8/10
Cat got your tongue, and everything else!
2 November 2019
This short features an older man who tells a young silent man all about the frightening local legend of a strange hungry beast that seeks to make itself more human piece by piece, and which is said to have only one last organ to add to make itself complete, and as it turns out the old man should have been more careful of the company he kept... I never really appreciated this early short by Robert Morgan before, it's not a hugely mindblowing sick fleshy animation like his grotesque masterpiece Bobby Yeah is, but watching it now I really love the folklorish, dark fantasy quality that it has, it's very rustic and oldie world looking and it has a wonderful lyrical vibe that gives it the feel of a grim visual poem that perfectly sets itself up and ominously closes in a short but satisfying amount of time. The animation and the live action parts really go together great to me, the animation highlights the more fantastical elements and gives it a viscerally mystical feel. And oh my what a truly bizarre creation, it reminds me a little of the monster from Jeepers Creepers, but I kind of liked this one better! The cat as it first appears looks like a bizarre chimera of cat and man, kind of cute and harmless as it licks its human fingers, but then you see it devour a child and growl and it morphs into something much more monstrous and predatory, when it has the boy's face it looks positively grotesque and nightmarish, very unsettling and unnatural, you wouldn't want to pet it, and you'd never want it anywhere near your lap! And at the end when it looks completely human and unexpectedly rips the tongue right out of the unsuspecting man's mouth and stretches its own mouth to inhuman proportions in order to eat its poor victim alive and then sings in his voice, it's really spooky and weird! Is the hungry cat-thing finally done now that it's a whole stolen person at last or will it never stop eating up the unwary in its human guise? Grim ghastly fun and magnificently put together, this pleasantly creepy fable is one of Robert Morgan's best and really shows that he had his own particular brand of whacked out animation magic from the start! "With an artful of cheer..."
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