Cat's Eye | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lewis Teague |
Written by | Stephen King |
Based on | "Quitters, Inc." and "The Ledge" by Stephen King |
Produced by | Dino De Laurentiis Martha Schumacher |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Jack Cardiff |
Edited by | Scott Conrad |
Music by | Alan Silvestri |
Production company | |
Distributed by | MGM/UA Entertainment Co. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $7 million |
Box office | $13.1 million [1] or $3.5 million (North America) [2] |
Cat's Eye (also known as Stephen King's Cat's Eye) is a 1985 American anthology horror thriller film directed by Lewis Teague and written by Stephen King. It comprises three stories: "Quitters, Inc.", "The Ledge", and "General". The first two are adaptations of short stories in King's 1978 Night Shift collection, and the third is unique to the film. The cast includes Drew Barrymore, James Woods, Alan King, Robert Hays and Candy Clark. The three stories are connected by the presence of a traveling cat and Barrymore, both of whom play incidental roles in the first two and major characters in the third.
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.(May 2017) |
A stray tabby cat hides from a dog in a delivery truck, which drives to New York City. The cat sees the disembodied image of a young girl pleading for help and is picked up by a man.
Dick Morrison is advised by a friend to join Quitters, Inc. to kick his smoking habit. The clinic doctor Vinnie Donatti explains that the clinic has a 100% success rate due to a uniquely persuasive method: every time Dick smokes a cigarette, horrors of increasing magnitude will befall his wife, Cindy and their daughter, Alicia.
Using the same tomcat that his assistant Junk caught in the street, Donatti demonstrates the first of these horrors: the cat is put in a cage and tormented with electric shocks coming from the floor. He explains that if his new client is caught with a cigarette, Cindy will be shocked while he is forced to watch. For subsequent infractions, Alicia will be shocked, then she will be raped. Finally, Dick himself will be killed. He hides the threats from his family.
That night, Dick, angered by the methods that Quitters, Inc. uses, notices a pack of cigarettes in his desk. He prepares to smoke, but notices a pair of feet in his closet, realizing that the clinic takes their threats seriously. The following day, he visits Alicia, gives her a doll and drops her off at school. However, he sees Donatti, who warns him that the organization will be watching him closely.
During a stressful traffic jam, Dick smokes after finding an old pack of cigarettes in his glove box. After watching Cindy suffer in the electric cage, Dick futilely attacks them. Dick is determined never to smoke again and tells her everything. Time passes, and Dick is smoke free, but he has gained weight due to quitting. Donatti prescribes illegal diet pills and sets a target weight for him. Dick jokingly asks what will happen if he continues to gain weight, to which he responds that someone will cut off his wife's little finger.
Dick and Cindy have a dinner party with the same friend who recommended Quitters, Inc., and toast to both them and the company. As she raises her glass, Dick sees that his friend's wife is missing her little finger.
Having escaped the scuffle at Quitters, Inc., the cat leaves Manhattan via the Staten Island Ferry, traveling to Atlantic City, New Jersey, where it sees the same disembodied girl's image once again asking for his help.
Gambler and former tennis pro Johnny Norris is involved with a woman named Sally Ann, whose jealous husband, Cressner, is a crime boss and casino owner and a man who wages on anything. After winning a wager that the cat will successfully cross the busy road outside his casino, he takes him to his home. Cressner then has Norris kidnapped and blackmails him into a dangerous ordeal: he must circumnavigate the exterior ledge of his penthouse. If he makes it all the way around, he will grant his wife a divorce. If Norris refuses, he will call the police and have him arrested for possession of drugs that have been planted in Norris's Mustang by his henchman Albert, to which he agrees.
Cressner harasses Norris by startling him with a horn when he attempts to get into a window. A pigeon lands beside him and pecks at his foot, causing it to bleed. Then he turns on a fire hose to keep Norris from lingering and he returns to the apartment. Cressner says that he will honor the bet: Albert removes the drugs, and presents him with a bag of cash. However, he kicks over the bag to reveal his wife's severed head.
Norris attacks him, while Albert is tripped by the cat and drops his gun. Norris seizes the gun and kills Albert, then points it at Cressner. Norris forces him to undergo the same ordeal on the ledge. The cat watches as Cressner, harassed by the pigeon, falls to his death.
