RoboCop/Trivia

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 16:44, 25 January 2014 by Dai-Guard (talk | contribs) (Mass update links)


The films:

  • Awesome, Dear Boy: Part of the reason why Paul Verhoeven did the first film. He initially rejected the opportunity to direct it when he read the script and thought it was silly and stupid. He changed his mind when his wife convinced him that there were more layers to the story than he initially thought, and because the writers pointed out the amount of Gorn there was, to which he responded "Well, I've never seen the hero get his hand blown off!"
  • Fake American: Dr. Faxx in the second movie is played by Australian Belinda Bauer. See also Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!
  • Shout-Out: The Show Within a Show I'd Buy That for a Dollar is a homage to the idiot's TV-derived catchphrase from the dystopic SF novel The Marching Morons, updated for inflation. Originally: "I'd buy that for a quarter!" [1]
    • In 2, Caine is overseeing the development of new versions of nuke, one of which is named Blue Velvet, likely after the song. But just maybe because the chemist working on it is named Frank.
  • Throw It In
    • RoboCop was supposed to stop the rapist holding his target as a shield with a precision headshot. When staging the scene, they saw how perfectly a bullet could fly through the woman's dress...
    • The politician being thrown to the ground was supposed to be just out of sight. The dummy they used for the scene had its legs kick up comically when it landed and was visible to the cameras. It looked too funny to leave out.

TV-Shows

  • Shout-Out
    • When Robo boards a helicopter to get into the blocked-off OCP building in one episode of the TV series, he asks the pilot to "Take me up, Scotty."
    • At the end of a an episode of Prime Directives, RoboCop muses that the world only makes sense when you force it to.
    • The original animated series had an unexpected nod to Murphy's death, with a flashback to the very end of the scene, Boddicker's "Fun's over" and the final shot to Murphy's head, rendered in animation.
  1. The star of the show, Bixby Snyder, is possibly a homage to Benny Hill. Or a parody. In a supposedly-filmed scene, there's one final newscast where the newsreaders announce that Snyder has been arrested for receiving sexual favours from underaged co-stars.