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Kitten with a Whip

  • 1964
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Ann-Margret, John Forsythe, and Peter Brown in Kitten with a Whip (1964)
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A rising political star faces scandal and blackmail when the young woman he tries to help turns out to be a juvenile delinquent.A rising political star faces scandal and blackmail when the young woman he tries to help turns out to be a juvenile delinquent.A rising political star faces scandal and blackmail when the young woman he tries to help turns out to be a juvenile delinquent.

  • Director
    • Douglas Heyes
  • Writers
    • Douglas Heyes
    • H. William Miller
  • Stars
    • Ann-Margret
    • John Forsythe
    • Peter Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Douglas Heyes
    • Writers
      • Douglas Heyes
      • H. William Miller
    • Stars
      • Ann-Margret
      • John Forsythe
      • Peter Brown
    • 37User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos45

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Ann-Margret
    Ann-Margret
    • Jody
    John Forsythe
    John Forsythe
    • David
    Peter Brown
    Peter Brown
    • Ron
    Patricia Barry
    Patricia Barry
    • Vera
    Richard Anderson
    Richard Anderson
    • Grant
    Skip Ward
    Skip Ward
    • Buck
    • (as James Ward)
    Diane Sayer
    Diane Sayer
    • Midge
    Ann Doran
    Ann Doran
    • Mavis
    Patrick Whyte
    Patrick Whyte
    • Varden
    Audrey Dalton
    Audrey Dalton
    • Virginia
    Leo Gordon
    Leo Gordon
    • Enders
    Patricia Tiara
    • Strip Tease Dancer
    Nora Marlowe
    Nora Marlowe
    • Matron
    Frances Robinson
    • Martha
    Maxine Stuart
    Maxine Stuart
    • Peggy
    Mildred von Hollen
    • Saleslady
    Jerry Dunphy
    Jerry Dunphy
    • Newscaster
    Doodles Weaver
    Doodles Weaver
    • Salty Sam
    • Director
      • Douglas Heyes
    • Writers
      • Douglas Heyes
      • H. William Miller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    5.21.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8FilmFlaneur

    Kitten whips up a great movie

    I really can't understand the low rating here for a movie I enjoyed thoroughly from end to end. The two leads work well together with John Forsythe, more familiar from soap work on TV in later years, reminding me at times of a cut-rate Henry Fonda. Sure, Ann-Margaret tears the scenery up some, but let's not forget her character is supposed to be emotionally unbalanced, and that she's a woman frequently playing for sympathy, then threat, often within a few moments of each other. I found it more of a misjudgment that, as David, Forsythe never really acted a man coming unstuck as events crowded in on him.

    No one I think has mentioned the music for this movie which is generally excellent, and which lifts, slightly rearranged, a couple of Mancini cues from Touch of Evil! They fit in quite effectively. Director Heyes, who largely worked within television does an excellent job with some interesting set ups (including the notable motel fight) while the cinematography, full of light and shade composition by the experienced Joseph Biroc, would have graced an A-production.

    Ultimately this is an excellent exploitation movie with no slack scenes and a compelling narrative, albeit with some dated 'hip' dialogue, principally from the later, intruding, trio. I'd recommend it to anyone who is looking for the real thing. My DVD file is excellent, crisp and clear.
    tostinati

    Way better than the hecklers say, plain and simple.

    Director Douglas Heyes oversaw 9 of the better Twilight Zone episodes, including the classic Eye of the Beholder, and one of the 2 or 3 best Boris Karloff Presents Thriller episodes (The Purple Room). Bringing this context to Kitten With A Whip, you realize you are in the hands of a master storyteller, and also, exactly what you are in for: a not-quite-fantasy but nonetheless feverishly nightmarish Twilight Zone episode.

    As with the best TZ episodes, you are asked what you would do if something on the scale between patently impossible to utterly insane happened to you. The setup is simple. A mentally unbalanced teenager sneaks into your house while you are away, threatens you with accusations of rape and the destruction of your political ambition (which appear about to reach fruition) to gain control once you return home, and effectively takes over your life. It is like a typical TZ scenario, a Twilight Zone-style turning a character's 'normal' life on its head, and letting the angst and desperate quest for an out flow from there.

    I see no big theme here, other than the noir theme of crazy fate putting its finger on you. That seems to be the entire point here. Separated from Serling's big theme plots that showed man against himself in the form of prejudice and fear, Heyes may seem a bit lost. But his directorial hand is sure as ever, and the story is as engrossingly told as that of any TZ episode. I suspect Heyes enjoyed taking TV's Bachelor Father and subverting the precepts of his bourgeois existence in the rudest, most thoroughly shaming way possible. Maybe, after all is said and done, it is through subversion that Heyes gets his chance to challenge the bourgeois status quo, as he did routinely while working with Serling. For many- and yes, possibly even the director- Kitten works as a jet black comedy.

    This film doesn't have a great reputation, though among its undeniable assets it boasts a fine performance from a man often unfairly given the Bob Cummings light comic actor brush-off by Hollywood. John Forsythe would appear In Cold Blood a couple of years later, another film light years away from the scrubbed sitcom milieu.

