by Linda Kay
Directed by: Mike Pritchard
This review contains a slight Kitty Carnage Warning for rough handling and scruffing!
Cat Out of the Bag Alert! This review contains some spoilers for this film!
Synopsis: Based on the book by Patricia M. St. John. Lucien (Paul Dean) is a mischievous boy who feels guilty when his carelessness causes an accident that cripples the neighbor boy Dani (Timothy Fleetwood). Dani’s sister Annette (Carey Born) is filled with so much anger towards the boy until both she and Lucien learn a lesson in humility and forgiveness.
Cat Burglar (Scene Stealer): Dani is playing with Klaus, his adorable white kitten with calico markings, on the hillside as Lucien teases Annette and she storms off angrily claiming he pushed her. Dani laughs at their fight.
Lucien starts teasing Dani, pushing a stick towards his face and stealing the flowers the boy picked for his sister. When Lucien walks away with the flowers, Dani gathers up Klaus and follows.
Lucien ruins the flowers and Dani threatens to tell his father. Lucien suddenly grabs Klaus from the boy and dangles the poor thing by the scruff over the side of a cliff.
Dani starts struggling with Lucien who drops the kitten over the edge. Thankfully the kitty lands on a ledge just below.
Ignoring Lucien’s warnings to stop, Dani starts to climb down to save Klaus but slips and falls to the bottom of the ravine.
Too scared to tell anyone, Lucien hides until Annette comes looking for Dani. He then admits what’s happened and Annette gets her father (William Boyde) and Grandmother (Bay White). They follow Lucien to the top of the cliff and the father starts to descend on a rope, pausing to rescue Klaus whom he hands to Annette.
Dani has suffered a badly broken leg and is unconscious when the father brings him back up. Annette carries Klaus as they make their way back down the mountain with the boy.
Dani has to go to the hospital and when he comes back home he does what any cat lover would do . . . ask for Klaus right away! The kitten is brought to him immediately.
Much later in the film, Dani is sitting on the grass of the hill playing with Klaus when Lucien approaches him, trying to be friendly. Dani is afraid of the boy and doesn’t believe him when he said he made the little wooden animals they are playing with (Annette wouldn’t let Lucien give the toys to her brother). The kitten is very frisky in this scene and even gives Dani a bit of a scratch to the face as the boy is dangling blades of grass for Klaus to play with.
The last time we see Klaus is a bit of a shock. A doctor (Julian Battersby) has come to look at the boy and asks to see the cat, which Dani goes to the woodshed to retrieve. When he returns with Klaus we are not really aware of the length of time since we’ve seen the kitten, but Klaus is now a huge, chonky white cat!
While it is not specified in the film, the book makes it clear that Klaus is actually a female kitten. The author explains in a note that she had her own white kitten given to her by a farmer when she was a child living in a similar area of Switzerland. In the story the kitten was a Christmas present given to Dani and was named Klaus after the Christmas saint.
Promotional photos from the film which include Klaus were featured prominently on covers of book reissues as well as VHS and DVD releases.
Final Mewsings: Sorry, but anyone who drops a kitten over a cliff deserves eternal damnation.
Many thanks to Stevie Holcomb for finding the cat in this movie for us!
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