Country: USA
IMDB: 5.6
Producer: Shinsuke Terasawa
Cast: Stephanie Beatriz, Jonathan Banks, Lauren Cohan, Elizabeth Gillies, Kelly Hu, Keith David, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Jonathan Frakes, Jacqueline Obradors, Steve Blum, Zehra Fazal, Ron Yuan, Andrew Kishino, Eric Lopez.
Follows Catwoman in an attempt to steal a priceless jewel. This puts her squarely in the crosshairs of both a powerful consortium of villains, Interpol and Batwoman.
Catwoman: Hunted 4K ReviewGoing into this, I wondered what a stand-alone Catwoman movie would look like and here u have Catwoman: Hunted.
It took a while personally, to recognise the animation style for this cartoon. It didn't look good at first where the characters' anatomy were not seamless but it got better and after seeing that it's anime, it became more appreciable. It seemed to work well for the action scenes but a huge problem with that is the way the manoeuvres were handled. All laws of physics were broken, taking suspension of belief to a new level.
The voice acting is not among the best we have seen but it's one you can get by with. That being said, what killed the dialogue was the cringe worthy humour. At first, one would think that the light tone and humour meant that it was targeted at kids or very young teens. The first quarter also seemed to deliberate dodge any gory displays as well. But as the movie progressed the directors seemed to forget their layout altogether and just deliver one gruesome shot after another. Back to the dialogue and banter, I couldn't believe what I was hearing but as it went on, I found myself laughing at the movie's ridiculous attempt at any form of humour. Whenever the actress voicing Catwoman/Selina Kyle was delivering her lines, the sentences seemed to drag as if to patronize the viewer. Cheesy one liners were thrown back and forth and yet, some phrases still managed to be in-audible.
It's a movie with quite a simple plot, lots of female characters and a welcome agenda against human trafficking, "young girls" as expressly stated by Catwoman at a point.
Still it doesn't know who it's meant to be aimed at.