ROBOCOP (1987) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | So funny!!!
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- Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
- This weekend we're watching ROBOCOP!!! Oh wow, I could've never predicted all of the fun in this one... You know the drill comment below where were you when you saw ROBOCOP FOR THE FIRST TIME!!
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*DISCLAIMER* I do NOT claim ownership of any clips used in this video. Used for entertainment and commentary purposes only
Time Codes:
00:00 - Intro
02:05 - Start Watching
25:57 - Wrap it up!
'Maybe there won't be blood.'
Oh, my sweet summer child...
😂😂
"Bitches leave" is the best line in cinematic history
"That's life in the big city" has become my favorite. I say it all the time living in a major US city. ahaha.
"I'm not arresting you anymore" is another great line. Murphy has returned.
I wish they had him say it in That 70s Show. When my brother and I saw the first episode, we simultaneously said, ”Can you fly, Bobby?”
it always reminds me of the vin deisel movie triple X when that one guys Says "Bitches Come"
Basically every line Smith delivers is pure gold
“C’mon, Sal! The Tigers are playing [thump thump-thump thump] tonight! …And I never miss a game.”
He recognized who he was because Dead or Alive You're Coming with me was the last thing Murphy said to him before they killed him, and Murphy's partner recognized him because of the gun trick his son thought was cool
Yeah i caught the gun trick in editing. As for the other guy, i eventually decided he must’ve known about the partnership between Dick and Clarence but i see now maybe that was only between them
@@ShanelleRiccio I think they messed up when they used the “dead or alive phrase” …. They should have shown robocop using that line before (with the shop lifter or the r@pers (sorry @trying not to get you a community standards hit) or a third scene ) otherwise it goes unexplained WHY Robo uses that phrase here IF he doesn’t yet recognize him
@@MrSheckstrHe says it to the dude as Murphy and says it again to the same dude as Robocop so the dude recognizes it. Jesus, do people need to have it written down?
@@Jayskiallthewayski dude thats EXACTLY MY POINT !!!!!! Yet he DOESNT SAY IT any time in between…. And he SAYS IT as robocop BEFORE Murphy /Robocop recognizes the guy….. so get off your high horse, pull that stick out if you arse and TRY to explain why he would have said it the second time.
For someone who whines about people needing things written down, you have a serious problem with reading comprehension because my issue was CLEARLY that he did NOT say it AS ROBOCOP at any of the encounters with criminals between his two encounters with this man…. And since he didnt recognize him yet…. There is no explanation why he would say it now!!!
@@MrSheckstrdo you interact with people by a script? Or do you sometimes say different things to different people? I’m not understanding why you think he should or would say the exact same thing every time he interacts with a perpetrator.
He wasn't a robot. He was a cyborg. Bob Morton told the boss that the problem with that robot at the beginning was that a machine can't make good choices so they needed a human element. Lewis recognized Murphy at the shooting range when he did the gun spinning thing.
*Ididnotwanttojoin* Lewis was his partner before his incident: and when she saw Murphy the gun from outside his Holster 🔫 she knew admittedly that was him: Murphy was a true boy in blue, head strong, charming, nonchalant to any criminal, and straightforward yellow jacket: he to be honest have no fucks, who was bringing in dead or alive(even when we a human before he became a cyborg...
A similar incident happened with Keanu Reeves playing as a human/overworked scientist in the movie "Surrogates" where he and the family went on a vacation trip, lost control of the wheel of the vehicle killing his wife, older daughter and younger daughter. In that moment of clarity he went into his companies funding to save their downloading their brain waves into "cloned bodies" he grew within a week from test tubes(some very intelligent 🤓,and alot of money involved in the process)
The first time he and his team, tried to transfer the wounded soldier's mind into a robot: but what algorithms failed at is the robots programming wouldn't accept the human consciousness, well it least it partially did 😅..) when the human psych took over, it admittedly tried to kill itself cause it refused to live as a machine. "If you can trick the mind, that body that it's occupying its very own construct and not a copy or machine, the human psych will accept the hosts and continue on like it's Normal"- Dr
That's what the Dr success was when he brought his family back as clones..
