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File:Magic Cat2 7938.jpg

Throughout history, cats have gone paw-in-paw with the supernatural. In Ancient Egypt they were considered to be sacred to the goddess of the moon, Bast; in medieval Europe they were tied to witchcraft; in Japan and Russia they are heralds of good luck; in the Muslim world, they are regarded as Born Lucky, benevolent djinni, while in other places they are harbingers of misfortune. In Western culture, cats are purported to have nine lives, and black cats in particular carry associations with witchcraft and both bad and good luck.

Unsurprisingly, when people write about cats in works with magic, cats tend to have magic too.

Because All Witches Have Cats, cats are almost certain to make an appearance in a work with witches, and more often than not, these felines will possess unusual abilities. Even in media without witchcraft, cats alone will sometimes be able to perform supernatural feats while other animals will be extremely mundane. If any one animal has the ability to be understood by humans or to use human speech fluently, chances are that it's a cat. A person will often choose the form of a cat when using magic to disguise him or herself as an animal. Similarly, using transformation as a form of punishment often results in a feline transformation. Sometimes their magic might appear in a Follow the White Rabbit form.

Usually a magical cat will be intelligent, but even non-sapient cats can have magical powers. Wittingly or not, cats may even be using their abilities to keep The Masquerade. Despite all this, cats are not often Bond Creatures, except maybe to witches in fluffiest of works. This is perhaps due to their reputations of being aloof and independent. This trope may mean a cat is an Evil Sorceror if used in a story where Cats Are Mean.

See also Cats Are Superior, Cats Have Nine Lives, Maneki Neko and Familiar.

Examples of Cats Are Magic include:


Anime & Manga[]

  • The Cat Returns is this in spades.
  • Yoruichi from Bleach often opts to wear the guise of a black cat.
  • Haruhi Suzumiya has Shamisen, the calico cat. He (male calico cats being extremely rare) originally started as an ordinary cat, but was briefly given the ability of speech. This was because Haruhi believes witches need magical cats, and this belief altered reality and made Shamisen magical. She never finds out that Shamisen could talk, but was originally a little disappointed that he wasn't a black cat.
  • In Sailor Moon, the characters find out they are Sailor Soldiers/Senshi/Scouts with magic powers because two talking cats with crescent moons on their foreheads, Artemis and Luna, appear to inform them and guide them as they try to save the world. They can even make magical items appear by doing backflips.
  • Kuroneko-Sama from the anime Trigun, the black cat randomly appears across the desert planet Gunsmoke where our hero's show up. Fan Wank is that Kuroneko-Sama is God.
  • Blair from Soul Eater is a cat with witch-level magical powers and the ability to transform into a busty human woman.
    • It doesn't help Soul or Maka that Blair's human form happens to have the iconic pointy hat and flowing robe (though Blair's robe is only flowy in the sleeves. The rest resembles are very short miniskirt with tank-top.)
  • Happy, Charle, Pantherlily, and all the Exceed from Fairy Tail apply.
  • Gatomon from Digimon Adventure possessed the attack "cats eye hypnotism" and she was rather mystic in nature
  • Team Rocket's Meowth is one of the only Pokémon who can use human speech.
  • In the manga Leviathan, cats are mentioned in passing to be able to see spirits.
  • The cats in Aria, especially the Mars variety. And then there's Cait Sith.
  • The cats in Windy Tales seem to have a natural talent for manipulating wind.


Comic Books[]


Films[]

  • Hocus Pocus: Binx, a teenager who was transformed into a black cat by a trio of vengeful witches. He has the ability to speak, and he is effectively immortal. No, he doesn't have nine lives, he just can't die.
  • At one point in The Mummy 1999, a normal cat is able to ward off Imhotep because "cats are the guardians of the underworld". This is exploited only the once, because Imhotep completes his regeneration soon after and becomes immune to whatever the cat would supposedly have done to him.
  • Similar to that, Constantine had John use a cat to enter the underworld, because they're "in-between".
  • The cats from Catwoman, the movie. They resurrected the dead Catwoman and gave her cat-like abilities.
  • The three stories in Cat's Eye are tied together by a wandering street cat who is on a journey to save a little girl from a troll-like creature, after he received a psychic signal of some sort.
  • The film Coraline has a cat that can move between the real world and the Other Mother's world. At the end of the movie, he is shown vanishing into thin air.
  • The Last Unicorn has a talking cat that gives Molly the hint they need to save Amalthea and the unicorns. It was also the only creature that could see through the spell Schmendrick put on the unicorn. Bonus points for being the only cat on this list with an Eyepatch of Power.


