Subject: doctorlit reviews the 2019 film adaptation of Cats
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Posted on: 2019-12-26 13:42:03 UTC

Tacking on another unrelated review. Sorry, Granz!

Mom is the Andrew Lloyd Webber fan of the family, but she never really got into Cats. So actually, my only real pop cultural osmosis exposure to Cats comes from Ekwy’s PPC missions. It’s been several years since I read those, too, so I went into this film adaptation without any idea of what it was about. (Other than, you know. Cats.)

Spoilers for Cats. (At least the 2019 film. Not sure what all is changed from the stage productions.) Also, I’m probably going to screw some of these names up, so . . . mini-Pollicle cats don’t count here, 10-4?

For all the internet’s reaction to the appearance of the actors in this film, I thought it worked well in the movie. Despite the obviously human faces and proportions, the actors themselves moved and reacted and behaved so recognizably feline that I found it quite easy to accept them as cats. Even the way Grizzabella is ostracized and threatened didn’t bother me as much as it would in another, human-led movie, because it’s just cats being territorial towards one another. Also, the integration of the human actors’ faces with the CGI cat body was good enough that I generally couldn’t recognize the actors in a way that detracted from the immersion, with the exception of Ian McKellan and Judi Dench, who I feel didn’t get as many effects applied to their faces. Mom also pointed out that the motions of the cat ears were very realistic, though I don’t think I was paying much attention the ears myself while watching.

I’ll admit it took me a while to get into the story, purely because it has such a unique narrative structure compared to most fiction. I’m used to stories that set up most of a setting’s world-building at the forefront, but Cats forces us to discover the culture of the cats throughout the musical. The most unexpected thing is the fact that magic just sort of . . . exists in this universe, and some of the cats can randomly do magic. (Why only two of them? Also, Does this mean Cats is technically urban fantasy?) I honestly don’t think I can say I enjoyed it very much, but it interested me, and I did get into the conflict by the end. Idris Elba did a fantastic job as the villain; he was quite spooky and intimidating, though I wish he had gotten to sing more. The villain song about him is quite cool, and definitely the high point of the movie for me.

I am still perplexed about this “Heavyside Layer” that seems to be the main goal of this group of cats. I’m itching to finish this review just so I can look it up! It seems like a heaven metaphor in some way, but if it is an afterlife, why are so many of the cats excited to achieve it (aka die)? Macavity obviously sees it as something to be obtained, and most of the cats who are after it are fairly young, and not close to natural death by age. I just . . . I just don’t understand what the metaphor is.

—doctorlit, a cat lover, but a Cats liker

♪It’s so easy to leave me all alone with the spoilers of a time long ago♪ ♪It’s so easy to leave me all alone with the spoilers of a time long ago♪ ♪It’s so easy to leave me all alone with the spoilers of a time long ago♪

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