Murphy however, remembered bits and pieces of his past life: " Ghost in a shell" references basically, and senses he's the law he can do within the confides of his program: even though he has past experiences "He can learn within the boundaries of his Primary Programming: his Prime Directives who can kill can vs what is a crime vs who is innocent until proven guilty. He can also use data-mine any: but not limited to recordings, files, pictures, audio frequencies, distress calls or "over ride" protocols if the situation calls for it..
@@jebVlogs556 Yeah, that first part is what I said, Lewis recognized him when he did the gun spinning thing, not because of his lips.
The rest I don't have time to read right now, I have to get ready for work. Maybe later.
Very true.
Yes he is a cyborg but I've wondered how are they able to merge human physiology and not only that but the brain with cybernetics because like in Robocop 3 this doctor says if they wanted a machine in there why did they stick Murphy in there and in Robocop two all of their subjects was going psychotic
I always hear at the gas station scene " how do they remember his face when its covered up!? " .... he remembers him from the " Dead or alive you're coming with me " line.
Emil recognozes him not by the face, but because he said 'Dead or Alive you're coming with me."
Murphy was wearing chest armor when they shot him with the shotguns. It's why is arms and legs were damaged, requiring amputation, but his torso and most of his internal organs survived.
Exactly - why don't most reactors get this?
@@Paul_1971Modern movie watchers seem to need everything constantly explained to them, which is probably why most movies suck these days.
Well I think it's mostly the shot to the head that people react to.
There is an extended cut of the shooting scene that's even MORE gruesome 😯
I’m not sure of the shots in the regular version or exactly what version Shanelle is watching but in the unrated version his chest is clearly covered in blood and gore in the shot where the camera pans in an arc from in front of him to the rear. And as his head hits the ground, you can see all the gore on the chest on the far right edge of the screen.
Dark Horse Comics had a limited run of "Robocop Vs. The Terminator" in the 90s. Excellent crossover.
Dick Jones' secretary was played by Kurtwood Smith's wife.
ILL BUY THAT FOR A DOLLAR
Its not that Murphy couldnt see the baby food to shoot it, its that his body wasnt doing what his eye was seeing. Lewis could see which way his aim was off, and guide him to compensate, so he was accurate again. But yes, its a 'touch' moment.
She was helping him recalibrate.
Peter Weller has major Sci-fi nerd cred. Check his back catalogue. He did a lot of dramas as a leading man, too. All solid work, if not blockbusters. *Leviathan* (1989), and *Screamers* (1995), are underrated Sci-fi gems, and *Buckaroo Bonzai* (1984) is a Sci-fi cult classic. He was a major character in the second of the *Star Trek* reboot movies, *Into Darkness* (2013). And he's still working, as far as I know.
I think he still acts occasionally but he stepped back to become a pretty well respected professor of art history, or renaissance history or some shit. I forget which university he lectures at and im too lazy to recheck.
Peter Weller got a phd in archaeology and more or less quit acting. He hosted some documentaries.
Liked him in Dexter.
Screamers AHAHAHAHAHAH With Roy Dupuis! That movie was a big thing where i live in Quebec Canada, first time a Sci fi movie was shot here back then... And Roy dupuis was an Actor from here too so it was all over the news but when we saw it lol.... Maybe not at the level of Batlefeild earth desaster but ishh was not a great movie either as i remember. Maybe i should watch it back as im now a grown man at that time i was 13 years old i i dont think i ever watched Screamers since.
I feel so lucky to have seen "Buckaroo Bonzai" in the theater as a teen. With John Lithgow and Jeff Goldblum in halrious roles.
Peter Weller, AKA “acting isn’t fun, let’s go get a PhD in Roman History”.
I’d buy that for a dollar!
Paul Verhoeven has a history of making films that on their surface look like they're mindless indulgence, but actually are much deeper when you dig in. Robocop is the most famous of them (I would say), but he also created Total Recall, Basic Instinct, Starship Troopers, Showgirls, and Hollow Man (well, also others, but those are the ones he's done that I've heard of). It's telling that he's not involved in the Robocop sequels, and those are generally not regarded as fondly as the first (though people at least like Robocop 2--Robocop 3, on the other hand, is pretty well disliked).
