Any of my fellow 40+ year olds remember how this movie and the character of Robocop was totally marketed to kids in the form of toys and a Saturday morning cartoon?? The 80’s, man. The 80’s.
@DurkMcGerk5 ай бұрын
They really missed a cross-marketing opportunity for baby food
@JamesS.2545 ай бұрын
Yep, so funny now thinking back that we had toys based off this movie, but I loved every minute of it.
@Dystopia11115 ай бұрын
Hehehe, remembering the old 'Rambo' cartoon. Juuust a little bit toned-down for the kids.
@Steve190555 ай бұрын
@@ckrowne i had robocop toys as a kid😎 Even i had not watched the movie because i was to young🤣 but i knew who robocop was still😂
@lawrencejoy22565 ай бұрын
And video games...
@lt61345 ай бұрын
To this day our family still uses the phrase “I’d buy that for a dollar!”
@alextwoliter65105 ай бұрын
I still say that too Fam. Haha
@Smileybeeblevrox5 ай бұрын
I use it, and people say, "hey is that from?" And I say yeah it is
@drogusmaxwell66405 ай бұрын
I just used it today at the bike shop, and several of the Gen X'ers immediately knew the reference. It was great! 😊
@profanepersonality5 ай бұрын
Same. Got the next generation saying it too, lol.
@user-vb2pm1dy6u5 ай бұрын
@lt6134: Still say it all the time.
@thegridrunner99765 ай бұрын
Robocop, Total Recall and Starship Troopers were all made by Paul Verhoven. They are all hyper violent but classic action movies.
@dougbarton46685 ай бұрын
And used several of the same actors…
@frankiek22695 ай бұрын
Wasn’t impressed by Starship Troopers. It was okay. Put it this way. I bought the other two movies you mentioned. I avoid the third. The novellas are so much better!
@charlesallen23065 ай бұрын
Ronnie Cox plays basically the same person in Total Recall. One of my favorites.
@LiberalsArePoop5 ай бұрын
@@thegridrunner9976 but he didn't make Super Troopers! I love that movie and might watch it "right meow!"
@bucknakedA5 ай бұрын
& Basic Instinct, also by Verhoeven with Michael Douglas
@DiggitySlice5 ай бұрын
The reason why the scene of them trying to save him in the hospital seems so real is because they hired a real hospital staff and just told them to act however they would if someone came in with Murphy's injuries
@LatinBostonH8ter794 ай бұрын
Similar to how they did the procedural routines in BULLIT.,
@hashtagfilm5 ай бұрын
What's really poetic is that Murphy stabs Clarence in the neck with the same hand that Clarence first blew off. Such amazing filmmaking
@cesarmadrigal364 ай бұрын
What I love also about that scene is the fact that Murphy fakes the pain when Clarance is hitting him and then stabbed him with that rod just to get him closer so he can stab him back.
@rickmclaughlin97105 ай бұрын
When "That 70s Show" came out, all of us Gen Xers saw Kurtwood Smith as Red Forman, and we were all like, "That's Clarence Boddicker."
@davidgerald1335 ай бұрын
I could never get into that 70s show because of that 😂
@aaronbarlow43765 ай бұрын
Also the military guy Griggs in Rambo 3
@80Jay715 ай бұрын
Also the strict dad in Dead Poets Society.
@ugarajahgovindasamy69335 ай бұрын
As well as in Deep Impact(1998)
@neilhutchinson45455 ай бұрын
@@aaronbarlow4376 I thought he was C.I.A.?
@InimitaPaul5 ай бұрын
To people my age Red Foreman doesn’t exist, there is only Clarence Boddicker!
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
Yes he’s no longer Red Foreman to us now. His performance in this film was incredible
@zdancrk5 ай бұрын
👏👏👏🥂🍻
@TheGrouchDnD5 ай бұрын
"Can you fly, Bobby?"
@sosaboi13525 ай бұрын
Bitches leave!
@PsychTsunamiMkII5 ай бұрын
Kurtwood Smith (aka Griggs in Rambo 3 / Tom Perry, Neil's Dad in Dead Poets Society / Federation President in Star Trek 6 - The Undiscovered Country / Cliff in The Crush / Earl Stone in To Die For / Baird - Secretary of Defense in Broken Arrow)!
@billclay94895 ай бұрын
Practical effects trumps CGI anyday.
@jackgilchrist5 ай бұрын
I completely agree, although stop motion doesn't hold up too well imo.
@ronlarue60325 ай бұрын
All day Everyday 80's and 90's some of the greatest movies
@garykidson44895 ай бұрын
Definitely! I hate all of the cgi we get now when it's something that could easily be done with practical effects.
@mikejordan82595 ай бұрын
@@jackgilchrist It sure does.
@RDSports55 ай бұрын
@@garykidson4489 Very true. Not 'easily', but at least it would bring back a ton of jobs people had back in the day that were completely replaced due to CGI. Its just a totally different feel when experiencing those 80s and 90s effects versus now. Almost like listening to digital music instead of on vinyl; there's a purity to vinyl that digital completely misses on
@DoBetterAlways80s5 ай бұрын
Their shock when he gets his hand blown off, where as every 80s vet is thinking "oh it gets soo much worse"
@punkem7335 ай бұрын
"Bitches leave" is one of the greatest lines/line deliveries all time, and you cut out bitches, but left in leave lol.
@camcordernonsense52645 ай бұрын
I'd like to use it but forwarn that I mean no Ill will as I doubt many now days would catch where it's from.
@ryanjacobson25085 ай бұрын
And the director at the time didn't know English that well, and referred to the actresses as "bitches" on set. Everyone found it so funny they didn't tell him until later on that bitch is a very offensive thing to call someone.
@aikighost4 ай бұрын
They also cut out the scene where he visits his old family home which is kind of one of the more important scenes in the protagonists journey from "Robocop" back to "Murphy"
@lowstryder10224 ай бұрын
Favorite line of the movie!!
@nobbynobbs81824 ай бұрын
The whole movie is a gold mine of iconic quotes
@whitediggity5 ай бұрын
“Nice shooting son, what’s your name?” “Murphy.”
@Rileyollam5 ай бұрын
One thing I like about that scene. Everyone else at OCP referred to Robocop as a machine, a thing. Yet the top dog person you would think should be the most callous, casually spoke with Murphy as a man.
@tentsio41195 ай бұрын
That phrase is pure gold if you analize it in subtext terms.
