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  XXX Fritz the Cat XXX
(1972)
  Country   Date
USA - 25 January 1972 - (New York City, New York)
USA - 12 April 1972 - (Los Angeles, California)
Also Known As (AKA)
Fritz el gato - Argentina / Peru
  El gato caliente - Spain
Fritz - kova kolli - Finland
Fritz il gatto - Italy
  Fritz le chat - France
Fritz, o Gato - Portugal (imdb display title)
Fritz, o ponirogatos - Greece (transliterated ISO-LATIN-1 title)
Katten Fritz - Sweden
  O Gato Fritz – Brazil
  Full Resolution Preview
  Fritz The Cat Trailer.avi
File Size: 98 MB
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File Size: 98 MB
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In a New York City park, hippies have gathered with guitars to sing protest songs. Fritz and his buddies show up in an attempt to meet girls. When a trio of attractive females walk by, Fritz  and his friends exhaust themselves trying to get their attention, but  find that the girls are more interested in the crow standing a few feet  away. The girls attempt to flirt with the crow, making unintentionally  condescending remarks about black people, while Fritz looks on in annoyance. Suddenly, the crow rebukes the girls with a snide remark and walks away. Fritz  tries to pick up the girls by convincing them that he is a tormented  soul, and invites them to "seek the truth," bringing them up to his  friend's apartment, where a wild party is taking place. Since the other  rooms are crowded, Fritz drags the girls into  the bathroom and the four of them have group sex in the bathtub.  Meanwhile, the police (portrayed as pigs) arrive to raid the party. As  the two officers walk up the stairs, one of the partygoers finds Fritz and the girls in the bath tub. Several others jump in, pushing Fritz  to the side where he takes solace in marijuana. The two officers break  into the apartment, but find that it is empty because everyone has moved  into the bathroom. Fritz takes refuge in the  toilet when one of the pigs enters the bathroom and begins to beat up  the partygoers. As the pig becomes exhausted, a very intoxicated Fritz  jumps out, grabs the pig's gun, and shoots the toilet, causing the  water main to break and flooding everybody out of the apartment. The  pigs chase Fritz down the street into a synagogue. Fritz manages to escape when the congregation gets up to celebrate the United States' decision to send more weapons into Israel.
  Fritz  makes it back to his dormitory, where his roommates ignore him. He sets  all of his notes and books on fire. The fire spreads throughout the  dorm, finally setting the entire building ablaze. In a bar in Harlem, Fritz meets Duke the crow at a billiard table. After narrowly avoiding getting into a fight with the bartender, Duke invites Fritz to "bug out." When Duke steals a car, Fritz is eager to join the illegal activity. Following a wild ride, Fritz drives the car off a bridge. Before the car crashes into the water and rocks below, Duke saves Fritz's life. The two arrive at an apartment owned by Bertha, a crow and former prostitute turned drug dealer. When Fritz  arrives, she shoves several joints into his mouth. The marijuana  increases his libido, so he rushes off into an alley to have sex with  Bertha. While having sex, he comes to a supreme realization that he  "must tell the people about the revolution!" He runs off into the city  street and incites a riot, during which Duke is shot and killed, and Fritz is chased by several cops.
  Fritz  hides in an alley where his fox girlfriend, Winston Schwartz, finds  him. She drags him on a road trip to San Francisco. On the road, she  stops at a Howard Johnson's restaurant, and disenchants Fritz by her refusal to go to unusual places. When the car runs out of gas in the middle of the desert, Fritz decides to abandon her. Fritz  meets up with Blue, a heroin-addicted rabbit biker. Along with Blue's  horse girlfriend, Harriet, they take a ride to an underground hide-out  where several other revolutionaries tell Fritz  of their plan to blow up a power station. When Harriet tries to get Blue  to leave, he hits her several times and ties her down with a chain.  When Fritz objects to their treatment of her, he  is hit in the face with a candle by the group's leader, a lizard. The  group throws Harriet onto a bed and rapes her. In the next scene,  Harriet is sitting in a graveyard, naked and traumatized. Fritz puts a coat over her and gets into a car with the leader to drive out to the power plant. After setting the dynamite, Fritz suddenly has a change of heart. The lizard lights the fuse and drives off as Fritz tries to get the dynamite out of its tight spot and fails. The dynamite explodes, blowing up both the power plant and Fritz.  At a Los Angeles hospital, Harriet and the girls from the New York park  come to comfort him. It is in this scene that, as John Grant writes in  his book Masters of Animation, Fritz realizes  that he should "stick to his original hedonist philosophy and let the  rest of the world take care of itself." In the final moments of the  film, we see Fritz have sex with the girls from the park again.
