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IMDbPro

O Gato Fritz

Título original: Fritz the Cat
  • 1972
  • 18
  • 1 h 18 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
15 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O Gato Fritz (1972)
AnimaçãoAnimação desenhada à mãoAnimação para adultosComédiaComédia “stoner”Comédia atrevidaComédia de humor negroDramaSátira

Anos 60. Fritz, é um gato descontraído, estudante universitário, um jovem de mente inquieta, que quer viver a vida intensamente, procurando desfrutar de toda e qualquer experiência e aventur... Ler tudoAnos 60. Fritz, é um gato descontraído, estudante universitário, um jovem de mente inquieta, que quer viver a vida intensamente, procurando desfrutar de toda e qualquer experiência e aventura que possa passar à sua frente.Anos 60. Fritz, é um gato descontraído, estudante universitário, um jovem de mente inquieta, que quer viver a vida intensamente, procurando desfrutar de toda e qualquer experiência e aventura que possa passar à sua frente.

  • Direção
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Roteiristas
    • Robert Crumb
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Artistas
    • Skip Hinnant
    • Rosetta LeNoire
    • John McCurry
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    15 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Roteiristas
      • Robert Crumb
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Artistas
      • Skip Hinnant
      • Rosetta LeNoire
      • John McCurry
    • 126Avaliações de usuários
    • 51Avaliações da crítica
    • 54Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    Trailer

    Fotos79

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    Elenco principal8

    Editar
    Skip Hinnant
    Skip Hinnant
    • Fritz the Cat
    • (narração)
    Rosetta LeNoire
    Rosetta LeNoire
    • Bertha
    • (narração)
    • …
    John McCurry
    • Blue
    • (narração)
    • …
    Judy Engles
    • Winston Schwartz
    • (narração)
    • …
    Phil Seuling
    • Pig Cop #2
    • (narração)
    Ralph Bakshi
    Ralph Bakshi
    • Narrator
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    • …
    Mary Dean
    • Girl #1
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    • …
    Charles Spidar
    • Bar Patron
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    • …
    • Direção
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Roteiristas
      • Robert Crumb
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários126

    6,215.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6BaronBl00d

    Happy Times - Heavy Times

    That is how the 1960s were described by the narrator in the beginning of this film. Fritz the Cat is a famous movie for a number of reasons, most stemming from it being the first feature-length adult cartoon and having an "X" rating. There were controversies surrounding its creation with director Ralph Bakshi and character creator Robert Crumb. The film is like nothing I have ever seen before. It has a unique animation process that makes everything reek seediness, despair, and cry for social change. Bakshi wrote the script which really is nothing more than the knife that cuts through all the 60's BS - from existentialism to the drug culture to the love generation to African-American perspectives to militancy. Nothing is spared as the counterculture is laid bared and examined through the eyes, ears, fears, and desires of Fritz the Cat. Along the way, Fritz experiments with just about anything - including lots of sex, drugs, and sex. While the film definitely is quite vulgar in many ways with some of the most odious characterizations of otherwise cute and cuddly animals and depicting lots of strong sexual situations(though in no way deserving the "X" by today's standards), Fritz the Cat is also an intelligent look at one character's drive to find himself and meaning in his life - perhaps a symbol for the whole decade the film is examining. The end result is nothing conclusive - also perhaps a symbol. Bakshi's script is in some ways profound and thought-provoking and in some ways infantile and vile - his obvious dislike of police just one example. But what had my attention more than anything else was the animation - particularly in exterior shots not containing characters. There is one scene where the slums of Harlem are integral to the story. Bakshi uses his camera to zoom in on quite an impressive animated background shot of a field lost amongst the slums of Harlem. It is the very essence of seedy existence in an uncaring world. There are many other shots too that have that same power, but let's not forget that even with the intelligent at times script and the animation, much of Fritz the Cat is used solely to arouse - either arouse some primal feelings or arouse offense. A landmark film at any rate whether for good or for bad.
    ass_head

    Existentialism

    Anyone who didn't like Fritz the Cat is not looking at the film in the right way. A lot of the reviews I've read basically said that it is nothing more than a bad film that strives only on shock value to get an audience. I also read that it doesn't have much of a storyline and only revolves around sex and drugs......so what else did you expect a movie about the slackers of the 60s to have? Did the stoners of that decade NOT behave the way Fritz does in the movie? In order to understand the point of the movie you have to put yourself into Fritz's shoes and let him guide you through his life as a college drop-out trying to find his purpose (Existentialism for those who are not familiar with philosophy) in life and still have a good time. Of course his journey leads you to animal orgies and a crow that hides pot in awkward places, but that is the beauty of this movie--it's about freedom! I also do not believe it is outdated because Fritz's trippy surroundings and his pseudo-intellectual thoughts were enough to make me melt! It's all about the mood. The animation and music put the viewer in a hypnotic state where nothing else matters except pleasure and happiness. If you can't identify with Fritz then you have lost the feel of what it's like being young.