@MitchClement-il6iq5 ай бұрын
I heard stories of the theaters going crazy and clapping to that! I didn't see this in theater's but vhs.... but I'm sure it's true.
@lennyvalentin64855 ай бұрын
@@Rileyollam It helps that he isn't wearing the helmet at the end. A lot of people have difficulty empathizing with something which is essentially just a mouth and lower jaw. :P
@EvilTwinMorgan5 ай бұрын
yaaaayyyy
@mikejordan82595 ай бұрын
It's funny that Amber says, "It's Very Real." during the hospital scene because it pretty much is. The movie company hired a real off duty emergency room team and told them the basics of the situation. They did everything they would've really done if it was a real event.
@WhosThat28765 ай бұрын
Wow I've seen so many facts about this movie, and even the RoboDoc on...Amazon i think?... and NEVER knew this about the ER scene. So cool, thanks for that!
@vladyvhv95794 ай бұрын
@@WhosThat2876 I think it's mentioned in the blueray commentary? DVD commentary? Either way, it's fairly well-know fact for those of us who don't just stream things.
@FrankJReynolds5 ай бұрын
All the callousness of the OCP employees to people dying is meant to parody the whole Wall-Street corporate "yuppie" mentality of the 1980s, where nothing else matters in your life but getting ahead in your career.
@SGlitz5 ай бұрын
Now it's the Woke Social Agenda that cares nothing for anyone but themselves
@mrtim53635 ай бұрын
Unfortunately callousness & greed, above all else, in financial, political & business decisions. "Where nothing else matters in your life but getting ahead in your career." Has never, gone out of style.
@bentucker23015 ай бұрын
90s 00s 10s 20s...
@MAGGOT_VOMIT5 ай бұрын
Yes big companies are that bad today. Remember, Boeing just recently unalived 2 of the whistleblowers!!
@NeptuneLady19575 ай бұрын
@@MAGGOT_VOMIT Unalived??? Really?
@LuciferStarr5 ай бұрын
15:36 This is another hint of the survival of some of Murphy's mind that a lot of folks don't notice: The way he wheel spins the car and hits the ramp so fast that he scrapes the underside.
@sharkdentures32475 ай бұрын
"I'm squeamish when it comes to . . . . .blood." Oh Honey, you are NOT ready for Robocop!!! THOUSANDS of Blood Squibs had to DIE for this movie to be made! LOL
@jdogjohnson3825 ай бұрын
I bet you two didn't expect this to be so violent and brutal it's an insane film but a classic.
@wiltchamberlainisthegoat135 ай бұрын
When I first saw this in theaters, I really liked it. However, I was kind of disturbed by the bad guys who seemed very happy to watch others suffer. Unfortunately, there are far too many people like that in our world.
@jdogjohnson3825 ай бұрын
@wiltchamberlainisthegoat13 I was a baby so I wouldn't have seen it in 1987 but I've seen It a few times now it's a classic but pretty violent and gruesome but it's fun.
@CollideFan15 ай бұрын
Rule of thumb, if you see Paul Verhoeven as director, pretty much expect ultra violence in his movies
@jdogjohnson3825 ай бұрын
@@CollideFan1 Total Recall is another one.
@Divamarja_CA5 ай бұрын
It’s a satire, and when you embrace the theme, you embrace the movie (and the ultra violence blended with humor). Loved Miguel Ferrer (Bob) and Ronny Cox (Dick). RIP to Miguel; Ronny is still alive and kickin’!
@Etherwinter5 ай бұрын
I like how you guys expected Robocop to go bad or rogue at the beginning of the movie lol. It's really amazing how Robocop becomes more human as the movie goes on, and at the end he loses his mechanical/robotic sounding voice.
@smoothALOE5 ай бұрын
I think my favorite moment in the whole movie is when he takes his helmet off and asks his parter about his family. “I can feel them, but I don’t remember them.” That’s such a well-written line and Peter Weller performed it perfectly.
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
In a later installment of the series, its mentioned that Alex Murphy is a person of strong religious faith coupled with his sense of honor and duty. So he would never intentionally go rogue. Instead he becomes at peace with his situation and continues to work his chosen vocation. I remember a friend once said that instead of seeing him as just a cyborg, Murphy is a several handicapped person utilizing prosthetic limbs to still contribute to society.
@lennyvalentin64855 ай бұрын
@@smoothALOE The music score in this particular scene is also pure genius. Basil Pouledouris was such a tremendously gifted composer and orchestrator...
@smoothALOE5 ай бұрын
@@lennyvalentin6485 to me, this is his best film score. He was a great composer, overall, but I like this one the most.
@lindy16425 ай бұрын
There was a lot to be said for practical effects back then.. they were masters at it .
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
They were awesome!
@kondaments4 ай бұрын
The behind the scenes documentaries of this movie are awsome to look at. They used all the tricks possible, including rear projection combined with stop motion...
@jpanderson25695 ай бұрын
No matter how dark the world gets, nothing puts a smile on my face like watching people experience that first scene of ED-209's "malfunction" and Verhoeven perfectly stretching that violence just 2 seconds longer than he should. Robocop (1987) is so underrated because it's actually a comedy, a perfectly dark satire, played totally straight.
@davidmarquardt90345 ай бұрын
The office scene where the guy is blasted to a pulp and has enough lead in him to sink a battleship. Then seconds later a guy yells "Call a Paramedic!" I lafted my head off. It was just so reduicless.
@edwardlenovo32404 ай бұрын
You've clearly never seen the special edition/directors cut. That scene and murphy's death go on for an absurd amount of time. Both were the reason it was initally rated X for violence.
@IanHollis4 ай бұрын
So few people understand this. It's why the remake was so abysmal. They completely misunderstood what made the original what it was and is to this day.
@edwardlenovo32404 ай бұрын
@@IanHollis Well the satire part is only part of the reason the remake sucked. There were many many other reasons. In the remake there was no slow introduction of the character, there was no story arch of him rebuilding his memories and humanity. He didn't lose his family, He didn't act and move like a 300lb robot. The over reliance on CGI (even the ED-209 stop motion scenes still hold up pretty well, because the jerky stop-motion plays well with idea of a walking robot tank thing) ....etc. etc.
