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The low, lurid plea­sures of Dario Argento’s The Cat O’ Nine Tails

08 Jan 2018

Words by Anton Bitel

Two men in suits shaking hands against a stone wall.
Two men in suits shaking hands against a stone wall.
The Ital­ian director’s 1971 gial­lo shows a vision­ary film artist still find­ing his feet.

The Cat o’ Nine Tails (Il Gat­to a Nove Code) is direc­tor Dario Argento’s sec­ond fea­ture, and the mid­dle film in his so-called Ani­mal Tril­o­gy’ (com­ing between 1970’s The Bird with the Crys­tal Plumage and 1971’s Four Flies on Grey Vel­vet). The whip metaphor of the title express­ly ref­er­ences the nine sep­a­rate leads that a pair of jour­nal­ists fol­lows in try­ing to iden­ti­fy a killer. And while there are no actu­al cats in the film, there is plen­ty of cat bur­glary, and a cli­mac­tic cat­fight across the tiles of a building’s rooftop.

Argen­to, too, is still find­ing his feet in The Cat o’ Nine Tails. He races with con­fi­dence through the more con­ven­tion­al who­dun­nit tropes of the gial­lo genre, pit­ting police and reporters against a ser­i­al mur­der­er whose iden­ti­ty is con­cealed behind POV shots and extreme close-ups of eyes. Yet at the same time the direc­tor ner­vous­ly avoids the genre’s out­er edges: the irra­tional nar­ra­tive exu­ber­ance, extreme styl­i­sa­tion, incur­sions of the pseu­do-sci­en­tif­ic and of the super­nat­ur­al which would all char­ac­terise his sub­se­quent work are here notable entire­ly for their absence. Even the mur­ders come with unchar­ac­ter­is­tic restraint, although the final death (of the killer) points the way to Argento’s more baroque impuls­es. So The Cat o’ Nine Tails is a fair­ly ordi­nary mur­der mys­tery, and report­ed­ly Argento’s per­son­al least favourite of his films, but that is not to say that it lacks all sen­su­al – and sen­sa­tion­al – pleasures.

On the con­trary, the film’s plot is full of ref­er­ences to the sens­es. It doesn’t smell very good down here,” com­plains jour­nal­ist Car­lo Gior­dani (James Fran­ci­cus) as he search­es a fam­i­ly crypt for a lock­et that con­tains a hid­den note. You won’t find it by smelling it,” replies Fran­co Arnò (Karl Malden), Look for it.” Though him­self blind, Fran­co Arnò (Karl Malden) proves more adept at over­hear­ing cru­cial evi­dence, feel­ing for clues and con­fronting a killer than many of his fel­low inves­ti­ga­tors, even if the Car­lo does most of the legwork.

Indeed, Fran­co needs Car­lo and young Lori (Cinzia De Car­o­lis) to be his eyes in a case which revolves around things unseen or over­looked – like that con­cealed note, or a fig­ure masked by the shad­ows of a car’s inte­ri­or, or a detail cropped from a pho­to, or his­to­ries hid­den away in files or safes. The film’s nine dis­parate leads will even­tu­al­ly be syn­the­sised, but on the way there are a lot of blind alleys, false trails and red her­rings, as much obscur­ing as reveal­ing the solu­tion in a man­ner that recalls the para­ble of the blind men and an ele­phant.

Mean­while, three activ­i­ties – Franco’s puz­zle-solv­ing (his blind­ness had him demot­ed from inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist to cross­word writer), the lock-pick­ing and safe-break­ing car­ried out by Carlo’s infor­mant Gigi (Ugo Fan­gareg­gi), and Carlo’s dis­in­ter­ring of a body in the crypt – all instan­ti­ate the very spir­it of gial­lo, a genre which turns crim­i­nal psy­chol­o­gy into an enig­ma which must be puz­zled out, cracked and brought to the surface.

The mur­ders here are all relat­ed to research being car­ried out in the Terzi Insti­tute (locat­ed across the road from Franco’s apart­ment), and more specif­i­cal­ly to research into whether a cer­tain chro­mo­so­mal abnor­mal­i­ty (XYY syn­drome) might sig­ni­fy a crim­i­nal ten­den­cy” in patients. Accord­ing­ly, The Cat o’ Nine Tails teems with sub­plots that play out the nature-ver­sus-nur­ture argu­ment. Franco’s blind­ness is express­ly the result of an acci­dent rather than a con­di­tion with which he was born, and he has quick­ly adapt­ed to it. The Institute’s founder Pro­fes­sor Ful­vio Terzi (Tino Car­raro) turns out to be the adop­tive rather than birth father of Anna (Cather­ine Spaak), although it is oth­er fac­tors which make their rela­tion­ship unnat­ur­al – where­as Fran­co offers a healthy mod­el of father­hood for lit­tle orphan Lori, even if she is in fact his niece.

Much play is also made of sev­er­al char­ac­ters’ (and no doubt some of the 70s audience’s) prej­u­dices against homo­sex­u­al­i­ty as being some­how suf­fi­cient­ly unnat­ur­al or deviant to arouse sus­pi­cions (ulti­mate­ly entire­ly mis­placed) of mur­der­ous intent. So the ques­tion of whether our moral make­up is influ­enced more by our envi­ron­ment or by our genet­ic inher­i­tance is as key to the film itself as to the research of Terzi’s geneti­cists. What moti­vates these mul­ti­ple mur­ders is the perpetrator’s des­per­a­tion to cov­er up a poten­tial­ly career-destroy­ing genet­ic pre-dis­po­si­tion to crim­i­nal­i­ty – and the result is an update of the Oedi­pal nar­ra­tive, as it remains unclear if this ser­i­al mur­der­er is dri­ven by a chro­mo­so­mal con­di­tion, or more para­dox­i­cal­ly by a desire to erase and escape that genet­ic legacy.

It is left for the view­er to piece togeth­er whether this is a case of a nat­ur­al born killer, or of one con­di­tioned by cir­cum­stance. The Cat o’ Nine Tails itself, though, is far more at peace with the inher­it­ed traits of the gial­lo gen®e, see­ing itself for exact­ly what it is and blind­ly accept­ing its low, lurid nature. The real muta­tions would come in Argento’s lat­er, more hybrid creations.

The Cat o’ Nine Tails is released by Arrow on Dual For­mat Blu-ray/D­VD (in a new 4K restora­tion from the orig­i­nal neg­a­tive) on 8 January.

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