I don’t think she has the intellect to interpret what Paul was saying.
wow..... @@TheMicahwitz
Although there are sparks of comedy and bangs of violence, it’s the haunting and saddening undertones that make this a favorite for me. The arch for Robocop becoming familiar again with his previous self, is what really makes me wish we would had a chance to explore this further.
Best movie about a cybernetic police officer ever made.
At about 15:00 he recognized him from the phrase “dead or alive, you’re coming with me”. Murphy said it to him as he tried arresting him, only to be shout up by the hand, then he said it as Robocop.
One of the best movie endings EVER!
I have the RoboCop theme as one of my ringtones/alarms, and have for years. It never gets old.
I saw this film on VHS with my parents and my brother, who is two years younger. I was 12 years old then (1989). Well, that's what the '80s were like.
I saw this on my 13th birthday, my parents said that was the age I was able to see R-rated movies.
The 6000 SUX is the real hero of this flick.
🤣
Great point on the scene blocking - not seen it mentioned by reactors or critics, but imo it's where Verhoeven really is masterful with ensemble casts and group scenes. Constantly changing the perspective all the time as well to keep it fresh. It runs through so many of his movies, the ultimate is the chaos backstage in Showgirls, it's sensational.
Yay for Showgirls!
His mastery of blocking is also apparent in his Dutch films. It's no wonder Hollywood got interested.
I was 11 years old in 1987 and saw it in the theater with my parents and siblings. It was an awesome family movie that I love even more to this day. Classic!
I was 6 going on 7 and my cousin and I went to see this. After I saw the toxic waste scene, I decided I wanted to be a chemist.
That would have been awesome I wish I could have done that but that's a little bit before I could experience that since it came out when I was born but a family movie I don't know about that
@@WarrChan that's interesting did you end up being a chemist
@@WarrChan it's always good if we can achieve our goals
@@reviewerinabathrobe I was a chemist for 10 years but I went back to school and now I'm an eye doctor.
I was working in post production vfx in Dallas when they filmed this. It’s always comical to me to see the Dallas 80’s skyline standing in for detroit where my husband was from. It opened doors for us lowly local production types to be extras. I opted out but my buddy who did composite work spent 3 long nights suited up as a cop in a parking garage only to end up a lone shadow on a wall. The satirical elements were dead on. Sensational news programs were a big thing at the time so we’re often parodied in shows in the 80’s.
"Why would he need to eat?"
How else would he sustain his organic tissue?
He's not a robot. He's a cyborg. Part man. Part machine.
"Part man. Part machine" - But 100% Cop :)
I guess how they feed people in comas in hospital, with a tube
Question asked literally right after it was answered 😂
He’s more machine than man now…
Even a Terminator would have to eat, our brain is a major part of our energy budget so by comparison Robocop would have to eat a lot more than a Terminator that only needs to sustain a basic digestion system and skin.
You'll have to do the Paul Verhoeven trilogy. Robocop, Total Recall, Starship Troopers. They all three have varying layers of social satire peppered throughout.
Someone PLEASE put the other two up as requests!!!
How can you forget showgirls
@@aquariussolaris2492 well, showgirls pretty much ended Verhoeven's career in Hollywood.
I remember my aunt sending me to buy the tickets at 11 years old. She always took me to see the biggest movies that came out those years.
She sounds cool. I didn't get to see it in the theater, but I turned 11 later that year and talked my dad into renting it for my birthday party. That's a fond memory.
Shanelle watching Robocop!? I'd buy that for a dollar!
RoboCop is a masterpiece. Saw it on VHS late 80ies or early 90ies. Blew my mind.
Also from same director Starship Troopers, is popcorn movie but also has social commentary.
Total Recall is also great.
The Bob Morten character (that pissed Dick off) was played by the late actor/director Miguel Ferrer. You've probably heard of his iconic father José and cousin George Clooney. He was also friends with Carrie Fisher before her Star Wars role.
Jose Ferrer as Cyrano de Bergerac is one of my all-time favourite movies, Mala Powers as Roxanne was gorgeous. Shanelle should see that.
Jose Ferrer was great in "The Caine Mutiny".
@@sparky6086 He's great in "Lawrence Of Arabia", "The Big Bus" and "A Midsummer's Night Sex Comedy".
