RoboCop | |
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Created by | Michael Miner Edward Neumeier |
Original work | RoboCop (1987) |
Owner | Amazon MGM Studios |
Years | 1987–present |
Print publications | |
Comics | List of comics |
Films and television | |
Film(s) | |
Television series |
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Animated series |
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Games | |
Video game(s) | List of video games |
RoboCop is an American cyberpunk action media franchise featuring the futuristic adventures of Alex Murphy, a Detroit, Michigan police officer, who is fatally wounded in the line of duty and transformed into a powerful cyborg, brand-named RoboCop, at the behest of a powerful mega-corporation, Omni Consumer Products. Thus equipped, Murphy battles both violent crime in a severely decayed city and the blatantly corrupt machinations within OCP.
The franchise began in 1987 with the film RoboCop . RoboCop 2 followed in 1990, and RoboCop 3 in 1993. There have also been various television series, video game and comic book tie-ins. The franchise has made over US$100 million worldwide and a remake serving as a reboot titled RoboCop was released in February 2014. A new installment titled RoboCop Returns is in the works and will serve as a direct sequel to the 1987 film, ignoring other sequels and the remake, as well as the two live action TV spin-offs. As of June 2019, the script, which will be based on an original story from the writers of the 1987 film, Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner, was still being written. Neill Blomkamp was originally signed on to direct the film but left the project, and Abe Forsythe was later selected to direct. [2]
Film | U.S. release date | Director(s) | Screenwriter(s) | Story by | Producer(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
RoboCop | July 17, 1987 | Paul Verhoeven | Michael Miner & Edward Neumeier | Arne Schmidt | |
RoboCop 2 | June 22, 1990 | Irvin Kershner | Walon Green & Frank Miller | Frank Miller | Jon Davison |
RoboCop 3 | November 5, 1993 | Fred Dekker | Fred Dekker & Frank Miller | Patrick Crowley | |
RoboCop | February 12, 2014 | José Padilha | Michael Miner, Joshua Zetumer & Edward Neumeier | Eric Newman & Marc Abraham | |
RoboCop is a 1987 American cyberpunk action film [3] [4] directed by Paul Verhoeven. Set in a crime-ridden Detroit, Michigan, RoboCop centers on a police officer who is brutally murdered and subsequently re-created as a super-human cyborg known as "RoboCop". The film features Peter Weller, Dan O'Herlihy, Kurtwood Smith, Nancy Allen, Miguel Ferrer, and Ronny Cox.
In addition to being an action film, RoboCop includes larger themes regarding the media, resurrection, gentrification, corruption, privatization, capitalism, masculinity, and human nature. It received positive reviews and was cited as one of the best films of 1987, spawning a large franchise, including merchandise, two sequels, a television series, two animated TV series, and a television mini-series, video games and a number of comic book adaptations/crossovers. The film was produced for a relatively modest $13 million. [5]
RoboCop 2 is a 1990 cyberpunk action film directed by Irvin Kershner and starring Peter Weller, Nancy Allen, Dan O'Herlihy, Belinda Bauer, Tom Noonan and Gabriel Damon. It is the sequel to the 1987 film, and pits RoboCop against another cyborg created with the intention of replacing him. [6]
The film received mixed reviews from critics. [7] It was the last film directed by Irvin Kershner.
RoboCop 3 is a cyberpunk action film directed and co-written by Fred Dekker, released in 1993, set in the near future in a dystopian metropolitan Detroit, Michigan, and filmed in Atlanta, Georgia. Most of the buildings seen in the film were slated for demolition to make way for facilities for the 1996 Olympics. Nancy Allen as Anne Lewis, Robert DoQui as Sgt. Warren Reed, Felton Perry as Donald Johnson, Mario Machado as Newscaster Casey Wong and Angie Bolling as Ellen Murphy are the only cast members to appear in all three films. Robert John Burke replaces Peter Weller as RoboCop.
