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Where’s The Death Race 2000 Roleplaying Game? Part One
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<blockquote data-quote="Egg Embry" data-source="post: 9754455" data-attributes="member: 6808965"><p>Remember 1975’s <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death </em></strong></a><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Race 2000</em></strong></a>? How about <a href="https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race" target="_blank">Paul W. S. Anderson'</a><a href="https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race" target="_blank">s</a><a href="https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race" target="_blank"> </a><a href="https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race</em></strong></a> reboot series (2008 to 2018)? Movies of chaotic auto racing competition where the driver’s kills and survival earn fans, fame, fortune, and freedom. Either the cheesy comedic political satire or the straight-up 2000s action reboot film series, both options would make for exciting gameplay. Despite its gametastic narrative, there’s never been an official RPG, and that begs the question: Where’s the <strong>Death Race Roleplaying Game</strong>?</p><p></p><p style="text-align: center">[ATTACH=full]417019[/ATTACH]</p><h3><strong>WHAT IS DEATH RACE?</strong></h3><p>In the original series (2 movies and 8 comic books), <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> is a dystopian world where a handful of driver/navigator partner teams compete in an internationally televised competition. Both movies have Roger Corman as the producer, while the original featured the talents of a post-<strong><em>Kung Fu</em></strong> David Carradine and pre-<strong><em>Rocky</em></strong> Sylvester Stallone and its sequel included Malcolm McDowell, Manu Bennett (Slade Wilson/Deathstroke in <strong><em>Arrow</em></strong> and Azog the Defiler in <strong><em>The Hobbit</em></strong> trilogy), and soap actor Marci Miller. Combining motor racing in garishly designed cars with <strong><em>The Most Dangerous Game</em></strong> as they race from coast-to-coast in custom automobiles, picking up points for the individuals that they run over, maim, and kill along the way. The bloodsport is a national pastime, and the winner is rewarded with a personal handshake from Mister President. Think of a world of casual violence, celebrated murder, and casual politics for laughs.</p><p></p><p>The 2000s remake series (4 movies under the <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> banner sans date) is an actioner about criminals racing cars inside a for-profit prison. It’s still a televised (streamed) event, but it’s not a country-wide race to rack up kills. Instead, it’s a short track race meets demolition derby that’s as much about survival as it is about kills. The reboot series features actors like Jason Statham, Tyrese Gibson, Ian McShane, and Joan Allen under the direction of Paul W. S. Anderson in the original and Danny Trejo, Ving Rhames, Sean Bean, and Danny Glover in the sequels. The new series trades the original’s satire, laughs, and practical effects for 2000s spectacle with actors taking this absurdity seriously in black and charcoal colored automobiles with power-up elements stolen from video games.</p><p></p><p style="text-align: center">[ATTACH=full]417020[/ATTACH]</p><h3><strong>I LOVE ME SOME ROGER CORMAN</strong></h3><p>When I need fun film trash, Roger Corman is my man! I’ve covered his <strong><em>Deathstalker</em></strong> films (<a href="https://www.enworld.org/threads/where’s-the-deathstalker-rpg-part-1.713549/" target="_blank">here</a> and <a href="https://www.enworld.org/threads/where’s-the-deathstalker-rpg-part-2.713550/" target="_blank">here</a>), so now it’s time for another juvenile movie with “death” in the title. Roger produced hundreds of LOW budget films resulting in hundreds of stinkers and some winners. However, if a million monkeys get to typing, sooner or later they’ll produce <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>, one of Corman’s “good” movies.</p><p></p><p>In case you’ve never seen a Roger Corman flick, let me qualify that “good” designation. Roger’s productions are not high art, instead they’re micro-budget schlock meant to capitalize on an existing or upcoming film or pop craze. As with many of Roger Corman’s movies, <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> is cheesy, silly, violent, did not age well, and full of frivolous nudity. But the film moves at a quick pace – <em>auto racing pun</em> – and all of the screen time is dedicated to 1970s satire. It’s not boring, and if you’re a child of that era, the original movie lampoons elements of The System. Mixing fun and subversion makes <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> a Corman classic.