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5,8/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA professor with the psychic ability to communicate with the dead uses his powers on his pet cat in order to take vengeance upon his enemies.A professor with the psychic ability to communicate with the dead uses his powers on his pet cat in order to take vengeance upon his enemies.A professor with the psychic ability to communicate with the dead uses his powers on his pet cat in order to take vengeance upon his enemies.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Daniela Doria
- Maureen Grayson
- (as Daniela Dorio)
Lucio Fulci
- Doctor
- (scènes coupées)
Vito Passeri
- Warehouse Watchman
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The plot of "The Black Cat" is a real doozy that might have you biting your tongue: creepy old medium Patrick Macnee (who's really overdoing the quivering monotone thing here) supposedly has a psychic link with a black cat, who he orders to kill the residents of a small village. Fulci does well with the flamboyant material, and keeps piling on the gore, atmosphere, and dark sets with gusto. For the most part, the cast (including Euro-vets Mimsy Farmer, David Warbeck, and Al Cliver) doesn't take the material any more seriously than they have to, resulting in some unintentional (but welcome) comic relief. Granted, this isn't "House by the Cemetery"-caliber, but it's not bad, either. 3 out of 5 stars.
Before anyone who hasn't seen this film gets excited that the adaptation of a short story helps Fulci keep hold of his often slippery grasp on the plot, "The Black Cat" has very little to do with Poe's tale until the last 15 or so minutes, and thus is full of the narrative craters B horror fans know and love.
The basic plot of the film is that a Scotland yard detective (David Warbeck) and an American photographer (Mimsy Farmer) investigate a series of "accidents" in a quiet English village. All clues point to an eccentric local medium(Patrick Magee), but the real mystery is the connection between the psychic and the black cat that seems to show up at the scene of each crime.
Lacking the trademark Fulci gore(what there is is very brief), the film focuses on atmosphere. There are a few nice touches (in widescreen format the cat's eye view stalking scenes and the close ups of character's eyes to show emotion work very well), but what keeps the mood from ever really taking off is the cat itself. Given enough screen time to be billed as a full cast member, Fulci never really succeeds in making the animal look possessed or menacing.
In most of its close ups it looks like your average house cat, albeit a bit peeved that you were late with the kibbles and bits. The cheesy snarling sound effects every time it attacks don't help either.
The humans leads are no better (across the board wooden acting), with Magee forced to carry viewer interest in the film by hamming it up as much as possible. Helped along by the overly zealous score, it's amazing that this movie manages not to be as silly as "Touch Of Death".
Overall an amusing trifle, but those looking for gore are better served by just about any other Fulci horror film and those interested in atmosphere are much better served by watching "The Beyond", where the director truly mastered the form.
4.5 stars
The basic plot of the film is that a Scotland yard detective (David Warbeck) and an American photographer (Mimsy Farmer) investigate a series of "accidents" in a quiet English village. All clues point to an eccentric local medium(Patrick Magee), but the real mystery is the connection between the psychic and the black cat that seems to show up at the scene of each crime.
Lacking the trademark Fulci gore(what there is is very brief), the film focuses on atmosphere. There are a few nice touches (in widescreen format the cat's eye view stalking scenes and the close ups of character's eyes to show emotion work very well), but what keeps the mood from ever really taking off is the cat itself. Given enough screen time to be billed as a full cast member, Fulci never really succeeds in making the animal look possessed or menacing.
In most of its close ups it looks like your average house cat, albeit a bit peeved that you were late with the kibbles and bits. The cheesy snarling sound effects every time it attacks don't help either.
The humans leads are no better (across the board wooden acting), with Magee forced to carry viewer interest in the film by hamming it up as much as possible. Helped along by the overly zealous score, it's amazing that this movie manages not to be as silly as "Touch Of Death".
Overall an amusing trifle, but those looking for gore are better served by just about any other Fulci horror film and those interested in atmosphere are much better served by watching "The Beyond", where the director truly mastered the form.
4.5 stars
An unusually restraint film for a Fulci picture made in the early 1980s. A picturesque vision of gothic horror that's done in the style of an Italian gothic or Hammer horror film from the 1960s. I think Fulci's attempt here was to make a film in the manner of Hammer horror or Corman's Poe pictures, which would involve little of the director's usual gory antics. There are some violent scenes, and the most brutal scene in terms of gore or death is the one involving Lillian Grayson. Il Gatto Nero/The Black Cat(1980) relies more on atmosphere, mood, and tension, than gory set pieces, which was a change of tune for Fulci after the bloody violence of Zombie(1979), The Smuggler(1980), and City of the Living Dead(1980).