The film received very negative reviews from critics. [8]
This is the first film in the RoboCop franchise to be rated PG-13.[ citation needed ]
A remake of the original film and a reboot of the franchise was released in early 2014. The film is directed by Brazilian filmmaker José Padilha and stars Joel Kinnaman in the title role. Gary Oldman and Samuel L. Jackson co-star in supporting roles. According to Kinnaman, the film is a reimagination of the original story, and bits and pieces cater to fans of the original film. [9] In July 2012, a viral website for the fictional OmniCorp was opened to promote the film. [10] Two months later in September, MGM and Columbia Pictures released the official film plot:
In "RoboCop", the year is 2028 and multinational conglomerate OmniCorp is at the center of robot technology. Their drones are winning wars around the globe and now they want to bring this technology to the home front. Alex Murphy (Kinnaman) is a loving husband, father and good cop doing his best to stem the tide of crime and corruption in Detroit. After he is critically injured in the line of duty, OmniCorp utilizes their remarkable science of robotics to save Alex's life. He returns to the streets of his beloved city with amazing new abilities, but with issues a regular man has never had to face before.
In January 2018, original RoboCop writer Ed Neumeier said that he was writing a direct sequel to the 1987 film, which would ignore both sequels and the 2014 remake: "We're not supposed to say too much. ... I would say this would be kind of going back to the old RoboCop we all love and starting there and going forward. So it's a continuation really of the first movie. In my mind. So it's a little bit more of the old school thing." [11] In July 2018 it was reported that RoboCop Returns would be directed by Neill Blomkamp and scripted by Justin Rhodes, based on the original, unused screenplay written by Neumeier and Michael Miner for RoboCop 2. [12] In 2019, Neumeier said that Blomkamp wanted RoboCop Returns to be as close to the first film as possible, explaining that Blomkamp thought that "it should be the proper Verhoeven if Verhoeven had directed a movie right after RoboCop." In June, Blomkamp said that the script continued to be developed, and confirmed that the original RoboCop suit would be used in RoboCop Returns, responding "1 million% original" to a fan's question on the subject on Twitter. [13] In August 2019, Blomkamp announced that he would no longer be directing the film, in favor of developing a horror movie instead. [14] By November, he was replaced as director by Abe Forsythe. [15]
In March 2023, after Amazon acquired MGM, they identified RoboCop as one of the company's priorities. [16] In April, Amazon Studios announced to develop a RoboCop television series and film, with the former possibly produced first. [17]
Series | Season | Episodes | First released | Last released | Showrunner(s) | Network(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RoboCop | 1 | 12 | October 1, 1988 | December 17, 1988 | Rich Fogel & Mark Seidenberg | Broadcast syndication |
RoboCop | 1 | 21 & 1 Pilot | March 14, 1994 | November 21, 1994 | Michael Miner & Edward Neumeier | CTV |
RoboCop: Alpha Commando | 1 | 40 | September 7, 1998 | February 3, 1999 | Eric Lewald & Julia Lewald | Broadcast syndication |
RoboCop: Prime Directives | 1 | 4 | January 4, 2001 | January 25, 2001 | Brad Abraham & Joseph O'Brien | Space |
Based on the original film, the first RoboCop animated series features cyborg cop Alex Murphy (RoboCop), who fights to save the city of Old Detroit from assorted rogue elements, and on occasion, fighting to reclaim aspects of his humanity and maintain his usefulness in the eyes of the "Old Man", Chairman of OCP. Many episodes see RoboCop's reputation put to the test or soured by interventions from Dr. McNamara, the creator of ED-260, the upgradable version of the Enforcement Droid Series 209 and the top competitor for the financial backing of OCP. He continually develops other mechanical menaces that threaten RoboCop. In the police force, RoboCop is befriended as always by Officer Anne Lewis, but is also picked on and lambasted by the prejudiced Lieutenant Roger Hedgecock (who appeared as a minor character in the original film and his first name revealed in "Night of the Archer"), ever determined to be rid of him and his kind, whom he sees as ticking time bombs. Their rivalry comes to a fever pitch during the episode "The Man in the Iron Suit", in which Hedgecock comes close to finally beating Murphy with the aid of a new weapons system developed by McNamara. He almost kills Lewis when she interferes, enraging Murphy into tearing Hedgecock's iron suit apart and nearly crushing his skull before Lewis emerges, alive and well. Robocop is maintained by Robocop Project director Dr. Tyler. He was voiced by Robert Bockstael.
