KARR says hi.Knight Rider really had no serious threats of any kind. Reoccuring or even any memorable one of villians.
KARR says hi.Knight Rider really had no serious threats of any kind. Reoccuring or even any memorable one of villians.
somebody took pictures of the filming of the Classic TransAm for something a couple days ago in downtown LA. Unknown if it's related, but it's a odd coincidence if not.
http://imgur.com/gallery/ekyz5
I think there's weight to the idea of using the Classic TransAm--an old car with advanced onboard sensing and electronic warfare technology (and maybe even a few tricks borrowed from James Bond's cars).I also prefer the Classic TransAm.
We've all got voices in our cars now - what with sat navs and the like. What's Knightrider today? A plain clothes cop with his sparkly satnav. It's old hat.
It's not going to be much of a revival this time, except in the unlikely case that NBC/Universal (one of the partners) or someone else picks it up to go to a full television series. It's most likely only going to be a "season" or two of short low budget webisodes if it follows the pattern of the other Machinima web series so far like Mortal Kombat: Legacy (19, 9-12 minute webisodes) and Halo: Forward Unto Dawn (5, 15 minute webisodes). They also aired Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome after it almost got picked up as a pilot by SyFy, but that's the closest any of them have gotten to being developed beyond low budget short films broken up into webisodes.Or the last four reboots -- Knight Rider 2000, Knight Rider 2010, Team Knight Rider, and the 2008 series. It's amazing how many times people have tried to revive the show. It's not like it was all that good to begin with.
In fact, Knight Rider 2010 was part of that too.
I was trying to remember why I couldn't remember, until I realized it was the Mad-Max style movie which had little to do with the series other than the name and the AI car, which was mostly forgettable.
On the whole, I think all of the attempts have largely been forgettable, which only adds to the puzzlement that they keep trying.
I actually rather liked Knight Rider 2010. It wasn't brilliant, but it was interesting, it had some promising ideas, and the dead woman whose consciousness was the template for the AI was played by the stunning and talented Hudson Leick, later Callisto from Xena: Warrior Princess (though she was billed as Heidi Leick at the time).
Given that it had virtually nothing to do with KR, though -- and given that 2010 seemed too early a date for the post-apocalyptic setting, given the backstory as described in the film -- I sometimes wondered if it had originally been a completely unrelated project that Universal just decided to stick the KR title on for promotional reasons. But I think I read somewhere that it was intended as a KR reboot from the start.
Which is why I think it's more about car companies wanting a vehicle to promote their, err, vehicles than anything else. There have been other car-based shows out there, but not many where the car itself was literally a main character.
Yeah, I can't really think of many others, other than maybe the Dukes of Hazzard.
Yeah, plus the 2005 movie plus its prequel didn't do all that well and neither were they terribly respective of their source material. It's one of those franchises that are definitely a product of their times. Fun back when they were made, but don't quite work in modern environments.
I was always a fan of the Knight Rider series. We didn't really get shown Team Knight Rider in the UK but I did see the original show, the two movies and the 2008 series. The only one I didn't like was Knight Rider 2010 - that just felt like it wanted to be Mad Max.
What I find interesting about all the KR reboots is that they all (except 2010) purport to be sequels to the original Hasselhoff series, and yet they all disregard each other. Each one presents itself as the only continuation of the original, ignoring and contradicting all the others. It's the same sort of thing as Godzilla continuity
What I find interesting about all the KR reboots is that they all (except 2010) purport to be sequels to the original Hasselhoff series, and yet they all disregard each other. Each one presents itself as the only continuation of the original, ignoring and contradicting all the others. It's the same sort of thing as Godzilla continuity -- multiple reboot continuities that were all sequels to the original film (with the exception of this year's Shin Godzilla) but were incompatible with each other.
Yeah, after seeing some of the originals, I have to admit it does seem like one that would be ripe for a serious reboot. I'm not counting the comedic movie here.
Yeah, what little I saw of the Dukes of Hazzard movie reboot was pretty dreadful. They turned it into the kind of crass, mean-spirited comedy that's been popular in recent years
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.