The cat then hops a freight train and travels to Wilmington, North Carolina, where it is adopted by the girl who was asking for his help earlier, Amanda, who names him General. Her mother believes that he will harm their parakeet, Polly. Despite Amanda's protests, she puts him out at night.
Consequently, he cannot protect Amanda from a small, malevolent troll that took up residence in the house. When she sleeps, the troll emerges via a hole in one of the walls in Amanda's room. The troll slays Polly with a tiny dagger and then tries to steal her breath. General finds a way into the house and chases the troll. After wounding his shoulder with his dagger, the troll flees, leaving Amanda and her parents to discover the dead bird.
Her parents are convinced that General killed Polly, but her father, discovering a wound too large for a parakeet to have made, starts doubting her belief that he slew her. She takes him to an animal shelter to be euthanized. When night falls, the troll returns and uses a doorstop to wedge Amanda's door shut, and then reattempts to take the sleeping girl's breath. As General is getting his final meal, he escapes and rushes back to her house. He saves Amanda and fights with the troll, causing a great deal of noise. Her parents awaken, but the blocked door prevents them from reaching her. Though the troll tries to flee, General kills him.
After her parents break into the room, Amanda describes how he saved her from the troll. Her parents believe the story when parts of the troll's corpse are discovered, as well as the tiny dagger and the hole in the wall that the troll used. The next morning, General feasts on a large fish, then climbs onto a sleeping Amanda's stomach and licks her face. She wakes up and cuddles him.
Cat's Eye was released theatrically in the United States by MGM on April 12, 1985. It grossed $13,086,298 at the domestic box office. [1]
Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four and wrote, "Stephen King seems to be working his way through the reference books of human phobias, and 'Cat's Eye' is one of his most effective films." [3] Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the film "the best screen adaptation of any of King's work since Brian De Palma's 'Carrie'" and "pop movie making of an extremely clever, stylish and satisfying order." [4] Variety wrote, "The three stories just don't connect and efforts to join them never work. However, an excellent roster of talent does try its best." [5] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and wrote that the opening story "is so funny and so fresh that it's a shock and a disappointment to see it come to an end in a half-hour. The movie's second short story is as dull as can be; No. 3 is kind of fun; so it all adds up to a better-than-average entertainment that sags terribly in the middle." [6] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times stated that "the special effects are impeccable and Giorgio Postiglione's production design meticulous and inspired. Yet it's the well-drawn characters, plus the brisk, stylish direction of Teague and superb camerawork of Cardiff, that make it work." [7] Paul Attanasio of The Washington Post wrote that all the stories "repeat the same formula," but the middle one was "the most fun, because of the presence of the peerless Kenneth McMillan," who "plays here with a good-humored burlesque that recalls Jackie Gleason." [8] Kim Newman of The Monthly Film Bulletin thought the film "would have been sub-standard even as one of the formula Amicus anthologies of the 60s and 70s," adding, "Despite a few good performances (James Woods, Kenneth McMillan), the film, like Creepshow before it, is continually let down by the weak punch lines King provides for his promising anecdotes." [9] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 70% rating based on 30 reviews. The critical consensus reads: "An effective if knowingly silly Stephen King anthology that combines comedy and terror." [10] On Metacritic the film has a score of 70% based on reviews from 12 critics. [11]
Neil Gaiman reviewed Cat's Eye for Imagine magazine, stating it was "Funny, scary, and one of the best King movies so far." [12]
The film was released on VHS in 1985 by Key Video and later on DVD by Warner Home Video in 2002. [13]
The film was nominated for the International Fantasy Film Award for Best Film in 1987. Drew Barrymore was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Starring Performance by a Young Actress in a Motion Picture in 1986. [14]
Night Shift is Stephen King's first collection of short stories, first published in 1978. In 1980, Night Shift won the Balrog Award for Best Collection, and in 1979 it was nominated as best collection for the Locus Award and the World Fantasy Award.
An anthology film is a single film consisting of several shorter films, each complete in itself and distinguished from the other, though frequently tied together by a single theme, premise, or author. Sometimes each one is directed by a different director or written by a different author, or may even have been made at different times or in different countries. Anthology films are distinguished from "revue films" such as Paramount on Parade (1930)—which were common in Hollywood in the early decades of sound film, composite films, and compilation films.
