms out of the house, Irene then calls the office and when Alice answers, Irene decides to go there. At a restaurant around the corner from the office building, Irene sees Oliver seated with Alice. After Alice leaves the restaurant and begins to walk home alone, she senses that she is being followed. Upon hearing a low growl and a rustling of the trees, Alice boards a bus, and later, at the zoo, several sheep are found slain. Leading away from their dead bodies are the paw marks of a large cat, which gradually change into human footprints. Disheveled and sobbing, Irene returns home and dreams that Judd is King John. The next day, she visits the zoo and steals the key to the panther's cage. Later, Irene, Alice and Oliver attend an exhibit of ship models and Irene becomes separated from the others. After leaving the exhibit and returning to her apartment house, Alice decides go swimming in the basement pool. Irene follows her home, and as Alice enters the shadowy basement, she hears a low growl and sees the shadow of a cat. Jumping into the water, Alice calls for help and Irene turns on the lights, claiming to be looking for Oliver. After Irene leaves, Alice picks up her robe and discovers that it has been ripped to shreds. When Alice tells Judd her suspicions that jealousy has transformed Irene into a cat, he discounts her accusations until she shows him the robe. Soon after the pool incident, Oliver informs Irene that he has fallen in love with Alice and she orders him out of the house. Later that night, Judd, Alice and Oliver confer and decide to commit Irene, but when she fails to show up for their meeting, Alice and Oliver return to their office while Judd slips back into the apartment. At the office, Alice and Oliver are menaced by a prowling panther, but Oliver vanquishes the beast with a T-bar in the shape of a cross. Irene then returns to her apartment, where she is greeted by Judd. To prove that Irene's fears are not founded in reality, Judd kisses her and then watches in horror as she changes into a cat and attacks him. Returning to the apartment, Oliver and Alice hear Judd's screams and run up the stairs, passing Irene, who is hiding in the shadows. Wounded by Judd's walking stick, Irene is drawn to the zoo's panther cage and unlocks it with her key. After the beast lunges at her, it runs into the street and is hit by a car. Alice and Oliver then run to the zoo, where they find Irene's dead body lying next to the open cage.
[x] Close full synopsis

Cast & Crew
Simone Simon
as Irene Dubrovna
Tom Conway
as Dr. Louis Judd
Jane Randolph
as Alice Moore
Jack Holt
as Commodore
Kent Smith
as Oliver Reed
Alan Napier
as Carver
Elizabeth Dunne
as Miss Plunkett
Elizabeth Russell
as The cat woman
Mary Halsey
as Blondie
Alec Craig
as Zoo keeper
George Ford
as Whistling cop
See all cast & crew >>
Release Date
25 Dec 1942

Color/BW
Black and White

Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)

Production Dates
28 Jul--21 Aug 1942


Duration (in mins)
73-74

Duration (in feet)
6,534

Premiere Information
New York opening: 6 Dec 1942
28 Jul--21 Aug 1942


Distribution Company
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.

Production Company
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.


Country
United States
Oct 30, 02:00AM
Remind Me>>

  Suggest This Movie>>

Cat People (1942)/The Curse Of The Cat People (1944) [DVD]
Available on DVD.
DVD Double Feat
Only $19.99
Larry Huber
All-Time Classic
A miracle of suspense and tension. No movie has ever created so much suspense from what you don't see. ...  More>>
James Higgins
Cat People (1942)
63/100. I have never understood the huge appeal to this film. It’s not a bad film at all, but I ...  More>>
More Reviews>>
Post a Review>>
You can also post on TCM's Message Boards >>