Batman Dracula: Andy Warhol’s Quirky 1964 Batman Film (Photo Credit – Instagram)

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Forget everything you know about Batman on screen—there’s a weird, wild gem you’ve probably never heard of. Back in 1964, Andy Warhol, yes Andy Warhol, made his own Batman movie. And no, he didn’t ask DC for permission. Batman Dracula was Warhol’s DIY tribute to the Dark Knight, shot on a 16mm Bolex camera and only ever shown at his art exhibits. Talk about the underground.

The movie, starring Jack Smith as Bruce Wayne and Count Dracula, is a total trip. No flashy explosions, no CGI, just a surreal, almost abstract chase across Long Island and New York City, culminating in a weird showdown between Batman and Dracula. Warhol didn’t care for typical superhero rules—this was his twisted take, full of camp and weirdness. Batman and Dracula? Perfect combo, right? And Warhol was all in. He didn’t just spend a couple of hours on this—he shot seven hours of footage.

But here’s the kicker—Batman Dracula was a lost film for decades. Warhol only ever showed it at his Pop Art exhibits, and because he didn’t get the green light from DC, the movie never went public. It was buried in obscurity until 2006 when some footage surfaced in the documentary Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis. The footage? Grainy, abstract, and hard to decipher. But you could make out Jack Smith’s goateed Dracula swirling his cape around actress Jane Holzer while the dreamy sounds of The Velvet Underground’s “Nothing Song” set the vibe. Superheroes, but make it artsy.

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