Scary Movie 2 is a 2001 American supernatural parody film directed by Keenen Ivory Wayans. It is the sequel to Scary Movie and the second film in the Scary Movie film series. The film stars Anna Faris, Regina Hall, Shawn Wayans and Marlon Wayans, as well as Tim Curry, Tori Spelling, Chris Elliott, Chris Masterson, Kathleen Robertson, David Cross and James Woods. The film was the last in the series to feature the involvement of stars Marlon and Shawn Wayans, and director Keenan until the upcoming sixth installment. Marlon would eventually go on to produce a similar horror-themed parody, A Haunted House, and its sequel, both starring himself. In the latter film, Wayans pokes fun at the Scary Movie series' decline in quality after his family's departure.
Tales from the Darkside: The Movie is a 1990 American comedy horror anthology film directed by John Harrison, serving as a spin-off of the anthology television series Tales from the Darkside. The film depicts the frame story of a kidnapped paperboy who tells three stories of horror to the suburban witch who is preparing to eat him.
"Quitters, Inc." is a short story by Stephen King published as part of his 1978 short story collection Night Shift. Unlike most other stories in this book, "Quitters, Inc." had been previously unpublished until February 1978 under Doubleday Publishing. It was featured in Edward D. Hoch's 1979 ‘Best detective stories of the year’ collection. The plot follows Dick Morrison's discovery of the brutal enforcement methods used by Quitters, Inc., the firm which he enlists to aid him quit smoking. Like much of Stephen King's work, this short story exhibits elements of horror fiction and satire. The tale was adapted in the 1985 American anthology horror film Cat’s Eye.
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Needful Things is a 1991 horror novel by American author Stephen King. It is the first novel King wrote after his rehabilitation from drug and alcohol addiction. It was made into a film of the same name in 1993 which was directed by Fraser C. Heston. The story focuses on a shop that sells collectibles and antiques, managed by Leland Gaunt, a new arrival to the town of Castle Rock, Maine, the setting of many King stories. Gaunt often asks customers to perform a prank or mysterious deed in exchange for the item they are drawn to. As time goes by, the many deeds and pranks lead to increasing aggression among the townspeople, as well as chaos and death. A protagonist of the book is Alan Pangborn, previously seen in Stephen King's novel The Dark Half.
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Thomas Vincent Savini is an American prosthetic makeup artist, actor, stunt performer and film director. He is known for his makeup and special effects work on many films directed by George A. Romero, including Martin, Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead, Creepshow, and Monkey Shines; he also created the special effects and makeup for many cult classics like Friday the 13th, Maniac, The Burning, The Prowler, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2.
"Sometimes They Come Back" is a short story by Stephen King, first published in the March 1974 issue of Cavalier and later collected in King's 1978 collection Night Shift.
"The Ledge" is a short story by Stephen King, first published in the July 1976 issue of Penthouse, and later collected in King's 1978 collection Night Shift.
Firewalker is a 1986 American action-adventure comedy film starring Chuck Norris, Louis Gossett Jr., Will Sampson in his final feature film role, and Melody Anderson. It was directed by J. Lee Thompson and written by Norman Aladjem, Robert Gosnell and Jeffrey M. Rosenbaum. This was the first comedic role for Norris, giving him a chance to poke fun at his action persona.
No Smoking is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language thriller film written and directed by Anurag Kashyap and co-produced by Vishal Bhardwaj and Kumar Mangat. The film stars John Abraham, Ayesha Takia, Ranvir Shorey and Paresh Rawal in the lead roles, while Bipasha Basu appears in an Item number. The film is loosely based upon the 1978 short story "Quitters, Inc." by Stephen King, which was previously adapted as one of three segments featured in the Hollywood anthology film, Cat's Eye (1985). It became the second Indian film after Julie Ganapathi and the first Hindi-language film to be adapted from Stephen King's work. The story follows K (Abraham), a self-obsessed, narcissist chain smoker who agrees to kick his habit to save his marriage and visits a rehabilitation centre, but is caught in a labyrinth game by Baba Bengali (Rawal), the man who guarantees he will make him quit.
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Needful Things is a 1993 American horror film based on Stephen King's 1991 novel of the same name. The film was directed by Fraser C. Heston, and stars Ed Harris, Max von Sydow, Bonnie Bedelia, and J. T. Walsh. The film received mixed reviews, critics praised the performances and ending, but criticized its portrayal of its story and felt it inferior to its source material.
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