Cat People (1942) Queer Film B+

DIRECTOR: Jacques Tourneur

The finest achievement of producer Val Lewton’s legendary RKO horror cycle, Cat People (1942) occupies a foundational place in queer film history because it mobilizes horror not as spectacle but as a grammar of deviance, repression, and embodied otherness. The film’s central figure, Irena Dubrovna (Simone Simon), a Serbian fashion illustrator newly arrived in New York, meets and marries Oliver Reed (Kent Smith) and becomes legible as a queer subject through her refusal of heterosexual consummation. She refuses physical intimacy because she is convinced that she descends from an ancient tribe of “cat people” who metamorphose when aroused, jealous, or emotionally overwhelmed. This folkloric dread governs her inner life and becomes the central fracture in the marriage. Oliver—well‑meaning but obtuse—pushes her toward psychiatric treatment with Dr. Louis Judd (Tom Conway), whose interventions only deepen the film’s exquisite ambiguity: is Irena delusional, or is the curse real?

As Oliver grows closer to his coworker Alice Moore (Jane Randolph), Irena’s fear curdles into jealousy. Alice begins to sense a predatory presence stalking her, and torn fabric hints at an attack.

As in *The Seventh Victim and Billy Budd, screenwriter DeWitt Bodeen—himself a gay man—threads queer coding throughout the narrative. Nowhere is it more explicit than in the famous “sister” scene at Irena and Oliver’s wedding dinner. A striking, predatory woman (Elizabeth Russell, uncredited) approaches Irena, looks her over, and murmurs “Moja sestra” (“my sister”). The tone is unmistakably intimate, even flirtatious. It reads as queer recognition—one of the “cat people” identifying another. In that moment, Irena is symbolically “outed” in public, her difference exposed.

Jacques Tourneur’s direction, paired with Nicholas Musuraca’s masterful chiaroscuro cinematography, creates a cinema of suggestion, shadow‑soaked stalking sequences and the shimmering terror of the justly famous swimming‑pool scene: alone in a darkened pool, Alice hears Irena’s unseen presence circling her. The interplay of echo, shadow, and rippling light creates one of the most erotically charged moments in horror history—a female‑on‑female menace that feels both intimate and transgressive.

And then there is the iconic “Lewton Bus” jump scare. Named for the film’s producer, the film builds unbearable tension only to puncture it with a mundane intrusion—a city bus screeching into frame—establishing the template for the Hollywood jump scare.

Music by Roy Webb.

Be afraid. Be very afraid!

Remade, rather badly, by Paul Schrader in 1982 with Nastassja Kinski, Malcolm McDowell, John Heard and Annette O’Toole.

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*The Seventh Victim, despite a loyal cult following, is a pale imitation of Cat People with numerous queer coded characters, again, courtesy of queer screenwriter DeWitt Bodeen in a plot that oscillates between the baroque and the faintly ridiculous. With Tom Conway reprising his role as the psychiatrist Dr. Judd, the film marked the screen debut of actress Kim Hunter and the directorial debut of Mark Robson.

The film’s offscreen history is as haunted as its narrative. Actress Isabell Jewell died by suicide in 1972, while actress Jean Brooks and Conway both struggled with alcohol abuse disorder; their careers cut short, they both died young. The melancholy that clings to The Seventh Victim feels, in retrospect, almost prophetic.

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