Poster

The Cat ()

Il gatto (original title)
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Amedeo and Ofelia, middle aged brother and sister, own jointly an old decadent, but still attractive, condominium. They want to sell it, but before they have to evict all the tenants. Of course, these don't want to leave at all. The cat... See more »

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Amedeo Pecoraro
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Ofelia Pecoraro
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Francisci
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Wanda Yukovich
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Legrand
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Salvatore
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The 'Princess'
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Don Pezzolla, the priest
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Police Chief
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Rosario Calascibetta, a killer
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The super
Fabio Gamma ...
Gangster
Franco Santelli ...
Police officer
Raffaele Curi
Nerina Di Lazzaro ...
Signora Tiberini
Lino Fuggetta ...
Signor Tiberini
Emilio Buonocore
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Lawyer
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Garofalo
Ugo Niutta
Pietro Saraceni
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Omero Capanna ...
Giuseppe Pulieri, a hitman (uncredited)
Azzolino Carrega ...
Man in Courtroom (uncredited)
Angelo Casadei ...
Man Holding the Coffin (uncredited)
Alice Gherardi ...
Bit part (uncredited)
Giovanni Morosi ...
Trial Spectator (uncredited)
Matteo Spinola ...
(uncredited)
Alessandro Tedeschi ...
Morto sul letto (uncredited)
Maria Tedeschi ...
Donna che segue la bara (uncredited)

Directed by

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Luigi Comencini

Written by

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Augusto Caminito ... (screenplay)
 
Fulvio Marcolin ... (collaboration)
 
Rodolfo Sonego ... (screenplay)
 
Rodolfo Sonego ... (story)

Produced by

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Romano Cardarelli ... executive producer
Sergio Leone ... producer

Music by

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Ennio Morricone

Cinematography by

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Ennio Guarnieri

Editing by

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Nino Baragli

Editorial Department

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Alessandro Baragli ... assistant editor
Rossana Maiuri ... assistant editor
Olga Sarra ... additional editor

Production Design by

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Dante Ferretti

Set Decoration by

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Bruno Cesari

Costume Design by

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Danda Ortona

Makeup Department

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Alfredo Marazzi ... makeup artist
Maria Rizzo ... hair stylist
Gino Tamagnini ... assistant makeup artist

Production Management

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Bruno Frascà ... production manager
Antonio Stoppa ... production supervisor

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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Massimo Patrizi ... assistant director

Art Department

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Carlo Agate ... chief designer
Paolo Biagetti ... assistant art director
Gianni Fiumi ... props

Sound Department

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Mario Bramonti ... sound
Romano Checcacci ... sound mixer
Giuseppe Muratori ... boom operator

Camera and Electrical Department

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Sandro Battaglia ... assistant camera
Antonio Benetti ... still photographer
Amilcare Cuccoli ... gaffer
Ennio Picconi ... key grip
Renato Ranieri ... camera operator
Antonio Scaramuzza ... assistant camera
Paolo Mancini ... assistant camera (uncredited)

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Diana Bruni ... tailor
Paola Comencini ... costume design assistant
Clara Poggi ... tailor

Script and Continuity Department

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Grazia Baldanello ... continuity (as Maria Grazia Baldanello)

Additional Crew

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Helietta Caracciolo ... jewels
Vittorio Carta ... production secretary
Giovanni Maccari ... production secretary
Antonio Mastronardi ... administrator
Ferruccio Amendola ... voice dubbing: Michel Galabru (uncredited)
Aldo Barberito ... voice dubbing: Lino Fuggetta (uncredited)
Gianfranco Bellini ... voice dubbing (uncredited)
Germana Dominici ... voice dubbing: Dalila Di Lazzaro (uncredited)
Fiorenzo Fiorentini ... voice dubbing: Pino Patti (uncredited)
Sergio Fiorentini ... voice dubbing: Armando Brancia (uncredited)
Antonio Guidi ... voice dubbing: Philippe Leroy (uncredited)
Gianni Marzocchi ... voice dubbing: Jean Martin (uncredited)
Mario Milita ... voice dubbing (uncredited)

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

Amedeo and Ofelia, middle aged brother and sister, own jointly an old decadent, but still attractive, condominium. They want to sell it, but before they have to evict all the tenants. Of course, these don't want to leave at all. The cat (Il Gatto), mascot and beloved by all, dies and this gives the two an excuse to enter the tenants' life. Amedeo starts to court the young Wanda and Ofelia seduces the priest Don Pezzolla. In the meantime police is looking for the cat killer... Written by 1felco

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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • Qui a tué le chat? (France)
  • The Cat (India, English title)
  • The Cat (Canada, English title)
  • The Cat (United States)
  • The Cat (United Kingdom)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 109 min
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Did You Know?

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Trivia Halfway through the film Dalila Di Lazzaro stopped shooting because she didn't want to shoot a scene in the shower without her panties on. "There was a reason", Di Lazzaro explains, "but it was personal and I didn't want to tell anyone about it: I had shaved my pubes because of a bet I had lost with my partner. Everyone was curious and Comencini had the production company call my agent: while waiting for them to come to an agreement, I was stuck in a bathrobe in the small bathroom where we were to shoot the scene. While Ugo Tognazzi was on a break, my refusal reached his ears and, curious as he was, he came to the set with the excuse of convincing me, but in reality to find out the reason for my rejection. And the more I kept silent, the more he put me under pressure: 'Are you a man? What are you hiding there?' he asked in his unmistakable tone of voice. He was nice, but I stubbornly didn't tell him my secret. 'Are you part of a religious sect?' he insisted. He thought, by making me laugh, that he could solve the riddle. But I held firm. In the end we came to a compromise: I would have shot the scene in the shower showing the camera my back, but I had to take off my briefs. Tognazzi sent the seamstress to spy on me, so my secret was revealed. In the evening he knocked on my room: 'Who is that asshole who makes you shave yourself? There is nothing more beautiful than a woman with her pubic hair,' he said. 'Hair has its charm. I guess you haven't met a real man yet.' 'I lost a bet," I replied. 'Yes, good, tell it to someone else. Too bad you're not one of the hens in my henhouse!' and walked away," Di Lazzaro recalls. See more »

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