Felidae: Difference between revisions

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{{work|wppage=Felidae (film)}}
[[File:Felidae.jpg|frame| It's [[Film Noir]]....with cats!]]
 
'''''Felidae''''' is the 1994 German animated film based upon a book of the same name by Akif Pirinçci, a German-Turkish author. Thanks to the internet, the film has gained something of a cult status.
 
''Felidae'' is the 1994 German animated film based upon a book of the same name by Akif Pirinçci, a German-Turkish author. Thanks to the internet, the film has gained something of a cult status.
 
The story of ''Felidae'' centers on a male cat named Francis as he and his owner, Gustav (nicknamed "Gus" by Francis), move into a new home of unknown location. Upon investigating his new home, Francis not only meets the sarcastic Manx stray named Bluebeard, but he also encounters the body of a murdered cat (as Bluebeard points out, it's the fourth murder that occurred in the past few days). It's not long until Francis begins to unravel the mystery surrounding the murdered cats, a strange cult known as the "Claudandus Sect", and the meaning behind the enigma known as "Felidae."
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Now available on [[YouTube]] [http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=C70ACDF5DC2784A8&search_query=felidae here] (for now). Subtitled version [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjCt_YGSGGY here.]
 
{{tropelist}}
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=== Tropes: ===
* [[Adults Are Useless]]: Francis' owner doesn't do anything to help solve the mystery, nor do any other humans.
** Considering that it's cats killing other cats, this really doesn't seem all that surprising.
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** Actually, Francis is able to figure out how to log into the data at the end without having ever seen it being done, as shown by the fact that he did not know a password was necessary, so it is a case of the time required varying according to the situation.
*** Francis is shown as being [[The Smart Guy|extremely smart]], even among other such [[Amplified Animal Aptitude|smart cats]], so careful reasoning probably got him to where the data was stored ( {{spoiler|Pascal}} apparently wasn't savvy enough to bury it ''too'' deeply), and from there [[The Password Is Always Swordfish|he just made an educated guess as to what the password could be.]] It's not so much a case of the learning time being shortened as it is Francis [[Fridge Brilliance|simply being able to use what little technical knowledge he had efficiently.]] The whole issue is much clearer in the book, as Pascal actually spends some time teaching Francis how the computer is used, and {{spoiler|the data for the "Felidae" project was stored close to the catalog of neighborhood cats.}}
*** Also, it's heavily implied both in the book and in the movie that Pascal ''wanted'' Francis to find those files {{spoiler|because he WANTS''wants'' Francis [[Passing the Torch|to be his successor]].}}
* [[Anti-Hero]]: Bluebeard. [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes|Type II.]]
* [[Arc Words]]: The title.
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* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: The movie falls under this. The book's ending is slightly darker, but still manages to avoid [[Downer Ending]] status.
* [[Burning Building Rescue]]: {{spoiler|Francis saving Bluebeard from Ziebold's burning house.}}
* [[Cat Fight]]: Played literally, [[Gender FlippedFlip]]ped, and without the fanservice (possibly). {{spoiler|Unless you're into graphic disembowelment.}}
* [[Characters As Device]]: The kitten Pepeline, whose purpose is to reveal that {{spoiler|Claudandus is still alive.}}
** However, her character is more fleshed out in the book. She doesn't even share her name in the movie at all!
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* [[Heaven]]: {{spoiler|Francis}} gets a look at the feline heaven after {{spoiler|being shot at the end of the second book. He's saved from the brink of death before the stay becomes permanent.}}
* [[Hollywood Atheist]]: {{spoiler|Subverted. Claudandus is a misotheist.}}
* [[Humans Are Bastardsthe Real Monsters]]: Both subverted and played straight. It's one of the main themes of the film.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted to hell and back. Dams and their kittens die all over the place.
** In the original novel, Francis has a nightmare where Deep Purple pulls a kitten out of his torn, bleeding throat, throws it against the wall, pulls out another kitten which bursts like a red paint balloon, and proceeds to splatter more kittens from his throat. Try going to sleep after reading that fun scene.
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* [[Moral Dissonance]]: Felicity says that "humans are the kindest creature there is" in the same space as "Claudandus was viciously tortured by humans." The break between these two realities is at the center of the book's plot.
** It also points out the irony of Felicity's views on humans considering it's heavily implied that she is blind due to humans experimenting on her in the past.
* [[Motive Rant]]: Quite a lengthy one, in which {{spoiler|Claudandus details how [[Humans Are Bastardsthe Real Monsters]], and why he created [[Felidae]] in order to overthrown humans.}} This is more prevalent in the book.
* [[Narm]]: In the English dub, most of the characters sound cartoony (yes, it's an animated movie, but... it's a murder mystery with cats! And sex!)
* [[A Nazi by Any Other Name]]: {{spoiler|Claudandus, since he tries to create a master race of cats and is willing to kill for it.}}
** The book is a bit more nuanced, because the motivations and origins of {{spoiler|Claudandus}} are explained in more depth. Depending on your perspective, he is [[Well-Intentioned Extremist|simply trying his best to make cats strong enough so they'll never be test subjects to any human again.]]
* [[Nietzsche Wannabe]]: {{spoiler|Claudandus. Just read his rant about how [[Humans Are Bastardsthe Real Monsters]]}}.
** And while certainly acting as a [[Nietzsche Wannabe]] up to his final confrontation with Francis, the meaning behind his [[Final Speech]] is open for debate - was it a [[Heel Realization]]?
* [[Nightmare Dreams]]: Francis has several of them, ranging from heavily symbolic to heavily disturbing.
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* [[Passing the Torch]]: {{spoiler|Pascal's original intention towards Francis.}}
* [[The Password Is Always Swordfish]]: Francis guesses the password on Pascal's computer fairly easily - it's {{spoiler|Preterius, the name of the scientist whose experiments set Pascal/Claudandus down the path of evil.}}
* [[Pet the Dog|Pet The Cat]]: Interestingly (see [[Humans Are Bastardsthe Real Monsters]] above), just about every human character is shown to have (or have had) good qualities. Even {{spoiler|Preterius}} was somewhat kind to his test subjects (at least in the book - it's not really shown in the movie) before his project started falling apart around him. About the only exception would be Saffron's owner, from book two, who took delight in starving and torturing his cats - Saffron's brother {{spoiler|died of dehydration}} thanks to him.
** Francesca also fails to get any [[Pet the Dog|such moments]], but she's not evil per se - just really domineering, pushy, and a hypocrite.
* [[Poetic Serial Killer|Philosophical Serial Killer]]. It's a rather nihilistic philosophy though. Especially at the end.
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[[Category:The Renaissance Age of Animation]]
[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]
[[Category:German MediaFilms]]
[[Category:Horror Western Animation]]
[[Category:Felidae]]
[[Category:Western Animation]]
[[Category:Films Based on Novels]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Cult Classic]]