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The film serves as a tribute to the low-budget Val Lewton horror films of the 1940s and also features an appearance by Kent Smith, who starred in Lewton's original classic Cat People (1942) and its sequel The Curse of the Cat People (1944). It originally premiered as the ABC Movie of the Week on December 11, 1973.
Long-haired tuxedo cat: 2003–2020 Henri, le Chat Noir short film series; Won the title of "Best Cat Video on the Internet" at the Internet Cat Video Festival. [11] Morris the Cat: Tabby cat: Died 1978 58 commercials for 9Lives (1969–1978) Won two PATSY Awards for his performances, in 1972 and 1973. [12] Orangey: Tabby cat c. 1950–1967
Murder at the World Series is a 1977 American TV movie starring Lynda Day George, Murray Hamilton, and Karen Valentine and directed by Andrew V. McLaglen. [ 1 ] Plot
Mousey (released as Cat and Mouse in theaters and on UK television) [2] is a 1974 Canadian thriller action drama film directed by Daniel Petrie, [3] and starring Kirk Douglas, Jean Seberg and John Vernon. [4] Although made for television, it was released theatrically outside of the U.S. In London, it was shown as part of a double feature with ...
[2] [3] John Erwin provided the voice-over for the cat. [4] Morris won two PATSY Awards (an award for animal performers in film and television) in 1972 and 1973. [2] The original Morris died on July 7, 1978, in his native Chicago of old age. [3] [5] All cats to play Morris have been rescue animals, either from an animal shelter or a cat rescue
An anthropomorphic cat puppet used in the short, a parody of various other puppets used in sitcoms. Spot: Star Trek Generations: Data's cat seen in Star Trek: The Next Generation [9] and Star Trek Generations: Stray cat The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: Tabby cat who visits the Swedish dwelling where Mikael Blomkvist is staying while doing ...
Seven Deaths in the Cat's Eye was released in Italy, where it was distributed by Jumbo, as La morte negli occhi del gatto on 12 April 1973. [1] The film grossed 219,556,000 Italian lire domestically. [1] The film was later released in West Germany on 7 December 1973, under the title Sieben Tote in den Augen der Katze. [2]
Owing to Jones's small size, he comfortably shared a hypersleep capsule with one of the crew members during the Nostromo's long journeys.When the Alien began stalking the ship's occupants, Jones was apparently of little interest to the creature (most likely because his biology made him unsuitable for reproduction) and he survived the incident unscathed.