@protossevolution33614 ай бұрын
Your post is the definition of a perfect scene analysis. To watch people seeing the cruel fate of Mr. Kiney for the first time, feels like we are seeing for the first time too. This scene make me shat my pants when I was a kid, and I love it. ED-209 was one of my obsessions as a kid, I used to draw it, had stamps of him, etc. One funny thing, the melted guy in the end (forgot his name) never impressed me, I don't think it's scary or gross.
@JoeCensored5 ай бұрын
Every 80's kid like me watched this movie and was traumatized by 2 scenes. Murphy's initial death scene, and the toxic waste dude scene.
@williamprocope96485 ай бұрын
Facts.
@brianmcgarry16325 ай бұрын
Emil's, the toxic waste guy, is one of the best death sequences in cinema history imo
@Wrain.5 ай бұрын
Kenny getting shot 100 times by ED 209 traumatized me for sure. I was only 11 when I watched Robocop.
@ryoku794 ай бұрын
Robocop was dark as hell. I actually prefer the remake over this one. The toxic waste guy scene was a little much tbh
@FatHead19794 ай бұрын
The sicko getting his cock shot off stuck in the mind (at the time) as well! 🤣
@isaacparras77725 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Mr Boddicker (Red) is married to the lady who plays the secretary at OCP
@AJR-zg2py5 ай бұрын
That's where they first met! :) Kurtwood Smith mentioned this during a recent interview on the Rich Eisen Show.
@Zeaiclies5 ай бұрын
Yes
@FFF666GP5 ай бұрын
How fitting 😏
@ozzythecats5 ай бұрын
Barbara kept the gum
@Zeaiclies5 ай бұрын
@@ozzythecats lol Well kept Kurt anyway
@southernlady75-Amy5 ай бұрын
I highly recommend Demolition Man(1993). Sylvester Stallone, Sandra Bullock and Wesley Snipes. Fantastic futuristic cop movie. It has some classic moments and a lot of action and punchlines. :D
@PML785 ай бұрын
I second this request
@GeekyGirl805 ай бұрын
Third that request. I'll make some popcorn up to watch that reaction.
@PML785 ай бұрын
@GeekyGirl80 🍿 🤤
@sparks50635 ай бұрын
I still don’t know how to use the 3 seashells lol
@PML785 ай бұрын
@sparks5063 I just cuss alot like John S. 😆
@RaiderDeepBall5 ай бұрын
ROBOCOP is WAY ahead of its time, everything holds up perfectly.
@adriantrusca12455 ай бұрын
Except the long arms when the guy falls out of the window. And Ed209's stop motion movement.
@shadowproductions9695 ай бұрын
@adriantrusca1245 the puppet is horrible at the end and a few little things.. like using a drill with a drill bit when putting the "led" on.. some of that robovision stuff.. Ed209 isn't too bad except in a few scenes.. they actually did have a life sized version of it in a few shots.. but overall it stands up really well.. especially the violence and underlying message against a corporate America. I love that they didn't shy away from anything and instead leaned into it all
@henrick5895 ай бұрын
In 1987 I was 8. I remember Robocop being played on tv at 2pm, in its full uncensored glory (in Quebec,Canada we had a channel named Super Ecran which broadcasted new movies and exclusivities) I can tell you that when Ed-209 kills the employee, and Murphy getting his right hand blown-up I was traumatized. Never saw that level of gore at the time. But I was just glued to the screen. Of course, you can imagine my parents didnt knew what I was just watching 😂 By the end of the movie, I had a new hero in my heart. What a movie, thats getting better with age. Just like a blood red wine 😅
@Mephisto314 ай бұрын
Me too 😂 8 ans and big fan 🇫🇷
@LubbockBabesFan4 ай бұрын
I was 6.
@ivaneames43545 ай бұрын
First reactors I've seen to realise that Murphy's bulletproof vest would have provuded some protection against the body shots. And one of the few to realise that it was Robo's "Dead or alive" line that made Emile realise it was Murphy.
@nenasimone5 ай бұрын
I love that you guys are so impressed with the effects, people talk about moviemaking in the 80s like it were the dark ages, some of the best loved movies come from this era.
@RDSports55 ай бұрын
And some of the best made movies are from the 80s and early 90s. It was a great time of creativity in writing and directing, while having enough technology to do some cool stuff, but not enough to be over the top ridiculous like we have today. To me, it was really the golden era of action films (prime Arnold, Sly, and Willis in that era didn't hurt either).
@jeffreydavid67945 ай бұрын
This movie is a masterpiece. I love the practical effects.
@exituscaeli9595 ай бұрын
You guys missed out in Michigan. A bit over a decade ago, Detroit announced an art development for the city and committed to commissioning a large sculpture downtown to “symbolize the city”. For that work, they opened it up to the public to vote and submit ideas. The number one submission was “Robocop”. The then mayor kept saying, “Please be serious and think about the city”. When it got close to time to pick the statue, Robocop was a win by a landslide. I literally sprayed coca cola out of my nose when a week before the final decision, Detroit’s mayor was asked about Robocop in a local press conference and he blew a gasket, slammed his fist down on the podium and said, “Their isn’t going to be a DAMN Robocop statue for Detroit!!” Comedy gold, it still cracks me up he was so mad. Afterwards, Peter Weller, the actor who played Robocop, made a video thanking people for their vote but asked them to let it go.
@Tensen015 ай бұрын
Except there IS a statue. It's currently awaiting installation, which has mostly been held up due to right issues.
@brianmcgarry16325 ай бұрын
@@Tensen01hopefully it cost more than a dollar 😂
@seanhammond92535 ай бұрын
Oh Man! I have loved cinema since I was 5 years old; I love gathering those little bits of lore that surround a good movie. You have just made my WEEK! A return jewel: Years before Star Wars, George Lucas was driving with a friend late at night on winding roads through a forest. They were talking, and then something moved fast across the road, passing through the headlights. They couldn't tell what it was, but then the friend said he was going to tell his wife he'd had another Wookie sighting. George was perplexed; "A what??" the guy said that in his family, anything big and harry that you couldn't identify was called a Wookie. Yes, that IS where that came from. My high-school science teacher (Beacon High School, Oakland CA) was invited out to Lucas Ranch with a bunch of other science teachers to get feed back on something, and the question of "where did you get the name Wookie for Chewbacca's people?" came up. He told us about the trip 2 weeks before going, and we all clustered around the day after and asked him questions. True Story ✌
@importantpyg4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this story. That made me so proud of Detroit! Hilarious!
