RoboCop, in Paul Verhoeven's 1987 film, was originally supposed to drive around in a custom built vehicle, like Batman does. It had several nicknames: "Robo-Car," "Robo-Mobile" and "Turbo-Car." A ...
Somehow, RoboCop lives on as NECA is bringing back yet another figure that gives the decade-old sculpt a new deco. RoboCop (1987) is a sci-fi action classic directed by Paul Verhoeven that takes place ...
Neill Blomkamp has been linked to a number of in-development projects with renowned sci-fi film franchises over the years, including Aliens, Halo, and RoboCop. Blomkamp addressed the latter in a new ...
January will be a big month for Max, as several RoboCop and Star Trek movies are headed to the service after the holidays. In terms of RoboCop movies, all three of the original films are being added ...
"Stands 6.5 inches tall, based on ROBOCOP 1987 film. Die-cast armor suit and 23 points of articulation lets you re-create film scenes. Also there is a pistol storage room in right thigh to fit auto-9 ...
Robocop begins with a lovely establishing shot of futuristic “Old Detroit” at twilight. The camera soars across a body of water (presumably the Detroit River) and pushes in towards the city. The ...
Director José Padilha's long-delayed RoboCop reboot has arrived, and it’s neither an unalloyed (see what I did there?) triumph nor the travesty that partisans of Paul Verhoeven’s subversive Reagan-era ...
The RoboCop show at Amazon is moving forward. The RoboCop franchise began in 1987 with the Paul Verhoeven-directed movie starring Peter Weller. It was followed by two sequels, 1990’s RoboCop 2 and ...
Nearly 40 years after Robocop first released, the sci-fi action film about a cyborg police officer is heading to television. First announced in April 2023, the television adaptation will feature a ...
“There has never been a documentary film quite like RoboDoc and the unique access to archive, exclusive interviews, attention to detail and a stunning visual ethos make this film a truly unique ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...