Review of Sexy Cat

Sexy Cat (1973)
6/10
Who dat sexy cat?
29 November 2007
Grahame, an alcoholic artist, gets his throat cut after hiring private detective Mike Cash to help him prove that Paul Carpas, creator of the wildly popular comic strip "Sexy Cat" ("the beautiful murderess!"), stole the original idea from him. The bodies pile up as Cash's quest for his client's killer leads him through the cut-throat worlds of modeling, publishing and television to a mysterious maniac mimicking the fatal feline.

This little-seen Spanish giallo is ahead of its time in concept but suffers from a low budget, lackadaisical direction, and a plot that plays out like a 70s TV detective show. Mike Cash (German Cobos), a Touch Connors' MANNIX lookalike, is a throwback to Philip Marlowe or Mike Hammer with his shady past, code of honor, and love/hate relationship with the law -in this case, one Lieutenant Cole. Models on the make, ambitious actresses, hungry wives, vengeful mistresses, and wealthy widows with names like Honey Lane and Gayle Crystal all offer their honor to the Mustang-driving Mike who always honors their offer but any "on her and off her" is on a juvenile level. Traditional giallo vernacular include black gloves, smoking & drinking, 70s fashions, a decent body count, a dodgy motive, and the obligatory stereotyped homosexual. The Carpas character looks like a play on Guido Crepax, the creator of the European adult comic "Valentina" (which was featured in the same year's BABA YAGA starring Carroll Baker) and the pop-culture killer, clad in black leotard, mask, heels, and waist-length blonde hair, stalks the set of its own TV pilot episode while the comic's sales go through the roof once the killings start. Death is doled out by Venetian knife, coral snake, iron cat-claw, spear-gun, industrial metal shearer, and even a bouquet of flowers but the cheap special effects, including a throat slashing and an eye gouging, make a poor substitution for spectacular set pieces. With a lot more time, effort, and nudity, SEXY CAT could have been reely memorable because it's not often the giallo, pulp fiction, and the graphic novel meet but this mediocre mix does provide some superficial fun in a comic-book kind of way.

The VHS I have is a bad print with bleeding colors and occasional garbled dialog; dubbed in English with Greek subtitles.
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