- Rather than the ED-209 program simply not being quite ready for implementation in law enforcement, due to glitches and errors in the units or their inclinations to use extreme perhaps unreasonably great force, the matter is that artificially intelligent beings in general are banned from direct law enforcement applications in the United States, on the grounds that potential problems can arise out of the incapability of AI to understand what it feels to be human while policing human beings. There is also an android kind of robot, the EM-208, and RoboCop's body roughly takes the form and size of its chassis.
- Instead of being overwhelmed beat officers facing off with extremely dangerous and ruthless thugs, Alex Murphy and his partner are detectives assigned to vice crimes detail. The police department itself is overwhelmed more so in terms of unsolved cases rather than emergency or tactical response operations, and there is no situation of police going on strike and no mention of the Delta City initiative. Detroit isn't a war zone on the razor's edge of calamity in this version.
- Rather than Murphy being murdered and resurrected as an anonymous industrial product, having lost most or all of his life memories along with self identity, he is severely injured and awakes from a sort of catatonic state as a bionic man with full awareness of his former life. The transformation requires his wife's consent since the corporation doesn't initially have legal custody of him or his body.
- RoboCop finds himself confronting not only brazen criminals and slick homicidal corporate people but also corrupt police detectives, including a police captain (which is a position closer to being like a politician than other police ranks). In the film, it is noted that the latter puts politicians on edge.
- RoboCop is armed with a special firearm and a special taser (capable of lethal and non-lethal electric shock), and uses non-lethal force as well as non-brutal force to bring down violent criminals far more often than lethal force or crude melee attacks. (These are features that helped the movie be rated PG-13 rather R.) He rides on a special motorcycle (complete with emergency vehicle lights) rather than a standard-issue squad car. His prosthetic body has robotic articulation quite analogous to that of the human body, and he takes advantage of his athletic dexterity by sometimes sprinting and dodging attacks. The motors, gears, rotors, axles and hydraulic components of his robotic limbs and neck are not extremely audible, although the weapon container located within each of his thighs expectedly makes a sound when opening or closing, while extending or retracting the weapon holster. His visored helmet can rotate away to the back of his head to expose his nose, eyes and forehead. His artificial body can be disassembled and reassembled immediately via a network of automated robotic devices, while docked in the laboratory where his maintainers work on him. He has wireless access to the police database and CCTV feeds throughout the city. His mind can be put to sleep and his body controlled remotely by his maintainers. He and his program have no explicit set of numbered directives to follow, but there is a subroutine like Directive Four, from the original, that prevents him from acting against "red assets" which include key members of the corporation responsible for his inception and maintenance.
RoboCop is a reboot that uses elements of original, RoboCop (1987), and takes it in a new direction. Some distinctions and features are as follows:
In the original RoboCop, Murphy (Peter Weller) only has his face and brain: "total body prosthesis". (Note: The implication that RoboCop is merely a machine who thinks he is Murphy made in RoboCop 2 (1990), per an OCP officer's remarks therein; meaning possibly that no or almost no portion of his human brain was spared.) In the 2014 RoboCop, Murphy (Joel Kinnaman) also has his right hand. This is a departure from the original in which his right arm was destroyed while he was being murdered, whereas the intact left arm was ordered removed during his transformation. In the 2014 version, it is shown that all that remains of Murphy after being transformed into RoboCop is his face, brain, heart, lungs and also his right hand, which is not connected to anything but a prosthetic arm. In a deleted scene included on the Blu-ray disc, Omnicorp CEO Raymond Sellars (Michael Keaton) orders Dr. Norton (Gary Oldman) to save Murphy's right hand-Sellars remembering that his father told him you could tell a lot from a man's handshake. In the original film, the team that transforms Murphy into his cybernetic form wants to save his left arm, which wasn't lost when he's massacred by Boddicker and his gang. Bob Morton coldly tells them to "lose the arm" in favor of giving Murphy a brand new mechanical body. So the sparing of the Murphy's hand in the 2014 movie is probably also a nod to that moment in the 1987 film.
Yes. Murphy's partner on the police force, who was a female character in the original RoboCop, Officer Anne Lewis (Nancy Allen), is now a male character, Detective Jack Lewis (Michael Kenneth Williams). This was likely done because there was never a romantic angle between Murphy and Lewis in the original trilogy, the filmmakers felt it was inconsequential whether the character was male or female.
Yes. Several ED-209 units appear in this movie. ED-209 is another OmniCorp product. The version of ED-209 in this film looks much like the original but has been given a redesigning to make it look larger and sleeker.
No, although it is stated in the film by the warmongering newscaster Patrick "Pat" Novak (Samuel L. Jackson) that OCP is the parent company of OmniCorp.
There are currently no publicized plans for a sequel.
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- How long is RoboCop?1 hour and 57 minutes
- When was RoboCop released?February 12, 2014
- What is the IMDb rating of RoboCop?6.1 out of 10
- Who stars in RoboCop?
- Who wrote RoboCop?
- Who directed RoboCop?
- Who was the composer for RoboCop?
- Who was the producer of RoboCop?
- Who was the executive producer of RoboCop?
- Who was the cinematographer for RoboCop?
- Who was the editor of RoboCop?
- Who are the characters in RoboCop?RoboCop, Dick Jones, Ellen Murphy, Rick Mattox, Officer Anne Lewis, Dr. Juliette Faxx, Tom Pope, Sergeant Warren Reed, Pat Novak, Dr. Marie Lazarus, and others
- What is the plot of RoboCop?In 2028 Detroit, when Alex Murphy, a loving husband, father and good cop, is critically injured in the line of duty, the multinational conglomerate OmniCorp sees their chance for a part-man, part-robot police officer.
- What was the budget for RoboCop?$100 million
- How much did RoboCop earn at the worldwide box office?$243 million
- How much did RoboCop earn at the US box office?$58.6 million
- What is RoboCop rated?PG-13
- What genre is RoboCop?Action, Crime, Sci-Fi, and Thriller
- How many awards has RoboCop won?4 awards
- How many awards has RoboCop been nominated for?5 nominations
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