He was also in Hot Shots 2, classic 90s comedy.
"War, it's fantastic!"
Singer/actress Rosemary Clooney was Miguel's mom.
You need to watch buckaroo banzai, Peter Weller, John Lithgow, Jeff Goldblum and more. Scifi, weird, silly and fun. The Stop motion in Robocop 2 was some of the best Stop motion.
I fully believe Shanelle would declare for Team Banzai.
Love both of those. P. S.: Robocop 2 is directed by Irvin Kirshner, who brought us Star Wars: The Empire Stikes Back. No big surprise there, eh?
@@jean-paulaudette9246 also written by Frank Miller (Sin City).
@@jean-paulaudette9246 I LOVED BONZAI...especially the aliens names ...JONATHAN BIGHBOOTY
I definitely hope Shanelle will watch Buckaroo Banzai at some point.
As a 7th grader at the time, we all definitely loved it and the humor... the toxic waste scene was talked about for years. Also side note, when I first saw That 70s Show and saw the character Red, I was like hey its that scary criminal dude from Robocop... :)
By all means YES. You are supposed to laugh at this movie, and I'm so glad you did. Another great reaction, thank you for all your great works.
I met the lead actor at comic con. His partner is the same actress that played the bully from Carrie.
This film is a childhood touchstone for aging American males, many of who could quote all the movie dialog to you.
Robocop walking on water at the end is christ-like showing Murphy's resurrection back to human.
This is a timeless masterpiece, who cares about some of the wonky effects. Great script, great memorable characters (unlike that 2014 tturd). I must've been one of the few who recognized Peter Weller from before Robocop. I had seen him in a very different film called "Of Unknown Origin" first.
Saw that one on HBO back in the day. I was probably 10 years old and was afraid to go in the basement for quite a while.
Now that people put cgi in everything as if obviously fake stuff were the be all and end all of cinematography the older effects look better...if people watched films with the cgi jabber the hut in the re- released star wars ep 4 in 97 or whenever it was they'll watch stuff from the 80s that doesn't have that rubbish in. Maybe you have to play computer games to get it I don't know.
@@rlawrence9838 No, you just have to care more about how things move than how they look. To me, it's the stop motion that looks obviously fake.
@@Tantalus010 Yeah ja ja binx looks more real than that because of his walk....
Considering when it was made, they didn't have CGI available for ED 209. The stop motion is also directed by Phil Tippet. Imagine clowning on his work.
Clarence is one of my very favorite movie villains.
👍👍👍
When they show Murphy's eye during the fight with ED 209. A subtle glimpse of his humanity. My favorite shot of the whole film.👌
The reason the gas station robber recognizes Robocop was because he said "Dead or alive. You are coming with me." at the factory.
Peter Weller is also Buckaroo Banzai, one of the greatest rockstar scientists to ever exist! And he's also an art historian. And Naked Lunch is a bizarre film
Why is there a watermelon there?
And to seal the deal, there’s a watermelon. What more could anyone ask for?
I saw this movie seven times in the theater after it got released back in 1987 when I was only 13-14 years old and I loved the hell out of it so much.
Real reason Robocop wears a helmet to disguise his looks is off duty, Murphy is physicist, neurosurgeon, test pilot and rock star Buckaroo Banzai. (also Jeff Goldblum, John Lithgow and Christopher Lloyd).
It’s hilarious to me how every RUclipsr sees Kurtwood Smith and says “Hey it’s Red”. When That 70’s Show came along, I said “Hey it’s Clarence.” Between Robocop and Dead Poets Society, he does such a good job playing terrible human beings it was actually jarring for me to see him doing comedy.
Robocop's partner was played by Nancy Allen. An underrated actor perhaps best known for her work with Brian De Palma in Carrie, Dressed to Kill and Blow Out...all great films!
Trivia:
The hostage situation with the mayor is clearly a reference to the real life murder of Harvey Milk and mayor George Moscone in San Francisco in 1978.
NO, You're WRONG, MILK-SUCKER. The movie was released on July 17, 1987 - BEFORE that occurred ( November 27, 1987). Maybe someone fed you that FALSE information. ...or perhaps FACTS & LOGIC do NOT exist in your woke mind?
