Jane Fonda plays the title character, an aspiring school teacher who returns to visit her father only to find his ranch in disarray.
That’s largely because business interests in the nearby Wolf City, Wyoming, are trying to force him off that ranch.
And they’ve hired a fast gun, Tim Strawn (Lee Marvin), to help in those efforts.
Strawn has a metal plate where his nose should be because it was bitten off in a fight, but that makes him no less deadly.
Ranch hand Jackson Two-Bears has a simple solution for Cat — she should hire her own gunfighter to protect her dad.
Well, she winds up with three — two minor outlaws named Clay Boone (Michael Callan) and his uncle Jed, who often poses as a preacher. Plus the notorious Kid Shelleen (also Lee Marvin).
The hero in dime novels, Shelleen is more drunkard than kid these days. In fact, he’s at his best as a gunfighter when he’s drinking.
The trio can’t keep Cat’s dad from being gunned down by Strawn, but they prove able assistants when Cat decides to get revenge for that dastardly deed.
Her primary target: Sir Harry Percival, head of the Wolf City Development Co.
A wacky and genuinely funny comedy Western that resulted in a best actor Oscar for Lee Marvin thanks to his raucous performance as the drunken Kid Shelleen.
The Kid might wobble in his saddle, but he never falls off. He also leads a posse on one of the wildest horse chases ever filmed.
Jane Fonda is a delight as the feisty Cat, who gets one kiss from outlaw Clay Boone and forever seems torn about her feelings toward him. But she’s never confused about this: Her father’s death will be avenged, even if it lands her in a hangman’s noose.
Stubby Kaye and Nat “King” Cole help the story along with a catchy theme song, reappearing at several points during the film. Cole was actually sick with lung cancer at the time and died in February 1965 at age 45, four months before the film was released.
Directed by:
Elliot Silverstein
Cast:
Jane Fonda … Cat Ballou
Lee Marvin … Kid Shelleen
Lee Marvin … Tim Strawn
Michael Callan … Clay Boone
Dwayne Hickman … Jed
Tom Nardini … Jackson Two-Bears
John Marley … Frank Ballou
Reginald Denny … Sir Harry Percival
Jay C. Flippen … Sheriff Cardigan
Arthur Hunnicutt … Butch Cassidy
Bruce Cabot … Sheriff Maledon
Burt Mustin … Accuser
Paul Gilbert … Train Messenger
Nat “King” Cole … Shouter / Sunrise Kid
Stubby Kaye … Shouter / Sam the Shade
Runtime: 96 min.
Song: “The Ballad of Cat Ballou” by Stubby Kaye and Nat “King” Cole
Memorable lines:
Catherine Ballou, having been left in company of a preacher: “Mrs. Parker didn’t introduce us. I’m Catherine Ballou.”
The preacher, rocking forward: “I’m drunk as a skunk.”
Clay Boone, plotting to stay close to Cat: “Oh, I hate shotguns. Don’t you? They leave such an oozy corpse.”
Cat Ballou: “Is a square dance anything like a war dance?”
Jackson Two-Bears: “This one is.”
Cat Ballou: “You won’t make me cry. You’ll never make me cry.”
Cat Ballou, looking into her father’s casket: “Why is he smiling like that?”
The Undertaker: “Well that was hard, little lady.”
Cat: “My father never smiled like that in his whole life.”
Clay Boone: “(We) can’t hold up no train.”
Cat Ballou: “Why not?”
Clay: “Lots of reasons.”
Cat: “Name one.”
Clay: “We’re rustlers, not train robbers”
Cat: “Well, if people didn’t try something not, there wouldn’t be hardy any progress at all.”