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    • Between 11 August and 28 September 1980

      • It was shot on location in the villages of West Wycombe, Chalfont St Giles and Hambleden, Buckinghamshire, and at film studios in Rome. Filming took place between 11 August and 28 September 1980.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Black_Cat_(1981_film)
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  2. The Black Cat is a 1934 American pre-Code horror film directed by Edgar G. Ulmer and starring Boris Karloff and Béla Lugosi. It was Universal Pictures' biggest box office hit of the year, and was the first of eight films (six of which were produced by Universal) to feature both Karloff and Lugosi.

  3. The Black Cat (1934) is a classic, enigmatically disturbing horror film from Universal Studios in the 1930s. It became Universal's top-grossing film of the year.

  4. The Black Cat: Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer. With Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, David Manners, Julie Bishop. American honeymooners in Hungary become trapped in the home of a Satan-worshipping priest when the bride is taken there for medical help following a road accident.

    • (13K)
    • Crime, Horror, Romance
    • Edgar G. Ulmer
    • 1934-05-07
  5. Aug 3, 2014 · Some eighty years afterwards in 2014 The Black Cat warrants revisiting as one of the most unique and revered horror films ever made. The Black Cat is German expressionist in character, perverse and morbid, portraying the post World War I gothic mind of Europe.

    • Ronald Duke Saltinski
    • 2014
  6. May 3, 2013 · The Black Cat isn’t a spectacularly scary picture, nor is it particularly tense. But the feeling of the film is the damnedest thing; it hardly makes a lick of sense. It survives on dream logic and the whims of haunting moods that hang over it.

  7. The Black Cat is a 1941 American comedy horror and mystery film directed by Albert S. Rogell and starring Basil Rathbone. The film was a stylistic hybrid, inspired by comedy "Old Dark House" films of the era as well as the 1843 short story "The Black Cat" by Edgar Allan Poe .

  8. By teaming the newborn horror genre's darkest stars -- Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff -- in their first film together, and splashing the name Edgar Allan Poe above the title, The Black Cat was as close as a Depression-era studio could come to a sure thing.