RoboCop appears in RoboCop played by Richard Eden. The series takes place 4–5 years after the original film and ignores the events of the second and third films. Murphy's mother and father were introduced. His father, Russell Murphy, was a devout police officer himself for many years until his retirement. He is responsible for instilling Murphy with his trademark sense of duty and dedication to law enforcement, even after his transformation into a cyborg. Throughout the series, Murphy finds himself teamed up with his father on a few cases that often saw them utilizing the elder Murphy's expertise in dealing with reappearing criminals he'd chased back before his retirement. Although his father was stern, it was clear Murphy's parents loved and cherished him even after his 'demise'. However at the end of the episode "Corporate Raiders", Russell Murphy finds out that it's his son under the RoboCop enhancements. Ellen (known as Nancy in the series for apparent copyright reasons) and Jimmy Murphy were recurring characters as well, often finding themselves crossing paths with Murphy by falling in inadvertently or intentionally with the criminal element to which Murphy interfered and protected them from harm. Despite his series partner Madigan's concerns to tell his family who he is, Murphy replied firmly, "No", as he felt doing so would hurt them even more. He commented that "they need a husband... and a father. I cannot be that. But I can protect them".
RoboCop appears in RoboCop: Alpha Commando voiced by David Sobolov. The series is set in the year 2030 and deals with RoboCop being reactivated after five years offline to assist a federal high-tech group, "Alpha Division" in their vigilance and struggle against DARC (Directorate for Anarchy, Revenge, and Chaos), a highly advanced terrorist organization and other forces of evil whenever that may be, globally or nationally. The series shared many of the same writers who had contributed to the 1980s animated series, but had even less in common with the films or television canon that it was based on, including the first animated series. RoboCop now has numerous gadgets in his body that were never in the film, such as roller skates and a parachute. The show also suffers from major continuity errors. In the first episodes RoboCop's son appears in his memories flashback and he appears to be around 10. He appears in the series, to be exactly the same age and even wearing the same clothing, as his memories. The absence of Anne Lewis was never explained. Besides RoboCop himself, Sgt. Reed is the only character from the films in the series. Unlike the films, and previous TV incarnations, RoboCop never takes off his helmet in Alpha Commando.
RoboCop appears in RoboCop: Prime Directives played by Page Fletcher. The series takes place ten years after the original film. Alex Murphy as RoboCop has become outdated, tired, and quasi-suicidal. Delta City (formerly Detroit) is now considered the safest place on Earth, and he is no longer viewed as particularly necessary. The first half of the series focuses on Alex Murphy's former partner, John T. Cable, who is slain by RoboCop due to his system being hacked and being programmed to terminate Cable. Cable is then resurrected as a cyborg in most aspects identical to the RoboCop model, save for color and the addition of a second sidearm. "RoboCable" is sent to destroy RoboCop, but after several battles, Cable is convinced to join Murphy. Meanwhile, OCP (on the verge of bankruptcy) is taken over by a scheming executive, Damian Lowe, who manages to murder the entire board of directors. To bring OCP back, he plans to use an artificial intelligence called SAINT to automate the entire city. The second half of the series introduces Dr. David Kaydick, who plans to introduce a "bio-tech" virus (Legion) to wipe out not only Delta City but all life on the planet, infecting computers and people alike. He takes control of RoboCable by planting a chip in him that causes him pain or death, at Kaydick's discretion. RoboCop receives aid from a group of tech thieves led by Ann R. Key (Leslie Hope), who are determined to stop Kaydick, and RoboCop's own son, James – now fully grown and aware of his father's fate. RoboCop and his rag-tag band race to stop Kaydick from infiltrating OCP tower and activating SAINT, which would presumably kill almost all humans. During the confrontation, RoboCop and James reconcile with each other, and manage to rekindle RoboCable's previous personality. Ann. R. Key and Kaydick both die during a confrontation with each other. Utilizing James's EMP device, and having shut down RoboCop, RoboCable and LEGION are terminated. RoboCop gets rebooted without his previous OCP restriction programming (as well as restoring his identity as "Alex Murphy" as opposed to an OCP product number) or his prime directives. After viewing a goodbye message left by Cable, Murphy returns to active duty to stop the resultant crime in Delta City due to the EMP pulse blacking out the city.
