Roger Corman’s Death Race 2000
this is not as it is quite apparent that Paul W.S. Anderson is just
your generic action director from the school of Michael Bay with not an
ounce of real creativity to set himself apart from the likes of Bay or
Brett Ratner, and some one should seriously tell him to leave the
writing to the professionals.
In this update of the
Corman camp classic it is the year 2010 and America has suffered an
economic collapse (I guess Obama wasn’t the way to go) and unemployment
has reached an all time high which has resulted in the crime rate
soaring and causing the prison systems to become overburdened. Big
corporations come to the rescue and create a Prison-for-Profit system
with gladiatorial games to the death to bring in revenue, and the latest
craze is Death Race where inmates must survive several laps of a killer
course in the hopes of winning their freedom. Jensen Ames (Jason
Statham) is a disgraced Nascar driver whose wife is murdered and him
framed for the crime, he is sentenced to Terminal Island, the most
brutal of the corporate run prisons, and is run by evil Warden Hennessy
(Joan Allen) who has her own agenda when it comes to the race. It seems
the most popular racer was a masked man by the name of Frankenstein
(voiced by David Carradine who played Frankenstein in the original) has
died in his last race but Hennessy doesn’t want to lose her most valued
commodity so she wants Jensen to don the mask and keep Frankenstein
alive and her revenue stream up.
The action scenes are
competent and there are some genuine cool moments, but the plot and key
elements are so moronic it takes most the fun out of it. It’s no
spoiler to reveal that Warden Hennessy was behind the death of his wife
as that is practically stated in the trailer so that big “revelation”
lands with a resounding thud, the race itself is so chaotic and with out
any consistent rules that I can’t see how anyone could get much
enjoyment out of it. At one point to increase viewership Hennessy
introduces “The Juggernaut” which is an armored tanker truck outfitted
with machine gunners, napalm flame-throwers, and rockets which just
barrels into the middle of the race to blow the crap out of several
drivers. Now how could one expect viewers to get invested in which
driver will win if an outside element can just show up and blow anybody
away?
This is a movie where stock characters roll out
clichés as required and nothing much original happens in its 89 minute
running time, and the hero is only slightly more engaging than the
villain. The only nod to the original is the characters of Frankenstein
and Machine Gun Joe, but they are name only homage’s to Corman’s film.
When the film ends you are left a pretty empty feeling as if you had
eaten too much cotton candy but still feel hungry for some reason.
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