Contents

Part Man. Part Machine. All Cop. The Future Of Law Enforcement

1987




Robocop (1987)  

Directed by 
Paul Verhoeven    
  
Writing credits 
Michael Miner    
Edward Neumeier    
  
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete  
Peter Weller ....  Alex Murphy/RoboCop  
Nancy Allen ....  Anne Lewis  
Dan O'Herlihy ....  The Old Man (Head OCP) (as Daniel O'Herlihy)  
Ronny Cox ....  Dick Jones  
Kurtwood Smith ....  Clarence Boddicker  
Miguel Ferrer ....  Bob Morton  
Robert DoQui ....  Sgt. Reed  
Ray Wise ....  Leon Nash  
Felton Perry ....  Johnson  
Paul McCrane ....  Emil  
Jesse D. Goins ....  Joe (as Jesse Goins)  
Del Zamora ....  Kaplan  
Calvin Jung ....  Minh  
Rick Lieberman ....  Walker  
Lee de Broux ....  Sal  
Mark Carlton ....  Miller  
Edward Edwards ....  Manson  
Michael Gregory (I) ....  Lt. Hedgecock  
Fred Hice ....  Bobby  
Neil Summers ....  Dougy  
Gene Wolande ....  Prisoner  
Gregory Poudevigne ....  Slimey Lawyer  
Charles Carroll (II) ....  Bail Bondsman  
Ken Page (I) ....  Kinney  
Yolanda Williams ....  Ramirez  
Tyress Allen ....  Starkweather  
John Davies (IV) ....  Chessman  
Laird Stuart ....  Cecil the Clerk  
Stephen Berrier ....  Roosevelt  
Sage Parker ....  Tyler  
Karen Radcliffe ....  Technician #1  
Darryl Cox ....  Technician #2  
Jerry Haynes ....  Dr. McNamara  
William Shockley ....  Creep  
Donna Keegan ....  Rape Victim  
Mike Moroff ....  Hophead  
Marjorie Rynearson ....  Grocery Mom  
Jo Livingston ....  Grocery Pop  
Joan Pirkle ....  Barbara  
Diane Robin ....  Chandra  
Adrienne Sachs ....  Tawney  
Maarten Goslins ....  Salesman  
Angie Bolling ....  Murphy's Wife  
Jason Levine ....  Murphy's Son  
S.D. Nemeth ....  Bixby Snyder  
Michael Hunter (I) ....  Peter the Homeowner  
Bill Farmer (I) ....  Justin Ballard-Watkins  
Spencer Prokop ....  Gas Station Attendant  
Debra Zach ....  Nurse  
L.J. King ....  Emergency Doctor  
David Packer ....  Emergency Doctor  
Leeza Gibbons ....  Jesse Perkins  
Mario Machado ....  Casey Wong  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Katie Griffin ....  Young Girl (uncredited)  
Mark Edward Walters ....  Street Kid (uncredited)  
  
Produced by 
Jon Davison (I)   (executive)  
Stephen Lim   (associate)  
Edward Neumeier   (co-producer)  
Arne Schmidt    
Phil Tippett   (associate)  
  
Original music by 
Basil Poledouris    
  
Cinematography by 
Jost Vacano    
  
Film Editing by 
Frank J. Urioste    
  
Casting 
Sally Dennison    
Julie Selzer    
  
Production Design by 
William Sandell    
  
Art Direction 
Gayle Simon    
  
Set Decoration 
Robert Gould (II)    
  
Costume Design by 
Erica Edell Phillips    
  
Makeup Department 
Rob Bottin ....  special makeup effects  
  
Production Management 
Charles Newirth ....  production manager  
  
Second Unit Director & Assistant Director 
Mark Goldblatt ....  second unit director  
Monte Hellman ....  second unit director (uncredited)  
David B. Householter ....  second assistant director (as David Householter)  
Michele Panelli-Venetis ....  first assistant director (as Michele A. Panelli)  
  
Sound Department 
James Christopher ....  sound editor  
Ezra Dweck ....  sound effects recording  
Avram D. Gold ....  supervising dialogue editor  
  