</p><p></p><p>Why did Roger Corman produce <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>? Because William Harrison’s 1973 short story, "Roller Ball Murder" was being adapted into the 1975 James Caan vehicle, <strong><em>Rollerball</em></strong>. Corman had a history of rushing movies to capitalize on a major studio release.</p><p></p><p>Produced by <strong>United Artists</strong>, <strong><em>Rollerball</em></strong> cost $5 to $6 million to film and the picture’s box office ranged from $6.2 million to $30 million based on different reports, which means a 1x to 5x return on that investment. <strong><em>Rollerball</em></strong> was a drama about a sport where you team roller skated, scored points, and killed the other team. <strong><em>Rollerball</em></strong> was, to my limited attention span, boring. Killer roller skaters? I should be laughing, instead I’m on my phone.</p><p></p><p>Just as <strong><em>Rollerball</em></strong> was based on a short story, <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> was loosely based on Ib Melchior's 1956 short story "The Racer". <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> cost around half a million to make, yet generated $8 to $14 million (a 16x to 28x return). The tale centered on auto races and laughs; it made money as it entertained even as it offended. When I watch <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>, it holds my attention with its mix of violence and absurdity.</p><p></p><p style="text-align: center">[ATTACH=full]417021[/ATTACH]</p><h3><strong>SEQUELS, REBOOTS, COMIC BOOKS, AND MOCKBUSTERS</strong></h3><p>For such a minor, low-budget grindhouse B-movie idea, there’s a variety of films that draw on the original Despite requiring vehicle stunts, there are quite a few movies, some comics, and unofficial spin-offs that grew out of the first movie.</p><p></p><p>The original Roger Corman <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong> series:</p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death </em></strong></a><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Race 2000</em></strong></a> (1975, directed by Paul Bartel and produced by Roger Corman)</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5493706/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race 2050</em></strong></a> (2017, directed by G.J. Echternkamp and produced by Roger Corman)</li> </ul><p>This continuity includes the <strong><em>Death Race 2020</em></strong> comic book series. Published from April to November of 1995 by Roger Corman's short-lived <strong>Roger Corman's Cosmic Comics</strong>, this series plays with the ideas of the original film, while building a larger, more bombastic world of vehicle carnage.</p><p></p><p>Among the unofficial spin-offs based on the first continuity, there’s the video game <strong><em>Carmageddon</em></strong>, which came from a failed deal to make a video game adaptation of <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>. There’s an unlicensed fan novel on <strong>Amazon</strong>, <a href="https://amzn.to/44mdlcj" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race 3000</em></strong></a> by Jon Lange.</p><p></p><p>Rebooting the original idea, there’s Paul W. S. Anderson <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> (no year) series:</p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0452608/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race</em></strong></a> (2008, directed by Paul W. S. Anderson)</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1500491/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race 2</em></strong></a> (2010, directed by Roel Reiné)</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1988591/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race 3: Inferno</em></strong></a> (2013, directed by Roel Reiné)</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3807900/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Race: Beyond Anarchy</em></strong></a> (2018, directed by Don Michael Paul)</li> </ul><p>Paul W. S. Anderson directed the 2008 Jason Statham vehicle (<em>ha!</em>). With the satire intentionally stripped out to make the movie more 2000s (i.e., less fun), Statham only appears in the first film as Jensen Ames / "Frankenstein". The three direct-to-video sequels in the series have different leads: <strong><em>Death Race 2</em></strong> (2010, starring Luke Goss as Carl "Luke" Lucas / "Frankenstein"), <strong><em>Death Race 3: Inferno</em></strong> (2013, also starring Luke Goss) and <strong><em>Death Race: Beyond Anarchy</em></strong> (2018, starring Zach McGowan as Connor Gibson).</p><p></p><p>The Anderson/Statham <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> inspired a mockbuster that same year, 2008’s <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1261046/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Death Racers</em></strong></a> starring the Insane Clown Posse and professional wrestler Scott "Raven" Levy. Because it’s a mockbuster, it’s closer to the camp and grindhouse nature of the original <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>, but without the satire, humor, or any of the original’s charm.