RoboCop. Will humans every lose their humanity via programmed robotic technological? With tech devices such as Google glasses, maybe that is a question to start asking. The question is: is this the movie to deal with that question?
Alex Murphy (Joel Kinnaman) is a clean cop in the dirty city of Detroit. How he and his partner Jack Lewis (Michael Kenneth Williams) stayed clean while cops all around them were dirty isn't a story that is told. All we know is that we have two cops trying to make Detroit just a tad safer. Both are targeted for their investigation. Jack suffers a gunshot wound. While Jack recuperates in the hospital, Alex finds his car malfunctioning in his driveway. He goes out to investigate. The car blows up. He is now severely injured.
His wife is approached by OmniCorp, who offers to do all they can to keep Alex alive -- this means turning him into part-robot (actually around 90% robot). OmniCorp wants to use drone technology to replace human police officers. The American people aren't buying it and so neither is Congress. OmniCorp believes that if they can make drone technology more presentable, they can change public perception. And so they turn Alex into RoboCop.
This movie does have some interesting commentary that it attempts to address. Will humanity eventually find itself drained of what makes us human by the technology we are developing? That is perhaps the big issue, but the movie also questions how we allow the media and current events to shape our thinking versus us having a solid philosophical footing that we can use to develop our thoughts when change arrives. My problem is that these concepts are wrapped into a movie that seems purposely designed to look like a b-movie action flick. This b-movie atmosphere is perfectly presented in Samuel L Jackson's over-the-top portrayal of media personality Pat Novak.
I saw this movie on pay television. Would I have hated myself if I had spent money on it in a theater? No, but I wouldn't have walked out feeling like I'd seen a great flick either.
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