Special Effects 
Dale L. Martin ....  special effects (as Dale Martin)  
Dennis Pawlik ....  roboteam  
Tom St. Amand ....  stop-motion technician  
  
Stunts 
Gary Combs ....  stunt co-ordinator  
  
Other crew 
Paula Squires Asaff ....  script supervisor  
Robert Blalack ....  optical supervision  
Rob Bottin ....  robocop designer
robocop creator  
Bradly E. Breitbarth ....  assistant property master  
Bundy Chanock ....  set medic  
Blair Clark ....  armature machinist  
Allegra Clegg ....  production co-ordinator  
Rocco Gioffre ....  matte painter  
Peter Kuran ....  special photographic effects  
Kevin Kutchaver ....  animator  
Randy E. Moore ....  weapons master  
Deana Newcomb ....  still photographer  
Kerry Rike ....  key grip  
Steven Scott Smalley ....  orchestrator  
Ron South ....  assistant film editor  
Phil Tippett ....  ed-209 sequences  
Tom Villano ....  music editor  
  
 
 

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                                    ROBOCOP
                        A film review by Dale L. Skran, Jr.
                         Copyright 1987 Dale L. Skran, Jr.

Let us cross pens. Mark and I have a number of long-running debates, including one on the value of movies like DREAMSCAPE, TERMINATOR, and ROBOCOP, and another on the adaptability of super-hero comics to film. If I may be somewhat cavalier, Mark tends to feel these films are unexceptional, while I feel they serve the special purpose of bringing standard SF ideas to a movie audience generally unfamiliar with them. On the other topic, Mark tends to argue that super-heros make poor, or at least silly films that are not good SF or anything else. As a long-time fan of the super-hero genre, especially Marvel's merry mutants, I, of course, disagree. At least, I feel the super-hero genre could be made into excellent films--if only Hollywood tried.

At long last, in ROBOCOP we may have such a film. Although flawed, it's a pretty good action picture--better than BLUE THUNDER or WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE. It has a nice score by the gentleman who scored Conan the Barbarian (really another successful super-hero adaptation). It has lots of good lines and funny jokes, including "My name is Murphy," "You're going to be one bad m***er-f**ker," and "You're fired." It is 100% better than the scientifically silly RUNAWAY (wherein Tom Selleck battles robots). Like TERMINATOR, which along with BACK TO THE FUTURE, introduced recursive time travel stories to the modern audience on a sensible level, ROBOCOP shows us a lot of wonderful stuff we've read a hundred times, but never seen before. The plot is old stuff, but who cares? Heinlein claimed there were only three basic plots anyway: boy meets girl, the little tailor, and boy becomes man. For those who care, ROBOCOP combines elements from all three of Heinlein's basic plots.

Mercifully, the makers of ROBOCOP take their premise seriously, and spares us cackling villains and silly sidekicks. This is a clean, mean story that owes a lot to the THE ROAD WARRIOR's realistic violence and BRAINSTORM's greedy, militarized, hi-tech corporations. Mark complains a good deal about the inconsistencies in this future world. I think he's holding to an excessively high standard. ROBOCOP is not BLADE RUNNER, but its future (a few Merlin phones aside) is far more completely thought out than the average SF movie. It is not up to written SF standards, but I suspect the producers wanted to make a few bucks and couldn't afford to re- do everything. It suspended my disbelief far better than 2010: ODYSSEY TWO which by contrast (except for the spaceships) seemed to be taking place in the next five years. The makers of ROBOCOP have at least made a serious (and sometimes not so serious) attempt to project current trends out 20-30 years.

