With no superpowers to speak of, Batman waged war against Gotham's seedy underworld with nothing more than a Bat utility belt and one of the most famous screen cars of all the time, the Batmobile. Over the decades, several cars have been used, from standard production models through to some serious gadget-laden custom-builds, and yet, ask any gearhead to pick a favorite, and the answer is more often than not George Barris' 60s original that comes out tops.

Save for a few rare examples, Batmobiles post the Lincoln Futura-inspired classic have gotten worse, an overreliance on tech-wizardry and one-off builds stretching the realms of reality versus pure fantasy. We're all for some CGI cinematic action scenes, but gravity defying, wall climbing cars? By the time Batman Returns hit the movies, the car had become a bigger star than Batman himself, and for all the wrong reasons too. Looking back over the various Batmobile evolutions, there is no mistaking the arrival of Batman, always in the nick of time to hand out some rough justice.

9 1939 Cadillac Series 75 Convertible (1943 Serial)

Cadillac Series 75 Convertible - Front
Via Mecum Auctions

Long before the advent of CGI and special effects, Batman, Robin, and Alfred, yes the ever faithful butler, would speed to and from crime scenes in a humble 1939 Cadillac Series 75. No rockets and jet motors, just a 346 cu-in 8-cylinder running a single Stromberg downdraft carburetor putting out 140 hp.

Cadillac Series 75 Convertible - Rear
Via Mecum Auctions

Used in two roles, top down with Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson going about their daily routine, and roof up with the crime fighting duo in disguise. How times have changed, in modern movie outings, the Batmobile takes center stage.

RELATED: 1937 Cadillac Series 75 Limousine Barn Find Survives The Test of Time

8 1949 Mercury Eight Convertible (1949 Serial)

Mercury Eight Convertible - Front
Via Mecum Auctions

Batman's second live action outing picked up where the original left off, a low budget show that used much of the first series' costumes and sets, only the Batmobile underwent a minor upgrade swapping from Cadillac to Mercury.

Mercury Eight Convertible - Rear
Via Mecum Auctions

In total, the series featured six 1949 Mercury Eight Convertibles, frequently crashed during filming, largely due to poor handling. Despite packing a 4.2-liter V8 under the hood producing 110 hp, the Mercury Eight was overweight, topping out at 83 mph.

7 Lincoln Futura (1960s TV/Film Series)

Lincoln Futura Batmobile - Front
Via Mecum Auctions

Drawing on Lincoln's Futura concept car, and easily the most recognizable of all the Batmobiles, the 60s TV show turned the wow factor up to eleven with a highly customized two-seater that finally saw our heroes take the wheel. Unlike earlier rides, the Futura-based design relied heavily on gadgets and raw power to "conceal" the crime fighting duo's identity.

Lincoln Futura Batmobile - Rear
Via Mecum Auctions

The creative outpouring of George Barris' ingenious talents, the Batmobile featured a host of defensive, offensive, and down right ludicrous add-ons that made it a huge on screen hit. Most notable for its highly unusual choice of propulsion, a military grade jet-turbine spewing flames under acceleration, in reality using a more down to earth 390 cu-in V8 lifted from Ford's Galaxie.

6 Batcopter & Batboat

Batcopter
Via Batman wiki

Not every confrontation would take place on dry land, Penguin famously had a flipper-powered submarine, so it was only fitting Batman would have a range of "other" Batmobiles. The Batcopter making several appearances in the 60s TV series, based on Bell's Type 47 adorned with power sapping canvas covered frames mimicking bat wings.

Batboat
Via Facebook 

On the rare occasions of water-borne antics, the Batboat carried the crime fighting twosome at speeds of up to 45 mph. Influenced by the Batmobile complete with jet-exhaust nozzle, red flashing light and near mandatory large batwing, the Batboat supplied by Glastron based on the popular V-174 series.