    8 stars. Give it a spin.
    6samhill5215

    Undeserved reputation

    Having just seen this film for the second time in some years I felt I needed to come to its defense in view of the poor ratings it has received on IMDb. Moreover I can't help but compare it to "Rebel Without a Cause" which I also recently saw again. Released nine years apart they both deal with the same subject, disaffected youth. They also both reflect their times. Whereas "Rebel" dances around young angst, "Kitten" is more honest about it, although nowhere near as raw as it would have been done today. In "Rebel" the kids are troubled but still seek comfort from their parents, in "Kitten" they're nihilistic, rebellious, disdainful of their parents' values. "Kitten" is edgy, mean, gritty. Its poverty-row production probably helped in that respect. The limited sets added to the sense of claustrophobia, the fear of exposing a dangerous secret in the open. And the references to the finality of the atom bomb add to the general sense of despair.

    I found the acting competent if not outstanding. All protagonists had their highs and lows and overall they acquitted themselves rather well, even John Forsythe who does tend to be one-dimensional. I even think that may have worked in his favor playing a conflicted middle-aged man whose estranged wife is away, suddenly being confronted with a sexually charged dynamo. It seems such a man would be on the introverted side. And his suspicious attitude hinted at something sinister. After all, if he had nothing to hide, wouldn't he have reached out for help? He had plenty of opportunities but wasted them all, to the very end, when Ann-Margret walks back to the car and takes away his car keys.

    One final note: Audrey Dalton had the most thankless part. She had not even one single line, no screen time at all. We only get to see her in a photo soon to be vandalized. And when Forsythe goes to buy size seven clothes for Ann-Margret we are told that Dalton's character would never fit in them. That's rather unkind because I think she's actually smaller than Ann-Margret. So to top it all off she has to suffer the indignity of being called fat, or at least big, and she doesn't get the chance to show us otherwise. Then again maybe that's just it, she doesn't have any screen time because the whole clothes scene wouldn't fit in.
    5Aaron1375

    A guy continually places his trust in an obviously insane girl.

    This film was rather funny...to watch a politician help a person then proceed to pay for it through the whole movie really makes one wonder what message this film was trying to send? Is it trying to say, one should never show kindness, because in return you will end up a hostage in your own home to political science majors and their friends with cars and anger management issues. Still, the film had some moments, mainly the unintentionally funny moments and you get to see a very attractive young Ann Margaret.

    The film is about a bland politician who ends up finding a very attractive girl in his daughter's bed. His wife and child are away at the time. The girl begs the man for help and he listens to her story and proceeds to buy the young lady and outfit, takes her to the bus stop and gives her some money to help her out. He later finds out that she has escaped from a juvenile facility and even stabbed one of the employees there. Well he returns home to find out that she has returned and he also finds out that she is kind of insane! She ends up making his life miserable, she invites friends that are a bit psycho themselves and he continually believes what she says and defends her at every turn.

    The film was featured on MST3K and it made for a very funny episode. It helps that this film was not all that bad, as it contained plenty of fodder for Mike and the bots. It was also kind of good in a way, which always makes for the more entertaining episodes. Listening to their riffs as the politician keeps getting deeper and deeper into trouble was funny, but at the same time you kept wondering how it was going to end as well. Could he possibly get out of this situation unscathed? So while it was not an award winning movie by an means, it was entertaining in its own way. And Ann Margaret was hot, hot, HOT...back then.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Behind the Eight Ball

    After stabbing the matron, the seventeen year-old delinquent Jody Dvorak (Ann-Margret) escapes from a juvenile detention facility. She breaks in an empty house and sleeps in a bed. Late night, the prominent politician and future senator David Stratton (John Forsythe) comes home after a business meeting with his friend Grant (Richard Anderson) and wife. In the morning, he sees Jody and she tells a dramatic story of her life to him. David decides to help the young woman and goes to the town to buy clothes for her. Then he drives her to the bus station and gives some money to her. He meets Grant in a restaurant and when David is going to tell what happened to him, he sees Jody in the television and gives up. When David returns home, he finds Jody there. He picks up the phone to call the police and Jody threatens to accuse him of rape. Then three delinquents – the smart Ron (Peter Brown); the violent Buck (Skip Ward); and Midge (Diane Sayer) - come to David's house and afraid of a scandal, he becomes hostage of the situation. When Buck and Ron have an argument, Buck accidentally hurts Ron with a razor blade and Midge flees in their car. Now the delinquents want David to drive them to Tijuana to escape from the police. What will David do?

    "Kitten with a Whip" is an anguishing film about a good and honest man that gets involved in a difficult situation that might destroy his career and personal life. Ann-Margret is a bipolar woman that controls the situation threatening the man with lies. The film is tense but David is too naive and has many chances to resolve the problem calling the police, especially after the arrival of Jody's friends. "Knock Knock" (2015) uses a similar storyline with a family man also "behind the eight ball". My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): Not Available on Blu-Ray or DVD.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Recycles portions of Henry Mancini's music from Touch of Evil (1958).
    • Goofs
      Between shots, as Jody stands at the stairs telling David her story, her hair changes position.
    • Quotes

      [David is in a clothing shop buying clothes for Jody]

      Saleslady: Why, David, I thought I'd never find you in ladies' underwear.

    • Connections
      Featured in Mystery Science Theater 3000: Kitten with a Whip (1994)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 15, 1965 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Das Mädchen mit der Peitsche
    • Filming locations
      • Universal City, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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