Felidae (film)

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Felidae
Felidae moviecover.jpg
VHS release poster
Directed byMichael Schaack
Screenplay byAkif Pirinçci
Martin Kluger
Story byAkif Pirinçci
Produced byHanno Huth
StarringUlrich Tukur
Mario Adorf
Helge Schneider
Uwe Ochsenknecht
Klaus Maria Brandauer
CinematographyWerner Loos
Edited byKlaus Basler
Music byAnne Dudley
Production
companies
TFC Trickcompany
Fontana
Distributed bySenator Film Distribution
Release date
  • 3 November 1994 (1994-11-03) (Germany)
Running time
78 minutes
CountryGermany[1]
LanguagesGerman
English

Felidae is a 1994 German adult animated mystery film directed by Michael Schaack, written by Martin Kluger, Stefaan Schieder and Akif Pirinçci, and based on Pirinçci's 1989 novel of the same name. Produced by Trickompany, the film features the voices of 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.[2]

Plot[]

Francis, an intelligent and cynical cat, is moved to a gloomy, dilapidated house with his owner Gustav Löbel, a romance writer and archeologist. The top floor of the house gives off a mysterious and distinctly chemical odor. During Francis's exploratory tour of the house, he discovers the body of a cat who was killed by a bite to the neck. At the crime scene, he meets and befriends Bluebeard, a foul-mouthed, one-eyed and mutilated Maine Coon. Soon, Francis discovers another body and the fact that his house's top floor is the meeting site of a sect of cats led by Joker; the members of the sect worship an entity named Claudandus and perform ritualistic suicide by throwing themselves in an electric current. When Francis's cover is blown, he is chased by the sect members through the city's rooftops. He escapes through a skylight and meets a blind cat named Felicity, who supplies Francis with information on the Claudandus sect.

The next day, Bluebeard takes Francis to Pascal, an elderly and tech-savvy cat who has taken to meticulously maintaining a list of feline deaths in the area, through which Francis learns that Felicity is the latest victim. That night, Francis is haunted by a nightmare in which the famous friar and geneticist Gregor Mendel leaves him with riddles. During a rodent hunt, Francis discovers a video recording that documents the top floor's previous use as an experimental laboratory; this laboratory was devoted to the research and development of a fibrin glue and tissue adhesive that would close wounds in an instant. The test subjects largely consisted of stray cats that, more often than not, died in agony as a result of the failed test runs. The one cat who survived the experiments was christened by the lab's technicians as "Claudandus", Latin for "He who should or must be sealed". However, Claudandus eventually murdered the project's alcoholic and increasingly unhinged lead technician Dr. Preterius, leading to the escape of the other strays and the closure of the lab. Claudandus would subsequently become a legendary martyr figure revered by the modern-day sect.

Francis gradually traces the neighborhood cats who descended from the strays involved in the experiments and is confronted by Pascal, who reveals himself to be Claudandus. Following Claudandus's murder of Preterius, he was taken in by Preterius's former assistant Ziebold and educated himself on Mendel's laws of heredity. In his pursuits, he saw an opportunity to create a breed of cat that would correspond to the primal ancestor of all domestic cats and be capable of wiping out humanity. The murdered cats, now including Joker, were deemed unworthy of breeding with the pure females that Claudandus had engineered. An additional obstacle in Claudandus's plot is the fact that he is terminally ill with stomach cancer. Although Claudandus deems Francis an ideal successor, Francis defies Claudandus's ambition and attempts to delete the data that Claudandus had gathered. The ensuing fight between the two results in a house fire, and the struggle ends when Francis disembowels Claudandus and leaves him in the burning premises, from which Francis saves himself and an injured Bluebeard.

Cast[]

Production[]

Felidae was the most expensive animated film produced in Germany to date, reportedly costing 10 million marks, or 5 million US dollars.[3][4] The characters were designed by Paul Bolger, who also served as a head animator for the film from Dagda Film Limited in Dublin. Armen Melkonian was the film's layout designer and a head animator from the studio Azadart in Toronto. The film was mainly animated by TFC Trickompany in Hamburg, from which Hayo Freitag notably animated the Mendel sequence. The movie was also outsourced to ten animation studios from London to Seoul.[4] 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), Mediasoft in Hamburg, Premier Films in London (from which John Cousen was the head animator), A-Film APS in Copenhagen (from which Michael Hegner was the head animator) and Hahn Shin Corporation in Seoul (from which Shin-Mok Choi was the head animator).[citation needed]

Differences from the book[]

The character of Bluebeard is more prominent in the film than in the book for the purpose of giving Francis an outside party to relay his thoughts to. Examples of this are the scenes in which Francis meets Jesaja in the catacombs and when he is reading a book on genetics near the story's climax; whereas he is alone for these scenes in the book, Bluebeard accompanies him in the film. The diary from which Francis learns of Professor Preterius's machinations is in written form in the book, and was updated to a video diary for the film. The climactic fight between Francis and Claudandus ends with Francis slitting Claudandus's throat in the book, while in the film, Francis slices Claudandus's abdomen open. The character of Felicity's owner is omitted from the film.

Release[]

BMG Video first released the film on VHS in Germany after its theatrical release in 1994. Although the film has had a cult following, the English version has not been widely released in any English speaking country (i.e. the United States and the United Kingdom) aside from a hard to find VHS in Australia, possibly due to the movie's strong violence and sexual content. The dub was, however, included on the German and French DVD releases and has since been uploaded in its entirety onto YouTube. The voice actors in the English version are unknown as the credits are retained from the German version.

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, trailer in German, and a "making of" documentary.[5]

Reception[]

Eric Hansen of Variety said the film lacked screen time for the plot, and that it needed more to avoid confusion. Hansen complimented the voices behind Francis and Bluebeard, but criticized Klaus Maria Brandauer's voice-over as a "by-the-numbers performance."[6]

Soundtrack[]

Felidae
Soundtrack album by
Released1994
Recorded1994
GenreOrchestral
Length41:35
LabelPolymedia

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. "Felicity" – 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

References[]

  1. ^ "Felidae - Film 1994". filmportal.de. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  2. ^ "Zeichentrick - Jagen und töten". Spiegel Online (in German). Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  3. ^ Chin, Rita (2007). "Toward a German Multiculturalism". The Guest Worker Question in Postwar German. Cambridge University Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-521-87000-9.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Pape, Hanna (22 May 2019). "Felidae: 25 Years since the release of the Animated Neo-Noir Cult Classic". 25YL. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  5. ^ "ASIN: B0001HN2SY". Amazon.de. Retrieved 9 January 2009.
  6. ^ Hansen, Eric (7 December 1994). "Felidae". Variety. Retrieved 23 September 2019.

External links[]

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