Retro Reel: The Three Lives of Thomasina


Posted on Jul 31, 2008 By Julia Szabo

Disney, 1964, 97 minutes
 
Thomasina - the talking pet of the title - happens to be a cat, but that doesn't mean there isn't plenty for dog people to love about this underrated Disney classic.

Based on the book by Paul Gallico, who also authored The Poseidon Adventure, it dramatizes the unbreakable bond between a little Scots girl named Mary and her beloved marmalade tabby, who narrates the film (with the voice of actress Elspeth March).
 
When Mary McDhui's cat Thomasina goes missing and is found terribly ill, she implores her father, the cranky town veterinarian (played by Patrick McGoohan - yep, Danger Man [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danger_Man ] himself) to save her pet. He promises he will, but alas he's too busy performing emergency surgery on a blind man's German Shepherd, so he arranges for Thomasina, who's contracted Tetanus, to be euthanized without making any attempt to cure her.
 
This shocking development happens early on in the film, but fear not - this is a Disney movie, after all, so that's not the final ending. As the title promises, Thomasina gets to live out all three lives, thanks to the tender loving care of Lori MacGregor (a radiant Susan Hampshire), a beautiful but reclusive young woman feared by the neighborhood children as a witch. But there are some surprisingly modern, psychologically complex, and downright un-Disney-like scenes in which little Mary grieves for her lost cat (these are way too upsetting for very young kids), plus Thomasina's truly intriguing dream sequence, and if you're not impressed with these elements, then I'll eat my tam o'shanter.
 
Along the way, we see plenty of dog stars, including a mutt who's the beloved best friend of a kindly old lady, an overweight Pug  belonging to the town vicar, and an adorable puppy. And the movie offers, in easy-to-swallow, sugar-coated pill form, an excellent edu-tainment lesson in the humane treatment of creatures great and small, from bears to frogs - and why it's so very important to promote and defend it, no matter how young or old you may be.
 

Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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