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poster of Who Killed the Cat?
Rating: 7/10 by 2 users

Who Killed the Cat? (1966)

A scheming widow tries to persecute three old ladies, but fate takes its revenge on her.

Directing:
  • Montgomery Tully
  • Ron Jackson
Writing:
  • Mary Cathcart Borer
  • Arnold Ridley
  • Montgomery Tully
  • Maurice J. Wilson
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Oct 07, 1966

Rating: 7/10 by 2 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 16 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: widow, based on play or musical

Mary Merrall
Janet Bowering
Ellen Pollock
Ruth Prendergast
Amy Dalby
Lavinia Galsworthy
Mervyn Johns
Henry Fawcett
Vanda Godsell
Eleanor Trellington
Conrad Phillips
Inspector Bruton
Natasha Pyne
Mary Trellington
Philip Brack
Police Sgt. Rawlings
Inigo Jackson
Dr. Brentwood
Joan Sanderson
Mrs. Sandford
Gregory Phillips
Peter Parsons

CinemaSerf

When the owner of a boarding house dies, he leaves his modest property empire to his daughter under the care of her jeweller uncle "Henry" (Mervyn Johns) and her stepmother "Ruth" (Ellen Pollock). Turns out the stepmother is every bit as wicked as stereotype suggests - and soon she decides to send the daughter out to work and to up the rent for the three elderly lodgers who live with them - safe in the knowledge that they could never afford it. One of these ladies has a kitten that has an habit of getting into rooms he's not allowed in, and when he is found dead the old ladies assume he has been poisoned, and set a trap for the supposed murderess. When the matronly landlady is discovered dead in her bed shortly afterwards, all eyes point to a bottle of whisky, a jug of water and, well, just about everyone, really... It falls to Conrad Phillips ("Insp. Bruton") to get to the bottom of things. It's quite a cleverly layered little mystery this, the three old ladies reminding you of Katie Johnson, and the ending is certainly not what I was expecting. Mary Merrall ("Janet") overacts dreadfully as the daughter, and her scenes do spoil it a bit, but for the most part it's an agreeable, well and amusingly paced amalgam of stories that I rather enjoyed.


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