</p><p></p><p>Last and least, there’s a mockbuster starring DMX that tries to pull in <strong><em>Fast & Furious</em></strong> fans as well as <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> fans with an insincere title. Released in 2020, <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11765324/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Fast and Fierce: Death Race</em></strong></a> is more <strong><em>Fast & Furious</em></strong>, but there are car chases and the like, though not in the <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> vein.</p><p></p><p>Totally unrelated to these films but very much in this wheelhouse, there’s 2017’s <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4898282/" target="_blank"><strong><em>Blood Drive</em></strong></a><strong><em>,</em></strong> starring a pre-<strong><em>Reacher</em></strong> Alan Ritchson. It’s a <strong><em>Cannonball Run</em></strong> motor race across a fuel-less dystopian America using cars that run on blood. The tone is hilarious carnage and dark humor in the vein of <strong><em>Death Race 2000</em></strong>. This TV series feels like the grindhouse, over-the-top action, mid-way point between the first <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> films satire and the second series’ action-centric approach. Created by James Roland, it has a light tie to the second <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> series in the form of Roel Reiné, who directed <strong><em>Death Race 2</em></strong> and <strong><em>Death Race 3: Inferno</em></strong> as well as two episodes of <strong><em>Blood Drive</em></strong>.</p><p></p><p>There are countless car carnage concepts, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t give a shout out to the <strong><em>Twisted Metal</em></strong> video games (1995 to 2012) and the <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14261112/" target="_blank">streaming series of the same name</a> (2023 to present). They have the vehicles, the mayhem, and the cheesy humor to make for a fun time for fans of the <strong><em>Death Race</em></strong> movies.</p><p></p><p style="text-align: center">[ATTACH=full]417022[/ATTACH]</p><h3><strong>THE FINISH LINE?</strong></h3><p>This is fertile ground for a tabletop game; competition, violence, and a goal beyond simply winning the race. In the next article, we’ll look at some tabletop games from <strong>Goodman Games, 9th Level Games,</strong> and <strong>Steve Jackson Games</strong> that could and should influence a hypothetical <strong>Death Race RPG</strong> as well as some original options to build out a game.</p><p></p><p><em>Egg Embry participates in the OneBookShelf Affiliate Program, Noble Knight Games’ Affiliate Program, Kobold Press Affiliate Program, and is an Amazon Associate. These programs provide advertising fees by linking to DriveThruRPG, Noble Knight Games, Kobold Press, and Amazon.</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Egg Embry, post: 9754455, member: 6808965"] Remember 1975’s [URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/'][B][I]Death [/I][/B][/URL][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/'][B][I]Race 2000[/I][/B][/URL]? How about [URL='https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race']Paul W. S. Anderson'[/URL][URL='https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race']s[/URL][URL='https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race'] [/URL][URL='https://www.enworld.org/Death%20Race'][B][I]Death Race[/I][/B][/URL] reboot series (2008 to 2018)? Movies of chaotic auto racing competition where the driver’s kills and survival earn fans, fame, fortune, and freedom. Either the cheesy comedic political satire or the straight-up 2000s action reboot film series, both options would make for exciting gameplay. Despite its gametastic narrative, there’s never been an official RPG, and that begs the question: Where’s the [B]Death Race Roleplaying Game[/B]? [CENTER][ATTACH type="full" alt="Death Race 2000 Banner.jpeg"]417019[/ATTACH][/CENTER] [HEADING=2][B]WHAT IS DEATH RACE?[/B][/HEADING] In the original series (2 movies and 8 comic books), [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] is a dystopian world where a handful of driver/navigator partner teams compete in an internationally televised competition. Both movies have Roger Corman as the producer, while the original featured the talents of a post-[B][I]Kung Fu[/I][/B] David Carradine and pre-[B][I]Rocky[/I][/B] Sylvester Stallone and its sequel included Malcolm McDowell, Manu Bennett (Slade Wilson/Deathstroke in [B][I]Arrow[/I][/B] and Azog the Defiler in [B][I]The Hobbit[/I][/B] trilogy), and soap actor Marci Miller. Combining motor racing in garishly designed cars with [B][I]The Most Dangerous Game[/I][/B] as they race from coast-to-coast in custom automobiles, picking up points for the individuals that