    And just for some peoples' info. the movie is not X-rated because it has explicit sex scenes (any viewer of pornography, also X-rated in some form, knows that we have seen much more of the human body then is depicted in this film), it is X-rated because there are CARTOON ANIMALS HAVING SEX. Anyone who would give this film an R-rating because there are no close-ups should not plan on an MPAA career in the near future
    5Nazi_Fighter_David

    A shocking but very entertaining film

    The story concerns a classic 60's hero, Fritz, and his adventures through the urban underground… He loves sex and constantly claims and declares the glories of revolution… At first he is happy with just sex, but as the story moves through exotic adventures he discovers that the only way he can truly be a revolutionary is to join up with one of the militant groups… There, he's over his head…

    In sharp contrast to Walt Disney's soft characters, Fritz is seen providing a bunch of screaming female cats, placing drugs, and having lots of fun… We are taken through Harlem where, in this case, the blacks are portrayed as jive-talking crows… Fritz is not a fantasy, but an animation venture into super-reality, at least as Bakshi sees it…

    The animation is unpolished, graceless, but very effective… It has an unrefined or unfinished, renewable energy that brings out some of the social results of the confused sixties
    tedg

    Bad Trip

    The bad thing about the past is that it is designed to fool you.

    The idea is supposed to be that the past stays fixed, as a sort of "truth." And we change. But viewed from ourselves, often the illusion or even the truth is the reverse. We know who we are. We think we recall who we were -- which we envision is some state on the way to who we are. Something relatively static, which means that the past changes. Radically.

    Or at least artifacts from the past change, artifacts like movies. All this is complicated by the fact that movies are a key tool we use to define ourselves.

    So it is a strange trip indeed to encounter something that DID define us, that we allowed to tell us who we were. And to find it so vacuous, so superficial it shocks.

    If you were not a hippie in that era you may need to know the great schisms at work. (I mean the era depicted here -- 1969 -- not the actual date of the movie.)

    You had the east coast hippies who were the sons and daughters of the beat generation. We were interested in ideas and art, and life as both. You had the "political" hippies, who were motivated by unhappiness and determined to change what they didn't like in the name of the values of more "genuine" hippies.

    And then you had the west coast hippies. These were the ones captured by drugs, "free" sex and dropping out. To differentiate themselves, they adopted the icons of death.

    At the time, there was as much confusion among these three as between any one of them and the Nixonites. (This was in the days of the "moral majority" and before the rise of the religious right which evolved from it.)

    And where there is is identity confusion, art rushes in. The Beatles of course, and central. Eastern "religions."

    And R Crumb.

    Crumb was a magnet, pulling many from the other camps into the west coast sphere. He made it seem less radical than it was -- more about cruising (which he called "truckin") and simply enjoying the cornucopia of round women God places there only for pleasure.

    We bought it, all of us. It was a sort of commercial identity, sort of like what you see today that surrounds Valentine's day. A vague notion of self and others and satisfied living.

    Now, we look at this and it seems the past has moved away from us, away from truth. Was this ever good, or did we only pretend it so because we were so hungry to be defined?

    I recently saw a Mickey Rooney movie where he introduces himself to Judy Garland as "white, free and available." I recoiled. I rejected that past. I had nearly the same feeling when watching this, even though it is/was my past.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
    5breakdownthatfilm-blogspot-com

    An interesting take but lacks depth

    The idea of taking certain concepts to the extreme has been happening forever and it's no stranger to the film industry. Originally, the thought of making animated movies was scoffed at, until Disney made theirs. Then as time progressed, people began to treat animated features with more relevance towards adults. However, it wasn't until the experimental era of rock, fornication and drugs did that particular push come into play. Classic cartoons that came before the 1950s were considered for adults, but they didn't contain blatant drug abuse and graphic sexual content. That is until Ralph Bakshi became one of those pioneers of said genre. Having worked on several other animated projects prior, Bakshi was very familiar with this aspect of filmmaking, which led him to his feature film directorial debut.

