Lucky and Zorba (Italian: La gabbianella e il gatto; "The Little Seagull and the Cat") is a 1998 Italian animated children's film directed by Enzo D'Alò, based on The Story of a Seagull and the Cat Who Taught Her to Fly (Spanish: Historia de una gaviota y del gato que le enseñó a volar) by Luis Sepúlveda.
She flies over the city until she falls on a woman's garden, right on top of her cat, Zorba.
The first one is that when she lays her egg he must not eat it, the second one is that he must take care of it until it hatches, and third is that he would teach the newborn how to fly.
Zorba promises despite his hesitations, then he goes to find his friends to try to help save Kengah with removing the oil.
Her belief soon disappears when Pallino, a red kitten jealous of Lucky because of all the attention and advantages she gets, tells her that she's a bird and that her adoptive father wants to eat her.
For this Zorba asks Bubulina's owner, a little girl named Nina, to take them to a very high tower where Lucky could jump from the top and, according to her instincts, be able to fly.
Despite that cats talking to humans in the same language is forbidden, Zorba tells Nina in her dreams.
The songs "So volare" and "Canto di Kengah" are sung by Spagna, "Non sono un gatto" by Leda Battisti, "Siamo gatti" by Samuele Bersani, "Duro lavoro" and "Noi siamo topi" by Gaetano Curreri and Antonio Albanese.