The plot has several weakness that tend to make it easier for ROBOCOP to bring in the bad guys. In particular, at one point the main henchman makes a speech to Robocop admitting that he works for the main villain. This makes things easy for Robocop, but 1) the henchman is getting thrown through windows and such like, 2) it is clearly established in the film that the henchman might suppose mentioning his boss's name would save him. At another point a bad guy puts down a perfectly good armor- piercing cannon to use a crane to drop a lot of metal parts on Robocop. This is stupid, but at least the movie has the main bad guy yelling at him to "Stop messing around and shoot." Mark also complains that the ED-209 (a robot that the cyborg Robocop edges out of a job) would not be very effective as a policeman, which is amply demonstrated in the movie, but it is also made clear in the film that the corporation doesn't care if it actually works as a cop--their plan is to sell it to the Pentagon.

I have a beef that I'm surprised Mark missed. Cops are being killed right and left. The crooks are armed like they just came out of the National Guard Armory. The cops...well, the cops carry what appear to be 9mm pea-shooters with nary a shotgun or automatic rifle in sight! Maybe these are supposed to be some kind of advanced handguns, but if I were on that future Detriot police force, I'd carry an AK-47 or a Uzi!

Overall, though, these are just quibbles. ROBOCOP is more realistic than many action movies, including most James Bonds and REMO WILLIAMS. The plot is not as tightly wound as that of THE CONVERSATION but it exceeds BLUE THUNDER by a wide margin. To this it must be added that ROBOCOP continues the line of "action" heroines started by ALIEN and ALIENS. We see for the very first time without any special attention that sexual equality has reached the point that male and female cops share the same locker room. There is no gratuitous flesh, and the heroine is not model-pretty. However, she has a mean crescent kick.

ROBOCOP straddles the edge between a realistic super-hero comic and SF. If one guy is a cyborg or wears a powered-suit a la the comic hero "Iron Man," we tend to have a super-hero story. If everyone has a powered-suit, we have Heinlein's STARSHIP TROOPERS. It is clearly implied in the movie that fairly soon there are going to be other cyborg cops, marking the beginning of the transition to a still more fantastic future.

ROBOCOP also marks a new level in audience acceptance of technology and human transformation, and may well point the way toward our own "cyber-punk" future. Murphy, as Robocop, eventually overcomes his programming and recovers his sense of self. Once having done so, he accepts his new role as a cyborg-cop, realizing that his previous life is over. Although technology not under human control is dangerous ("Star Wars" lasers burn 10,000 acres in California, the amuck ED-209, etc), technology backed by human integrity is working for the betterment of all. I was amazed at how favorable the audience seemed as the movie ended.

In some non-trivial sense we are all Murphy. We went to sleep and a lot of technology insinuated itself into our lives. Now, as before, it is up to us to use it for good or ill. Each time we wake, however, there is still more technology, and like Murphy, we know there is no going back. Who knows, Mark? If you get very very lucky, someday you may wake to see the planets forming around that star you want to visit. But if you do, you will find that, like Murphy, you have said more good-bys than it is healthy to contemplate.

Rating on the (-4) to (+4) scale: (+2). Keep in mind that Robocop is rated "R" for a reason--this is not a "kiddie" movie.


Have I Seen This Movie: Yes
And What Did I Think?: I've always liked Robocop and watched it a number of times. I recently bought the DVD, so I had a chance to revisit it again. This film has lots of action, violence, humor, and a pretty good story to boot. Sometime in the future.... the future of 1987 that is, A corrupt company that rules Detroit and the police department, build a cop to combat the vicious crime in the streets. They take a police officer named Murphy who was gunned down and revive him as a cyborg. Peter Weller plays Murphy/Robocop and the arch villian who guns him down is played by Kurtwood Smith. Kurtwood Smith who is now seen as the dad on "That 70's Show" plays a much different character then we're used to seeing. Nancy Allen also costars here as Murphy's partner. This film ruled the summer of '87, and while it may look a bit like a kids movie if you haven't seen it, it's far from it. It has lots of violence, and a few extra ultra-violent scenes were cut out to save it from an x rating. However, if you get the director's cut of it on dvd, you'll get to see those extra scenes, and it adds to the movie. The dvd also includes a few extra goodies as well. A couple of mediocre sequels and a cartoon series. It's definately worth seeing if you're a fan of action or superhero movies.

I give Robocop 4 out of 5 stars.
Review written November 24, 1999

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