they run over, maim, and kill along the way. The bloodsport is a national pastime, and the winner is rewarded with a personal handshake from Mister President. Think of a world of casual violence, celebrated murder, and casual politics for laughs. The 2000s remake series (4 movies under the [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] banner sans date) is an actioner about criminals racing cars inside a for-profit prison. It’s still a televised (streamed) event, but it’s not a country-wide race to rack up kills. Instead, it’s a short track race meets demolition derby that’s as much about survival as it is about kills. The reboot series features actors like Jason Statham, Tyrese Gibson, Ian McShane, and Joan Allen under the direction of Paul W. S. Anderson in the original and Danny Trejo, Ving Rhames, Sean Bean, and Danny Glover in the sequels. The new series trades the original’s satire, laughs, and practical effects for 2000s spectacle with actors taking this absurdity seriously in black and charcoal colored automobiles with power-up elements stolen from video games. [CENTER][ATTACH type="full" alt="Death Race 2000 Poster.jpg"]417020[/ATTACH][/CENTER] [HEADING=2][B]I LOVE ME SOME ROGER CORMAN[/B][/HEADING] When I need fun film trash, Roger Corman is my man! I’ve covered his [B][I]Deathstalker[/I][/B] films ([URL='https://www.enworld.org/threads/where’s-the-deathstalker-rpg-part-1.713549/']here[/URL] and [URL='https://www.enworld.org/threads/where’s-the-deathstalker-rpg-part-2.713550/']here[/URL]), so now it’s time for another juvenile movie with “death” in the title. Roger produced hundreds of LOW budget films resulting in hundreds of stinkers and some winners. However, if a million monkeys get to typing, sooner or later they’ll produce [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B], one of Corman’s “good” movies. In case you’ve never seen a Roger Corman flick, let me qualify that “good” designation. Roger’s productions are not high art, instead they’re micro-budget schlock meant to capitalize on an existing or upcoming film or pop craze. As with many of Roger Corman’s movies, [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] is cheesy, silly, violent, did not age well, and full of frivolous nudity. But the film moves at a quick pace – [I]auto racing pun[/I] – and all of the screen time is dedicated to 1970s satire. It’s not boring, and if you’re a child of that era, the original movie lampoons elements of The System. Mixing fun and subversion makes [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] a Corman classic. Why did Roger Corman produce [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B]? Because William Harrison’s 1973 short story, "Roller Ball Murder" was being adapted into the 1975 James Caan vehicle, [B][I]Rollerball[/I][/B]. Corman had a history of rushing movies to capitalize on a major studio release. Produced by [B]United Artists[/B], [B][I]Rollerball[/I][/B] cost $5 to $6 million to film and the picture’s box office ranged from $6.2 million to $30 million based on different reports, which means a 1x to 5x return on that investment. [B][I]Rollerball[/I][/B] was a drama about a sport where you team roller skated, scored points, and killed the other team. [B][I]Rollerball[/I][/B] was, to my limited attention span, boring. Killer roller skaters? I should be laughing, instead I’m on my phone. Just as [B][I]Rollerball[/I][/B] was based on a short story, [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] was loosely based on Ib Melchior's 1956 short story "The Racer". [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] cost around half a million to make, yet generated $8 to $14 million (a 16x to 28x return). The tale centered on auto races and laughs; it made money as it entertained even as it offended. When I watch [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B], it holds my attention with its mix of violence and absurdity. [CENTER][ATTACH type="full" alt="Death Race 2000 and 2050 Banner.png"]417021[/ATTACH][/CENTER] [HEADING=2][B]SEQUELS, REBOOTS, COMIC BOOKS, AND MOCKBUSTERS[/B][/HEADING] For such a minor, low-budget grindhouse B-movie idea, there’s a variety of films that draw on the original Despite requiring vehicle stunts, there are quite a few movies, some comics, and unofficial spin-offs that grew out of the first movie. The original Roger Corman [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B] series: [LIST] [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/'][B][I]Death [/I][/B][/URL][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072856/'][B][I]Race 2000[/I][/B][/URL] (1975, directed by Paul Bartel and produced by Roger Corman) [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5493706/'][B][I]Death Race 2050[/I][/B][/URL] (2017, directed by G.J. Echternkamp and produced by Roger Corman) [/LIST] This continuity includes the [B][I]Death Race 2020[/I][/B] comic book series. Published from April to November of 1995 by Roger Corman's