Batman Dracula (partially found Andy Warhol film; 1964): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (→‎Notes: Only straight border works in link text on MediaWiki)
Line 27: Line 27:
*This movie should not be confused with ''[[Batman Fights Dracula (lost unofficial Filipino comedy parody film; 1967)|Batman Fights Dracula (1967)]]''.
*This movie should not be confused with ''[[Batman Fights Dracula (lost unofficial Filipino comedy parody film; 1967)|Batman Fights Dracula (1967)]]''.


==See Also==
==See Also (Dracula Media)==
*[[Dracula (lost Russian film; existence unconfirmed; 1920)]]
*[[Batman Fights Dracula (partially found Filipino comedy parody film; 1967)]]
*[[Dracula (partially found epilogue scene of Universal horror film; 1931)]]
*[[Dracula Hunter (lost arcade game; 1979)]]
*[[Dracula's Death (lost horror film; 1921)]]
*[[The Un-Dead (partially found original Dracula manuscript; 1897)]]
 
==See Also (Batman Media)==
*[[Batman Fights Dracula (lost unofficial Filipino comedy parody film; 1967)]]
*[[Batman Fights Dracula (lost unofficial Filipino comedy parody film; 1967)]]
*[[Gotham High (lost cancelled Batman animated series; 2009)]]
*[[Gotham High (lost cancelled Batman animated series; 2009)]]

Revision as of 13:39, 30 October 2021

Batman Dracula Andy Warhol.jpg

Poster for the film.

Status: Partially Found

Batman Dracula is a 1964 film directed by pop artist Andy Warhol.

The film is supposedly about an hour-long, is silent and in black and white. According to Warhol, the movie was created as an "homage" to the Batman series, but it was not authorized by DC Comics.

The filming took place on the beaches of Long Island, various rooftops in New York, and at "The Factory", Andy Warhol's New York City Studio. It stars Jack Smith (director of Flaming Creatures) as Batman/Dracula.[1]

The film was only screened as part of Andy Warhol's art exhibits. As of Warhol's death, the film was considered lost. However, some scenes from the film were shown in the 2006 documentary Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis. Some other uploaded clips have been collected and compiled, representing about 40% of the film.

Gallery

Images

Videos

A remix and superimpositions of footage from it in 2000 shot off a screen by Andre Perkowski.

Notes

See Also (Dracula Media)

See Also (Batman Media)

External Links

Reference

  1. Andy Warhol filmography. Retrieved 11 Aug '14