"THAT WAS REALLY BAD!!!" she cackles.🤣🤣🤣
It wasn't RoboCop's face the guy on the motorcycle recognized. It's when he said Dead or Alive you're coming with me.
RoboCop is my #1 and #2 all time favourite, interchangeable alongside Jurassic Park for #1 and #2 spots.
It came out when I was 5, and I saw this when I was 7 in 1989... and it changed my movie going world forever and cemented me as a Paul Verhoeven fan for life.
At that time, I'd seen Superman 1 and 2, Ghostbusters, maybe Goonies being the most risque movie because the kids swear in that film... and all the other kids my age were into maybe Superman or Indiana Jones, stuff like Mary Poppins and Disney stuff, Charlie And The Chocolate Factory and so on.
I grew up as a movie-goer very, very quickly when I saw RoboCop.
It lead me onto movies like Predator, Alien, Aliens, Terminator, Poltergeist, Blade Runner, The Shining, The Lost Boys, Lethal Weapon, all by the age of 7, 8 and 9.
RoboCop was my seminal moment, and made me the cineaste and the writer I am, and drove me to critique cinema.
There's so much to this movie than just swearing, gore and action.
I've written thesis on RoboCop.
I adore this movie.
This movie has a wit and a sarcastic edge that no action movie has the right to have. It's very layered! I've had the pleasure of having this gem in my mind since I saw it in theaters. I can't imagine not buying that for a dollar!
In an interview for an anniversary edition, Peter Weller (or it might have been Ray Wise) was asked how it felt to be part of a movie that became a cultural icon. He answered "I'm just happy that we were able to make something that was interesting and good. The rest is just gravy on the cake...GRAVY on the CAKE?" realizing he had mix up his metaphors.
15:50 "How did he remember Robodop? His face is covered in a mask."
Maybe it was the "Dead or alive, you're coming with me" line.
An American production company gave a Dutchman millions of dollars to take the piss out of American society, genius. Verhoeven's Sci-Fi satire trilogy are essential movies, absolute classics. For anyone interested in the film I highly, highly recommend the recent "RoboDoc: The Creation of RoboCop", its maybe the best 'making of' I've ever seen. +1 for not editing out the best line... "Bitches leave", cracks me up every time.
My dad took me to see Robocop in theaters when I was a little kid. I was basically traumatized by Murphy's death. As I grew up, I kind of thought maybe I simply saw the movie too young, but I credit it more to the very effect that Verhoeven was going for. The movie kills that nameless suit with ED 209 in the board room and everyone laughs and cheers (and you're supposed to). Then Murphy dies and it's horrific and tragic and real - movies train us to think that guns and knives kill you instantly and they don't a lot of the time. Him still being alive with the POV, memories of his wife and son, and hand-held camera shots of the EMTs working on him as he's rushed to the hospital - Verhoeven made you laugh at movie violence and then shoves a very realistic gunshot victim death in your face. Verhoeven did the same thing with Showgirls. Shows you gratuitous nudity and sex, sex, sex the whole movie, often over the top and even silly, and then slaps a violent sexual assault scene right into your face.
One of the most traumatic killings shown on screen
If you notice, the more he remembers his life, the less robotic he becomes.
Also, that suit took almost ten hours for him to get into every time.
Paul Verhoven made three movies that are Sci-fi legends; Robocop, Total Recall and Starship Troopers.
Peter Weller, star of my all-time favorite movie: “The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across The 8th Dimension.” Nancy Allen is great in “1941,” a WWII comedy by Stephen Spielberg. Paul Verhoeven is best known for his three sci-fi flicks: “Robocop,” “Total Recall.” and “Starship Troopers.” All three movies are so much fun. It’s okay to laugh; we all do it. Fun is fun!
Emil’s death-by-toxic waste remains one of my favorite movies deaths, ever.
I think you might be mixing up Karen Allen (who isn't in this movie) with Nancy Allen, who is. Nancy Allen's most famous other role I'm aware of was in Carrie, but Nancy is in 1941, so it seems like you only mixed up the actresses' names.
@@dostatochno yes. Thank you (blushing!)
@jamielandis4308 definitely not a big deal. It was a simple mix-up.
