| Film | Lead | Budget | Director | Rotten Tomatoes | Tone | |------|------|--------|----------|----------------|------| | Death Race (2008) | Statham | $45M | Paul W.S. Anderson | 42% (critics) | Polished, satirical, big-budget | | Death Race 2 (2010) | Goss | $7M | Roel Reiné | 50% (audience) | Grittier, more violent, prequel | | Death Race 3: Inferno (2013) | Goss | $6.5M | Roel Reiné | 5.3/10 IMDb | Desert road warrior vibe, franchise fatigue setting in | | Death Race 4 (2018) | Zach McGowan | $5M | Don Michael Paul | 4.8/10 IMDb | Soft reboot, post-apocalyptic Mad Max clone |
Death Race 3: Inferno is a serviceable, middle-tier direct-to-video sequel. It does not elevate the franchise but also does not embarrass it. For fans of B-movie car carnage, Luke Goss’s stoic performance, and Dougray Scott chewing scenery as a smug villain, the film delivers exactly what it promises: fast cars, fire, and a thin excuse to blow things up in the desert. Casual viewers are unlikely to miss anything by skipping from Death Race (2008) to Death Race 4 (2018). However, for completionists and DTV action enthusiasts, Inferno offers a harmless 105-minute adrenaline distraction.
Lucas is paired with a new “navigator,” a skilled but volatile driver named Katrina Banks (Tanit Phoenix), who has her own vendetta against York. The race involves competing against a new roster of psychotic drivers, including the monstrous “Psycho” (Bart Fouche) and the seductive “Scarlet” (Roxane Hayward). The film’s climax sees Lucas and Banks betray York, destroy his desert compound, and escape, setting up a potential new beginning free from the Death Race system. death race 3 movie
Death Race 3: Inferno (released in some markets as Death Race: Inferno ) is the third installment in the rebooted Death Race film series, which began with the 2008 film starring Jason Statham. Directed by Roel Reiné, this entry continues the story of convicted cop-turned-racer Carl “Luke” Lucas, now played by Luke Goss (replacing Statham). Unlike the first film’s theatrical release, Inferno was produced exclusively for the direct-to-video (DTV) market by Universal 1440 Entertainment. It functions as a direct sequel to Death Race 2 (2010) and sets up the narrative for Death Race 4: Beyond Anarchy (2018).
★★½ (2.5/5) – “A desert-fueled gear-grinder that runs on fumes but never stalls.” | Film | Lead | Budget | Director
1. Executive Summary
| Platform | Score / Sentiment | Summary | |----------|------------------|---------| | Rotten Tomatoes | No Tomatometer (0% audience score from limited reviews) | Not reviewed by major critics. | | IMDb | 5.3/10 (based on ~18k user ratings) | “Entertaining but forgettable DTV action.” | | Common Critiques | — | Cheap CGI fire, mediocre acting (except Goss and Scott), recycled plot from Death Race 2 . | | Praise | — | Fun practical car stunts, a strong villain in Dougray Scott, fast pacing. | For fans of B-movie car carnage, Luke Goss’s
| Actor | Role | Notes | |-------|------|-------| | Luke Goss | Carl “Luke” Lucas | Takes over the role from Jason Statham. Brings a more gritty, action-hero physicality. | | Dougray Scott | Niles York | The aristocratic, sadistic new owner of the Death Race. Serves as the primary antagonist. | | Tanit Phoenix | Katrina Banks | A tough, resourceful female racer and Lucas’s forced partner. Represents the “damsel in distress” archetype but with agency. | | Danny Trejo | Goldberg | The mechanic and mentor figure, returning from Death Race 2 . Provides comic relief and exposition. | | Ving Rhames | Weyland | The co-creator of the Death Race, appearing briefly as a reluctant ally. |