Ed Neumeier revealed to MovieHole that a RoboCop prequel TV series is in development that will focus on a young Dick Jones and the rise of Omni Consumer Products. [18] On September 25, 2024, Deadline reported that Amazon MGM has announced a RoboCop TV series is now in development with Peter Ocko as a writer, executive producer and showrunner and James Wan as an executive producer. [19]
RoboCop story chronology | |||
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Original continuity | |||
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The Series continuity | |||
Prime Directives continuity | |||
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Reboot continuity | |||
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List indicator(s)
- A dark gray cell indicates the character did not appear in that installment.
- An A indicates an appearance through previously recorded material.
- A U indicates an actor or actress was uncredited for their respective role.
- A Y indicates an actor or actress portrayed a younger version of their character.
Character | Original series | Animated series | Television series | Video games | Remake | ||||||
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RoboCop | RoboCop 2 | RoboCop 3 | RoboCop | RoboCop: Alpha Commando | RoboCop | RoboCop: Prime Directives | RoboCop | RoboCop: Rogue City | RoboCop | ||
Officer Alex Murphy RoboCop | Peter Weller | Robert Burke | Robert Bockstael | David Sobolov | Richard Eden | Page Fletcher | John More | Peter Weller | Joel Kinnaman | ||
Officer Anne Lewis | Nancy Allen | Susan Roman | Azita Deghestani | Kosha Engler | Michael K. Williams [a] | ||||||
Sergeant Reed | Robert DoQui | Greg Morton | Blu Mankuma | TBA | |||||||
Donald Johnson | Felton Perry | ||||||||||
Casey Wong | Mario Machado | Len Carlson | TBA | ||||||||
Ellen Murphy | Angie Bolling | Photograph | Unspecified voice actress | Jennifer Griffin [b] | TBA | Abbie Cornish [c] | |||||
James "Jimmy" Murphy | Jason Levine | Clinton Austin Shirley | Uncredited actor | Uncredited voice actor | Peter Costigan | Anthony Lemke | TBA | John Paul Ruttan [d] | |||
Jordan Hughes Y | |||||||||||
The Old Man | Daniel O'Herlihy | Len Carlson | Randall Roberts | Mark Holden | |||||||
Jess Perkins | Leeza Gibbons | ||||||||||
ED-209 | Jon Davison | Appeared | Jon Davison | Appeared | Jimmy Chimarios U | ||||||
Clarence Boddicker | Kurtwood Smith | Kurtwood Smith A | Len Carlson | Kurtwood Smith A | |||||||
Richard "Dick" Jones | Ronny Cox | ||||||||||
Robert "Bob" Morton | Miguel Ferrer | ||||||||||
Emil Antonowsky | Paul McCrane | Paul McCrane A | Paul McCrane A | ||||||||
Leon Nash | Ray Wise | Ray Wise A | Silent role | Ray Wise A | |||||||
Joe Cox | Jesse D. Goins | Jesse D. Goins A | Gordon Maston | ||||||||
Steve Minh | Calvin Jung | Calvin Jung A | Calvin Jung A | ||||||||
Dr. Tyler | Sage Parker | Barbara Budd | |||||||||
Lieutenant Roger Hedgecock | Michael Gregory | Rex Hagon | |||||||||
Bixby Snyder | S.D. Nemeth | S.D. Nemeth | |||||||||
Dr. McNamara | Jerry Haynes | Robert Bockstael | |||||||||
Cecil | Laird Stuart | Chris Ward | |||||||||
Roosevelt | Stephen Berrier | Greg Morton | |||||||||
Dr. Juliette Faxx | Belinda Baur | ||||||||||
Cain RoboCop 2 | Tom Noonan | ||||||||||
Hob | Gabriel Damon | ||||||||||
Angie | Galyn Gorg | ||||||||||
Mayor of Detroit [e] | Uncredited actor | Willard Pugh | Douglas Urbanski | ||||||||
Officer Duffy | Stephen Lee | ||||||||||
Holzgang | Jeff McCarthy | ||||||||||
Schenk | John Dolittle | ||||||||||
Linda Garcia | Patricia Charbonneau U | ||||||||||
Dr. Marie Lazarus | Jill Hennessy | ||||||||||
Nikko Halloran | Remy Ryan | ||||||||||
Paul McDagget | John Castle | ||||||||||
Bertha Washington | CCH Pounder | ||||||||||
Coontz | Stephen Root | ||||||||||
Zack | Stanley Anderson | ||||||||||
OCP CEO | Rip Torn | ||||||||||
Mr. Kanemitsu | Mako | Silent cameo | |||||||||
Otomo | Bruce Locke | ||||||||||
Alpha Prime | Campbell Lane | ||||||||||
Mr. Brink | Jim Byrnes | ||||||||||
Lisa Madigan | Yvette Nipar | ||||||||||
