Thursday, February 20, 2014

Robo Cop (2014)

Robocop has been rebooted and updated for 21st century relevance. Joel Kinnaman is now occupying the role Peter Weller made relatively famous while a terrific cast accompanies the new incarnation. The story remains in Detroit and has more philosophical pretensions than the 80's version, which had a more political dimension. Unlike the original Robocop, this metal iteration has emotions and tries to reconnect with his family though what's left of him after a botched hit renders him essentially a head and a few internal organs. The story assumes existential proportions; rather than pursuing criminals from the vast police computer file downloaded into his brain, he shocks his 'makers' by overriding department agenda when he pursues the weapons-distributor responsible for his predicament. The story also addresses an almost theological problem of creator/creation and freewill. If that isn't enough for one film, a parallel between law-enforcement robots and drones echoes the ethical and moral debates about the deployment of the latter in military operations. Gary Oldman, Michael Keaton, and Samuel L. Jackson lend some weight to the proceedings and make Robocop fun if not great entertainment. Jose Padilha, the Brazilian director who brought us the riveting Bus 174 , shows a deft hand with action sequences and draws solid performances from the cast. The latest Robocop has a longer reach than the original and though updated, retains the skeletal-plot of the first film.

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