5 Chevrolet Impala - Chassis (Batman / Batman Returns 1989/92)

Chevrrolet Impala Batmobile
Via: Dartranner83 / Wikipedia

Two successful movie reboots, Batman and Batman Returns, from 1989/92 respectively, and one Batmobile, only this time around featuring little in the way of a recognizable car. Under the masses of sculpted foam lays the chassis of a Chevrolet Impala. By this stage, easily outshining its human co-stars, the Batmobile merged art-deco inspired styling with enough gadgets to make James Bond envious.

RELATED: 10 Things Gearheads Forgot About Chevrolet Impala SS

Batmobile - Front
Via Phantom Stranger / Wikipedia

Built to withstand literally anything, retractable ceramic armor adding both fire and bulletproof protection over its entire length, so long at 21-foot that tight turns at speed required a grappling hook to make its high-speed escape. Speaking of speed, in theory, or at least on-screen, capable of 330 mph thanks to a 10,000 hp jet-turbine.

4 Custom Built Batmobile (Batman Forever 1995)

Batmobile - Frotn View
Via Herbie1966 / Wikipedia

With the changing of producers from the frequently dark Tim Burton to Joel Schumacher came a re-imagined Batmobile that, for the first time, was a ground-up custom-built car, save for a Chevrolet 350 ZZ3 V8 tucked away beneath the acres of back-lit rib like bodywork.

Batmobile
Via Facebook

Taking a trip down the neon retro-gothic path, this foam and fiberglass creation divides opinions like no other Batmobile. In place of a dark, brooding image normally associated with Batman, gearheads were instead treated to a neon roadster that wouldn't look out of place at a custom car show. Adding to the wow factor, combining a redirectable jet exhaust with grappling hooks, the Batmobile could scale vertical walls.

3 Custom Built Batmobile (Batman & Robin 1997)

Via comicsagogo.wordpress.com

Lights, camera action with even more emphasis on the lights, Batman & Robin hit the ground running with a new Batmobile in a clash with Freeze, the new Batmobile having more in common with the original comic strip than a dark, brooding superhero.

Batmobile---Front-1
Via Facebook

Built around a Chevy 350 cu-in V8 motor, for the movie boosted by the now obligatory jet-engine set-up that ultimately failed to save the Batmobile, falling foul literally of a freeze beam forcing Batman to eject. By this stage, the Batmobile had become more of a gimmick than superhero ride, fortunately this one only featured in one movie.

2 Wayne Enterprises "Tumbler" (The Dark Knight Trilogy 2005/12)

Tumbler - Front
Warner Bros YouTube

The Dark Knight trilogy thankfully witnessed a return to the Batman's darker side, shrouded in mystery that few ever managed to see was Bruce Wayne behind a rubber mask, superheros are always hiding in plain sight. The Tumbler, however, is another story there's little chance of mistaking this piece of military grade hardware.

Tumbler - Rear view
Via Jay Leno's Garage

Surely just a movie prop, right? Surprisingly, this monster is a fully functioning, road-legal behemoth powered by a 500 hp GM 5.7-liter V8 and could hit 60 mh in 5.6-seconds despite weighing in at 5,500 lbs. Other stand-out "functioning" features included a custom front suspension set-up, giving the Tumbler adjustable ride height.

RELATED: 10 Movie Cars That Totally Stole The Show

1 Custom "Muscle Car" - (The Batman 2022)

2022 Batmobile
Movie Cars Central via YouTube

Coming full circle, the latest Batman big screen outing sees a return to standard road cars, more or less. The Batmobile of 2022 resembling a classic American muscle car, a modified one, naturally.

2022 Batmobile
via Globe Echo

Gearheads with a liking for classic muscle should look away now, in place of big-block high-power V8s, the producers switched from front-mounted V8 muscle to a potent mid-rear Ford Triton V10 motor complete with twin turbochargers, putting down an estimated 700+ hp. However, there remains some doubt over the actual engine used, eagle eyed gearheads/movie buffs counting just eight coil plugs.