Its not one of his best works, but it is a beautiful looking film, with some gracious camerawork, and impressive visuals. Based loosely on the Edgar Allen Poe short story, of which this film has no direct relationship to the plot of that horror story. The closet the film comes is during the sequence that comes near the very end of the picture. The climax is an encore of the climatic moment in Sette Note in Nero/Seven Notes in Black(1977). The POV of the cat prowling around during the opening credits scene is handled with visual spectre by Sergio Salvati.
The casting of Patrick Magee as Robert Miles is one of the best parts of The Black Cat(1980). Magee gives a performance that shows why he was a master in playing eccentric and mentally troubled characters in films like A Clockwork Orange(1971), and Marat/Sade(1970). One of five or six excellent actors to have a role in a Lucio Fulci film. He portrays in his character emotions of fear, hate, and menace just by his expressions of his face and eyes, which are more effectively presented when viewing the film in widescreen. Atmospheric and eerie use of its British locales that rivals that of Jorge Grau's Let Sleeping Corpses Lie(1974).
One scene, which reaches the dreamlike style of Fulci's other gothic pics from the early 80s is the moment when the house that Jill Travels lives in shakes, and rocks around in a frenzy after the hanging Miles cat. Its an eerie sequence that is one of the best in the film. Daniela Doria once again plays a character who comes to a gruesome end(seems to be her only function in a Fulci film). David Warbeck does ok as Inspector Gorley, but his performance here is nowhere near as good as in The Beyond(1981). The Mrs. Grayson death scene borders on the effective and ridiculous without moving totally into the realm of the latter.
Mimsy Farmer gives a bland performance here that is short of the good performances given by Catriona MacColl, who was better at making a Fulci's heroine a little more dimensional. The editing is smooth looking and fluid compared to the erratic editing of City of the Living Dead(1980), which was a weakness for that film. The death of Ferguson is crafted with hand shaking suspense and a creative payoff. Fulci's director is flamboyant and yet simple in the same time. Overall, an entertaining horror film that is one of Fulci's most underrated films, and one despite its flaws is worthwhile for anyone that loves Euro-horror, Fulci horror, or just horror films in general.
Its not one of his best works, but it is a beautiful looking film, with some gracious camerawork, and impressive visuals. Based loosely on the Edgar Allen Poe short story, of which this film has no direct relationship to the plot of that horror story. The closet the film comes is during the sequence that comes near the very end of the picture. The climax is an encore of the climatic moment in Sette Note in Nero/Seven Notes in Black(1977). The POV of the cat prowling around during the opening credits scene is handled with visual spectre by Sergio Salvati.
The casting of Patrick Magee as Robert Miles is one of the best parts of The Black Cat(1980). Magee gives a performance that shows why he was a master in playing eccentric and mentally troubled characters in films like A Clockwork Orange(1971), and Marat/Sade(1970). One of five or six excellent actors to have a role in a Lucio Fulci film. He portrays in his character emotions of fear, hate, and menace just by his expressions of his face and eyes, which are more effectively presented when viewing the film in widescreen. Atmospheric and eerie use of its British locales that rivals that of Jorge Grau's Let Sleeping Corpses Lie(1974).
One scene, which reaches the dreamlike style of Fulci's other gothic pics from the early 80s is the moment when the house that Jill Travels lives in shakes, and rocks around in a frenzy after the hanging Miles cat. Its an eerie sequence that is one of the best in the film. Daniela Doria once again plays a character who comes to a gruesome end(seems to be her only function in a Fulci film). David Warbeck does ok as Inspector Gorley, but his performance here is nowhere near as good as in The Beyond(1981). The Mrs. Grayson death scene borders on the effective and ridiculous without moving totally into the realm of the latter.
Mimsy Farmer gives a bland performance here that is short of the good performances given by Catriona MacColl, who was better at making a Fulci's heroine a little more dimensional. The editing is smooth looking and fluid compared to the erratic editing of City of the Living Dead(1980), which was a weakness for that film. The death of Ferguson is crafted with hand shaking suspense and a creative payoff. Fulci's director is flamboyant and yet simple in the same time. Overall, an entertaining horror film that is one of Fulci's most underrated films, and one despite its flaws is worthwhile for anyone that loves Euro-horror, Fulci horror, or just horror films in general.