Also, I try not to care _who_ i's "right" or "wrong," I just want the most correct information to be what ultimately gets passed along.
The Nuke 'em commercial was very topical at the time. The cold war was still going on and there was a lot of talk in the news about the nuclear arms race, and how many MX "peacekeeper" missiles we were deploying everywhere. And the "line of death" came straight from the mouth of Libya's Mommar Gadhaffi, who we also weren't getting along with very well. Having the game end in a joyous nuking was a bit of gallows humor, since people weren't really sure that we *weren't* going to kill ourselves in a nuclear war.
Back in 1987, “Looking for me?” was in the TV ads for the movie, so we heard it a lot. :)
Fun fact: This movie is how Kurtwood Smith met his wife (the woman playing the receptionist).
He has to eat because there are still organic components to Murphy. Under the armor and hardware you still have a head..a brain... At the very least. The food keeps those living components functioning.
So this is a very adult move. However, this movie spawned toys and a Saturday morning cartoon. I remember seeing this with my folks when we rented it. I think most kids I know saw it. Kind of surprising to me now considering how ultra violent it is.
The late 80s saw ALOT of grown up movies getting a cartoon series , its was a way to introduce younger kids/consumers to a franchise
“Hey, mom and dad, why not buy the kids a xenomorph? They’ll love it!”
@@0okamino There was an Alien toy line planned. I think a few of the figures were made then the line was cancelled. I think Reaction Toys ended up with the molds.
@@jamesroseii Yes, Kenner did produce and release 18" xenomorph figures in 1979, 4 series of _Aliens_ toys from 1992 to 1994 (which were released again as double-packs called _Aliens vs Marine_ in 1996), _Predator_ toys in 1994, and _Aliens: Hive Wars_ toys in 1998. These were all specifically marketed for kids, rather than mainly collectibles like later lines have been. I remember seeing a few commercials for them at the time.
I adopted "I'd buy that for a dollar!" thanks to this movie 😂
This movie and Starship Troopers stood out to me back in those days of ultra violent high adrenaline kick ass flicks. Awesome goodness.
I'm so glad you've seen this. It's straight-up one of the greatest films of the latter 20th century. A true satire, and a true black comedy, as well as a kick-ass action flick. As you were saying, it was VERY much needed in 1987. Nobody was making satire at the time, or great superhero stories, either. When I saw it at the cinema, the audience cheered at the end. So rare!
Forget Total Recall. You need to see BUCKAROO BANZAI!!!
I agree on Buckaroo Banzai but don't forget Total Recall, it is a great movie, especially when you look past the action movie exterior.
This movie is prophetic.
I actually agree. Its far more so than idiocracy imo.
He recognized him from him using that same line “Dead or Alice you’re coming with me” line before on him.
The dude covered an acid at the end - that gets liquefied by the car is the most gnarly shit I had seen when I was eight years old.
I seen this in the theater and loved it as a kid. I still love this movie today. Great video!
Gotta look into pre-Hollywood Verhoeven. He's WAY more than just "the Robocop guy" and if you thought his popular stuff is wild, man oh man, just you wait..
"It's 40 years old!" As someone who was born in 1987, that hurts!😢
My beloveded Red Foreman...
Uh oh. My first VHS to go with our first VCR.
One of my favourite films of all time ever since my childhood. Terminator, Robocop and rest of Arnie’s films. The best. Just the best.
I remember watching a movies show on TV with my big brother. Verhoeven was a well-known director in the Netherlands with some big movies already on his resume (Turkish Delight being his most famous one) and he moved to the USA to make movies. This was his first really big production (Flesh & Blood didn't get as big) and they showed some sequences including a scene with ED201. I clearly remember both my brother and I being impressed with what he was doing in the USA and we commented on that.
I love the line, "My friends call me Murphy, but you can call me... Robocop."
23:56 -- Actor Ray Wise hadn't seen Emil in his prosthetics and makeup before the scene was shot. His reaction was genuine..
I want a Robocop musical where ED209 has a quiet song by itself, reflecting on existence right before it goes into the boardroom the first time... Then a huge dance number after the "glitch"...
I first saw this on TV. Peter Weller has quite a career in both movies and TV as well as a director. One of his other starring roles was in "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension". A fun ... put your brain on hold type of movie. It might be worth a watch.