  Review by BaronBl00d
That is how the 1960s were described by the narrator in the beginning of this film. Fritz  the Cat is a famous movie for a number of reasons, most stemming from  it being the first feature-length adult cartoon and having an "X"  rating. There were controversies surrounding its creation with director  Ralph Bakshi and character creator Robert Crumb. The film is like  nothing I have ever seen before. It has a unique animation process that  makes everything reek seediness, despair, and cry for social change.  Bakshi wrote the script which really is nothing more than the knife that  cuts through all the 60's BS - from existentialism to the drug culture  to the love generation to African-American perspectives to militancy.  Nothing is spared as the counterculture is laid bared and examined  through the eyes, ears, fears, and desires of Fritz the Cat. Along the way, Fritz  experiments with just about anything - including lots of sex, drugs,  and sex. While the film definitely is quite vulgar in many ways with  some of the most odious characterizations of otherwise cute and cuddly  animals and depicting lots of strong sexual situations(though in no way  deserving the "X" by today's standards), Fritz  the Cat is also an intelligent look at one character's drive to find  himself and meaning in his life - perhaps a symbol for the whole decade  the film is examining. The end result is nothing conclusive - also  perhaps a symbol. Bakshi's script is in some ways profound and  thought-provoking and in some ways infantile and vile - his obvious  dislike of police just one example. But what had my attention more than  anything else was the animation - particularly in exterior shots not  containing characters. There is one scene where the slums of Harlem are  integral to the story. Bakshi uses his camera to zoom in on quite an  impressive animated background shot of a field lost amongst the slums of  Harlem. It is the very essence of seedy existence in an uncaring world.  There are many other shots too that have that same power, but let's not  forget that even with the intelligent at times script and the  animation, much of Fritz the Cat is used solely  to arouse - either arouse some primal feelings or arouse offense. A  landmark film at any rate whether for good or for bad.
Directed by
Ralph Bakshi 
Writing credits
Ralph Bakshi (screenplay)
  Robert Crumb (characters)
Cast (in alphabetical order)
  Skip Hinnant - Fritz the Cat (voice)
Rosetta LeNoire - (voice)
John McCurry - (voice)
  Phil Seuling - (voice)
Ralph Bakshi - Pig cop #1 (voice) (uncredited)
Judy Engles - (uncredited) (voice)
  Charles Spidar - Bar Patron (voice) (uncredited)
Produced by
  Steve Krantz - producer
Original Music by
  Ed Bogas 
Ray Shanklin 
  Cinematography by
Ted C. Bemiller (as Ted Bemiller)
Gene Borghi 
Film Editing by
Renn Reynolds 
Production Management
Bob Revell - production manager
Art Department
John Alvin - poster artist
Sound Department
Gene Coleman - additional dialogue recordist (uncredited)
Special Effects by
Susan Jonas - special effects (as Susan Cary)
  Helen Jordan - special effects
Irene Sandberg - special effects
  Animation Department
Edwin Aardal - animator (as Edward Aardal)
Fred Abranz - assistant animator (as Alfred Abranz)
  Cosmo Anzilotti - animator
Cosmo Anzilotti - layout artist
Clifford Augustson - animator
  Ted Bonnicksen - animator (as Theodore Bonnicksen)
Ted Bonnicksen - second layout (as Theodore Bonnicksen)
Robert Brown - animation checker
  Ethlynn Dalton - animation checker
James Davis - animator
James Davis - layout artist (as Jim Davis)
  Dotti Foell - animation checker (as Dorothy Foell)
Jack Foster - assistant animator
John Gentilella - animator
  Milton Gray - animator
Milton Gray - assistant animator
Karen Haus - assistant animator
  Jack Kerns - assistant animator
Bob Kirk - assistant animator (as Robert Kirk)
Helen Komar - assistant animator
  Michael Lloyd - second background
Jim Logan - assistant animator (as James Logan)
Dick Lundy - animator (as Richard Lundy)
  Dick Lundy - second layout (as Richard Lundy)
Bob Maxfield - animator (as Robert Maxfield)
Norm McCabe - animator (as Norman McCabe)
  M. Frann McCracken - animation checker
Lew Ott - second layout (as Lewis Ott Jr.)
Manuel Perez - animator
  Larry Riley - animator (as Lawrence Riley)
Virgil Ross - animator
Rod Scribner - animator (as Roderick Scribner)
  John Sparey - animator
John Sparey - layout artist
Nick Tafuri - animator (as Nicholas Tafuri)
  Martin Taras - animator
Ira Turek - background designer
James Tyer - animator
  John Vita - background artist
Art Vitello - assistant animator (as Arthur Vitello)
John Walker - animator
  John Walker - second layout
Ray Young - assistant animator
Ellie Zika - color modeler
Music Department
Ed Bogas - musical director
Other crew
Marion Nobel - production assistant
  Nate Smith - traffic manager
Sound Track
# "Bo Diddley"
(1955)
  Written by Bo Diddley (as Ellas McDaniel)
Performed by Bo Diddley & Billy Boy Arnold
  # "Yesterdays"
(1952)
Written by Jerome Kern & Otto A. Harbach
  Performed by Billie Holiday, vocal
Joe Newman, trumpet
Paul Quinichette, tenor sax
  Oscar Peterson, piano/organ
Freddie Green, guitar
Ray Brown, bass
  Gus Johnson, drums
File Name : Fritz The Cat.avi
  File Size : 1.17 Gb.
[Movie]
  Valid : Yes [AVI]
Duration : 01:18:45
Movie complete : Yes
[Video]
Resolution : 656x368
  Codec : XviD MPEG-4 codec
FPS : 23.98
BitRate : 1938 Kbps
  Quality Factor : 0.34 b/px
[Audio]
  Codec : MPEG 1 or 2 Audio Layer 3 (MP3)
Number of channels : 2
Sample Rate : 48000 Hz
  BitRate : 192 Kbps
Split using 7 Zip
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Fritz The Cat.zip.001
File Size: 299 MB
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Fritz The Cat.zip.002
File Size: 299 MB
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Fritz The Cat.zip.003
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Fritz The Cat.zip.004
File Size: 297.9 MB
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File Size: 299 MB
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Fritz The Cat.zip.002
File Size: 299 MB
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Fritz The Cat.zip.003
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Fritz The Cat.zip.004
File Size: 297.9 MB
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Pando Link:
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