I really don't care what anyone says; "The Black Cat" is pretty damn cool. As far as the gore goes, it's not excessive as most of Fulci's films are, but it doesn't need to be. That being said, this film is not for the faint of heart. If you watched it with your grandma or someone who has not been jaded by the blood and guts in Italian horror films, you'd see it from a different side. A dude gets impaled, a girl burns to death, rotting corpses are found in a hot boat shack, and a cat repeatedly rips the flesh off a guy's face, goring him up. I mean, it's not "New York Ripper" but it's not a slasher film. It's more like a giallo.
This film is most notable for the brilliant cinematography. The shots from the cat's point of view are awesome. And then there's the excellent acting (for a Fulci film). Mimsy Farmer is decent! And the other dude, Patrick Magee from "Clockwork Orange" isn't bad either. Better than other Fulci stuff for sure.
The fact that the acting is above par and the fact that there isn't a constant onslaught of gore has contributed to the low rating on here. The film is a good giallo-style horror movie and it oozes with old school ambiance and mood. The soundtrack is great and all in all, it's a great adaptation of the Poe story.
I recommend it to Italian horror fans who can stand to be entertained without seeing people get disemboweled.
7 out of 10, kids.
This film is most notable for the brilliant cinematography. The shots from the cat's point of view are awesome. And then there's the excellent acting (for a Fulci film). Mimsy Farmer is decent! And the other dude, Patrick Magee from "Clockwork Orange" isn't bad either. Better than other Fulci stuff for sure.
The fact that the acting is above par and the fact that there isn't a constant onslaught of gore has contributed to the low rating on here. The film is a good giallo-style horror movie and it oozes with old school ambiance and mood. The soundtrack is great and all in all, it's a great adaptation of the Poe story.
I recommend it to Italian horror fans who can stand to be entertained without seeing people get disemboweled.
7 out of 10, kids.
This is a creepy horror film plenty of suspense, chills, brutal images and gory events. Being loosely based on the story: "The Black Cat" by Edgar Allan Poe. Bizarre things are occurring in a small English village beginning 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, a nosy American photographer 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. She is confronted with rare happenings: people are cruelly murdered and some of them are bitten by a cat and a person (Bruno Corazzari) has a lethal fall. But she doesn't know what a new horror is waiting there . Venturing out, she meets the local police constable Sergeant Wilson (Al Cliver) and later a Scotland Yard detective (David Warbeck) arrives and investigates the series of bizarre deaths in the small English village which are connected to a local literacy professor who lives at an old mansion. When you hear this cat breathing down your neck...Start praying!!!. When the black cat cries...someone dies!.When you hear this cat breathing down your neck... start praying... before you finish your Amen... you're dead!.It purrs. It stalks. It kills. Cat got your tongue? It's still hungry. Flesh Ripping Felines!
Spaghetti splatter-meister Fulci, best known for his unbashed ripoffs: ¨Zombie¨ and ¨Gates of Hell¨, tones down the gore this time in a vaguely Poe-ish tale of a medium with some marbles loose -well played by Patrick Magee- whose kitty provides the temporary habitatfor spirits its master calls up. This is a chilling, eerie Italian terror flick full of screams, thrills , intrigue and lots of blood and guts. Production design is pretty good with a nice setting from a dreary English village. And Sergio Salvatti's downright myopic camerawork is original, adding up an opressive viewing experience, especially with the menacing frames and close-ups of the black cat wandering here and there. . This genuinely frightening story with adequate utilization of images-shock is well photographed on location in Hellfire Caves, West Wycombe, West Wycombe Park, Buckinghamshire, England, UK and Italian studios: Incir De Paolis .The orchestral music by Pino Donaggio (Brian de Palma's usual composer) helps a lot to raise the tension, providing poignant moments and elevating the intrigue to the maximum. It's a decently made Fulci film and better narrated and competently developed than his other flicks. This is a classic excruciatingly horror film in which the intrigue,tension, suspense appears threatening and lurking in every room, corridors , cellar, stable, morgue and many other places. This unrelenting shock-feast packs good make-up and special effects make-up by Paolo Ricci, replacing the ordinary Gianetto De Rossi. It's a an Italian/British co-production, financed on a budget enough by Giulio Sbarigia and as associate producer uncredited Harry Alan Towers.