Sergeant Stanley Park | Blu Mankuma | ||||||||||
Diana Powers | Andrea Roth | ||||||||||
Gertrude "Gadget" Modesto | Sarah Campbell | ||||||||||
John T. Cable RoboCable | Maurice Dean Wint | ||||||||||
Wendell Antonowsky | Joseph Capp | ||||||||||
Dr. Dennett Norton | Gary Oldman | ||||||||||
Raymond Sellars | Michael Keaton | ||||||||||
Patrick "Pat" Novak | Samuel L. Jackson | ||||||||||
Rick Mattox | Jackie Earle Haley |
Film | Director(s) | Producer(s) | Screenwriter(s) | Composer(s) | Cinematographer | Editor(s) |
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RoboCop | Paul Verhoeven | Arne Schmidt | Michael Miner Edward Neumeier | Basil Poledouris | Jost Vacano | Frank J. Urioste |
RoboCop 2 | Irvin Kershner | Jon Davison | screenplay: Walon Green Frank Miller story: Frank Miller | Leonard Rosenman | Mark Irwin | Lee Smith Armen Minasian Deborah Zeitman |
RoboCop 3 | Fred Dekker | Patrick Crowley | screenplay: Fred Dekker Frank Miller story: Frank Miller | Basil Poledouris | Gary B. Kibbe | Bert Lovitt |
RoboCop | José Padilha | Eric Newman Marc Abraham | Joshua Zetumer | Pedro Bromfman | Lula Carvalho | Peter McNulty Daniel Rezende |
Omni Consumer Products | |
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In-universe information | |
Type | Corporation and laboratory |
Founder | The "Old Man" |
Founded | 1990 |
Location | Detroit and Delta City, Michigan |
Products |
|
Omni Consumer Products (OCP) is a fictional corporatocratic megacorporation in the RoboCop franchise. It creates products for virtually every consumer need, has entered into endeavors normally deemed non-profit, and even manufactured an entire city to be maintained exclusively by the corporation. [20] [21] OCP is a modern example of the longstanding trope of the evil corporation in science fiction. [22] [23]
OCP is depicted as a megacorporation with products ranging from consumer products to military weaponry and private space travel. With the exception of the first film, it is also the true main antagonist of the RoboCop franchise. Their projects included RoboCop, the ED-209, and the RoboCop 2 cyborg. OCP owns and operates a privatized Detroit Police Department and in Robocop 3 employs criminals into a mercenary police outfit known as the Rehabs (short for Urban Rehabilitators). [20]
OCP, throughout its depictions in the RoboCop films, has sought to fully privatize a dystopian Detroit, Michigan, into "Delta City", a manufactured municipality governed by a corporatocracy, with fully privatized services — such as police — and with residents exercising their representative citizenship through the purchase of shares of OCP stock. They also serve as part of the military–industrial complex; according to OCP executive Richard "Dick" Jones, "We practically are the military." Jones observes in RoboCop that OCP has "gambled in markets traditionally regarded as non-profit: hospitals, prisons, space exploration. I say good business is where you find it." [20]
In RoboCop 3, OCP is bought out by a Japanese Zaibatsu, the Kanemitsu corporation. As a Kanemitsu subsidiary, OCP through its new CEO remains in charge of the destruction of old Detroit and the construction of Delta City by using the Rehabs as its police force, but are financially ruined whilst commander Paul McDaggett is killed by RoboCop. By the end of the film, OCP's brutal policies concerning Delta City are brought to light, many of OCP's majority shareholders sell their stock, and OCP itself is forced into bankruptcy. [24]
In the live action TV series RoboCop , the OCP Chairman is played by David Gardner who still plans to undergo completion of Delta City under his MetroNet computer but is more a sympathetic character as he aides RoboCop against several enemies. He also oversees the new project NeuroBrain to monitor MetroNet by secretly-corrupted executive Chip Chayken and psychopathic genius Dr. Cray Z. Mallardo, who'd later menace OCP and RoboCop. [25]