short-lived [B]Roger Corman's Cosmic Comics[/B], this series plays with the ideas of the original film, while building a larger, more bombastic world of vehicle carnage. Among the unofficial spin-offs based on the first continuity, there’s the video game [B][I]Carmageddon[/I][/B], which came from a failed deal to make a video game adaptation of [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B]. There’s an unlicensed fan novel on [B]Amazon[/B], [URL='https://amzn.to/44mdlcj'][B][I]Death Race 3000[/I][/B][/URL] by Jon Lange. Rebooting the original idea, there’s Paul W. S. Anderson [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] (no year) series: [LIST] [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0452608/'][B][I]Death Race[/I][/B][/URL] (2008, directed by Paul W. S. Anderson) [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1500491/'][B][I]Death Race 2[/I][/B][/URL] (2010, directed by Roel Reiné) [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1988591/'][B][I]Death Race 3: Inferno[/I][/B][/URL] (2013, directed by Roel Reiné) [*][URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3807900/'][B][I]Death Race: Beyond Anarchy[/I][/B][/URL] (2018, directed by Don Michael Paul) [/LIST] Paul W. S. Anderson directed the 2008 Jason Statham vehicle ([I]ha![/I]). With the satire intentionally stripped out to make the movie more 2000s (i.e., less fun), Statham only appears in the first film as Jensen Ames / "Frankenstein". The three direct-to-video sequels in the series have different leads: [B][I]Death Race 2[/I][/B] (2010, starring Luke Goss as Carl "Luke" Lucas / "Frankenstein"), [B][I]Death Race 3: Inferno[/I][/B] (2013, also starring Luke Goss) and [B][I]Death Race: Beyond Anarchy[/I][/B] (2018, starring Zach McGowan as Connor Gibson). The Anderson/Statham [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] inspired a mockbuster that same year, 2008’s [URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1261046/'][B][I]Death Racers[/I][/B][/URL] starring the Insane Clown Posse and professional wrestler Scott "Raven" Levy. Because it’s a mockbuster, it’s closer to the camp and grindhouse nature of the original [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B], but without the satire, humor, or any of the original’s charm. Last and least, there’s a mockbuster starring DMX that tries to pull in [B][I]Fast & Furious[/I][/B] fans as well as [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] fans with an insincere title. Released in 2020, [URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11765324/'][B][I]Fast and Fierce: Death Race[/I][/B][/URL] is more [B][I]Fast & Furious[/I][/B], but there are car chases and the like, though not in the [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] vein. Totally unrelated to these films but very much in this wheelhouse, there’s 2017’s [URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4898282/'][B][I]Blood Drive[/I][/B][/URL][B][I],[/I][/B] starring a pre-[B][I]Reacher[/I][/B] Alan Ritchson. It’s a [B][I]Cannonball Run[/I][/B] motor race across a fuel-less dystopian America using cars that run on blood. The tone is hilarious carnage and dark humor in the vein of [B][I]Death Race 2000[/I][/B]. This TV series feels like the grindhouse, over-the-top action, mid-way point between the first [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] films satire and the second series’ action-centric approach. Created by James Roland, it has a light tie to the second [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] series in the form of Roel Reiné, who directed [B][I]Death Race 2[/I][/B] and [B][I]Death Race 3: Inferno[/I][/B] as well as two episodes of [B][I]Blood Drive[/I][/B]. There are countless car carnage concepts, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t give a shout out to the [B][I]Twisted Metal[/I][/B] video games (1995 to 2012) and the [URL='https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14261112/']streaming series of the same name[/URL] (2023 to present). They have the vehicles, the mayhem, and the cheesy humor to make for a fun time for fans of the [B][I]Death Race[/I][/B] movies. [CENTER][ATTACH type="full" alt="Death Race 2008 Poster.jpg"]417022[/ATTACH][/CENTER] [HEADING=2][B]THE FINISH LINE?[/B][/HEADING] This is fertile ground for a tabletop game; competition, violence, and a goal beyond simply winning the race. In the next article, we’ll look at some tabletop games from [B]Goodman Games, 9th Level Games,[/B] and [B]Steve Jackson Games[/B] that could and should influence a hypothetical [B]Death Race RPG[/B] as well as some original options to build out a game. [I]Egg Embry participates in the OneBookShelf Affiliate Program, Noble Knight Games’ Affiliate Program, Kobold Press Affiliate Program, and is an Amazon Associate. These programs provide advertising fees by linking to DriveThruRPG, Noble Knight Games, Kobold Press, and Amazon.[/I] [/QUOTE]
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