A heavily modified 2007 Lamborghini Murcielago LP640 just sold on Bring a Trailer for $344,000, and the price says plenty about what buyers will still pay for a bold supercar build. This one showed just over 20,000 miles, wore a full Liberty Walk Silhouette Works widebody kit, sat on air suspension, and looked more like Bruce Wayne’s weekend toy than a stock LP640. Comic Book Presence In A Street-Legal Package BaTProbably the bigger story here is the conversion, not the sale. Liberty Walk’s Silhouette Works kit for the Murcielago swaps in a new front bumper, canards, wider front and rear fenders, side skirts, a rear bumper, diffuser, wing, hood pieces, a tail lamp kit, and special exhaust tips. Finished in black, this car traded the standard Murcielago’s smooth menace for something closer to a GT race car with a comic-book budget.The Murcielago already came from the factory with one of Lamborghini’s best shapes. Liberty Walk took that shape and pushed it way past stock, which is why builds like this split enthusiasts in two. Some see a classic supercar getting cut up, while others see a tuner leaning into what made the car outrageous in the first place. This example never tried to look original. BaTThe rest of the setup backed up the look. The car wore black Rohana/Liberty Walk wheels, 18 inches up front and 19 inches in the rear, with Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S tires. It also had an Ideal Air Max air-suspension kit while keeping Lamborghini’s factory front-axle lift. That suggests the owner wanted the slammed stance, but also wanted to clear real-world driveways without turning the nose into confetti. Yup, The V12 Is Still There BaTUnder all that bodywork, this was still an LP640. That means a 6.5-liter naturally aspirated V12 with 632 horsepower and 487 pound-feet of torque, sent to all four wheels through Lamborghini’s six-speed E-gear automated manual. This is a later version of the Murcielago with a revised engine, suspension, gearbox, exhaust, brakes, electronics, and body, making it the sweet spot before the SV arrived.Inside, the build stayed mostly serious. The cabin kept black leather, yellow stitching, and carbon-fiber trim, but it also gained a Pioneer stereo, a rearview camera display, and an aftermarket digital dash. The camera may be the most practical mod on the whole thing because the Murcielago's rear visibility has never been a celebrated feature. $344,000 Is Actually A Realistic Price BaTThe Murcielago already has pop-culture points on its side. The model’s most famous movie role came in Batman Begins, and the name itself means “bat” in Spanish. That alone does not add value, but it helps explain why a black LP640 with a giant wing and angry fenders lands so well with collectors and supercar enthusiasts. It looks like the sort of car a billionaire vigilante would daily, right up until he scraped the splitter on a parking ramp.Hagerty’s current value guide puts a 2007 Murcielago LP640 coupe in #3 good condition at $314,000, and Classic.com lists the average sale price for automatic LP640 coupes from 2006 to 2010 at about $271,221. So this Bring a Trailer sale sat above both marks, but not by an absurd amount.Source: Bring a Trailer