Black cat (disambiguation)

A black cat is a cat with black fur.

Black Cat(s) or The Black Cat(s) may also refer to:

Films

 * Black Cat Films, a series of short films made starting in 1916 by Essanay Studios
 * The Black Cat (1934 film), an American horror film starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff
 * The Black Cat (1941 film), an American comedy/horror film starring Basil Rathbone and Bela Lugosi
 * Black Cat, a 1959 Indian Hindi-language film starring Balraj Sahni
 * The Black Cat (1981 film) (Gatto nero), an Italian film by Lucio Fulci
 * The Black Cat or Il gatto nero, a 1989 Italian film starring Urbano Barberini
 * Black Cat (1991 film), a Hong Kong film starring Jade Leung and Simon Yam
 * The Black Cat, a 1995 UK horror film by Rob Green
 * Black Cat (2007 film), an Indian Malayalam-language film by Vinayan
 * "The Black Cat", a segment of the 1962 AIP anthology horror film Tales of Terror
 * "The Black Cat", a segment of the 1990 Italian anthology horror film Two Evil Eyes, directed by Dario Argento

Television

 * "The Black Cat" (Masters of Horror), an episode of Masters of Horror
 * "The Cat"/"The Black Cat", a two-episode story arc of the 1994 animated series Spider-Man

Groups

 * Black Cats (band), a US-based Persian pop band

Albums

 * The Black Cat!, a 1970 album by Gene Ammons
 * Kara Kedi (English: Black Cat), a 2010 album by Serdar Ortaç
 * Black Cat (Never Shout Never album), 2015
 * Black Cat (Zucchero album), 2016

Songs

 * "Black Cat" (song), a 1989 song by Janet Jackson
 * "Black Cat", a song by Broadcast from Tender Buttons
 * "Black Cat", a song by Cacophony from Go Off!
 * "Black Cat", a song by Gentle Giant from Acquiring the Taste
 * "Black Cat", a song by Ladytron from Velocifero
 * "Black Cat", a song by the Living End from State of Emergency
 * "Black Cat", a song by Mayday Parade from A Lesson in Romantics
 * "Black Cat", a song by Turbo
 * "Black Cat", a song by Ziggy Marley from Love Is My Religion

In print

 * "The Black Cat" (short story), by Edgar Allan Poe
 * Black Cat (manga), a Japanese manga series later adapted into an anime
 * Black Cat pirates, a group of characters in One Piece media
 * Black Cat (Harvey Comics), a comic book character published from 1941 to 1951
 * Black Cat (Marvel Comics), a comic book character first published in 1979
 * The Black Cat (Canadian magazine), a 1970 Canadian fantasy magazine
 * The Black Cat (US magazine), a late 19th- and early 20th-century American literary magazine
 * Black Cat, a 2004 novel by V. C. Andrews
 * The Black Cat, a 2010 novel by Martha Grimes

Business

 * Black Cat (Washington, D.C., nightclub)
 * Black Cat Bar, a bar in San Francisco, California
 * Black Cat Tavern, a bar in Los Angeles, California and site of one of the first demonstrations in the United States protesting police brutality against LGBT people
 * Ora Black Cat, a Chinese battery electric city car
 * Black Cat, an imprint of the publisher Grove Press
 * Black Cat, a brand of cigarettes made by the Carreras Tobacco Company

Military

 * Consolidated PBY Catalina, an American flying boat nicknamed Black Cat when painted black during World War II
 * Black Cat (aircraft), an American B-24 heavy bomber, last American bomber shot down over Germany in World War II
 * Black Cats (Royal Navy), the Royal Navy's helicopter display team
 * Black Cat Squadron, a squadron of the Republic of China Air Force
 * 13th Armored Division (United States) or The Black Cats, a division of the U.S. Army in World War II

Other uses

 * Sunderland A.F.C. or The Black Cats, an English football club
 * National Security Guard or Black Cats, a counter-terrorism force in India
 * Black Cat group, a counter-insurgency militant group in Sri Lanka 1989-1993
 * BlackCat (cyber gang), a ransomware hacker group
 * 13 Black Cats, also known as the Black Cats, a 1920s professional stunt flying group
 * Black Cat (wrestler) or Victor Manuel, professional wrestler
 * Black Cat Roundabout, a road intersection in the United Kingdom
 * Black cat, an anarcho-syndicalist symbol
 * Black cat analogy, an analogy accounting for various disciplines, such as philosophy or theology