By the time of RoboCop: Prime Directives , OCP is being manipulated by Damien Lowe, a brash young executive who through murder and reallocation of resources, ascends to power to automate Delta City under a new artificial intelligence called S.A.I.N.T. This is manipulated by cyberterrorist David Kaydick, who seeks the destruction of the human race through a virus that can be introduced to computers and human beings alike. [26]
For the 2014 remake, "OmniCorp" is a division of OCP, with the slogan "We've Got the Future Under Control." [10] Led by CEO Raymond Sellars, OmniCorp is a leading manufacturer of military solutions worldwide, with their robots maintaining peace in hostile environments. However, due to the Dreyfus Act, which prohibits the use of robots for law enforcement, OmniCorp has been unable to penetrate the American market. Sellars plans to circumvent the bill by placing the body parts of critically injured Detroit Police officer Alex Murphy into a robotic suit.
Film | Release date | Box office gross | Box office ranking | Budget | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America | Other territories | Worldwide | All time North America | ||||
RoboCop | July 17, 1987 | $53,424,681 | — | $53,424,681 | — | $13 million | [27] |
RoboCop 2 | June 22, 1990 | $45,681,173 | — | $45,681,173 | — | $25 million | [28] [29] |
RoboCop 3 | November 5, 1993 | $10,696,210 | $36,300,000 | $46,996,210 | — | $22 million | [30] [31] [32] |
RoboCop | February 12, 2014 | $58,607,007 | $184,081,958 | $242,688,965 | — | $130 million | [33] [34] |
Total | $168,409,071 | $220,381,958 | $388,791,029 | $190 million |
Film | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | CinemaScore |
---|---|---|---|
RoboCop | 92% (83 reviews) [35] | 70 (17 reviews) [36] | A− [37] |
RoboCop 2 | 28% (40 reviews) [7] | 42 (22 reviews) [38] | B− [37] |
RoboCop 3 | 9% (33 reviews) [8] | 40 (15 reviews) [39] | B+ [37] |
RoboCop | 49% (223 reviews) [40] | 52 (41 reviews) [41] | B+ [37] |
Title | U.S. release date | Length | Composer(s) | Label |
---|---|---|---|---|
RoboCop: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | 1987 | 41:49 | Basil Poledouris | Varèse Sarabande |
RoboCop 2: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | 1990 | 30:19 | Leonard Rosenman | Varèse Sarabande |
RoboCop 3: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | 1993 | 28:31 | Basil Poledouris | Varèse Sarabande |
A Future to This Life: Robocop – The Series Soundtrack | 1995 | 36:38 | Joe Walsh and various artists | Pyramid Records |
RoboCop: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | 2014 | 54:28 | Pedro Bromfman | Sony Classical Records |
In February 2011, there was a humorous ploy asking Detroit Mayor Dave Bing if there was to be a RoboCop statue in his 'New Detroit' proposal, which is planned to turn Detroit back into a prosperous city again. When the Mayor said there was no such plan, and word of this reached the internet, there were several fund-raising events to raise enough money for the statue which would be built at the Imagination Station. It is yet to be seen if a statue will actually be built, but it is reported that over $50,000 has already been raised on the Internet. [42]
Various licensed video games for various arcade, console and computer systems were released:
In 1989, Data East released a pinball machine based on the film.[ citation needed ]
A mass market paperback novelization by Ed Naha, titled RoboCop 2: A Novel, was published by Jove Books. Marvel Comics produced a three-issue adaptation of the film by Alan Grant. Like the novelization, the comic book series includes scenes omitted from the finished movie. [43]
Various publishers have released RoboCop comic books:
