Don’t pay attention to those jokers out there, RoboCop 3 isn’t nearly as terrible as its reputation. Although I don’t think I’d go as far as to call it good exactly. Look, the first RoboCop is an undisputed masterpiece. No one’s gonna argue with that. The second film gets a bunch of flack but is generally liked for exploring the humanity vs machine angle and keeping up the spirit of its predecessor. It’s goofier (all the delinquent kid enemies, Robo programmed against his will to be comically genial and less violent, the dotted eyeballs and brain floating in a test tube that represent what’s left of the main villain before he’s turned into the next gen man-machine police officer, etc.) and at the same time nastier (killing someone by slicing their chest open with a scalpel, showing the removal of the top of someone’s skull during surgery, etc.). For part 3 though the powers that be went for a middle of the road strategy. They had a cartoon series, action figures, an upcoming live action TV show and stacks of other shit aimed at making this creation and universe more appealing to a wider audience. I genuinely believe they could’ve come up with something decent that would’ve fit within this new framework. This is one of the most compelling characters ever conceived after all. Instead what we got was a sorta blah film.
One of the biggest issues is that it doesn’t delve into any
new territory. Once again Robo/Murphy grapples
with balancing his previous life and memories as a bona fide human being with
being a corporate tool that must obey whatever’s been programmed in his CPU. But ok, in all fairness they do introduce two
new ideas and both deal with RoboCop accessories. He can now detach one of his arms and lock on
a machine gun/mini rocket launcher/flame thrower combo. Kinda neat actually. He gets to use it a few times throughout the
movie justifying its existence. The
other is a strap on jetpack so he can fly.
The thing is he’s already so powerful though being able to withstand
most gunfire, small explosions and high falls.
Plus the new arm cannon is a weapons upgrade so also giving him the
ability to fly is a touch too far in my opinion. However, I’ll give credit to the filmmakers
for incorporating its use well enough towards the end of the film that it feels
natural and not the crutch it could’ve been to get RoboCop out of every sticky
situation.
Story-wise it ain’t there though. As mentioned above it’s way too similar to
part 2 involving Robo wrestling with his human emotions and programmed orders,
fighting with his corporate maker/overlord OCP and eventually going up against
a seemingly more powerful battle droid.
He does join an underground resistance who use guerilla tactics to try
to stop OCP from bulldozing their neighborhood so they can build a city of the
future in its place. I mean sure, why
not? He regains a little more of his
humanity with each outing so I guess that tracks. But aside from a lot of rehash the plot just
feels kinda small for a part 3. The
stakes haven’t been risen to a proper level and Robo doesn’t get pushed to a
new low where he has to fight back harder than ever to see that justice is
served. In part 2 he gets completely
dismantled at one point and you wonder how the hell he’s gonna recover from
that while in this one the worst that happens is his power gets drained and he
needs to be recharged.
Another aspect that’s done well is the pacing. The story never drags or becomes
tedious. There aren’t superfluous sub
plots or tangents that distract from the main plot and I for one really
appreciate that.
And yea, it’s shot and edited perfectly fine. The action and everything that’s going on is
completely followable. Again, I
appreciate that and wanna give the film points for things that some others
might take for granted. These baseline qualities
aren’t givens for any picture.
So there it is. The
story isn’t exciting but serviceable, the characters aren’t advanced any
further but they’re still the familiar ones we know and love, the effects
aren’t groundbreaking but definitely well done (except the flying stuff), Burke
taking over the lead does a bang up job and the violence isn’t quite as scaled
back as people like to complain about (there’s actually a really horrific scene
(that I think is supposed to be funny) of one OCP employee who commits suicide
by jumping out of a window while on the phone with his wife and then we cut to
a shot of ground level where he lands behind a barrier thankfully sparing us
the awful impact).
And for shits let’s take this one step further. How does this one stack up against other
action franchises that went PG-13 with one of their sequels? While not as fun as Mad Max Beyond
Thunderdome or The Expendables 3 I think RoboCop 3 is better
than Terminator Salvation, Terminator Genisys, Speed 2 and Conan the
Destroyer (in fact rated PG). Maybe
it’s tied with Live Free or Die Hard.