I think BB would totally be worth it. It’s so nutty, and has that great “Oh, hey, it’s them” ensemble.
As someone who loves the behind the scenes stuff, you should check out how much work Peter Weller put into just getting his movements to look good. Clearly robotic, but not cheesy. They even hired a movement coach to help out with this.
Robocop is a classic; it's a hero's journey story that puts you through the wringer with the protangonist, laced with social commentary and dark satire that very few films can match. Love all of Verhoven's stuff - even Showgirls.
This was the first R rated movie I saw at age 10. My friend's dad took us but then his mom felt terrible about all the violence I had been exposed to, whereas I was reveling in hearing the F word in a movie! The violence barely phased me. Not sure what that says about me at age 10, lol. 😊
Gen Xers and 80s babies are built different, and I thank God for it. 😏😎
@@JamesASharp me too! That's part of the reason I get such a kick out of reaction videos from people in their 20's because their reaction is PRICELESS, yet we just took it for granted because that's how it was back then.
Director Paul Verhoeven is responsible for some of the most innovative and biting satires of modern society: Robocop (a satire of corporate takeovers of public services), Starship Troopers (a satire of the 1980s-pro-war mentality), and Total Recall. All of them are over-the-top hyper-violent, itself a comment on our appetite for violence.
0:47 - A little, yeah.
6:00 - There's an important line right here that most people miss. Morton says they've 'placed prime candidates' for the Robocop program. Murphy doesn't know WHY he was transferred, just that the order came from OCP.
11:12 - Because he's not 100% robot, he's a cyborg. His brain and certain elements of his torso are still organic, so he still needs food.
15:53 - He recognized his voice when he said "Dead or alive, you're coming with me."
Yeah I've noticed not a lot of people catch that as well. "We've restructured the police department and placed prime candidates according to risk factor." I somewhat understand that though. He says it very quickly and it comes off sounding like corporate/legal jargon while most people are probably still stuck on Mr. Kinney being blown to pieces.
It's not scifi violence there's more to this movie than that.
It's about a man who gets killed on duty ,his family leaves moves on ,he is made into
a cyborg and loses his humanity.
Slowly he remembers he is really human but his family is gone.
It's a sad story in the end really.
But it is gory like so many 80's movies were.
The practical effects are very good too.
Enjoy girl !
I saw this as a kid and most of the satiric content went over my head, but the more you watch the more you see. The movie is a SCATHING attack on capitalism. They even have the evil corporate guy and the evil crime boss give essentially the same speech at different scenes in the movie, both ending with "good business is where you find it," showing that the movie sees corporations and criminal cartels as interchangeable.
The movie also casts RoboCop as a modern-day Jesus analogue. He dies and rises again, and in the final battle he appears to be walking on water (just a camera trick but still) and he is stabbed in the side with a spear just like Jesus on the cross. I guess that makes Officer Lewis Mary Magdalene? (Maybe that's pushing the analogy too far).
The RoboCop suit was so painful and so hot that even with fans, Peter Weller is said to have sweated off about 3 pounds for each full day of filming. He quit the movie shortly into filming but was convinced to come back and finish.
Weller is a very smart and very eclectic guy, he's been in a ton of stuff as you mentioned and directed quite a bit of TV as well. Besides ROBOCOP he's most famous for playing the title role in a 1984 sci-fi movie which is the definition of a cult classic (get ready) - THE ADVENTURES OF BUCKAROO BANZAI ACROSS THE EIGHTH DIMENSION, which is very weird and very fun and very, very, very 1980s. Besides that Weller is also a jazz musician (he's been in a band with Jeff Goldblum) and has a Ph.D. in Italian Renaissance Art History (a real degree, not a fake honorary one) and has taught university-level courses on art history and archaeology.
Another great reaction, thanks as always.
Peter Weller movie you should check out is “buckaroo bonsai across the eighth dimension”
I recently watched the 2023 4 part documentary on this called Robodoc the creation of robocop, and even after all these years I still learnt more about it. Well worth a watch. I was ten at the time when it was released not even realising the violence and at the time the most swearing id ever heard in a movie 😂😂.