SimEx-iWerks (formerly iWerks Entertainment) opened RoboCop: The Ride around the world at its various iWerks Motion Simulator Theaters, amusement parks, and casinos in the winter of 1995. The "Turbo Ride," as it was termed, was a Motion simulator "ride" attraction which could accommodate between 20 and 30 guests, and featured an oversized screen displaying the projection placed in front of synchronized hydraulically activated seats. The attraction was a mixture of motion picture film and computer animation, lasting approximately 4:00 minutes. The cost in the United States was $5.00 at pay-per-ride theaters. The attraction focused on the guest partnering with RoboCop, riding specialized police motorcycles on a mission to save the mayor of Detroit from "Cyberpunk ROM" and his gang. In the latter part of the attraction, the motorcycle would then convert into "hover mode" and simulate flying through the skyline of New Detroit. Though not as impressive or technical-savvy as other iWerks attractions at the time, the attraction was very popular amongst children and teenagers and especially in foreign markets outside of North America. The attraction was removed from the iWerks theaters in the North American market in 1998. [44]
In early 2019, fast food franchise Kentucky Fried Chicken announced that the latest celebrity to play the Colonel would be RoboCop. [45] A series of commercials were produced with original actor Peter Weller reprising his role. [46] In 2021, RoboCop appeared in one of a series of advertisements in the UK for the insurance company Direct Line, [47] played by actor and stuntman Derek Mears.
RoboCop is a 1987 American science fiction action film directed by Paul Verhoeven and written by Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner. The film stars Peter Weller, Nancy Allen, Daniel O'Herlihy, Ronny Cox, Kurtwood Smith, and Miguel Ferrer. Set in a crime-ridden Detroit in the near future, RoboCop centers on police officer Alex Murphy (Weller) who is murdered by a gang of criminals and revived by the megacorporation Omni Consumer Products as the cyborg law enforcer RoboCop. Unaware of his former life, RoboCop executes a campaign against crime while coming to terms with the lingering fragments of his humanity.
RoboCop 2 is a 1990 American science fiction superhero action film directed by Irvin Kershner and written by Frank Miller and Walon Green. It stars Peter Weller, Nancy Allen, Dan O'Herlihy, Belinda Bauer, Tom Noonan and Gabriel Damon. It is the sequel to the 1987 film RoboCop, the second entry in the RoboCop franchise and the last to feature Weller as RoboCop until he returned in Mortal Kombat 11, RoboCop: Rogue City and other media; it is also the last film Kershner directed before his death in 2010.
Peter Francis Weller is an American actor and television director.
RoboCop 3 is a 1993 American science fiction superhero action film directed by Fred Dekker and written by Dekker and Frank Miller. It is the sequel to the 1990 film RoboCop 2 and the third and final entry in the original RoboCop franchise. It stars Robert Burke, Nancy Allen and Rip Torn. Set in the near future in a dystopian metropolitan Detroit, the plot centers on RoboCop (Burke) as he vows to avenge the death of his partner Anne Lewis (Allen) and save Detroit from falling into chaos, while evil conglomerate OCP, run by its CEO (Torn), advances its program to demolish the city and build a new "Delta City" over the former homes of the residents.
Edward Neumeier is an American screenwriter best known for his work on the science fiction movies RoboCop and Starship Troopers. He wrote the latter's sequels Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation, Starship Troopers 3: Marauder and Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars.
The Enforcement Droid Series 209, or ED-209, is a fictional heavily armed robot that appears in the RoboCop franchise. It serves as a foil for RoboCop, as well as a source of comic relief due to its lack of intelligence and tendency towards clumsy malfunctions.
Felton Perry is a retired American actor. He is most notable for his roles as Deputy Obrah Eaker in the 1973 movie Walking Tall, and as Inspector Early Smith in the 1973 movie Magnum Force, the second film in the Dirty Harry series. Felton's other well-known role is in the 1987 science fiction movie RoboCop as Donald Johnson, an executive at the corporation Omni Consumer Products (OCP). He reprised his role as Johnson in the sequels RoboCop 2 (1990) and RoboCop 3 (1993).