@misterlexx27214 ай бұрын
Detroit could also get a painting or statue for its son Axel Foley too. He is a huge Detroit Lions fan too.😆😆😆😆😆
@11DNA115 ай бұрын
Them calling Kurtwood Smith "Red Forman"... He's ALWAYS Clarence Boddicker first. One of the best movie villains ever created.
@Ginza925 ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies! Love the old futuristic atmosphere and music. Do you guys still teach or are you doing KZbin full time now? congratulations on your success!
@LordEriolTolkien5 ай бұрын
''Can you fly, Bobby..'' ''I'd buy that for a dollar.''
@chrism88605 ай бұрын
"Bitches, leave"
@KeijiMaeda865 ай бұрын
"Bitches leave."
@Spr1ggan875 ай бұрын
"goodnight sweet prince"
@Barronvoncrash5 ай бұрын
"Bitches leave"
@calumthomson89935 ай бұрын
Just after 15mins 40secs. Robocop catches keys for the car. The scene supposley took over like a 150 takes, he couldn't catch the keys because of the material of the glove.
@EvripidouM5 ай бұрын
The keys kept bouncing off lol
@MD-19825 ай бұрын
The fear in Nash's face was GENUINE; they kept the actors apart before the scene was shot so he had no idea 😅
@mckenzie.latham915 ай бұрын
Ray wise
@bekindandrewind14225 ай бұрын
Emil's make up and prosthetics were kept a secret from EVERYONE. (Until called to the set, he was sequestered to a tent so no one could see him.)
@ExpatCollin5 ай бұрын
He was declared "legally dead", which is different than clinically dead. Even though Murphy had no idea, when he signed up for the police force he was already owned by OCP, which as waiting for any moment for an officer to die for their robocop program. They had rights to him, revived him, and turned him into a cyborg.
@Skank_and_Gutterboy5 ай бұрын
Dude is dead and they still make him come to work. Damn!!
@nielsjensen41855 ай бұрын
"Waiting for him to die," and Bob Morton pulled a few strings to make sure that Murphy died. He was the one who got him transferred into the most lethal precinct and he was the one who made sure that there was no backup.
@mikejordan82595 ай бұрын
@@nielsjensen4185Bob didn't pull strings to make sure Murphy died. If you watch early in the movie, Bob tells the Old Man that they've restructured the Police Department and placed prime candidates in the worst areas where it was more like for an experienced officer to be killed in the line of duty.
@nielsjensen41855 ай бұрын
@@mikejordan8259 You need to watch the Director's Cut as it changes the appearance of the boardroom scene and the scene of Murphy transferring in. Once you see it in that order the reason for Morton's assuredness that he can go to prototype within 90 days is because he has pulled strings to make it possible well in advance. The thing is that he never specifically gave orders that would lead to Murphy's death, Murphy just happened to be the first who died and he just made sure that some things would trigger if their names came up. Your argument presents all he did. He just increased the chances of these people dying ´. Otherwise would be to assume that he cared, which he never did. This meant that all the other "candidates" were SOL even though the strings would no longer be on them after Murphy died.
@markriedel19775 ай бұрын
The brilliance of this movie is making a cynical action movie, the heart of it being Murphy regaining his humanity, but framing the action scenes as more 'horror'
@vladyvhv95794 ай бұрын
And making it also a comical satire.
@edwardlenovo32404 ай бұрын
Well the actually synopsis is a satirical jesus resurrection story, but when he comes back, he's a cyborg judge dredd, and the villian(s) are coke fueled 1980s corporate assholes.
@Unclemarv125 ай бұрын
Robocop 2 is watchable, don’t worry about the remake
@karinag.7525 ай бұрын
What? The remake is great!!!
@Kosmisch19875 ай бұрын
I think the remake is decent... it has good moments... it just doesn't capture the same energy as the original.
@charlesallen23065 ай бұрын
I put it up there with the Total Recall remake. Entertaining but didn't capture the essence of the originals.
@Billp197335 ай бұрын
I think the sequel is shamefully bad. Unwatchable
@garykidson44895 ай бұрын
@@karinag.752 The remake is horrible!
@HRPufnsting5 ай бұрын
Fun fact, Peter Weller(the guy who played Robocop) has a phd is Italian Art History
@Yora215 ай бұрын
He's done TV documentaries.
@bittergeek5 ай бұрын
@@Yora21 I was casually watching some show on cable, and suddenly saw Weller-the-scholar talking about Roman aqueducts. No stunt casting with a celebrity, no reference to his movie career, just a straight nerdy presentation about a really technical historical topic. Did not compute. (And, thankfully, no references to ancient aliens. The Romans got most of their engineering skills from the Etruscans, not little green men.)
@fritsdaalmans55895 ай бұрын
Aaaand.. he played Buckaroo Banzai the neurosurgeon/rockstar, in "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension", with John Lithgow(sp?). Actually, check out that film @robsquadmoviereactions, to see if it's maybe somethign that you two would like to review. It's a scifi film but it's also quite funny. Not as action-packed as Robocop for sure.
@misterlexx27214 ай бұрын
Fun fact. Robocop is playable in Mortal Kombat 11 and also got a new video game last year.
@basecode85 ай бұрын
I'd watch this for a dollar!
@AJR-zg2py5 ай бұрын
17:45 Fun fact: the news reporter at the scene is Bill Farmer... whose face you probably don't know but you've certainly heard his voice. He's been the official voice of Goofy for Disney since 1987. Bill was living in Dallas (where Robocop was filmed) and working as a moderately successful stand-up comic before getting the call to go to LA - and the rest is history.
@IkethRacing4 ай бұрын
27:28 the most badass writing I've seen in a movie. I don't think there's another movie that competes. The alpha male disrespect fingers in the drink immediately followed by the alpha male response "I don't care, I'll drink it anyway" is so good.
@jfarnsworth755 ай бұрын
Here's a little bit of Trivia. The actor who played Bob, the Yes-man, is Miguel Ferrer. He was the older half-brother to George Clooney. They had the same mother, Rose Mary Clooney. RIP Miguel.
@tordferguson8345 ай бұрын
RoseMary Clooney was George Clooney's Aunt. She was the older sister to his father Nick Clooney, a longtime Cincinnati news reporter. Miguel Ferrer is George's cousin.
@mitomidou5 ай бұрын
War. It's fantastic.
@XanderFrederick5 ай бұрын
@@mitomidou I wonder how many will know that reference.
