Blood Drive Announced By SyFy

If Sharknado or that sort of thing isn't your idea of 'horror' Syfy might have the solution with [...]

If Sharknado or that sort of thing isn't your idea of "horror" Syfy might have the solution with the upcoming Blood Drive.

Via Press Release

Syfy and Universal Cable Productions today announced they have greenlit Blood Drive, a high-octane, over-the-top scripted series in the classic grindhouse movie tradition. Set in a near-apocalyptic future, the 13-episode series centers around LA's last good cop who is forced to join a twisted, gory cross-country death race -- with cars powered by blood and a dangerous femme fatale partner who sees people as fuel.

Blood Drive is from executive producers John Hlavin (Underworld: Awakening, The Shield) and David Straiton (Bates Motel, Hemlock Grove), who will also direct.

James Roland wrote the pilot under Hlavin's supervision and will also serve as supervising producer. Fredrik Malmberg (Conan the Barbarian) and Mark Wheeler will serve as producers. Universal Cable Productions will be the studio.

Said Dave Howe, President, Syfy & Chiller: "This highly stylized roller coaster ride is a throwback to 1970s grindhouse cinema. With its fast-paced thrills and indie feel, Blood Drive will make an exciting and edgy addition to Syfy's growing slate of original scripted series."

"The grindhouse cinema style remains largely untapped in television. The combination of gritty action and dark humor can push the envelope in some fun and unexpected ways," said Jeff Wachtel, Chief Content Officer, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment and President, Universal Cable Productions. "Blood Drive has all these elements and more. We're excited to partner with John Hlavin and David Straiton to bring this cool, action-packed series to life."

This works well with Syfy's new model of straight-to-series that's being implemented. Other series like that are the upcoming alien drama Hunters and the space opera The Espanse.

Readers, are you going to be looking forward to this? Is this more of the type of programming Syfy should be trying to air, or are you happy with their current state of silly B-movies?

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