RoboCop: Prime Directives is a Canadian cyberpunk TV miniseries released in 2001. It is a spin-off from the RoboCop franchise. The series, created by Fireworks Entertainment, consists of four feature-length episodes: Dark Justice, Meltdown, Resurrection and Crash and Burn. All four episodes have been released on DVD. Page Fletcher stars as Officer Alex Murphy / RoboCop.
RoboCop is a 1994 cyberpunk television series based on the RoboCop franchise. It stars Richard Eden as the title character. Made to appeal primarily to children and young teenagers, it lacks the graphic violence of the original film RoboCop and its sequel RoboCop 2 and is more in line with the tone of RoboCop 3.
Neill Blomkamp is a South African and Canadian film director and screenwriter. He is known as the co-writer and director of the science fiction action film District 9 (2009), for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and the director of the dystopian science fiction action film Elysium (2013), which garnered moderately positive reviews. He also directed the science fiction action film Chappie (2015) and the sports drama film Gran Turismo (2023).
RoboCop refers to a comic book series spun off from the feature film of the same name.
RoboCop is a 1988 superhero animated series based on the 1987 movie of the same name. The series was produced by Marvel Productions in association with Orion Pictures Corporation, and was syndicated by New World Television as part of the Marvel Action Universe programming block.
Officer Alex JamesMurphy, commonly known as RoboCop, is a fictional cybernetically enhanced officer of the Detroit Police Department from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and is the main protagonist in the Robocop franchise. Murphy is killed in the line of duty, and is resurrected and transformed into the cyborg law enforcement unit RoboCop by the megacorporation Omni Consumer Products (OCP). In the original screenplay, he is referred to as Robo by creators Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner.
RoboCop is a 1987 American cyberpunk action film.
Charles Joel Nordström Kinnaman is a Swedish actor. He first gained recognition for his roles in the 2010 Swedish film Easy Money and the Johan Falk crime series. Kinnaman is known internationally for his television roles as Detective Stephen Holder in AMC's The Killing, Takeshi Kovacs in the first season of Altered Carbon, and Governor Will Conway in the American version of House of Cards. He has also played Alex Murphy in the 2014 RoboCop remake, and Rick Flag in the Warner Bros. film adaptations of the DC Comics anti-hero team Suicide Squad (2016), as well as its sequel, The Suicide Squad (2021). Since 2019, he has starred as NASA astronaut Ed Baldwin in the Apple TV+ science fiction drama series For All Mankind.
RoboCop is a 2014 American cyberpunk action film directed by José Padilha and written by Joshua Zetumer, Edward Neumeier, and Michael Miner. It is a remake of the 1987 film and the fourth installment of the RoboCop franchise overall. The film stars Joel Kinnaman as the title character, with Gary Oldman, Michael Keaton, Samuel L. Jackson, Abbie Cornish, Jackie Earle Haley, Michael K. Williams, Jennifer Ehle, and Jay Baruchel in supporting roles. Set in 2028, a detective becomes critically injured and is turned into a cyborg police officer whose programming blurs the line between man and machine.
RoboCop: Rogue City is a 2023 first-person shooter game developed by Teyon and published by Nacon. The game features an original storyline based on the RoboCop films, with Peter Weller reprising his role as the titular character. It was released for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on 2 November 2023, to generally positive reviews from critics.
The following is a list of unproduced Neill Blomkamp projects in roughly chronological order. During his long career, South African-Canadian film director Neill Blomkamp has worked on a number of projects which never progressed beyond the pre-production stage under his direction. Some of these productions fell in development hell or were cancelled.
The RoboCop statue is a bronze statue of RoboCop, a fictional cybernetically enhanced Detroit Police Department officer from the 1987 film RoboCop. The idea for the statue originated with a 2011 exchange between Detroit mayor Dave Bing and a pseudonymous user on Twitter. In response to the suggestion that Detroit have a statue of RoboCop to rival Philadelphia's statue of Rocky, Bing replied that there were no plans to erect such a statue in the city. The exchange went viral and a subsequent Kickstarter campaign raised $67,436 to fund the construction of the statue.
_Title character seen as an avatar in a battle royale_