The Series is good -- to an extent. Its problem is making everything horrifically over-the-top.
No more so than Verhoeven did in the movie. It's just that Verhoeven was over-the-top with violence and profanity as well as everything else, and somehow people think that means it should be taken more seriously.
However, it's far more entertaining than either film sequel, and a few galaxies away from the abortion that was Prime Directives.
Absolutely. Even the lame
RoboCop: Alpha Commando animated series was better than those.
As for Murphy's character, RoboCop 2's one and only positive hits the nail on the head -- in its first 15 minutes. At the end of the first movie, Murphy has regained his humanity and that humanity has asserted its control over his machine body. RoboCop 2 begins to explore the psychological effects, however, of what is essentially "cybernetic rape," in that Murphy's body was discarded, his mind and memories kept, in favor of this cold, metal body. He was denied death, and instead Alex Murphy has to live inside that metal shell. RoboCop 2 starts to explore that with Murphy stalking his ex-wife and son, but the idea is given lip-service and subsequently discarded in favor of THE WAR ON DRUGS. A shame.
I prefer the series' take on it, which is that Robo wasn't just Murphy in a robot body, but a hybrid personality formed from the synergy of the RoboCop programming and the residual, but incomplete, memory engrams of the late Alex Murphy. In a sense, he embodied the best of both worlds -- the decency and humanity of Murphy, and the unwavering integrity and reliability of RoboCop. Yet at the same time he was incomplete, mentally as well as physically, unable to be fully human. He was at once a paragon and a tragic figure. It was a wonderful characterization.
The mistake the movie sequels made was to assume there was nothing interesting about RoboCop as a character and to try to de-emphasize him in favor of other characters. The series did feature a whole ensemble, but it made RoboCop a rich central character as well.
As for Prime Directives... It's too bad that Richard Eden wouldn't sign on to return for this and they got Page Fletcher because it was too much of a change.
Well, it was terrible in every way, but Fletcher's casting was one of the worst missteps. He got the character totally wrong, playing him as just another wisecracking action hero who happened to be in a robot suit (though that's as much the script's fault). He was way too small for the suit, and there was no attempt made to recreate the movement style Moni Yakim developed for the character in the original film -- both of which made him look ridiculous, like a kid prancing around in a Halloween costume, jerking his arms around and going "Look-I-am-a-ro-bot."
Well, the show knows how cheesey and over the top it is, and revels in that. It's almost a self parody... And it's preachy as hell, but in a way that, well, it's so silly you really don't care.
I think what a lot of people fail to realize about the original film is that it was a comedy. A dark, harsh, satirical comedy, but in its own way quite broad and farcical. The series continued in that vein, just lightening it up some and making it more accessible to a family audience. So I think it's the only followup that was really authentic.
The premiere for the series was actually an unproduced script for the sequel written by the original Robocop writers... Obviously, they've completely changed large portions of it.
Not that much, necessarily. They changed the character names, but it's pretty obvious that Madigan was written to be Lewis (she even had Lewis's bubblegum habit in the pilot, though fortunately that was dropped afterward) and Sgt. Parks was a substitution for Sgt. Reed. And I've always figured Pudface Morgan was meant to be Emil, the guy who had a face-melting toxic-waste accident in the film, though he pretty clearly died right afterward, I think.
It's odd that they were able to use the character of Murphy/RoboCop but couldn't use any of the other character names. They even had to refer to the OCP boss as "The Chairman" rather than "The Old Man." But then, rights in Hollywood are bizarre and byzantine. But I think it worked, since they changed the precinct too. I think the idea was that RoboCop had been reassigned back to Murphy's old precinct, the one he was transferred from at the start of the original film, and that Madigan was his first partner. So I don't think there are any real inconsistencies between the original movie and the series; they fit together pretty neatly in a single continuity, as far as I know.