Cat Person

2023

Action / Drama / Horror / Thriller

25
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 46% · 124 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 45% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.0/10 10 6869 6.9K

Plot summary

When Margot, a college sophomore, goes on a date with the older Robert, she finds that IRL Robert doesn’t live up to the Robert she has been flirting with over texts.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
December 14, 2023 at 10:32 PM

Director

Top cast

Emilia Jones as Margot
Hope Davis as Kelly
Isabella Rossellini as Dr. Enid Zabala
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 1080p.WEB.x265
1.06 GB
1280*536
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 58 min
Seeds 14
2.18 GB
1918*802
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 58 min
Seeds 17
2.47 GB
1918*802
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 58 min
Seeds 9

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by dnkqbzw 7 / 10

Dobler or Dahmer?

Cat Person is best when you withhold judgement until the end as a viewer. Early judgement of this plot will lead you to misconstrue its ideas. I found Cat Person thought provoking, witty and well directed.

The plot of Cat Person is a real life reflection of Ted Mosby's "Dobler or Dahmer Theory" from 2000's sitcom How I Met Your Mother. The theory says that romantic gestures are only charming if the recipient is into the other person, making them a Dobler in the eyes of the recipient, referencing Lloyd Dobler in Say Anything. If the recipient of the romantic gesture is not into the other person, the recipient views them as a Dahmer, referencing serial-killer Jeffery Dahmer. Cat Person explores this theory as it occurs in the real world and the consequences that can bare out of the poor reception of romantic gestures. In an era where sensitivity to this has heightened, Cat Person effectively allows for viewers to draw their own point of view yet it sincerely believes in the Dobler or Dahmer Theory.

It is cynical about the benevolence of any party involved in romantic affairs, putting multiple ways of coming up short in these situations on display for us to interpret. Nicholas Braun & Emelia Jones choosing this film as their first projects after Succession & CODA, respectively, seems to be a smart choice to me. Good film. Recommend.

Reviewed by Aus1964 6 / 10

Better than expected

When the movie opened with the quote "Men are scared women will laugh at them. Women are scared men will kill them", I thought "Uh oh, here we go. Another 'All men are nasty' movie". But it ended up being more nuanced than that, a bit messier and less black and white, just like real life. Both protagonists were a little bit wrong and a little bit right, so I thank the writer for bringing a more balanced and less predictable perspective to how relationships can unfold.

The film had its share of dramatic moments but also had lighter moments interspersed, with imagined scenarios, which provided a little light and shade.

Overall, a thought provoking movie with more than one perspective.

Reviewed by danrobfed 7 / 10

Modern dating is hard, amd we make it even harder by making so many mistakes along the way

I didn't have any idea what to expect when I turned this on tonight on Hulu. I saw the word cat, and the lead looked nice, so I thought I was gonna see a romantic comedy. Boy was I wrong. This is modern tale about dating, and the pitfalls of it as well.

People joke about meeting online, wishing they could instead have this meet cute that are in all the romantic comedies, but then real life is rarely like the movies. I do appreciate that about this movie. It tries to be a more realistic representation of the work it takes to date. Should I text right back? Should I go along with a date, even if it's not at a place I wanna go. Does this person really like me or are they saying all this to get in my pants? Lots of real life questions are brought up in this film.

The narrator is paranoid, but she probably has good reasons to be. But as a somewhat unreliable narrator, we see her envision all these scenes that never happen. They are her fears being brought to the forefront of her mind, and projected onto someone who may or may not be like that. We sympathize with her struggle to ask for what she wants, but we also wonder why she doesn't just communicate it directly as well.

As far as the male protagonist/antagonist (depending on the scene), we get a very bland view of him at the beginning. He seems like a late 20s/early 30s man, who watches way too many movies. His demeanor borders on the autistic, and I honestly think he was somewhere on the spectrum. He probably had heard online to not text a girl back right away so that she gets nervous and then texts a lot. We don't see him ignore her texts, but that's 100% what his plan was. He has been told or learned that communication is a game that men must play to keep a girl interested.

Then after the incredibly awkward moment where our female lead gains the power (awkward kiss), everything changes. She starts to recognize the weird things about him that she doesn't like. Does she say any of this to him? No. Is it partially cowardice? I would say yes, but also she clearly has this fear of him. A fear that she can't say no. A fear that hurting his feeling would lead him to doing something worse than awkward kisses or s*x. And man was it awkward. I've never felt so uncomfortable than I was in that scene. She basically goes numb and out of body to avoid the more awkward, but probably necessary conversation of telling him she is no longer interested. And once again for good reason. He is a tall man, much bigger than her. She is reliant on him for a ride home too. Which is also an awkward moment.

Male and female brains must see things in a much different ways. Because she clearly didn't want to have s*x with him, but he thought it was a great time. Part of this on her for refusing to communicate with him, but honestly he should also be more attentive to her body language too. It's a messed up situation, that could easily be fixed if the 2 of them never got to his house in the first place. She should have listened to her friend and got the Uber. The people that say casual s*x is normal, only believe that when the 2 parties are actually wanting it. In this case, there was no reason they should have been even thinking about this moment. But that's what texting relationships do. They give you a false sense of who someone is, and they make you think you have this connection, that you haven't actually achieved in the real world yet. It's not til the true connection happens, that you can feel a little more safe, or at least good about having s*x. Especially if you're texting all the time how much you like that person.

The caution I would give, is to slow down a little. Make sure you know who you are dealing with. Paranoia can be good, but a slow build up of trust is the key. In this hookup culture, women don't really know the man they are being so intimate with til it's too late. Caution is key.

And to the men watching this movie too, stop calling women wh*res when they reject you. Stop obsessing over their every text. Stop stalking and creeping out women. This makes all men look bad. The reason they say "All Men" is cause we could all be the ones who do this. As the gender with dominant physical strength, they are right to fear us, because we have been monsters for millenia. We need to be the generations that change that. We need to be more secure and less afraid of rejection.

Dating is hard, and this movie was a (somewhat) realistic view of how things can go terribly wrong. The house burns down at the end, symbolizing how both parties were responsible for the torching of their relationship. A relationship that should t have been only romantic, but about friendship too. When we ghost someone, or call someone a horrendous name, we damage the fragile relationship that men and women have. As in this movie, in real life we need to both communicate are feelings better. Otherwise we are left with toxic relationships and bitter endings. And as the end of the movie shows, we will just dive head first into the next one, not learning a thing.

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