The motion picture was well realized by one of the most controversial filmmakers of terror movies ,Lucio Fulci. He is a gore-feast expert, making many films in his usual style and peculiar trademarks with flaws and gaps but being professionally made because he is a skilled craftsman . He created strange horror thrillers that managed to be both scary and skilfully made, deserving cult status . Fulci made a lot of movies with full of gory, gruesome, and ghastly feasts in which killers, spectra, Zombies or stumbling stiff dead committed astonishing murders . Reviewers are divided over booth the morals and talents of Fulci (1927-1996) who sometimes directed under the alias ¨Louis Fuller¨. For some critics many of his movies are cruel and shockingly violent, yet their gory surface often conceals religious, social commentaries or intelligent issues. Whether he should be viewed as a cheap sensationalist or just a genius Fulci has a loyal fan base and undeniably has an important and unique influence on the terror genre , creating great works on a low budget such as proved in ¨ The black cat ¨, ¨Manhattan baby¨, ¨Gates of Hell¨, ¨Island of the living dead¨, ¨New York ripper¨ , among them. This is one more imaginative horror pictures in which the camera stalks in sinister style . It's just one long unrelenting guts-feast and passable budget horror movie that still packs a punch for those who like to be terrorized out their wits. Gatto nero(1981) will appeal to Lucio Fulci aficionados.
Spaghetti splatter-meister Fulci, best known for his unbashed ripoffs: ¨Zombie¨ and ¨Gates of Hell¨, tones down the gore this time in a vaguely Poe-ish tale of a medium with some marbles loose -well played by Patrick Magee- whose kitty provides the temporary habitatfor spirits its master calls up. This is a chilling, eerie Italian terror flick full of screams, thrills , intrigue and lots of blood and guts. Production design is pretty good with a nice setting from a dreary English village. And Sergio Salvatti's downright myopic camerawork is original, adding up an opressive viewing experience, especially with the menacing frames and close-ups of the black cat wandering here and there. . This genuinely frightening story with adequate utilization of images-shock is well photographed on location in Hellfire Caves, West Wycombe, West Wycombe Park, Buckinghamshire, England, UK and Italian studios: Incir De Paolis .The orchestral music by Pino Donaggio (Brian de Palma's usual composer) helps a lot to raise the tension, providing poignant moments and elevating the intrigue to the maximum. It's a decently made Fulci film and better narrated and competently developed than his other flicks. This is a classic excruciatingly horror film in which the intrigue,tension, suspense appears threatening and lurking in every room, corridors , cellar, stable, morgue and many other places. This unrelenting shock-feast packs good make-up and special effects make-up by Paolo Ricci, replacing the ordinary Gianetto De Rossi. It's a an Italian/British co-production, financed on a budget enough by Giulio Sbarigia and as associate producer uncredited Harry Alan Towers.
The motion picture was well realized by one of the most controversial filmmakers of terror movies ,Lucio Fulci. He is a gore-feast expert, making many films in his usual style and peculiar trademarks with flaws and gaps but being professionally made because he is a skilled craftsman . He created strange horror thrillers that managed to be both scary and skilfully made, deserving cult status . Fulci made a lot of movies with full of gory, gruesome, and ghastly feasts in which killers, spectra, Zombies or stumbling stiff dead committed astonishing murders . Reviewers are divided over booth the morals and talents of Fulci (1927-1996) who sometimes directed under the alias ¨Louis Fuller¨. For some critics many of his movies are cruel and shockingly violent, yet their gory surface often conceals religious, social commentaries or intelligent issues. Whether he should be viewed as a cheap sensationalist or just a genius Fulci has a loyal fan base and undeniably has an important and unique influence on the terror genre , creating great works on a low budget such as proved in ¨ The black cat ¨, ¨Manhattan baby¨, ¨Gates of Hell¨, ¨Island of the living dead¨, ¨New York ripper¨ , among them. This is one more imaginative horror pictures in which the camera stalks in sinister style . It's just one long unrelenting guts-feast and passable budget horror movie that still packs a punch for those who like to be terrorized out their wits. Gatto nero(1981) will appeal to Lucio Fulci aficionados.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe role of Prof. Myles was offered to Peter Cushing, but he refused to accept the part because of director Lucio Fulci's reputation for making gory horror-movies.
- GaffesAs Ferguson throws a rock at the black cat during his drunken encounter with the feline in an alley, he misses. The next successive shot shows the rock hitting the cat as it scurries away.
- Citations
Maureen Grayson: The air conditioning is not working - please find the key - I'm frightened.
- Versions alternativesThe Anchor Bay release is the complete, uncut version of the film.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El gato negro
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 32 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Le Chat noir (1981) officially released in India in English?
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