The Black Cat (1981 film)
The Black Cat | |
---|---|
American poster for The Black Cat | |
Directed by | Lucio Fulci |
Produced by | Giulio Sbarigia |
Screenplay by |
Lucio Fulci Biagio Proietti |
Story by |
Edgar Allan Poe Biagio Poietti |
Based on | The Black Cat by Edgar Allan Poe |
Starring |
Patrick Magee Mimsy Farmer David Warbeck Al Cliver |
Music by | Pino Donaggio |
Cinematography | Sergio Salvati |
Edited by | Vincenzo Tomassi |
Production company |
Italian International Film Selenia Cinematografica |
Release dates | 4 April 1981 |
Running time | 92 minutes |
Country |
Italy United Kingdom |
Language |
Italian English |
The Black Cat(Italian: Black Cat (Gatto nero)) is a 1981 British-Italian horror film directed by Lucio Fulci. The film is based loosely on the story of the same name by Edgar Allan Poe, and uses the violent style that typified the director's later career, following films like Don't Torture a Duckling (1972).
Plot
Strange things are happening in a small English village starting when a man driving a car suddenly encounters a strange black cat in the back seat and through the mesmerizing stare, the cat causes the man to crash his car into a lamp post, killing him. The black cat travels back to its home, a rambling old house occupied by Robert Miles (Patrick Magee), a morbid and hostile former college professor of the supernatural who is reputed to be a medium. Professor Miles lives alone except for his equally hostile black cat, and spends his time making audio tape recordings at the tombs of the recently deceased. Meanwhile, an American tourist named Jill Travers (Mimsy Farmer), ventures into an open crypt to take photographs for her scrapbook when she discovers a small microphone on the floor of the place. Venturing out, she meets the local police constable Sergeant Wilson (Al Cliver) who tells her not to venture down the crypt again, saying that the dead like to be left alone. "They're not very hospitable," says Wilson.
Elsewhere, Maureen Grayson (Daniela Doria), a local outgoing teenager and her boyfriend, Stan, are in a rowboat on a nearby canal when they row to a boathouse and lock themselves in an airtight room so they can have sex. Maureen becomes nervous and Stan discovers that the key for the locked door has disappeared. They are trapped as the room's air begins to run out.
The following day, Lillian Gayson (Dagmar Lassander) calls the police to her daughter's disappearance and Sergeant Wilson calls a man from Scotland Yard, Inspector Gorley (David Warbeck) who rides into town on his motorcycle and immediately gets a speeding ticket from Sergeant Wilson upon arrival at the police station. Meanwhile, Jill's search for the owner of the mini-microphone leads her to Miles, who discusses with her the barriers of perception and how to escape them. He tries to hypnotize Jill, but is prevented from doing so by the black cat, which suddenly leaps and scratches him. Jill leaves in a hurry.
That night, a local man named Ferguson (Bruno Corazzari) leaves the local pub and walks home. The cat appears and scares him into a disused barn. When the feline appears suddenly before him, Ferguson tries to make his escape along a beam high off the ground. The cat scratches his hands as he holds onto a beam above his head to keep his balance, and he falls off to his death landing on some pikes on the ground.
The next morning, Inspector Gorley arrives at the scene and asks Jill to help photographing the dead man. As she does so, she sees cat scratches on the hands, which remind her of those suffered by Miles the previous day.
At Miles' house, Mrs. Grayson arrives and begs him to help her find her missing daughter. Miles, who is revealed to have been romantically involved with Mrs. Grayson many years ago, reluctantly agrees to help. Holding a bracelet owned by Maureen, Miles enters a trance and describes the boathouse, and the location of the missing key. The police and Mrs. Grayson rush to the scene and find all as Miles had said. Batterering down the locked door, which had been locked from the inside, they discover the horribly decomposing bodies of Maureen and Stan. The key was on the tarpaulin outside, an impossible feat for a murderer since the only other way out of the room was a blocked air conditioning vent far too small for a human.