@mitomidou5 ай бұрын
@@XanderFrederick not too many I feel, but glad at least one it seems. Man, I miss good spoof movies. 😁
@PeterMaranci4 ай бұрын
Miguel Ferrer's father was quite a famous actor himself! Jose Ferrer was incredible as Cyrano de Bergerac, along with many other sides. Miguel looked a LOT like his father.
@davephillips4335 ай бұрын
Murphys partner was the main bully from Carrie. She looks a lot different in this😂
@MLJ79565 ай бұрын
She was also the aunt in Poltergeist III
@GeekyGirl805 ай бұрын
I saw in an interview she had law enforcement family members. She wanted to do her best to be honorable to them.
@RetiredSailor605 ай бұрын
She was also in the Philadelphia Experiment movie.
@roryotoole32795 ай бұрын
There's an 11-years difference between the films
@clarencewalker39255 ай бұрын
Nancy Allen is her name. She is currently retired from acting.
@steveo27375 ай бұрын
The "Give me my F&#*ing call" and him spitting the blood on the paper was completely adlibbed. Loved watching this with you both, as always
@trevorberridge60795 ай бұрын
That was anothe moment where the cast reaction is real.
@DJHolte5 ай бұрын
And the later line where he's like, "You can keep the gum," felt like it was also probably improvised.
@MrSmokingfrog15 ай бұрын
@@DJHolte That is his wife in real life. 🙂
@lennyvalentin64855 ай бұрын
@@MrSmokingfrog1 They didn't marry until after the movie was made tho. So maybe she liked his gum a whole lot? :D
@Jaydogg2225 ай бұрын
@@lennyvalentin6485 No they were already dating before the film, In an interview he said she was an actress so they asked her to do this small part through him...
@davidgerald1335 ай бұрын
I was 7 when I was this when it came out....Murphy getting shot up traumatized as a kid. That scene was BRUTAL
@spiderpig97775 ай бұрын
Saw that it in the theater with me older brother ... I was nine haha.... That was no problem in the 80s.. Still one of my favorite movies .
@helicoptersrkool5 ай бұрын
The guy who did the practical effects and design of the Robocop suit, Rob Bottin, was also responsible for the practical effects in 1982 movie 'The Thing'. He also did the practical effects in another Paul Verhoeven movie called, 'Total Recall'.
@dallasknight48545 ай бұрын
Great knowledge boss👍. Is that the same person in dusk till dawn who had a pistol in his crutch? No that's Tom Savini my bad
@xlrouge5 ай бұрын
"Robotin" (Rob Bottin) in Spanish means "little robot", do you think that that could be a nick name for a team of fx artists?
@MrBlaktoe5 ай бұрын
Bottin was truly one of the greats of that era. He was the protégé of one of the greatest makeup and effects artists of that day, Rick Baker.
@dustywaynemusic62975 ай бұрын
Give Phil Tippet some love too. ED-209 is one of the best movie robots of all time. Right up there with R2D2 and Mechagodzilla
@joehoy92425 ай бұрын
And don't forget Stephane Dupuis, who did the makeup and prosthetics around Murphy's face in Act 3...
@RobPryme5 ай бұрын
Dick Jones' secretary was played by Kurtwood (Clarence) Smith's real life wife.
@charlesallen23065 ай бұрын
That is a cool piece of trivia!
@MrBark5 ай бұрын
This is where they met.
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
Sooo she did manage to fit him in. 🤣😂😉
@MrBoyYankee5 ай бұрын
@@technofilejr3401 Dammit, you took my line.🤣🤣🤣🤣
@covfefecoffeeluvr53495 ай бұрын
I never saw That 70s show, but I remember him from "24" (with Kiefer Sutherland circa early 2000s)
@anthonysmith34425 ай бұрын
I am a paramedic, thanks for the shout out.
@triphophoney29815 ай бұрын
And, thank you for what you do because I don't think I have the disposition for it. Mad respect! 🙏
@PowderedToastMan4205 ай бұрын
I love how Murphy regains his humanity by the end of the movie. His T.J. Lazer move is bad *ss! ✌
@seanellio5 ай бұрын
Even though the movie takes place in Detroit, it was actually filmed in Dallas because of some of the (then) futuristic buildings.
@gnomejay16185 ай бұрын
Jay's face when that guy hit by the car at the end. Classic
@toochangz5 ай бұрын
My friends mom went to an open casting call and became RoboCops wife!! Love this movie! Filmed in Dallas!
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
That is cool as heck
@PML785 ай бұрын
Shout out from Downtown Dallas 💪🏽😎
@KrushgrooveOG5 ай бұрын
@@PML782018 I'm in Dallas staying at the Fairfield Inn on Evergreen.. I go for a walk..walk past City Hall and I was like wait a minute...... Lol
@PML785 ай бұрын
@KrushgrooveOG yup, u see Reunion Tower and everything in the movie 😎... when we rented the movie, that blew our minds being young 😆
@KrushgrooveOG5 ай бұрын
@@PML78 What's funny, I stayed in the same place the year before..but never walked in that direction. 🤦🏽♂️. But that's cool about Reunion tower. I've never been inside it tho.. I'll be back in November, maybe I'll finally check it out.
@prestonkourian5 ай бұрын
They originally wanted Schwarzenegger for the role, but soon realized it was easier to put a skinny guy in a bulky costume.
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@NavvyMom5 ай бұрын
I didn't know that, but am glad they went with Weller instead. I loved him in Buckaroo Banzai (add that to the list of movies they need to see) and he did great in this.
@imaspoon45225 ай бұрын
@@NavvyMom I would love to see that reaction. It's just so weird and funny, and Peter Weller looks pretty cool in it.
@NavvyMom5 ай бұрын
@@imaspoon4522 And so many good people in it. Jeff Goldblum, Carl Lumbly, OMG I can't remember his name but he played Rawhide . . . I hate when my brain does that.
@NecramoniumVideo5 ай бұрын
I think it would have been too obvious for Arnold in the role, seeing he already looks like one.
@UnkleKlumsy13535 ай бұрын
Popped in my feed and I had to see young folks seein this for the first time. I watched this first time when I was 5 back in the 80s and its still one of my fave movies. I had the toys as a kid and everything. Couldn't tell you how many times I've seen it over the years "I'd buy that for a dollar!" Fun fact about the costume. The suit was restrictive and Peter Weller couldnt sit down in it, so for the driving scenes, he was basically only wearing the top-half
@camcordernonsense52645 ай бұрын
That's to be my excuse when I get pulled over and I'm not wearing pants. Restrictive indeed.
