Warner Bros.
Starring: Shirley Knight, Constance Ford, Drew Vigen
Directed by: Walter Doniger
Cat Out of the Bag Alert! This review contains some spoilers for this film!
Synopsis: The trials and tribulations of women prisoners who are allowed to keep their children in prison with them until the kids reach the age of three.
Cat Burglar (Scene Stealer): One prisoner named Sophie (Constance Ford) has a little boy named Tommy (Drew Vigen). When she is put in solitary confinement for a violation, Tommy is kept in an adjacent dormitory with some other children. In one scene he is taking a nap in bed. An orange tabby cat is lying on the cot.
The cat moves to the window and jumps out onto the fire escape, quickly scrambling up the steps to the roof.
Tommy wakes up and finds the cat gone and chases after him onto the fire escape. The cat is now on the roof and Tommy starts to climb up after him.
Sophie has just been released from confinement and enters the dorm to take Tommy when she sees he is gone. She calls for him and the child answers, so she is able to rescue him from the fire escape. But later in the film when the children have all been confined to the dormitory the scenario repeats itself. The cat is climbing the fire escape again. Tommy is following him.
Once on the roof the cat runs away and the boy follows.
The cat climbs onto the ledge and the boy follows, trying to pet him. The woman caring for the boy tries to reach him in time but he topples from the roof and dies, much to the horror of the inmates who have witnessed the accident, including Sophie herself.
It is very possible that this is the cat team of Orangey fulfilling this role.
Final Mewsings: Cats can’t help it if they lure children to their doom.
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