    Fritz the Cat (1972) is Bakshi's satirical take and social commentary on the 1960's in the United States. Plot wise, it follows the adventures of Fritz the cat (Skip Hinnant) looking to fine the "inner meaning" to life and such. Being a college student, he floats around hopping to different places and experiencing different kinds of people with their ideologies. Also written by Bakshi, the script finds itself bogged down with a hodgepodge of events and underdeveloped motives for the audiences' "protagonist". It's rather unfortunate because the film itself isn't meant to really make Fritz a likable character, but the film also partially fails to provide any sort of understanding as to why he acts the way he acts. It's just Fritz being hypocritical doing things with different people; which was already spoiled in the plot synopsis.

    In a way, it feels like Bakshi's version of Alice in Wonderland but grittier and graphic. The audience bumbles along with Fritz on his misadventures watching him try to fit in with all sorts of individuals that in no way fit him. Worst yet, is that Fritz himself feels weightless in his motivations. He just keeps searching, and searching, not really getting to a definitive state of understanding. Fritz is a lost puppy....how oxymoronic. Along his travels, Fritz tries drugs, fornicates with whatever character he finds appealing that he can woo over, joins extremely dangerous cults and causes tensions between different groups of people. All to find that "inner meaning" he so desperately wants to understand. In some ways, it feels like what some of the 1960s were about, but was it that chaotic and scatterbrained?

    The acting is fine despite the cast being a very short list. Skip Hinnant as Fritz is fine, he gets the job done adequately. He didn't perform very much after this, returning for The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat (1974) and I Go Pogo (1980). Rosetta LeNoire also plays the role of Bertha in this film. She does fine for the role while also voicing other characters too. LeNoire would later have roles in The Brother from Another Planet (1984), Gimme a Break! and Family Matters. There are some other actors involved in this production, but their contribution is so little in comparison and they didn't go on to do much later, so it's not worth covering. If there's one thing Bakshi got right, it was making this cartoon directed towards adults because no youth should see the amount of graphic nudity and violence that is in this picture. There's blood, private parts and racial undertones that would not be accepted at all today by any means.

    As for the visual aspects, it's a little confusing as to why two cinematographers were needed as this was an animated film. There are some settings where the picture gets rotated but I'm not sure if camerawork was needed for that. As for the animation itself, the colors and movements to the characters are good. The textures to the animation are unique too since it was most likely cell animation. The coloring in every stage of the animation looks like no frame was filled in exactly the same. It's a different look for sure. Lastly the music composed by Ed Bogas was okay for the time and budget it was produced on. Bogas would also go on to compose for The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show and Garfield and Friends. He would also go onto compose music for video games like Gameboy's Swamp Thing and even the dreaded NES Action 52 cartridge. Very interesting indeed.

    As a whole, the movie should be looked at more as a trial in pushing the limits of acceptable animated films. Sadly, this movie tries to make a point but doesn't. The animation, music, social commentary and acting are okay, but the point of it is lost with its haphazard story, overly graphic detail and half-baked script.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      There is no evidence that Robert Crumb filed suit to have his name removed from the film's credits. Contradictory to this claim, Crumb's name continues to appear in the credits, even on home media releases. His name, however, does not appear in the credits for As Nove Vidas do Gato Fritz (1974).
    • Erros de gravação
      When he emerges from the trash can, Fritz's outfit changes color from red to blue to red again between shots.
    • Citações

      Fritz: Hey, hey, hey, Look at this big fucking gun!

      [shoots the toilet]

      Fritz: I killed the john! I killed the john!

    • Versões alternativas
      When aired during the Groundbreakers block on Playboy, the scene of Harriet's rape is heavily edited. The movie is otherwise uncut.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Bo Diddley
      (1955)

      Written by Bo Diddley (as Ellas McDaniel)

      Performed by Bo Diddley & Billy Boy Arnold

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is Fritz the Cat?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 1 de março de 1973 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official site
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Iídiche
    • Também conhecido como
      • Fritz el gato
    • Empresas de produção
      • Fritz Productions
      • Aurica Finance Company
      • Steve Krantz Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 700.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 18 min(78 min)
    • Cor
      • Color

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