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Cat Women of the Moon

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Director
  
Initial DVD release
  
March 13, 2001

Duration
  

Language
  
English

3.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Adventure, Sci-Fi

Music director
  
Country
  
United States

Cat Women of the Moon movie poster

Release date
  
September 3, 1953 (1953-09-03)

Writer
  
Al Zimbalist (based on a story), Jack Rabin (based on a story), Roy Hamilton (screenplay)

Cast
  
(Laird Grainger), (Kip Reissner), (Helen Salinger), (Alpha), (Douglas 'Doug' Smith), (Walter 'Walt' Walters)

Similar movies
  
Interstellar
,
The Martian
,
Guardians of the Galaxy
,
2001: A Space Odyssey
,
Independence Day
,
Avatar

Tagline
  
Love-starved moon maidens on the prowl!

Cat-Women of the Moon is an independently made 1953 American black-and-white 3D science fiction film, produced by Jack Rabin and Al Zimbalist, directed by Arthur Hilton and starring Sonny Tufts, Victor Jory, and Marie Windsor. The film was released by Astor Pictures.

Contents

Cat Women of the Moon movie scenes

Notably, the musical score was composed by Academy Award-winner Elmer Bernstein, though his last name is misspelled as "Bernstien" in the opening credits.

Cat Women of the Moon movie scenes

Plot

Cat Women of the Moon movie scenes

Using a spaceship furnished with wooden tables and rolling chairs, a "scientific expedition" to the Moon encounters a race of Cat-Women, the last eight survivors of a 2-million-year-old civilization. Residing deep within a cave wherein they have managed to maintain not only the remnants of a breathable atmosphere and Earth-like gravity but also a pair of gigantic spiders, the Cat-Women sport black unitards, beehive hair styles, and elaborate cosmetics. Realizing that the remaining air in the cave will soon be gone, the Cat-Women plan to steal the expedition's spaceship, migrate to Earth, and in the words of the Cat-Women's leader, Alpha (Carol Brewster), "We will get their women under our power, and soon we will rule the whole world!"

Cat-Women of the Moon wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters54886p54886

Through the use of their telepathic ability the Cat-Women have been subliminally controlling Helen Salinger (Marie Windsor), the mission navigator and only female member of the expedition. Once the expedition arrives on the Moon the Cat-Women take complete control of Helen's mind, after which she leads the entire crew - clad in heavy spacesuits and equipped with matches, cigarettes, and a gun - to the Cat-Women's cave. Although unable to control their minds, the Cat-Women are nevertheless able to influence the male crew members through the combined application of the mind-controlled Helen, their own superior intellectual abilities and feminine wiles. As explained to Helen by the Cat-Woman named Beta (Suzanne Alexander), "Show us their weak points. We'll take care of the rest."

Along with telepathy, the Cat-Women have the ability to transport themselves unseen, and instantly, from place to place within their living space. They use this ability to steal the crew's spacesuits from the mouth of the cave, where they had been left unguarded. This act forces the crew deeper into the cave and into violent confrontations with the two resident spiders and the Cat-Women themselves. Having failed to exterminate them in this manner, the Cat-Women approach the men openly, using Helen to help establish friendly relations. Kip (Victor Jory), who has been suspicious throughout the encounter, confronts Alpha about the missing spacesuits, and she promises to return them in the morning. Food and drink are then brought out, and private conversations between crew and Cat-Women commence. As the conversations progress (sample dialog: "You're too smart for me, baby. I like 'em stupid") the gun-wielding Kip sits alone, unable to intervene, while the Cat-Women successfully exploit the "weak points" of expedition commander Laird (Sonny Tufts) and the other men.

Cat-Women of the Moon CatWomen of the Moon HORRORPEDIA

By that evening the Cat-Women have learned how to operate the spaceship. Following a modern dance performance by the Cat-Women, Walt (Douglas Fowley) is stabbed to death by Beta. The Cat-Woman named Lambda (Susan Morrow), however, falls in love with crew member Doug (William Phipps) and tells him of the plot, saying, "I love you Doug, and I must kill you." With this news, the male crew members conclude that they are in danger. Carrying three spacesuits Alpha, Beta, and Helen make a break for the spaceship. Lambda teleports ahead to delay them, and is bludgeoned to death with a rock by Beta. Kip catches up and fires several shots, killing Alpha and Beta but leaving Helen uninjured. The surviving expedition members shortly thereafter manage to escape the cave, reach the spaceship, and begin their return trip to Earth.

Cast

Cat-Women of the Moon CatWomen of the Moon HORRORPEDIA

  • Sonny Tufts as Laird Grainger
  • Victor Jory as Kip Reissner
  • Marie Windsor as Helen Salinger
  • William Phipps as Doug Smith
  • Douglas Fowley as Walt Walters
  • Carol Brewster as Alpha
  • Suzanne Alexander as Beta
  • Susan Morrow as Lambda
  • Bette Arlen as Cat-Woman
  • Roxann Delman as Cat-Woman
  • Ellye Marshall as Cat-Woman
  • Judy Walsh as Cat-Woman
  • Critical reception

    Cat-Women of the Moon CatWomen of the Moon 1953 The Visuals The Telltale Mind

    Upon the film's release, Variety magazine wrote: "This imaginatively conceived and produced science-fiction yarn [an original story by producers Zimbalist and Rabin] takes the earth-to-moon premise and embellishes it with a civilization of cat-women on the moon ... Cast ably portray their respective roles ... Arthur Hilton makes his direction count in catching the spirit of the theme, and art direction is far above average for a film of this calibre. William Whitley's 3-D photography provides the proper eerie quality".

    Cat-Women of the Moon CatWomen of the Moon Scifist

    The New York Times wrote: "They (The Cat-women) try to get their hands on the visitors' rocket ship, hoping to come down here and hypnotize us all. Considering the delegation that went up, it's hard to imagine why".

    The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction calls the film absurd, but notes that it "qualifies as one of the most influential science fiction films ever made" as it influenced later films "in which astronauts discover decadent, all-female (or almost all-female) civilizations on other planets, including Fire Maidens from Outer Space (1956), Queen of Outer Space (1958), Nude on the Moon (1961), [and] Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968)."

    Legacy

  • An original-format two-projector polarized 3-D showing of Cat-Women of the Moon was featured at the first 3-D Film Expo at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood in September 2003, and also at the "3-D at the Castro" film festival, at the historic Castro Theatre in San Francisco, on October 17, 2006.
  • The 1995 VHS version, from Englewood Entertainment, was released in the red-and-blue anaglyph 3D format.
  • The first 2-D DVD version of the film was released by Image Entertainment.
  • Since 2007 The L. A. Connection improvisational comedy troupe regularly screens the film in its live "Dub-a-vision" performances.
  • Cat-Women of the Moon was used as the title of two programs about sex in science fiction broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in August and September 2011. They were presented by the writer Sarah Hall, and produced in Manchester by Nicola Swords; they featured a number of British writers including Iain M. Banks, China MiĆ©ville, and Nicola Griffith.
  • Cat-Women was remade five years later (1958) as Missile to the Moon, also released by Astor Pictures.
  • Cat-Women was the inspiration for Pat Benatar to change her appearance one Halloween, which assisted in her acquiring a record deal.
  • The film inspired several songs on Shakespears Sister's second album Hormonally Yours, among them their UK #1 hit "Stay".
  • The opening track of Is It Man or Astroman uses the opening narration of Cat-Women prior to the start of the song Taxidermist Surf.
  • References

    Cat-Women of the Moon Wikipedia
    Cat-Women of the Moon IMDb Cat Women of the Moon themoviedb.org