| That Darn Cat! | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Robert Stevenson |
| Screenplay by | Gordon Gordon Mildred Gordon Bill Walsh |
| Based on | Undercover Cat by Gordon Gordon Mildred Gordon |
| Produced by | Walt Disney Bill Walsh Ron W. Miller |
| Starring | Hayley Mills Dean Jones Dorothy Provine Roddy McDowall Neville Brand Elsa Lanchester William Demarest Frank Gorshin Ed Wynn |
| Cinematography | Edward Colman |
| Edited by | Cotton Warburton |
| Music by | Robert F. Brunner |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Buena Vista Distribution |
Release date |
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Running time | 116 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $28,068,222[1] |
That Darn Cat! is a 1965 Americanthrillercomedy film directed byRobert Stevenson and starringHayley Mills andDean Jones in a story about bank robbers, a kidnapping and a mischievous cat. Produced byWalt Disney Productions, the film was based on the 1963 novelUndercover Cat byGordon and Mildred Gordon. The title song was written by theSherman Brothers and sung byBobby Darin.
That Darn Cat! wasHayley Mills's last film of the six in which she appeared for theWalt Disney Studios until she returned in 1986 for threeParent Trap films. Mills later said that it was a mistake to leave Disney.[2] It wasDean Jones's first film for Disney. Aremake of the film was released in 1997, and it features a cameo appearance by Jones.
"Darn Cat" or "DC" is a wily, adventurousSiamese tomcat who lives with young suburbanite sisters Ingrid "Inky" and Patricia "Patti" Randall. He enjoys an evening route wandering through town, which includes teasing local dogs, swiping food, and marking vehicles with muddy paws.
One night, DC follows bank robber Iggy into the apartment where Iggy and his partner, Dan, are holding bank employee Margaret Miller hostage. Miss Miller uses the opportunity to replace DC's collar with her watch, on which she has inscribed most of the word "HELP".
DC returns home to the Randalls; Patti discovers the watch, and suspects that it belongs to the kidnapped woman. She goes to the FBI and tells Agent Zeke Kelso of her discovery. Supervisor Newton assigns Kelso to follow DC in the hope that he will lead them back to the robbers' hideout.
Kelso sets up a headquarters in the Randalls' house and assigns a team to keep the cat under surveillance. Despite multiple attempts and a bugging system, DC eludes them in humiliating and comedic ways, culminating in a chase where he leads Agent Kelso through several back yards and adrive-in theatre. As DC ends up trying to open a pigeon cage, he is discovered by the owner, Gregory Benson, who is in Ingrid's carpool and is constantly trying to get her to go out with him. Benson chases DC and Kelso out and angrily announces that he is leaving the carpool.
The next day, agent Kelso's supervisor Newton shuts down the operation, determining the watch not a useful clue. Patti disguises herself as thehippie niece of her friend Mr. A. Hofstedder the jeweler, and persuades the FBI that the watch is indeed hard evidence. Newton and Kelso set up one last surveillance from the Randall home and trail DC through several neighborhoods before finally arriving at the bank robbers' hideout. Kelso enters the apartment just in time to save Miss Miller's life, and Patti enters moments later in an attempt to keep Kelso alive. After a brief scuffle, the kidnappers are arrested and Miss Miller is liberated.
In the epilogue, Patti reconciles with her on-and-off-boyfriend Canoe Henderson, who has suffered with jealousy due to the secretive nature of the FBI investigation. Kelso becomes Ingrid's new carpool and begins a romance with her, much to Gregory's dismay, while DC starts a family with a gray cat that he has been visiting on his nightly rounds.
The exterior neighborhood scenes were filmed onThe Walt Disney Studiosbacklot inBurbank, California.
Each of theSeal Point Siamese cats who collectively play the role of DC is a so-called"traditional" or "old style" Siamese, as opposed to the more dainty, long and tubular modern Siamese show cat. One of the cats used for the film belonged to longtime cat breeder Edith Williams, a member of the Stud Book Fanciers Association. One of the feline actors also starred, along with two dogs, inDisney's 1963 filmThe Incredible Journey.[3]
Bosley Crowther ofThe New York Times wrote: "The feline that plays the informant, as the F.B.I. puts it, is superb.Clark Gable at the peak of his performing never played a tom cat more winningly. This elegant, blue-eyed creature is a paragon of suavity and grace", and concluded, "it's an entertaining picture. Even a king might profitably look atThat Darn Cat."[4]Variety said: "Walt Disney comes up with a novelty charmer in this lilting translation ofthe Gordon's [sic] whimsical tale of a Siamese cat who helps the FBI solve a kidnapping case."[5] Philip K. Scheuer of theLos Angeles Times stated: "As a detective story,That Darn Cat! is strictly for juveniles and the juvenile-minded. It contains little of the step-by-step development which in good detective stories brings out the sleuthing in all of us, being content to settle for a series of gags in which that darn cat, a brownish Siamese, leads the FBI and others on a number of false scents till he and we finally barge in on the criminals."[6]Richard L. Coe ofThe Washington Post declared: "That Darn Cat is a dandy Christmas present for everyone except theScrooges. Children will enjoy its pranks, adults its whimsy, cat-lovers its Siamese and evenJ. Edgar Hoover won't mind this use of the FBI."[7]Brendan Gill ofThe New Yorker called the film "a typical product of the giant Disney flapdoodle factory, which for many years now has devoted itself to grinding out lavish falsifications of contemporary life."[8]
In September 1965,Hedda Hopper reported that Disney had commissioned a sequel from the Gordons entitledUndercover Cat Prowls Again but it was not made.[9]
The film holds a 94% rating onRotten Tomatoes based on 16 reviews.[10]
The film's writers, Mildred Gordon, Gordon Gordon, andBill Walsh, were nominated for theWriters Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy at the18th Writers Guild of America Awards. The film was also nominated for anEdgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture Screenplay, and a Golden Leaf nomination for Best Supporting Actress (Elsa Lanchester). Hayley Mills won the 1966 second-place Golden Leaf Award for Comedy Performance, Actress. TheSherman Brothers won the third-place Golden Leaf award for Best Song.