A ton of great films came out in 1987, like Adventures in Babysitting, Interspace, Predator, SpaceBalls, The Running Man, and The Lost Boys. All great films but sadly Interspace lost out on an avalanche of great films. But Interspace really is a Hidden gem in all these films.
IMDB was pretty light on the trivia. I love this movie. I have some additional trivia. The female news reader was played by Lenexa Gibbons. She was a ch host of Entertainment Tonight and I had a major crush on her. When Robocop goes to arrest Nash in the night club, when Nash kicks Robocop in the groin, it cuts to a shot of a guy making a face in the camera and pumping his hands up and down. That is Paul Ver Ho Ven ( spelled how it is pronounced). This was heavily cut in Australia for its theatrical release. They dubbed out all the swearing. The death of Kinney in the boardroom was severely cut and ironically, made it all the more violent because of the cut. It stopped just as he fell back on the model. The death of Murphy was also severely cut. No hand being blown off, no arm flying off. No camera panning around Murphy and seeing the headshot. The death of Murphy was intentionally shocking BECAUSE you did not get much time getting to know Murphy, so they had to make you really feel for him when he is killed. The nudity was also cut out at the start. Fortunately, they released it as an R rated video and has remained uncut ever since.
Paul’s next movie, Total Recall was also heavily cut on release in cinemas in Australia. It too was released in both Rated M version and rated R. I think it has since been released uncut but with an MA rating. It too has a similar style to Robocop with commentary on fascism.
Leeza
@@MovieVigilante He must have had a major crush on her sister Lenexa
The Shan Smile 😢😅😮❤❤❤❤❤
Robocop = ultra-assertive. And we love him for it!
Emil recognized Murphy immediately when he said "Dead or alive, you are coming with me," because that was the exact line Murphy had spoken to him earlier. It's kind of his catchphrase.
Just a note.. The amazing Nancy Allen played officer Ann Lewis..I think you saw her recently in Brian DePalma's Stephen King adaptation "Carrie" as the evil queen bitch supreme Chris Hardison.
She's also fantastic in Dressed to kill and Blow out
@@Jayskiallthewayski have to say I loved seeing her pop up in Steven Sodebergh's adaption of "Out of Sight". She's always great to see, even when her characters are evil. Lol.
Shanelle, your reaction to ed-209 killing Mr. Kenny or Kinney (whatever his name was) was absolutely priceless 😆. Also this was the first ever film I saw where it only showed the title of the film and not the names of the actors and actresses at the beginning.
I saw this as a young kid and it amazes me that people say it wasn't, at least partially, aimed at children. There were a ton of toys, an animated series, a live action tv series, and lots of other children's merch.
11:12 - “Why would he need to eat?” He’s called Robocop, but he’s not a robot. He’s a cyborg. He has living tissue that needs sustenance, or they’d rot.
Sometimes I think some reactors don't bloody listen to the dialogue.....
20:46- naming a car SUX probably not the best marketing
Possibly explains why Cox found one still with the factory sticker on it!
But if it's the 6000, I reckon it's gotta be the 6th model released. 😂
15:54 I assume you figured this out in the editing, but just in case (and since comments help with the algorithm...), Murphy said "Dead or alive, you're coming with me" to that guy both at the gas station and at the chemical plant earlier in the film. (15:18 and 7:54) That's how the criminal recognized him, he knew the voice and that's a reasonably uncommon phrase. Edit: Also, you didn't react to the joke at 20:45 that the car being advertised is the "6000 SUX" ("An American tradition!"). As a kid, I thought the SUX was hilarious (and it's also the car model they offered to the man who took the mayor hostage earlier in the film at 12:53).
Lol! I guess nobody pays attention that RoboCop shoots at his jars of baby food for target practice instead on consuming it.
Saw this in theaters in Summer 1987. I probably went to the movies every single weekend that year and I remember being disappointed by a LOT of my anticipated films.. including Superman IV. Robocop delivered big time and blew us all away. Like you said, it was a better superhero movie than the actual superhero movies that came out at the time. It definitely paved the way for more mature comic book type movies like Batman (1989).
When news broke that Robocop was getting a reboot there was such backlash that film makers across RUclips remade different scenes and edited it all together to make "Our Robocop Remake."