Literature[]

  • Tamora Pierce's The Song of the Lioness series features a mysterious black cat (Faithful) who makes an appearance in the Beka Cooper Trilogy as Pounce, the cat constellation who has come to Beka for undivulged reasons.
  • Un Lun Dun, by China Mieville, subverts this by making cats the most stupid and least magical of all animals. Dogs, foxes, various birds, and even fish are shown to be sapient and able to cross the boundaries between worlds, but cats are too concerned with looking cool to learn anything of value.
  • A black cat in Neil Gaiman's Coraline can talk in the Other Mother's universe, and acts as a sort of Mentor towards the heroine.
  • Neil Gaiman's short story The Price is about an otherwise ordinary black cat who, on a daily basis, protects the narrator's home from a demonic entity. The black cat gets more and more beat up with every fight, and when he fails to fight the demon, the narrator's household is afflicted by numerous misfortunes. Yeah. Gaiman has a thing for black cats.
  • In Lloyd Alexander's, Time Cat, all cats have the ability to travel to any place they choose, in any point of time they choose. This is said to be the reason why they can vanish mysteriously in small rooms.
  • Discworld's Death is very fond of cats and gives them all nine lives. That said, the only cat who is really magical is Maurice, from The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents. He gained sapience and speech by eating a rat who had, in turn, also eaten some magical garbage.
  • Cats in The Bartimaeus Trilogy are the only animal naturally able to see more than one plane.
  • Nakata from Kafka on the Shore has the ability to talk to cats. Siamese cats are said to be very easy to communicate with.
    • Jonnie Walker, another character from the same book, kills cats and uses their souls to make a magic flute.
  • Cats in the Young Wizards universe are the only Earth species which can naturally see the string structures out of which wizardly Cool Gates are made, so the maintenance teams for Cool Gate clusters are all made of cat wizards. Also, even non-wizard cats can sometimes spontaneously walk through walls.
  • In the Polish short story "Because the cat" a company designs computer systems that allow children to learn at a fantastic rate, creating associations after a single exposure to a given situation. Unfortunately, it goes bankrupt as several of the devices break down - the system responsible for recognising just what is the right association suffers a self-inflicted Logic Bomb, as it tries to make sense of the reality around it. One of the children was damaged more than others - the boy has a pet cat and the faulty system has built his entire logic around the animal, attributing all that is happening to its behaviour. The characters consider the child a hopeless case and consider euthanizing him - until he gets bored and uses the cat to Reality Warp himself out of the hospital.
  • In Diana Wynne Jones Dark Lord of Derkholm, Dirk's cats, which he bred to be invisible, are also inexplicably unable to be trapped for long, they always find their way out, even from magical barriers.
  • In Robert Heinlein's The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, a kitten appears in places it should be impossible to do so, apparently because it can shrug off the laws of physics.
  • The cat from Stephen King's film "Cat's Eye" definitely applies here
  • In Garth Nix's Old Kingdom Trilogy, there is Mogget, the sarcastic, fish-demanding, white feline servant of the Abhorsens who is actually Yrael, one of the Nine Bright Shiners, and a free magic creature, bound by a ring. Kerrigor, a powerful necromancer, is bound along with Mogget by the same ring and becomes a sleeping black cat.
