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A Selection Of My Reviews

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- Attack Of The Blind Dead (1973)
- Battle Royale (2000)
- Bay Of Blood (1971)
- The Boondock Saints (1999)
- Boy Eats Girl (2005)
- Brick (2005)
- The Descent (2005)
- Dust Devil (1992)
- Enter The Dragon (1973)
- Equilibrium (2002)
- Evil (2003)
- The Goonies (1985)
- Grindhouse (Planet Terror / Death Proof) (2007)
- Hard Candy (2005)
- Hot Fuzz (2007)
- Hundra (1983)
- Joint Security Area (2000)
- Mad Max (1979)
- Man Bites Dog (1992)
- Memories Of Murder (2003)
- Near Dark (1987)
- Night Of The Living Dorks (2004)
- The Poseidon Adventure (1972)
- Pump Up The Volume (1990)
- Rabid (1977)
- RoboCop (1987)
- Shall We Dance? (1996)
- Showgirls (1995)
- The Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007)
- Slither (2006)
- Strip Nude For Your Killer (1975)
- Tokyo Drifter (1966)
- The Untold Story (1993)
- The Wizard (1989)


Ryan / Movies At Midnight



Last Updated: 7/24/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 31
Sign: Scorpio

City: PLAINSBORO
State: NEW JERSEY
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/23/2006

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Thursday, April 26, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
ROBOCOP (1987)


It is the late nineties in Detroit. Crime has reached an all-time high. The police, try as they might, are powerless to put a dent in the downward spiral of the city. OCP, a corporate conglomerate, who has recently taken charge over local law enforcement, takes the next step in an attempt to reclaim the city and puts into operation RoboCop, an experimental officer that uses the mind of recently killed officer Murphy and puts it into a hulking robotic body. RoboCop is sent out into the streets to clean it up, but when he comes face-to-face with the psychopathic criminals who executed him, it begins to fire up memories of his past. From RoboCop's data crunching CPU comes the faces and dreams of Murphy, which were thought to be erased. As the rest of the police force goes on strike, RoboCop sets out on a one man war to put an end to the corruption that plagues Detroit.

Audiences were lured in to the theatres with the tag line "part man, part machine, all cop" and the expectation of highly-stylized violence. What they got was a cynical look, gingerly sprinkled with dark humor, at the future of America - a future littered with big business, unstoppable crime, complete corruption of the system, and shallow consumers eager to eat up whatever they were told to buy. Most successfully made movies will hint at what it will be about within the first five minutes of the movie. Director Paul Verhoeven, working from a script and story by first time writers Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner, chooses to spend his first five minutes watching television and in the boardroom of OCP.

Verhoeven, using a plot not unlike FRANKENSTEIN as a creation struggles to find independence and free thought for the backdrop, completely skewers the media here, as violence is sensationalized by an almost inhuman and completely unsympathetic broadcasters, and spoonfed in easy to digest sound and video bites. The plot is also moved along via interspersed news broadcasts of RoboCop's exploits. And what news broadcast would be complete without commercials? Verhoeven takes time to look at products of the future, which includes an American car that proudly gets 8.2 MPG ("big is back!") and the Battleship-esque game Nukem ("get them before they get you!"). What is truly frightening about this look into the future is that present-day television has far surpassed Verhoeven's jaded take on it.

However, ROBOCOP does offer its viewers the base violence and gore that viewers eagerly expected from the hedonistic and blood-drenched action pictures of the 80's. It is ironic that while the film condemns those attracted to violence it also serves up some of the most graphically grotesque effects to come out of the era. These were so graphic that ROBOCOP was threatened with an X unless it was trimmed. These now legendary shots, which include Murphy's decimating murder by multiple shotguns wounds and a chillingly real bullet to the head, and the extended slaughter of a boardroom executive by the hulking robot ED-209, were almost completely erased during the film's theatrical run. Whispers of these rumored full scenes floated through had to wait to be seen until home release on laserdisc and later on DVD courtesy of Criterion and currently MGM. And even after twenty years, these have hardly aged, thanks to the superior efforts of film's special effects team.

It is this crew that also brings the heroic RoboCop to the screen, and what a fantastic job they do. In an age where a Commodore Amiga was used for digital effects, in-camera practical effects were what was needed to bring science-fiction to life. Created by wizard Rob Bottin, who previously worked on THE THING and would later go on to TOTAL RECALL and FIGHT CLUB among others, the RoboCop suit is a marvel to look at, and has a real-world functionality to it that does not seem that far-fetched. The results of his hard labor would land him several award nominations, and a win for special effects from the Academy Of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Film.

