Original RoboCop comes to Blu-ray in remastered director’s cut

RoboCop Blu-ray

Thank you for your cooperation.

It is likely the best format you will have seen Paul Verhoeven’s classic vision of social commentary meets science fiction since it appeared in theaters in 1987.  If you’ve only watched it on TV and in standard formats you’ll want to take another look at RoboCop, your favorite borg cop, now on high-definition Blu-ray in an unrated director’s cut.  Known for its excess violence and campy cyborg superheroics, RoboCop manages to avoid the dated look of many of its contemporary films, falling in an elite league of re-watchable, cult-favorite 1980s films with The Terminator and Tron.  Filmed in Dallas for its futuristic building locations instead of its actual story setting in Detroit, the police uniforms, corporate setting, and street scenes all feel as if they could be part of some future, with maybe only hair styles and faked media clips that shout 1980s.

RoboCop remastered

Relive the classic boardroom scene where Ronny Cox’s new alternative police replacement robot has a “glitch.”  Relive the first time you saw Ray Wise and Kurtwood Smith playing their earliest genre roles.  And don’t forget the unforgettable Basil Poledouris (The Hunt for Red October, Starship Troopers, Conan the Barbarian, The Twilight Zone) soundtrack.

Best of all, Peter Weller’s police armor looks superb–Verhoeven’s choice of lighting and camera angles really shows off this unique cyborg supersuit.  Rich, clear colors–those 1980s grainy film images are now gone.

RoboCop plugs in

The new Blu-ray is packed with features.  Two of the special features–“Flesh and Steel: The Making of RoboCop” and a 2012 Q&A panel with the creators and stars Peter Weller and Nancy Allen–are among the most insightful extras you’re likely to find in a new edition of a film classic.  The Blu-ray also includes a commentary by director Verhoeven, screenwriter Ed Neumeier, and executive producer Jon Davison, plus a special effects short, two 1987 documentary featurettes, a scene study on the boardroom scene, and a feature on the villains of RoboCop.  You’ll learn great tidbits about the creation of the costume and how long it took to put on Weller each day, and the fact that Michael Ironsides (who would later star with Ronny Cox in Total Recall) was originally selected for the role.  The only disappointment is a lackluster set of deleted scenes (deleted for good reason), but considering all the rest of the package it’s still a great collection on a single disc.

If you’re thinking about checking out this year’s remake when it arrives in theaters, make sure you see the original classic first.  Robocop: The Unrated Director’s Cut is available everywhere and you can get it at a reduced price now at Amazon.com that will have you shouting “I’d buy that for a dollar.”

C.J. Bunce
Editor
borg.com

Leave a Reply