Fifties Horror Classic Mutates Anew by Steven X. Rea NASTASSIA KINSKI doesn’t like whai she’s been reading about herself lately, particu larly the business that began after Tess re garding her "un canny,” "eerie" and remarkable” resem blance to the young Ingrid Bergman "I really don't look like her at all," in sists the 21 -year-old Berim-bom actress about the sad-eyed screen star of Ca uManca. Spellbound and Notorious Still, as she ambles idly through the cold, stoney, Gothic set of a 1901 New. Orleans zoo on Stage 27 at Universal Studios, kicking the toe of one penny loafer against the heel of her other, dressed in a simple skirt-and-sweater combo, her hair cropped short and straight, die similarities arc hard to ig nore Amidst the zoo's ominous dreamscape of bas-relief animal scenes, giant statues of perched panth ers and urine-stained cages with real live babboons and cats nervously pac ing within, Nastassia Kinski exudes something of the same quiet, innocent sexuality tftat became such a box office boon for the Swedish actress in the Forties (but which Nastassia uses to minimal advantage in One from the Heart) And it's that look of innocent sex uality — whether it recalls Ingrid Bergman or not — that is what Nastas sia Kinski's character in Cat People is all about. Directed by Paul Schrader ed a rich, il lusory vision that resonates like some come-to-life Symbolist painting. “It’s far more non-verbal than any thing I’ve done before,” says Schrader. “It is not realistic, it is not street- ~ oriented. It finds its truth in sexual fable and myth and fantasy. It’s more magical, more stylized. The narrative is defined within a kind of dream logic.” Scarfiotti, who designed the spec tacular vine-tangled Victorian zoo and who, according to Schrader, practically authored the op>ening desert scene and Nastassia Kinski’s dream sequence, was in fact essential to Schrader’s character concept. “He was in my con tract. When 1 agreed to do the movie I put in a clause saying that if they' didn ’t have him I didn’t have to do the movie. “I don’t know what film buffs are going to make of this movie,” muses Schrader as he puts on a blue blazer and heads back to the soundstage. "It’s going to be very hard for them to make comparisons because there are different characters, different settings, different scenes, a different plot. But the title’s the same,” he laughs. “All of which is fine by me, since I never had any intention of remaking the original anyway.” Probably because he is one himself, Schrader seems esp>ecialfy concerned with "film buffs" and critics and their various reactions to his efforts. At Uni versal's Alfred Hitchcock theater, where Schrader was overseeing the dubbing of some last minute scenes, prints of some new matte effects for the desert prologue were screened. Joked Schrader, as he studied the exo tic panorama on screen: “Now I have to think of some horrible story for the press. How it took us two long, terri- *r ble weeks in Morocco to get this se quence. How the Assistant Director was kidnapped and we were trapped in the mountains by a band of guerilla soldiers.” Whatever the press and the public’s reaction to Cat People, Schrader is proud of his $13 million erotic fantasy. T've used this opportunity to heighten, to improve my ability to tell stories visually rather than literarily. And I **■ think I’ve got a winning hand." Nastassia Kinski and Malcolm McDcnvell (left) as brother and sister — with more than the usual sibling ties