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 DVD: Robocop Box Set
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  • Starring: Robobox, Peter Weller, 
  • Encoding: Region 1 (US and Canada only)
  • DVD Format: Color, Closed-captioned, Box set
  • MPAA Rating: Unrated
  • Studio: Image Entertainment
  • DVD Features:
    • Robobox Includes Three Robocop Movies (see individual title listings for complete details):
    • Robocop (1987, 103 min., Rated R), Robocop 2 (1990, 117 min., Rated R) and Robocop 3 (1993, 104 min., Rated PG-13)
    • Widescreen letterbox format
    • Number of discs: 3
  • Other Formats: VHS | VHS widescreen | DVD | DVD widescreen
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Review

Amazon.com
The first Robocop was thrilling, hilarious, and totally original--none of which has as much to do with the film's spawning two sequels (plus two separate television shows) as its $50 million-plus take at the box office. Though the Law of Diminishing Returns inevitably applies to the theatrical trilogy, the central premise is so strong that each of the lesser sequels has at least a few moments worth catching. That's because the original (wherein Detroit cop Peter Weller, killed in the line of duty, gets transformed into a crime-fighting cyborg) set up an entire world. Director Paul Verhoeven spends as much time lampooning television news, commercial products, and big business as he does on the story; however violent or gory things get (and they get quite icky), the tone throughout is comic, even giddy. Robocop 2, helmed by Irvin Kershner of The Empire Strikes Back fame, sobers up considerably. The film is rather underrated; sure, there are fewer ads and newsbreaks this time around, but there are several inventive touches--Robocop is briefly reprogrammed into a homily-spouting Dudley Do-Right; drug dealers step in to bail out the financially strapped city--and the villains (including the most foul-mouthed, amoral 12-year-old in movie history) are less outrageous than in the first installment. Robocop 3, however, is profit-driven hash. Having Robocop (now acted by Robert John Burke) join a citizens' uprising is a nice idea, and even the ninja android could have been fun, but the movie tries too often to be heartwarming, an emotion thoroughly out of place in this wickedly satirical series. --Bruce Reid

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