IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
A house cat sees her mistress murdered by two servants under orders from her husband , and becomes ferociously bent on revenge.A house cat sees her mistress murdered by two servants under orders from her husband , and becomes ferociously bent on revenge.A house cat sees her mistress murdered by two servants under orders from her husband , and becomes ferociously bent on revenge.
André Morell
- Walter Venable
- (as Andre Morell)
Rodney Burke
- Workman
- (uncredited)
Vera Cook
- The Mother
- (uncredited)
Angela Crow
- The Daughter
- (uncredited)
John Dearth
- Constable Hamer
- (uncredited)
George Doonan
- Ambulance Man
- (uncredited)
Peter Evans
- Constable
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe poem Ella is reading to Tabitha in the film's opening scene is the classic "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe. The poem was originally published in January 1845.
- GoofsWhen Andrew the Butler is trying to lure the cat from behind a statue, and then later, when Beth Venable is approaching the cat on a staircase, a string, presumably to control the cat, is visible.
- Quotes
Beth Venable: You mean to tell me that an ordinary domestic cat is terrorizing three grown-ups?
- ConnectionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: The Shadow of the Cat (1972)
Featured review
Shadow of the Cat is a Poe-esquire horror film that focuses on a sinister animal - the domestic cat. The film begins with a reciting of the Edgar Allen Poe poem 'The Raven', and from there we begin to focus on the title animal. There is nothing about this film that officially suggests it has anything to do with Hammer studios, but the feel of the film is very much like Hammer and the fact that John Gilling - the man behind two of the best Hammer horror films, Plague of the Zombies and The Reptile - is the director means that it has something of an affinity with the studio. The plot focuses on the common Gothic horror theme of a family and an inheritance. The family here is the Venable family, and the story starts properly when a rich old woman is murdered by her relatives because they're after her inheritance. The only witness to the crime was the lady's pet cat, and while normally anyone committing murder in this way would get away with it scot-free, this particular cat takes exception to the murder of its owner and sets about exacting its own revenge.
The plot is, of course, pretty far fetched, but it's handled well and John Gilling never lets it descend into the realms of ridiculousness when it comes to people being murdered by the cat. The cat itself looks sinister enough, and while it doesn't have the same menace as, say, the murderous moggy in Lucio Fulci eighties impression of The Black Cat, the acting from the feline side of the cast is mostly fine. The thick Gothic atmosphere is the film's main asset, and John Gilling achieves this through the black and white cinematography as well as the decor of the central location and many of the events that transpire. The film is very short at around seventy five minutes, but this doesn't matter too much as Gilling makes his point and doesn't let too many sub-plots interfere with that. Of course, this sort of story is rarely going to give way to a truly GREAT film, as there isn't enough of it; but the film moves along nicely for the duration, and the events that build up to the ending ensure that the film does what you would expect of it. Overall, I doubt too many people will be disappointed with this and any fan of British horror will want to check it out.
The plot is, of course, pretty far fetched, but it's handled well and John Gilling never lets it descend into the realms of ridiculousness when it comes to people being murdered by the cat. The cat itself looks sinister enough, and while it doesn't have the same menace as, say, the murderous moggy in Lucio Fulci eighties impression of The Black Cat, the acting from the feline side of the cast is mostly fine. The thick Gothic atmosphere is the film's main asset, and John Gilling achieves this through the black and white cinematography as well as the decor of the central location and many of the events that transpire. The film is very short at around seventy five minutes, but this doesn't matter too much as Gilling makes his point and doesn't let too many sub-plots interfere with that. Of course, this sort of story is rarely going to give way to a truly GREAT film, as there isn't enough of it; but the film moves along nicely for the duration, and the events that build up to the ending ensure that the film does what you would expect of it. Overall, I doubt too many people will be disappointed with this and any fan of British horror will want to check it out.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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