Referring to the original "Robocop" movie(s) here, we'll also ignore for the sake of discussion that the movie was supposed to be a "satire" or take on coldness or the give-a-fuckery of corporate America in the 80s.
So in the near future, er.... past, er... present... Whatever. Detroit is a crime-ridden hell-hole (Heh, science fiction) soon to be razed and rebuilt as "Delta City" should certain plans ever gel together and get off the ground. Part of the plan on the road to Delta City is to get crime under control in Detroit. Two executives from a defense contractor propose their ideas.
One idea is Robocop, the idea of mating a human mind with robotic technology to create a cyborg cop. The idea being to have the "best of both worlds" of a human cop (with the ability to think, reason and process, while having the durability and reflexes of a machine. By and large this idea fairs well through the course of the movie and future movies.
But the original proposed idea is the Enforcement Droid 209 (which suggests there were 208 other versions of these things either made or tested before settling on a final idea deemed to "work.")
ED-209 is a bipedal monstrous machine with intimidating looks and instead of arms it has two large high-powered, high-caliber machine weapons.
During the test they go with a "typical disarment and arrest scenario." An elected volunteer is given a gun, at first he points it at his boss and in this case ED-209 does nothing. Which is a first "Huh?" moment. As ED-209 does nothing which, really, if it was "good at it's job" it should have done something the moment it saw the gun.
The volunteer is told to point the gun at ED-209 and he does, this activates ED-209 who demands the volunteer drop the gun. (He does.) At this point ED-209 fails to recognize that the gun was dropped, gives more warnings and finally shoots the guy to death. We'll ignore the fact that ED-209 glitched in not noticing the gun was dropped.
What was the goal here? How effective can ED-209 be if it's incapable of arresting someone? Supposing he dropped the gun, ED-209 recognized it, then what? ED-209 has no means to detain the guy and take him in for booking. At "best" he can use intimidation to hold him there until a human police officer shows up but then that kind of defeats the purpose of replacing the human police force with something more efficient and controllable.
And while "Old Detroit" was depicted as being such a crime-ridden hellhole it seems ED-209 is only deigned to take care of a very specific kind of crime. Namely it, itself, having a gun pointed at it. Now, later in the movie it's guarding the OCP main headquarters and it does get on Robocop for parking in an un-authorized area but kind of by the same means. "Move the car or I'll blow you away."
Assuming civil rights and all are the same as they are today as they are in this version of Detroit, is parking your car in an un-authorized place really call for lethal force? How does ED-209 detain a suspect, bare witness to a crime and testify it in court?
ED-209 really just seemed like a mess and Dick Jones was, well, a Dick for thinking it'd have any merit whatsoever as being a "police officer."
So in the near future, er.... past, er... present... Whatever. Detroit is a crime-ridden hell-hole (Heh, science fiction) soon to be razed and rebuilt as "Delta City" should certain plans ever gel together and get off the ground. Part of the plan on the road to Delta City is to get crime under control in Detroit. Two executives from a defense contractor propose their ideas.
One idea is Robocop, the idea of mating a human mind with robotic technology to create a cyborg cop. The idea being to have the "best of both worlds" of a human cop (with the ability to think, reason and process, while having the durability and reflexes of a machine. By and large this idea fairs well through the course of the movie and future movies.
But the original proposed idea is the Enforcement Droid 209 (which suggests there were 208 other versions of these things either made or tested before settling on a final idea deemed to "work.")
ED-209 is a bipedal monstrous machine with intimidating looks and instead of arms it has two large high-powered, high-caliber machine weapons.
During the test they go with a "typical disarment and arrest scenario." An elected volunteer is given a gun, at first he points it at his boss and in this case ED-209 does nothing. Which is a first "Huh?" moment. As ED-209 does nothing which, really, if it was "good at it's job" it should have done something the moment it saw the gun.
The volunteer is told to point the gun at ED-209 and he does, this activates ED-209 who demands the volunteer drop the gun. (He does.) At this point ED-209 fails to recognize that the gun was dropped, gives more warnings and finally shoots the guy to death. We'll ignore the fact that ED-209 glitched in not noticing the gun was dropped.
What was the goal here? How effective can ED-209 be if it's incapable of arresting someone? Supposing he dropped the gun, ED-209 recognized it, then what? ED-209 has no means to detain the guy and take him in for booking. At "best" he can use intimidation to hold him there until a human police officer shows up but then that kind of defeats the purpose of replacing the human police force with something more efficient and controllable.
And while "Old Detroit" was depicted as being such a crime-ridden hellhole it seems ED-209 is only deigned to take care of a very specific kind of crime. Namely it, itself, having a gun pointed at it. Now, later in the movie it's guarding the OCP main headquarters and it does get on Robocop for parking in an un-authorized area but kind of by the same means. "Move the car or I'll blow you away."
Assuming civil rights and all are the same as they are today as they are in this version of Detroit, is parking your car in an un-authorized place really call for lethal force? How does ED-209 detain a suspect, bare witness to a crime and testify it in court?
ED-209 really just seemed like a mess and Dick Jones was, well, a Dick for thinking it'd have any merit whatsoever as being a "police officer."