by Mark Murton and Linda Kay
Directed by: Jim O’Brien
Cat Out of the Bag Alert! This review contains some spoilers for this film!
Synopsis: Based on the novel by Beryl Bainbridge. In England during the Second World War, repressed dressmaker, Nellie (Joan Plowright) and her more liberal sister, Margo (Billie Whitelaw), struggle raising their seventeen-year-old niece, Rita (Jane Horrocks), who is having a delusional affair with an American soldier, Wesley (Tim Ransom).
Cat Burglar (Scene Stealer): The family’s black cat is sitting contentedly on a chair near the fire as Rita reads a magazine and Nellie prepares for bed.

Margo enters and pours a pan of cold water on the fire to extinguish it, the noise of which, much to Margo’s amusement, frightens the cat, causing him to hurriedly depart the chair.


One night, Nellie and Margo, who share a bed, hear a noise coming from their late mother’s bedroom which has remained undisturbed since her death. Suspecting that the cat — which we learn has been saddled with an unfortunately derogatory name which begins with the letter ‘N’ — is responsible, Nellie goes to investigate and her suspicions are confirmed when her torch picks out the guilty party crouched on a small table.

The cat quickly jumps away.

Later, Nellie has finally decided it’s time to put away her mother’s things away, and as she carries a box up the stairs the cat is seen moving rapidly in the opposite direction.


Despite not being in favor of Rita’s fondness for the American G.I., the family invite the young man over for tea. After Wesley and Rita have been talking in the back alley they go inside via the back door, and the cat can be seen walking along the wall adjoining the next house stalking towards the neighbour’s pigeon coop.

The cat suddenly leaps on top of the coop, startling the pigeons terribly!

In a later scene, Margo carries the cat out the back door and puts it down to feed.


The story takes a sudden and unexpected turn which results in a glass case getting knocked over. The cat is wandering nearby as Margo cleans up the broken glass.

As the film winds down the story comes full circle as once again Margo takes great delight in frightening the cat from its seat by pouring cold water on the fire.


Final Mewsings: Cats appreciate a regular routine but not one that scares them every day.
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