@HEYBERT19845 ай бұрын
I remember watching this when i was 5 i absolutely loved this movie and watched it all the time growing up lol. 🍻
@theworldofron27125 ай бұрын
There are two sequels and a tv series. Then there was a remake in 2014 but we do not talk about the remake! LOL
@MLJ79565 ай бұрын
...And also there was a 3 part live-action TV mini-series & a short lived Saturday morning cartoon series.
@SirHilaryManfat5 ай бұрын
I think Robocop 2 is the only relatively decent continuation. Everything else is just trash!
@JeshuaSquirrel5 ай бұрын
I don't mind the remake much. I can see what they were trying to do. Maybe if they had left in some of the cut material, like why Robo still had a flesh hand.
@TheTangothrax5 ай бұрын
It's really best to stop here, a lot of sequels and remakes don't pan out and I'd say this falls into that category
@Chr15515 ай бұрын
@@SirHilaryManfat The Robocop: Rogue City game starring Peter Weller is a decent continuation taking place after Robocop 2.
@bydavidmitchell5 ай бұрын
I watched Robocop not long after it first came out. I was way too young to watch it, and it disturbed me to my core. Even today, in my 40s, the scene where they kill Murphy is still traumatising. The direction was incredible. They made you like Murphy just enough before they brutally murdered him. Such a classic movie. I've never watched the sequels, or the reboot. I prefer to honour the memory of the original movie. I wonder how many kids in the 80s and early 90s wanted to be Robocop. Millions I bet. What a movie! Great reaction guys, thank you ♥
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
That scene was brutal and how they made it look was amazing by production team
@etc70705 ай бұрын
I first saw it as a child when it came out on VHS and my parents rented it from the video store. The operating room scene was the traumatizing scene for me, I couldn't watch with all the blood. But hey, these are the movie memories that last! 😆
@NavvyMom5 ай бұрын
Glad you are saying you were too young. It blows my mind how many people will talk of watching this or that movie when they were kids. Just because a movie is great doesn't mean it's appropriate for certain audiences.
@NavvyMom5 ай бұрын
The We the People 200 celebration was in September of that year. There was a big parade in Philly. "Robocop" was in the parade. Tons of kids yelling "Robocop! It's Robocop!". when he went by. Not gonna lie, it was a tiny bit spooky.
@andyrunton5 ай бұрын
Same here. Murphy losing his hand traumatized me so deeply that I still haven’t recovered. I was waaay too young to watch it uncut on HBO. My childhood was full of this kinda stuff! Runner ups include Poltergeist and Missing in Action!!
@roderickmacsween28205 ай бұрын
You will never look at Red Foreman the same after watching this.
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
Literally never!!
@lennyvalentin64855 ай бұрын
@@robsquadmoviereactions Kurtwood does a great job in "Dead Poets Society" too, you should watch if you haven't already. It's an incredible movie with a lot of incredibly talented people in it and an amazing ambiance.
@camcordernonsense52645 ай бұрын
@@lennyvalentin6485everybody else, spoiler! Look away from my comment. when he's crying about his son. I always feel it in my chest!
@steveleslie21705 ай бұрын
16:48...I was living in Dallas Tx and my roommate and I went for a drive. By coincidence we ended up driving by this set/scene, they were just setting up at the time. I didn't see Robo or any actors...9 months (or so) later Robocop came out. 24 years later (aprox) I was on a tv show with the actor who played the new Robocop.
@Clownboy155 ай бұрын
Some fun facts: though the movie takes place in Detroit, it was filmed in Dallas, TX. The OCP building is Dallas City Hall with a matte painting extension. Peter Weller and Nancy Allen (Robocop and Lewis) share the same birthday (which is the day before mine 😁). In the night club sequence, there’s a crazy guy with longish hair and glasses manically laughing at the camera. That was the film’s director, Paul Verhoeven. The movie was almost scrapped because they couldn’t get the suit to work right. They hired a mime to figure out how to make it work. He had them dump a lot of superfluous material and worked with Weller on the movements. For example, Robocop always turns his head before he turns his body. The Robocop helmet couldn’t actually cover the prosthetics on Weller so they had to remove the helmet in two shots. RoboCop also could not get in and out of cars. So they’d film him in a car with just the top of the suit on, cut, then show him pretending to step out of the vehicle. Another issue with the suit was Robocop’s backside waddled like a duck when he walked and was hilarious. So you rarely see Robocop walking away from the camera. The secretary that Clarence hits on was his real life wife. And for the love of God… whatever you do… DO NOT LOOK UP AND WATCH ROBOCOP SCENE 27!! DON’T DO IT, I’M WARNING YOU!
@haydnrlong5 ай бұрын
Seriously clicked on this the minute it popped up in my feed and you guys didn't disappoint. I saw this on opening day and every single frame is still burned into my memory. Fun fact ... when Red Foreman goes to see Dick Jones in the office after the shootout he sticks his gum on the nameplate of the secretary. He met that actress on the set of this movie and they have been married ever since and that's amazing. Just like watching you guys react to these movies. You guys are great. All love to you and your family. ❤😊
@NavvyMom5 ай бұрын
That's such a neat story. Thanks for that!
@frankdoe49405 ай бұрын
Whats awesome is that you two are the only ones that recognize in that gas station scene where he recognizes the words Robocop said to him and remembering that they killed him, almost every other reaction video it flies over their heads. Good job for picking that up lol
@mazack005 ай бұрын
The "retro police cars" are actually Ford Taurus (never used as police cars irl) which were chosen because they looked more futuristic than the ACTUAL retro police cars of the time.
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
That’s so funny thank you for the info!
@garybradford83325 ай бұрын
Most police cars were a boxy Crown Victoria at the time so a rounded, more compact car stuck out as different.
@smokeman9983 ай бұрын
Tauruses have been used as police cars for decades. It's just that Crown Vics were used more often.
@smokeman9983 ай бұрын
Tauruses have actually been used as police cars for decades. It's just that Crown Vics were used more often.
@mazack003 ай бұрын
@@smokeman998 that's a very confidently incorrect answer: The Ford Police Intercepter is based on the sixth generation Taurus. What's pictured in the movie are stock first generation cars, 25 years prior. They were NOT used as police cars.
