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Davis was known in the community as "RoboCop" because of his large size and as the "Desire Terrorist" due to his aggressive policing style. [5]He had been suspended six times and received 20 complaints between 1987 and 1992, while subsequently receiving the department's Medal of Merit in 1993.
Officer Alex James Murphy (designation number: OCP Crime Prevention Unit 001), commonly known as RoboCop, is a fictional cybernetically enhanced officer of the Detroit Police Department from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and is the main protagonist in the Robocop franchise. [1]
RoboCop was considered easier to merchandise than other R-rated films and, [119] despite its violent content, its merchandise was targeted at a younger audience. Merchandise included cap guns and other toys, comic books, [n] theme-park rides, novels [65] and RoboCop Ultra Police action figures, which were released with the 1988 animated series ...
RoboCop is an American cyberpunk action media franchise featuring the futuristic adventures of Alex Murphy, a Detroit, Michigan police officer, who is fatally wounded in the line of duty and transformed into a powerful cyborg, brand-named RoboCop, at the behest of a powerful mega-corporation, Omni Consumer Products. Thus equipped, Murphy ...
The “Robocop” TV series in development at Amazon is starting to take shape. ... “A giant tech conglomerate collaborates with the local police department to introduce a technologically ...
"RoboCop" starred Peter Weller as police-officer-turned-cyborg Alex Murphy, ... RoboCop would become the guardian of fresh strawberries and organic kale by the end of 2023, an announcement said ...
Joel Kinnaman as Alex Murphy / RoboCop: A young police detective who is injured in an explosion and transformed into the cyborg RoboCop; Gary Oldman as Dr. Dennett Norton: Omni foundation chief scientist who creates RoboCop; Michael Keaton as Raymond Sellars: The CEO of OmniCorp; Abbie Cornish as Clara Murphy: Alex's wife
While RoboCop was initially an American property, Orion Pictures received a $500,000 cash infusion for TV licensing rights by Canada's Skyvision Entertainment in May 1993. . Orion Pictures had originally planned to make a fourth RoboCop film, but decided to license a television series instead due to the bankruptcy of the studio and the negative reception to RoboCop 3 (1993).