  • Enchanted Forest Chronicles - Morwen's cats
  • In H.P. Lovecraft canon, specifically The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, the cats of the Dreamlands cats can travel to the Moon on their own power and have a secret language. They worship Bast and aid the hero in his quest. The only thing the Earth-cats fear are the cats from Saturn, who are even more powerful than they, but are in league with the Eldritch Abominations.
  • The Cheshire cat.
  • Pretty much all the cats in the Chrestomanci books. Diana Wynne Jones likes this trope.
  • The book Never Steal A Magic Cat.
  • Also in Patricia A. McKillip's The Forgotten Beasts Of Eld, Sybel has a magical menagerie which includes the huge black cat Moriah, who is legendary for her knowledge of spells and secret charms.
  • Robert Aspin lampshaded this in one of the Myth Adventures books: "Cats and computers can work through dimensions."
  • Subverted in Mercedes Lackey's Diana Tregarde story "Arcanum 101." When Di is observing the house of someone she believes may be involved in black magic, she sees a cat wander past the house with no reaction... and thinks to herself that this doesn't mean anything because, superstitions notwithstanding, cats are too self-absorbed to notice magic that isn't affecting them directly.
  • Mrs. Norris of Harry Potter.
    • And Crookshanks, but he is half-magical creature.
  • The Ghatti's Tale books feature cats with psychic powers who bond with humans. Humans partnered with cats act as arbiters because of the felines' ability to "mindwalk." The Ghatti, however, are noted as being natives of their planet and distinct from "normal" Earth-origin cats despite sharing many similarities.
  • Warrior Cats. When cats die, they go to StarClan, where they can enter living cats' dreams, influence real-world events by creating omens, and even enter the physical world from time to time.
  • In the aptly named "Ghost Story", Harry Dresden's cat Mister proves able not only to see ghosts, but to physically shoulder-check them and be stopped midair by it. It's explained all cats are able to see ghosts they just don't find it interesting usually.
  • In H.P. Lovecraft's Short Story "The Cats of Ulthar", a Gypsy Curse causes pet cats to team up and exact vengeance on an old couple that killed a kitten for fun.
  • The cat in The Last Unicorn knew exactly what was going on. It could have saved everyone a lot of time by telling Molly how to save the unicorns without incorporating a riddle, but "no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer."
  • In another Peter S. Beagle example, Mister Cat from Tamsin is the one to find the ghosts in the first place, and leads Jenny to them.
  • In the Toby Daye series all cats are loyal to the local King of Cats, aware of magic, and much smarter than they let on. And this is the ordinary non-magical cats. There are also the Cait Sith, who are cat fae and outside the normal fae laws for being cats.
  • In Saki's short story "Tobermory", Tobermory magically becomes able to talk, and horrifies a group of party guests by tattling on all the sins that he's been spying on over the years.
  • Robert Westall's fiction was often built on this trope. The Cats of Seroster is all about magical cats and short stories, The Creatures In The House and Fred, Alice and Aunty Lou involve cats having powers to perceive things beyond what humans can.
  • In Andrzej Sapkowski's The Witcher novels cats are mentioned to be the only species of animal apart from dragons to actively seek out magical Intersections which radiate Power, and rest in them, although no-one knows what they do with the Power they gather by doing so.


