Felidae (film)

Felidae

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Michael Schaack
Produced by Hanno Huth
Screenplay by Akif Pirinçci
Martin Kluger
Stefaan Schieder
Story by Akif Pirinçci
Starring Ulrich Tukur
Mario Adorf
Helge Schneider
Uwe Ochsenknecht
Klaus Maria Brandauer
Music by Anne Dudley
Cinematography Werner Loos
Edited by Klaus Basler
Production
company
Trickompany
A. Film A/S
Distributed by Senator Film Distribution
Release dates
  • 3 November 1994
Running time
78 minutes
Country Germany
Language German

Felidae is a 1994 German adult animated neo-noir horror-thriller film directed by Michael Schaack, written by Martin Kluger, Stefaan Schieder and Akif Pirinçci based on the 1989 novel Felidae, produced by Trickompany, and starring Ulrich Tukur, Mario Adorf and Klaus Maria Brandauer. The story centers on domestic house cat Francis and the grisly feline murders taking place in his new neighborhood.

Plot

A green-eyed black and white tomcat named Francis moves in with his owner to an abandoned house in a new neighborhood, and no sooner has he set paw into his new home than he is greeted by Sascha's slain body. Local street cat Bluebeard is convinced that this, and the other three recent killings, must have been committed by a "can-opener" (cat slang for a human).

Francis disagrees, and as he finds out more about the victims, he is sure that not only is the murderer a cat, but that the killings are all connected by one common factor - each of the victims was sexually aroused at the time of death. He is aided in his investigations by fierce, gluttonous Bluebeard, blind but wise Felicity, and the elderly, technology-savvy cat Pascal secretly known as Claudandus. His sleep is haunted by terrifying and vivid nightmares, which offer insight into the mind of the murderer.

Francis soon runs afoul of the local bully Kong and the suicidal Claudandus Sect, and he discovers that his new home was once the site of a laboratory owned by Dr. Preterius. Preterius, in his search to create a bonding glue that would heal any flesh wound, performed painful and deadly experiments on countless cats, including the legendary Claudandus (the namesake cat of the Claudandus Sect). This particular cat was the first upon which the bonding glue worked, something Preterius attributed to superior genetics. He continued routine vivisection on Claudandus, and as his experiments continued failing, the doctor descended into a state of alcoholic craziness. One day, Claudandus attacked Preterius, tearing open his throat.

After Preterius's death, the abandoned lab became a meeting site for the Claudandus Sect, who believe that Claudandus was imbued with powers that could help the cat species evolve into something greater. Some members believe that Claudandus has ascended to another life, and that by sacrificing themselves through ritual suicide, they may attain perfection.

It is eventually revealed that Claudandus lives on. Old and embittered, Claudandus now seeks revenge against humanity, citing them as the only truly evil animal. Through selective breeding, he aims to give rise to a 'new breed' of feline - one perfect enough to overtake the humans. Using his owner's computer to keep a listing of every cat in the city, Claudandus is systematically killing the cats he deems unworthy of breeding. He names both his database and his plan simply after the biological family of the cats, "Felidae."

When Francis confronts him, Claudandus reveals that he is terminally ill with a form of stomach cancer. Having been impressed by Francis' intelligence, he hopes that the younger cat will continue the Felidae project after he dies. Appalled, Francis deletes Felidae and destroys the computer, sparking an electrical fire. The two cats fight, and Francis disembowels Claudandus, who remarks as he dies that he, too, was once as pure as Francis.

Francis and Bluebeard escape the burning building, and all remaining traces of Claudandus and the Felidae project are destroyed. Looking over the remains of Claudandus's home, he muses that there must be optimism for a brighter future for humans and felidae alike.

Cast

Production

Felidae was the most expensive animated film produced in Germany to date, reportedly costing 10 million marks.[1] The film was mainly animated by TFC Trickompany in Hamburg, from which Hayo Freitag notably animated the Mendel sequence. Some of the animation was farmed out to other studios, including Animationstudio Ludewig in Hamburg, Uli Meyer Animation in London, Natterjack Animation in Vancouver (from which Steven Evangelatos was the head animator), Azadart in Toronto (from which Armen Melkonian was the head animator), Mediasoft in Hamburg, Premier Films in London (from which John Cousen was the head animator), A-Flim APS in Kopenhagen (from which Michael Hegner was the head animator), Dagda Film Limited in Dublin (from which Paul Bolger was the head animator), Hahn Shin Corporation in Seoul (from which Shin-Mok Choi was the head animator) and an uncredited Wang Film Productions in Taiwan.

Release

Aside from being released on the VHS, it was also issued on the Laserdisc format in the English dub.

It was released on PAL DVD region 2 with Dolby 5.1 and 2.0 surround sound for the original German audio and Dolby 2.0 for the English audio dub in Dolby 2.0. Extras (in German only) include DVD commentary, trailers in English and German, and a "making of" documentary.[2] There are currently no plans for a Blu-ray release or a Region 1 DVD release of the movie.

Soundtrack

Felidae
Soundtrack album by Anne Dudley
Released 1994
Recorded 1994
Genre Orchestral
Length 41:35
Label Polymedia

Track listing

  1. "Felidae" — 04:44 (Boy George/John Themis)
  2. "Main Theme From Felidae" — 02:06
  3. "Bluebeard - And Archie" — 01:26
  4. "Kong And His Cronies" — 02:11
  5. "Celebrating The Black Mass" — 05:55
  6. "Felicitas" — 01:50
  7. "Pascal - The Enigma" — 01:37
  8. "Mendel's Waltz" — 02:39
  9. "Blood Sport" — 02:17
  10. "A Gruesome Encounter" — 04:03
  11. "Catacombs Of Doom" — 01:01
  12. "The Egyptian Dream" — 01:18
  13. "Seduction NHOZEMPHTEKH" 01:29
  14. "In The Snow" — 01:14
  15. "The Riddle Falls Into Place" — 05:04
  16. "I Am Claudandus" — 05:01

Difference between movie and novel

Longer scenes and monologues are shortened in the film.

References

  1. Chin, Rita (2007). "Toward a German Multiculturalism". The Guest Worker Question in Postwar German. Cambridge University Press. p. 230. ISBN 0-521-87000-3.
  2. "ASIN: B0001HN2SY". Amazon.de. Retrieved 9 January 2009.

External links