@nintendianajones645 ай бұрын
So many quotable lines. One of the most rewatchable movies ever made. This movie is a masterpiece and a great satire of Reagan America.
@D2SProductions5 ай бұрын
The 1987 Robocop is one of my all time favorite movies.
@FeaturingRob5 ай бұрын
- The actor who plays Clarence Bodecker, aka Red Foreman, is Kurtwood Smith. This was his real big break. He had done movies and TV but was mainly a stage actor when he got RoboCop. As an added plus, his wife was also cast in the film. She was Dick Jones's secretary, Barbara, whose nameplate became home to his gum. They are still married, btw. Another film he appears in, which I recommend, is Dead Poet's Society with Robin Williams (an excellent film!). - Peter Weller (Murphy/RoboCop) used a movement coach to help him develop his movement as a machine. - Miguel Ferrer (Bob Morton, head of the RoboCop program) was George Clooney's cousin. His mother was singer and actress Rosemary Clooney (best known for the movie White Christmas), and his father was Oscar-winning actor Jose Ferrer (Cyrano De Bergerac, 1950). Unfortunately, Miguel passed away in 2017 after a long career as a character actor in everything from Star Trek, the MCU (he was the Vice President of the United States in Iron Man 3), Disney (he voiced Shan Yu in Mulan), and TV (Crossing Jordan, Twin Peaks, NCIS). - Nancy Allen (Ann Lewis) was a frequent actress in the 1970s and early 1980s movies, especially in the films of her first husband, Brian De Palma (Carrie, Dressed to Kill and Blow Out). She retired and lived a peaceful life away from Hollywood. She did play Lewis in the three RoboCop films. - Dan O'Herlihy played the Old Man Chairman of OCP. He was a character actor in tons of films, TV, and on stage. A movie I loved with him was another 80s classic, The Last Starfighter from 1984. In that film, he plays an alien named Grig, who is so lovable! - Director Paul Verhoeven specializes in ultra-violent films that are somewhat satirical, like RoboCop and Starship Troopers. Those two and Total Recall make up his sci-fi trilogy that most people love (I don't care for Total Recall anymore). Besides those films...I wholeheartedly recommend Basic Instinct with Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone. If you want to go crazy (but I don't recommend this one), he made one of the worst movies of all time called Showgirls with Elizabeth Berkley (Jessie on Saved By the Bell). It was an NC-17-rated disaster. Campy, over the top with sex and nudity, and just a mess. Some people love it for all those reasons...I don't understand why. It wrecked a lot of careers for about 5 to 10 years after it came out, including Elizabeth Berkley's.
@charlesallen23065 ай бұрын
Awesome info!
@drogusmaxwell66405 ай бұрын
Hate to break it to you, but most prisons are now owned by private corporations. As well as our hospitals. Some police have corporate sponsorship. Dystopia much? 😅
@jackgilchrist5 ай бұрын
And there's been some push here and there to privatize the police, too.
@camcordernonsense52645 ай бұрын
Ive been snooping this subject out quite a bit last two weeks. All the politicians involved through decades. Blechhh
@DrToast22425 ай бұрын
My FAVORITE last line to a movie, ever.
@eliasvargas12674 ай бұрын
This movie is timeless! 80's violence is amazing. Youngsters can't handle this level of badass.
@frogofbrass3825 ай бұрын
Though set in Detroit, the movie was filmed in Dallas, TX. If you guys visit, you can drive past City Hall, which was used as the base portion of the OCP building. The top portion was a matte painting added in post-production.
@All-Fur-Coat_No-Trousers5 ай бұрын
There's something about seeing Red Foreman play a nasty bad guy that tickles my brain. Edit: hah! You guys thought of Red Foreman, too. We're sympatico
@001rnv5 ай бұрын
He wanted to put a foot up Robocop’s ass! lol
@Scruffyman815 ай бұрын
I'm old. It was weird to see Clarence Boddicker play a tv dad.
@frankiek22695 ай бұрын
@@Scruffyman81. I’m with you. Watching him play Red was kind of fitting. If Clarence lived a different life, he would’ve been Red.
@karicastanza52165 ай бұрын
He was also good in Dead Poets Society with Robin Williams! They need to watch that movie!
@SeanRI5 ай бұрын
He's having such a blast, too. "Can you flllllyyyy, Bobby?"
@rayhume19715 ай бұрын
ED209 did not hit a window when he blew that guy away with all those shots. Impressive.
@Sarah_Gravydog3165 ай бұрын
he's a trained professional, silly
@daverhoden4455 ай бұрын
Well those windows were innocent.
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
Tight groupings for the win.
@ronniearnold91655 ай бұрын
Kurtwood Smith. He also played a small part in Rambo: III.
@hollishamilton39435 ай бұрын
He also played pretty unpleasant characters in Dead Poets Society and A Time to Kill.
@Dystopia11115 ай бұрын
Also multiple roles in Star Trek films and series over the years.
@larrybremer49305 ай бұрын
Good practical effects beat CGI any day. Also those Ford Taurus patrol cars were very futuristic looking in 1987 so I had a good laugh at the comment of "those retro police cars" when a Ford Crown Victoria or Chevrolet Caprice are what you normally saw in the mid to late 80s.
@armandomartinez22914 ай бұрын
Most quoted line from robocop "I'd buy that for a dollar"
@emmahowells83345 ай бұрын
The actor who plays Robocop his real name is Peter Weller, Murphy's partner Lewis her real name is nancy Allen. Fact while wearing the suit he couldn't drink as it would take ages to remove the suit, but he would often get dehydrated by the end of filming did become unwell afterwards. When this first came out i was 11 years old and still a great movie from when i was old enough to watch it of course .
@ThatsillyChickBeth5 ай бұрын
I'm not sure how old the two of you are, I'm 46. So all these older movies that you all are having reactions to I love it! These are movies that I've watched growing up. I adore your all's reactions
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
Thank you so so much we hope you have a great rest of your day!
@mikegilgenbach48405 ай бұрын
Now that youve gotten through the initial shock of Robocop, you can now watch it again and appreciate it for the masterful comedy it is.
@RikkieRokks5 ай бұрын
This movie was mainly shot in Dallas. You can see the Dallas police dept. and the opening chase scene was shot on old highway 75 before the expansion. You can even see Reunion Tower in the background!