But without the physical acting and presence of star Peter Weller, it is just a costume. Weller, who only spends about ten minutes of the film as a human, ties the entire world the film takes place in together. If he is not believable, everything else falls apart. Fortunately, Weller pulls off an amazing performance, evoking emotion, expression and thought process through gestures and facial expressions. When his face, which is cover for most of the film, is finally revealed, Weller turns his eyes into heartbreaking wells of sadness. He has been forced into this role, and must come to terms with what he has become.

The blending of science-fiction, graphic violence and social commentary would become a trademark of the Netherlands imported director, who was previously known only for his erotic outings in the 70's, if he was known at all. The director even turned down this movie at first, only later reconsidering at the behest of his wife. It is strange to think where, if at all, the ROBOCOP phenomenon and even Verhoeven's career would be had he not listened to her. Thankfully, the final outcome has left the world a thoroughly entertaining slice of cinema that is as relevant today in the middle of a media-obsessed culture with corporate-government hybrid running things as it was when first released in the midst of Reagan's years. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
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Jerry

 
This is an excellent review. I love my Criterion DVD of this film.
You bring up a lot of good points.
As I have gotten older, I feel that some of the revenge elements owe to Once Upon A Time In The West too.  I love the music to this film too.
 
Posted by Jerry on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 4:01 AM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
crap, i completely forgot to mention the music!  yeah, if the main theme doesn't get you pumped for some payback action, there's not much that will.  i've been humming it all night.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 4:42 AM
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Ben

 

Great movie review! I am lucky enough to own the Criterion Collection edition of this movie which has the director's cut. They should never have cut out the scene where that guy gets blasted away to smithereens. The way it was done, it was so over the top that you just had to laugh.

The movie is really a great satirical look at the corporate world and how it operates. It is quite scary how real life has surpassed this movie.

Shame about the sequels.


 
Posted by Ben on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 5:08 AM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
I enjoyed the hell out of ROBOCOP 2. 
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 1:14 PM
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Ben

 
I thought it started off well, but disintegrated very quickly after that. I also desperately missed Basil Poledouris' score from the first film. John Williams' score here was one of his worst.
 
Posted by Ben on Friday, April 27, 2007 - 4:18 AM
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Moronic Mark
Mark Arnold

 
It truely is a great film. Freky cause it does cast Leeza Gibbons as one of the news reporters, and you gotta love Kurtwood Smith as Clerence Bodecker. It's fun showing this movie to stupid kids who just think of him as "Red Foreman."
 
Posted by Moronic Mark on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 6:24 AM
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Dr. Dave

 

Great review, Ryan.

Robocop is one of my favourite movies; sharp, satirical, and prescient, all wrapped up in a funny, outrageous, action-packed shoot 'em up (a trick Verhooven would pull off again a few years later with the glorious Starship Troopers).


 
Posted by Dr. Dave on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 8:23 AM
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Dr. Dave

 
Excuse the spelling of Verhoeven, it's too early for me...
 
Posted by Dr. Dave on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 8:26 AM
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I need to buy this one very soon!
 
Posted by on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 11:31 AM
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Sam & Eleanor
Samantha Johnsen

 
One of my favorite films of all time!!!  Excellent review!  P.S.  I read online that Peter Weller hated wearing the costume.
 
Posted by Sam & Eleanor on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 11:37 AM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
I think he was going to walk off the set at some point.  They wound up building a fan and A.C unit into the suit for him.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 1:15 PM
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The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire

 

One of my all time favorites. All out violence...Verhoven style! I wish Verhoven would make more movies like this. After Starship Troopers and Hollow Man, his sort of forgotten about his violent, sci-fi roots.

I also love the sequel to this one. It has more action, and Robocop going up against a new and "improved" version of Robocop. And the battle between these two robots is gargantuan, I mean they really tear up the city! Plus the stop animation on it is really freakin good! Oh and Frank Miller wrote the script for the sequel! How cool is that?? Though I hear he wasnt happy with the final result. He had written a much more violent and dark film then the one that showed up on screen.

Great review man!


 
Posted by The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 1:18 PM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
Sadly, Miller's script for the sequel was destroyed as it was tooled for the big screen.  However, there is an awesome comic book adaptation of his original script that you can pick up.  It is fan-frickin-tastic.  Here is the link to the nine-issue collection over at Amazon.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 2:42 PM
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The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire

 
Yup, I got that series! Excellent art work, and it feels a whole lot more like something from Frank Millers mind. More true to his voice.
 
Posted by The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 8:29 PM
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Anthony T
Anthony Thurber

 
Liked the Review. Saw the movie a couple of years of ago on dvd and thought it was good.
 
Posted by Anthony T on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 2:07 PM
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my 2nd fav. Verhoeven flick, right behind "Total Recall". shame about the sequels
 
Posted by on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 10:55 PM
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