Keanu (2016): Jordan Peele stars as Rell, a man who is despondent after he’s dumped by his girlfriend. When a kitten shows up on his front step, Rell takes the little guy in and his life is suddenly transformed. He’s enamored with the kitten, whom he names Keanu, can’t stop talking about him, and even begins photographing him in dioramas based on famous films.
But tragedy strikes when drug dealers ransack Rell’s home, mistaking it for the small-time drug dealer’s home next door, and take Keanu. Rell and his cousin, Clarence (Keegan Michael-Key) embark on a quest to get Keanu back no matter what it takes, even if it means posing as a pair of contract killers to infiltrate the criminal world where Keanu’s been taken. It’s every bit as absurd as you’d imagine — but it’s also very, very funny. “Actually, we’re in the market right now for a gangsta pet,” is not a line I’d expect to hear in a movie, but in Keanu it works.

Flow (2024): Even the hype of Golden Globe awards and Oscar nominations can’t take away from the powerful impression Flow makes. By now most of us are probably familiar with it through clips or trailers, but they don’t do justice to the beauty of director Gints Zilbalodis’ world, nor how naturally expressive his protagonist, Cat, is.
The animators put in an extraordinary amount of effort into understanding and perfectly replicating every feline behavioral quirk, every hackled coat and curiously bent tail. They accomplish the same with Cat’s companions, including a Labrador, a secretarybird, a lemur and a capybara. And while we’re dazzled by the visuals and energetic narrative, Zilbalodis poses a thematic question as the flood waters take the animals through the ruins of human civilization: without people, the world will go on. What would a world without humans look like? Cat and his companions tell us one story while the environment tells us another, and the result is greater than the sum of its parts.

Tiger: A Spy In The Jungle (2008): What makes this documentary so special is that it was filmed over three years in an Indian tiger preserve, and the filmmakers not only disguised cameras as rocks and tree stumps, they trained elephants how to carry “trunk cams,” achieving shots which no human cameraman could ever hope to get without spooking the subjects of the film.
Tigers don’t hunt elephants because they’re simply too big. Unlike lions, they’re not feeding a whole pride, and they don’t hunt cooperatively. It’s just not worth the effort required to take down the giant, majestic beasts. As a result, tigers and elephants not only tolerate each other, they mostly ignore each other’s presence.

That allowed the team to get unprecedented shots of an iron-willed tigress raising a litter of four cubs by herself. We see their dens, we watch the cubs play, and we witness the incredible prowess of the mother, who according to narrator David Attenborough has a remarkable 80 percent success rate while hunting. That’s pretty much unheard of.
With four young mouths to feed in addition to herself, the tigress is determined, and also supremely skilled. The whole jungle erupts in a cacophony of shrieks and alarm calls the instant a single animal gets a whiff of the tigress’ presence, but that still doesn’t stop her from achieving her goal.
Still, the odds are against all four cubs making it, with dangers like adult leopards, sickness and hunger. Through Spy In The Jungle, we get to see the entire journey, from the newborn cubs to the confident juveniles on the cusp of adulthood. There’s no better tiger documentary anywhere.

The Jungle Book (2016): With so many Disney cash-grabs in the form of live-action remakes of classics that did not need to be remade, it’s easy to dismiss The Jungle Book. The thing is, this movie has heart. Neel Sethi is an earnest Mowgli, Idris Elba voices the infamous tiger Shere Khan, and to balance out the felid villainy with some heroism, Sir Ben Kingsley voices Bagheera, the noble leopard who discovers baby Mowgli in the jungle and protects him as his wolf friends raise the boy. Lupita Nyong’o as the wolf matriarch Raksha, Bill Murray as the honey-obsessed bear Baloo and Christopher Walken as orangutan King Louie round out a great cast.

Keanu was hilarious! Still waiting to see Flow on my clients Netflix.
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It’s streaming on Max now
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Thanks. I meant cable tv that has Netflix, etc.
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AND it’s on Prime…
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Thanks for these recommendations, Big Buddy. I’m going to check these shows out, a little cat-centric entertainment will make a nice change from doom scrolling.
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Ah, doom scrolling is the worst. I hear you on that, I’m trying to stop doing it and to stay away from junk news and junk content, which is harder than it sounds.
Most of it is outrage bait, and I’ve found that consuming junk content negatively impacts my writing, as if it somehow seeps into my brain.
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Don’t forget A Street Cat Named Bob, Duma, and a favorite from my childhood: The Three Lives of Thomasina.
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I was gonna include A Street Cat Named Bob, but then I figured I’d probably do a post on the book and the movie. I liked the book more than the film, which changed some details, but they’re both very good. Haven’t seen Duma, but it looks very interesting, and I still haven’t checked out Kedi, the documentary about Turkish street cats. They’d both make good movies for a Part 2 of this post.
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Haven’t seen Kedi yet, either, but it’s in my Prime Watch List.
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Kedi was wonderful! I saw it in a theatre when it first came out. Along with the cats, it was a love letter to Istanbul and all the great people there who look after the cats. And after the movie I had a conversation with a young couple from Istanbul- who said that – yes – people really like and care for the street cats there.
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Hi Miraim: You might be interested in an interview I did with a woman from Istanbul who adopted a street cat and spoke about the cat culture in her city:
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I loved the Aristocats!
(shows my age!)
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Yeah I think Disney hides that one these days due to cultural sensitivity and all that. I haven’t seen it since I was a kid, definitely one I should rewatch.
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oh I never thought of that, for cultural issues…..
Yes It’s been years since I saw it, I remember the music best, will have to see it again.
Have a good day Les Buddies.
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It’s the same thing with the Siamese cats and their song in Lady and the Tramp, which were replaced with different cats in the remake. (Siam was the old name for Thailand kind of like Joseon was the old name for Korea.)
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Cultural issues? Been quite a few years. I better watch it. Just saw Flow. Sad. I have questions but doubt i will get answers from the movie. Cats owners. Abandoned him and home? With all those cat statues they must have loved him. Maybe. Deer going in circles. Knew what was coming? Maybe these are not important because at the end of the day it is about the planet becoming doomed.
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Cat and capybara – sounds purr-fect. I love watching tigers – they are so elegant
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I saw Flow – and it was magical! I was transported.
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I haven’t seen any of those movies yet, though I did read A Street Cat Named Bob. I’m hoping to get the hubs interested in Flow. We did see The Electrical Life of Louis Wain. His work apparently had enormous impact on public perceptions of cats. They’d been viewed as vermin control but he helped reveal their charms.
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I really liked The Electrical Life of Louis Wain. Benedict Cumberbatch is always great, and Peter was such a cute cat. Sad story though
I can’t say enough good things about Tiger: Spy In The Jungle.
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t just saw Flow. I
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