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Batmobile - Wikipedia The Batmobile is the fictional land vehicle driven by the superhero Batman, used both to patrol Gotham City looking for crime and to engage in car chases or vehicular combat with the city's criminal underworld [1]
1989 Batmobile | From Batman (1989) and Batman Returns (1992 . . . Almost 20 feet in length, the Batmobile driven by Michael Keaton in the 1989 and 1992 movies was based upon a 1967 Chevy Impala found in a London junkyard It was powered by a 327-cubic inch V-8 Chevrolet engine mounted low in the frame in order to maintain a low hood line and enhance the car’s sleek profile
Did You Know Michael Keaton’s Batmobile Was Once in Kentucky? Michael Keaton's portrayal of Bruce Wayne and Batman is legendary The 1989 and 1992 Batmobiles were my favorites as a kid, so seeing one of the actual cars in person as an adult was a dream come true It was, however, smaller than I had expected and much shinier as well
Every Batmobile from every Batman movie, ranked - SYFY Michael Keaton’s limousine-esque Batmobile was sleek, stylish, and suitably Bat-like without being too over the top It’s a classic for a reason, and is often the Batmobile people think of first The Batmobile is also essentially unchanged between the two Keaton films, which is why they share a spot in the ranking 1
Evolution of the Batmobile | History of the . . . - Volo Museum This Batmobile was not the type that could hide in plain sight, but with its speed, Batman could navigate around with such quickness, that it didn't much matter Michael Keaton's Batman, already iconic on its own, became even more synonymous with the franchise, due to the vehicle's bold appearance
FAST FACTS Vol. 1, Issue 19 – The 1990s Batmobile | Fraser The “Keaton Mobile” was the brooding musings of famed director Tim Burton, (Beetlejuice, Nightmare Before Christmas), and was designed by Anton Furst Driven, of course by Michael Keaton Taking a hard left-turn into the Art Deco styling of the mythical Gotham City, spurred a new view of Batman as powerful and undeniably cool