Live-Action TV[]

  • Salem, from Sabrina the Teenage Witch. He was originally a warlock, but was transformed into a cat as punishment for trying to take over the world.
  • In an episode of Charmed a witch's Familiar turned on her and became a Warlock. Sorta the reverse of what happened on Sabrina with Salem.
    • Of course, the sisters have their own feline familiar. She became a human as a reward for her service to the forces of good.


Myth and Legend[]

  • Ancient Egyptians worshiped the goddess Bast, who was cat-headed and held cats to be sacred. At some points in ancient Egypt, harming cats carried the death penalty.
  • In Japan cats are said to give good fortune, which is why you see welcome/lucky/beckoning cats (white ceramic cats with a gold coin and one raised paw) in some establishments. The lower paw (which is often holding a coin) is to protect money, and the raised paw draws money in.
  • A black cat crossing your path is said to be bad luck in most of continental Western Europe
  • On the British Isles Black Cats have better press for some reason and are usually associated with good luck
    • A woman with a cat, especially a black one, will have more suitors.
    • In Scotland, the arrival of a strange black cat to a house is supposed to signal good fortune for everyone in the household.
  • The urban legend that shelters won't allow black cats to be adopted around Halloween in case they're killed and torture ritualistically (the former is true, the later is unsubstantiated).
  • Ship's cats (especially black ones) were said to be lucky by sailors, although pirates often believed that a ship which had a black cat walk on then off was doomed to sink. The ascribed good luck, at least, is probably more attributable to the fact that ships traditionally have rat problems than any magic, however.
  • Many modern Pagans, including Wiccans, hold cats in high esteem. In Wiccan rituals, it is believed a cat can walk through a magic circle without breaking it, since cats can walk through spiritual/magical borders. Another animal, like say a dog, would break the circle and thus dispel any magic.
  • Cats are believed in some cultures and traditions to be able to see spirits and ghosts. One legend has a kitty managing to trick the Devil out of obtaining the soul of the baby he's watching over.


Tabletop Games[]

  • Call of Cthulhu, which draws from Lovecraft canon.
    • Bast is an Elder God and the basis for the Egyptian pantheon's version.
    • Dreamlands supplement. In the Dreamlands, cats can travel to the Moon on their own power and have a secret language. They worship Bast.


Theater[]

  • Aside from from the entire world being implied to exist in some in-between realm, Mistoffelees from Cats, who uses his magical powers to save Old Deuteronomy from Macavity. There are also a few other cats who are hinted to have magical powers, such as Macavity himself, and Coricopat and Tantomile.


Video Games[]

  • The cats of Echo Bazaar can talk and know many secrets. Then there's the mysterious Starveling Cat, which is mostly referenced in cautionary rhymes and seems to be a sort of bogeyman (bogeycat?).
  • Grimalkins in Grim Grimoire, cat familiar units that act as the Squishy Wizard in your army.
  • No Delivery: The player character will find an Obese Cat. Killing the Obese Cat will allow them to take its Soul, which is used on an Animatronic, along with lots of other items, to revive the Kid. The secret prequel We Deliver reveals that the Manager (then the Employee) had killed an Obese Cat and put its Soul into an animatronic, which is how the pizzeria came to be what it is now. It certainly explains why she told the Kid at the end of One Night at the Steeze not to kill any cats.
  • Dragon Quest games have the Meowgician class of enemies.
  • Felineko of Solatorobo are stated to have a gift with magic, possessing both interest and talent.

Webcomics[]

  • Spark from Dominic Deegan is a cat who can talk, which causes some people to believe that he's possessed.
  • Rose, who is arguably the most magical of the four kids in Homestuck, prototyped her dead cat Jasper to her kernelsprite, and also made a genetic sequence using the letters MEOW (instead of the typical GCAT) which can be spliced with other DNA to create godlike entities.
    • After the universe is rebooted, we meet an actual GCat, likely made with a BARK sequence. The G, of course, stands for God, since, as a First Guardian, GodCat is pretty much omnipotent.
  • Errant Story has the flying black cat, Ellis. He's extremely resilient to offensive magic and can also talk... which is not necessarily a good thing.
  • Poe from Neko the Kitty Comics can speak English, levitate, and has minor telekinetic powers. Explained in this strip: Poe was accidentally sucked into an ethereal conduit when the witch Julia was attempting to summon a lesser demons. Demons are unable to possess cats, so when they manifested together in the summoning circle the demon died, leaving Poe with his magical abilities.


Web Originals[]

  • Basement Cat, and Ceiling Cat!
    • To elaborate: LOLcats, over the years, have accrued a small mythology. Ceiling Cat, based off a picture of a cat that was stuck in between the walls of an apartment that was rescued when a hole was cut in the ceiling, is considered the God of Lolcats. Basement Cat is just any random black cat, and is considered the Devil. There are others, such as Longcat, who can stretch to any length and is sometimes depicted in an epic battle with its Evil Twin, Tacgnol.


Western Animation[]


Real Life[]

  • Oscar the "Death Cat" has predicted over 50 patient deaths. He even got a paper written about him in the New England Journal of Medicine here. Instead of being creepy, most people find it comforting to be able to contact their family one last time and say a final goodbye.
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