5.9
A UFO is stranded on earth and impounded by the US government. Its pilot, a cat with a collar that gives it special powers, including the ability to communicate with humans, has eluded the authorities and seeks the help of a scientist in order to reclaim and repair his ship and get back home.
Ken Berry
Frank
Sandy Duncan
Liz
Harry Morgan
General Stilton
Roddy McDowall
Mr. Stallwood
McLean Stevenson
Link
Jesse White
Earnest Ernie
Alan Young
Dr. Wenger
Hans Conried
Dr. Heffel
Ronnie Schell
Jake (Voice) / Sgt. Duffy
James Hampton
Capt. Anderson
Howard Platt
Col. Woodruff
William Prince
Mr. Olympus
Ralph Manza
Weasel
Tom Pedi
Honest Harry
Hank Jones
Officer
Rick Hurst
Dydee Guard
John Alderson
Mr. Smith
Tiger Joe Marsh
Omar
Arnold Soboloff
NASA Executive
Mel Carter
1st Soldier
Dal McKennon
Farmer
Alice Backes
Farmer's Wife
Henry Slate
Sandwich Man
Roger Pancake
Red
Roger Price
1st E.R.L. Expert
Jerry Fujikawa
2nd E.R.L. Expert
Jim Begg
Dydee Driver
Peter Renaday
Bailiff
Rickie Sorensen
Technician
Tom Jackman
Army Engineer
Fred L. Whalen
Sarasota Slim
Joseph G. Medalis
Sucker
Gil Stratton
1st NASA Scientist
Jana Milo
2nd NASA Scientist
Sorrell Booke
Presiding Judge (uncredited)
Jackson Bostwick
Additional Voices (voice) (uncredited)
Director
Norman Tokar
Writer
Ted Key
August 28, 2020
5
Nice idea, just not one that's executed well at all.
<em>'The Cat from Outer Space'</em> is mundane. The concept of an alien cat invading is cool, but they choose to do it in a way that is boring - the cat, Jake, speaks via voiceover only, so there are many shots of the cat just staring whilst Ronnie Schell speaks. That just doesn't work, to get attached/become interested in a character you need emotion and/or expression... you get none of that here. I never cared for Jake, and that's coming from someone who loves cats.
Also with the plot they spend most of the time focusing on the cat helping the humans with dull things, like betting and freezing people. Quite inconsistently too, there's a number of times where the cat could solve their problem instantly but they avoid using him for some reason. It's only at the end when they, truly, tackle the overall story arc - which itself is held back by the (understandably, I guess) lame special effects.
Cast-wise it's very flat, none of them are particularly bad but they all give forgettable performances - even Harry Morgan (Stilton), who has done some fine things for Disney in these early decades.
I can think of at least ten worse live-action flicks from this studio up until 1978, but that's not to say this is anything worth watching - it isn't, unfortunately.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$4,000,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00