That night, the cat's next victim is Mrs. Grayson herself when she gets burned to death by a fire in her house started by the malevolent feline.
Jill goes to Miles house the following day and shows him the photographs she took of the scratches on the dead man's hands. Jill now believes that Miles exerts an evil supernatural influence over the cat, but Miles says that it's the cat who dominates him.
That night, Miles drugs the cat and takes it outdoors, hanging it by the neck from a tree branch. Supernatural forces are unleashed by the cat's death, which also hits Jill as she sleeps in her bed at the village inn. The cat appears before Miles again, now a ghostly curse on the frightened Miles. Inspector Gorley pays a late-night visit to Jill's room to discuss with her the mysterious flashes of light and occurrences that happened just an hour earlier. As he leaves, Gorley sees the evil creature himself, and gets attacked and hypnotized by it. He staggers on the road in front of a moving car and gets run over.
The next day Jill, who still thinks that Miles is the real killer, sneaks into his house when he goes out and snoops around his office, uncovering the audio recordings of his conversations with the dead. When Miles suddenly returns, she runs to hide in the cellar and encounters the black cat, which magically appears and disappears before her eyes. Running away in terror, she is cornered by Miles. He tells her that the cat has picked up on his suppressed hatred for the village folk and is acting them out without his knowledge or control. Jill runs, but is attacked, first by bats in the cellar, and then again by Miles who knocks her out with a stick.
Jill wakes up bound and gagged to find Miles walling her up alive in a space in the cellar wall. He has also taken her keys and emptied her hotel room, making it seem that she has left the village. However, Inspector Gorley, who has survived the car accident, goes with Sergeant Wilson, and his superior, Inspector Flynn, over to Miles' house and insists on searching it for signs of the cat, and Jill. They find nothing and are about to leave when they all hear a faint cry from the cat coming from the cellar. They find the newly bricked up wall and upon battering it down, they find Jill barely alive, and the cat which was incarcerated there without Miles knowing it. As Jill is pulled out, Miles mumbles to Gorley that the cat has won and that he has fallen victim to his own evil misdeeds.
Cast
- Patrick Magee as Prof. Robert Miles
- Mimsy Farmer as Jill Trevers
- David Warbeck as Inspector Gorley
- Al Cliver as Sgt. Wilson
- Dagmar Lassander as Lillian Grayson
- Bruno Corazzari as Ferguson
- Geoffrey Copleston as Inspector Flynn
- Daniela Doria as Maureen Grayson
Release
The film was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by World Northal in February 1984.[1]
The film has been released on DVD in America by Anchor Bay Entertainment and Blue Underground and in the UK by Salvation Films and Shameless Screen Entertainment.[2]
The Black Cat received its first Blu-ray release in the United Kingdom from Arrow Films on 19 October 2015 as part of "Edgar Allen Poe's Black Cats" limited edition collection of 3000 copies, featuring two adaptations of Poe's short story; Lucio Fulci's version and the 1972 Sergio Martino version Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key.[3] The Black Cat was released as a stand-alone Blu-ray edition from Arrow on 4 April 2016.[4] Both sets are available with DVD editions of the film.
Critical reception
Allmovie wrote, "As usual, [Fulci] conjures up a spooky atmosphere with effortless skill – a scene with Patrick Magee wandering through a fog-shrouded graveyard at night is truly creepy – but the film's meandering script makes it sputter when it should be building in intensity. Thus, The Black Cat never rises above being an exercise in style".[5]
References
- ↑ "Company Credits for The Black Cat". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
- ↑ "Rewind @ www. dvdcompare.net - Black Cat (The) AKA Il Gatto Nero (1982)". dvdcompare.net. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
- ↑ "Edgar Allan Poe's Black Cats: Two Adaptations by Sergio Martino & Lucio Fulci Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ↑ "The Black Cat Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ↑ Guarisco, Donald. "The Black Cat (1981)". Allmovie. Retrieved 25 June 2012.
External links
- The Black Cat at the Internet Movie Database
- The Black Cat at AllMovie
- The Black Cat at Rotten Tomatoes