@IChooseJesus90915 ай бұрын
The OCP Building in the movie, is the Dallas City Hall Building in Dallas Texas. My A-Dad worked there as a Real Estate Appraiser for the city. He took me to work with him a few times. We had to pick him up from work one time, not sure why. I guess his car was down or being repaired. And when we got there, they were having a televised city hall meeting, in the evening. News stations were there. We had to wait for him to be done with that meeting. I never got to see him on TV. But he was briefly for that meeting. He eventually quit working for the city, for many reasons I'm sure. But one major reason being, we lived in Garland, a suburb of Dallas, & he was tired of having to commute 2 hours, to & from work, in morning & evening, rush hour traffic every day. He went to work for a smaller real estate business somewhere else, & later worked for himself. Dallas City Hall, is actually more uniquely shaped than in the movie. In the movie they added that whole square top portion, onto the upside down half triangle bottom portion, to add height to it, for the last scene, where Dick Jones falls out the window. It makes the whole original structure look sturdier, & more balanced than it appears in rl. In rl, it gives off an appearance like it could tip over on the slanted side of the building at any moment.
@shogunn25175 ай бұрын
Its funny to look back and see how many actors from this movie ended up in the series 24. Ray Wise, Kirkwood Smith, Peter Weller, Paul McCrane.
@AL13NM5 ай бұрын
Saw this at the movies when it came out, a pure 80's madness/classic masterpiece!
@Ncxgroup5 ай бұрын
The movie was filmed in Dallas. The tower is Reunion Tower in the Background. Logan's Run was also filmed there.
@PML785 ай бұрын
Yes 💪🏽😎
@trevorthomas-rx6jl5 ай бұрын
Ha ha retro police cars. This movie is why they went from crown Vic’s to Taurus
@Paul77ozee5 ай бұрын
Everybody that watches this says “that’s Red Foreman” while 80s kids like myself said “that’s Clerence Boddicker” when we first saw That 70s Show.
@lordofthereels67905 ай бұрын
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai is another great Peter Weller/Murphy/Robocop flick. Scifi gem with Jeff Golblum, Christopher Lloyd and more.
@davidmunro5465 ай бұрын
The 80’s was a great time for movies as a kid. Mentally scarring, but awesome at the same time. Many of us watched movies like this when technically we were too young but I’m glad to have been one of them.
@SirHilaryManfat5 ай бұрын
Honestly I miss the whole fun of renting out a movie in the 80's. We were blessed with so many great movies, with great dialogue, special effects, action and direction. The art of quotable movies has somehow died in recent years, which is a shame. Me and my friends still use quotes from 80's movies to this day, as they were that memorable.
@anthonysmith34425 ай бұрын
In the commercial about heart transplants they mentioned the "Jarvic 7". That was an actual artificial heart made in the early 80's. I don't think that the few patients they used it on survived long.
@electronic80s4 ай бұрын
Loved this movie when it first came out, while i was only 17, i seen it 3 times at my local cinema.. It was wicked on the big screen..
@exalkalibor9245 ай бұрын
When he said he's name is Murphy at the end means he wants to be treated as human he's not a machine.
@joecortes71425 ай бұрын
Dead or alive I've been waiting to see your reaction to this movie. Whoo hoo
@MD-19825 ай бұрын
One of my favourite sci-fi movies EVER!! Up there with The Terminator and Short Circuit!
@wiltchamberlainisthegoat135 ай бұрын
💯💯
@jeremiahrose46815 ай бұрын
That is so true
@buckbuchanan49025 ай бұрын
These two SO need to watch Short Circuit! That movie is hillarious!
@etc70705 ай бұрын
Omg they need to watch Short Circuit now! Sentient robots were a big deal in the '80s, lol
@Dystopia11115 ай бұрын
I'm not sure how these two would process 2001: A Space Odyssey.
@adampare80885 ай бұрын
Am I the only idiot that would watch the "I'd buy that for a dollar" show?! Jay would, I'm sure of that.
@robsquadmoviereactions5 ай бұрын
No doubt I would watch that😂😂
@adampare80885 ай бұрын
@@robsquadmoviereactionsYeah well be careful, if she catches you having fun with "loose" women, she's gonna slap you on the head and you'll be sleeping on the couch
@HellBrYnger5 ай бұрын
i've been a fan since my dad showed me Robocop 1, 2 and 3 when i turned 8, that was in 1999 and been a fan ever since, even the 22 episode TV show i thought was different but still awesome if you're more into the lore-side of things. (the 4-"movie"-mini-series called "Prime Directives" had its moments, but you can see the lowest of low budgets getting sprinkled around there) but to be totally honest, when it comes to me (and that's also just my personal opinion) there never was a 2014 reboot, if you catch my drift.
@gerardcote83915 ай бұрын
Jay an Amber, this and Star Wars are the only 2 movies I have seen where people came out of the theater and got back in line to see it again.
@micpar25 ай бұрын
Red Forman throw Kelso out! LOL
@smoothALOE5 ай бұрын
One of the best action/sci-fi movies of all time. I’m from Dallas, Texas and this is one of those movies we claim as our own, although it wasn’t all filmed in Dallas. To me, what makes this film stand out are the standards it set that are still so much a part of the genre today. It’s an excellent movie…I see y’all are watching the extended, more-violent cut. It’s so graphic at times, it’s like a comic book, but it’s so important to the progression of the story, in my view.
@ryanjacobson25085 ай бұрын
Most of it is in Dallas... I think the factory at the end was in Pennsylvania, though.
@smoothALOE5 ай бұрын
@@ryanjacobson2508 correct. Pittsburgh area.
@DreadPirateMayhem4 ай бұрын
17:51 how Robo just casually coasts thorough the police line like zero fukcs given! XD
@WildBikeCamper5 ай бұрын
When I was a kid - this movie had been cut to bits / censored - even on its 18 rated VHS release. Took around 30 years for the full version you're watching to go mainstream.
@jimthar175 ай бұрын
I had this movie on VHS since 1987 an it was never edited The only other version I know of (except the TV edits) is the Criterion version which is actually MORE violent.
@WildBikeCamper5 ай бұрын
@@jimthar17 That's what I mean - the VHS missed out bits like Murphy's whole arm coming off. It's only really with the new documentary that we're finally seeing everything; not that there was much missing.
@Whitebrowpriest5 ай бұрын
I believe you two reacted to the horror movie, Carrie, before? The actress who played Murphy's partner is Nancy Allen, who played Chris Hargenson in Carrie. She was the one who pulled the rope and dumped all of that pig's blood on Carrie.