Cat's Eye Movie Review
The pacing is great and the direction is.
Cat's eye movie review. Cats Eye follows the three sisters Hitomi Rui and Ai Kisugi. There is quite a bit of creep factor here in a lot of ways. Cats Eye is a fun 80s anthology crafted from the work of Stephan King.
Seven Deaths in the Cats Eye is one of my top giallos now. It was made by studio Tokyo Movie Shinsha TMS and was directed by Yoshio Takeuchi Harlock Saga for the first half and the second half was directed by Kenji Kodama City Hunter. The special effects are effective and understated allowing the foreground to be occupied by some of our basic human fears of pain for loved ones of falling from a great height of suffocation.
Stephen Kings Cats Eye Reviews. You get three really fun and creepy stories that are good for most ages. As we approach the novels 30th anniversary its hard to think of many characters who have endured pain like Atwoods.
With Drew Barrymore James Woods Alan King Kenneth McMillan. 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. Set in a castle the film drips with atmosphere.
The stories are united by the appearance of a cat as well as Drew Barrymore Everyone Says I Love You Scream the stars of the third and final story. The third story really throws the movie out of whack. 1 hr 33 mins.
25 stars out of 4. A trio of moggy-linked Stephen King tales two of them adapted from his own short stories the final section a celluloid original. Production values are very good and this transfer does it justice.