Cat's Eye Movie Review
Neil Gaiman reviewed Cats Eye for Imagine magazine and stated that Funny scary and one of the best King movies so far The film was released on DVD by Warner Home Video in 2002.
Cat's eye movie review. If cats can inspire YouTube videos and a Broadway musical perhaps its time for the furry ones to have their own feature-length live. Set in a castle the film drips with atmosphere. It is based on three of Kings short stories The Ledge Quitters Inc and The General the first two appeared in his Night Shift short story collectionThe movie.
The third story really throws the movie out of whack. With Drew Barrymore James Woods Alan King Kenneth McMillan. Margaret Atwoods Cats Eye is a sharp study of a very female torture.
You get three really fun and creepy stories that are good for most ages. Blue Underground can always be relied upon to give us a quality transfer. On Metacritic the film has a score of 70 based on reviews from 12 critics.
It is an American horror film. A stray cat is the linking element of three tales of suspense and horror. The film contains 3 stories each connected by a stray cat running in and out of scenes.
And too much of a kids movie for its target audience. As we approach the novels 30th anniversary its hard to think of many characters who have endured pain like Atwoods. Cats Eye which has been rated PG-13 special parental guidance for those younger than 13 contains some ghoulish elements including one.
Cats Eye follows the three sisters Hitomi Rui and Ai Kisugi. Cats Eye is an anthology of three Stephen King short stories two of which were previously published in print in the Night Shift collection Quitters Inc and The Ledge. Production values are very good and this transfer does it justice.