RoboCop: Prime Directives: Difference between revisions

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{{tropework}}
[[File:RoboCop_Prime_Directives_1414.jpg|frame]]
 
'''''[[Robo CopRoboCop]]: Prime Directives''''' is a 2001 Canadian-made miniseries set in an [[Alternate Continuity]] thirteen years after the [[RoboCop (Film)|original film]], starring Page Fletcher as the titular cyborg police officer.
 
In the intervening years after the events of the first film, Delta City has become fully owned and operated by OCP, while Robocop/Alex Murphy (Fletcher) has remained in service for over a decade. Murphy's also showing his age, and is scheduled to be retired by OCP because his parts are out of warranty. In addition, his now-grown son James has become an OCP executive, and his old partner John Cable has returned to the city to become the company's new security commander. By the end of the first episode, Robo is forced to kill Cable, who is subsequently reborn as Robocable, the second prototype for the once-defunct Robocop program. Murphy teams up with an anarchist group led by Ann R. Key ([[Twenty Four24|Leslie Hope]]) to stop Cable, OCP (which are now hunting both Murphy and Robo-Cable) and David Kaydick, Ann's ex-husband and a disgraced OCP scientist who plans to use an organic virus to destroy everyone in Delta City.
 
The production was filmed and produced in [[California Doubling|Toronto, Canada]], and featured a number of well-known Canadian actors. Richard Eden (who played the title character on ''Robocop: The Series'') was asked to reprise his role, but backed out. The producers hired Page Fletcher instead, who devised his own movement system to reflect where the character was at that point in his life.
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''Prime Directives'' is a polarizing work for fans of the franchise. Some praised the miniseries for throwing out the "kid-friendly" elements of the previous series and third movie in favor of ultra-dark storytelling and copious amounts of violence, while others derided it for the acting, production values and comic book-like plot.
 
{{tropelist}}
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* [[AIA.I. Is a Crapshoot]]: Murphy has become quasi-suicidal and angsty in the intervening years between the first film and the miniseries, while Robocable gets a conscience twice during the series (once when he decides to assist Murphy in "Meltdown", and again in "Crash And Burn").
=== The series provides examples of: ===
 
* [[AI Is a Crapshoot]]: Murphy has become quasi-suicidal and angsty in the intervening years between the first film and the miniseries, while Robocable gets a conscience twice during the series (once when he decides to assist Murphy in "Meltdown", and again in "Crash And Burn").
* [[Asshole Victim]]: Damian attempts to leave the OCP building in "Crash And Burn"', and first gets shoved down an elevator shaft by Sara Cable (breaking his legs) and then gets his legs and hands cut off by the building's automated laser defense system before dying.
* [[Bash Brothers]]: Murphy and Cable, in both their human and cyborg forms.
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* [[Darker and Edgier]]: After the 1994 television series, the creators of ''Prime Directives'' went the other way and loaded the miniseries with just as much violence (implied/on-screen) as the films, including such instances as an extended sequence where Murphy and Cable discover a man who's been butchering young women and many other people being blown to pieces, shot and vaporized.
* [[Disproportionate Retribution]]: Kaydick was fired by OCP for illegal experiments, so he decides to get back at them by creating a nanite virus and killing all organic matter in Detroit.
* [[Drunk Onon the Dark Side]]: Kaydick, who relishes the chance to beat up his ex-wife just as much as he enjoys trying to kill everyone in Old Detroit.
* [[Earn Your Happy Ending]]: Detroit is now stuck in total darkness (thanks to {{spoiler|Robo-Cable activating the EMP}}), and several people have died to stop the corrupted S.A.I.N.T. computer program from destroying the city, but Murphy does get to make up for lost time with his son and continue in his role as a protector, free of his overriding directives.
* [[Evil Is Hammy]]
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* [[Heroic BSOD]]: The activation of Murphy's locked memories causes him to scream for several seconds before literally shutting down.
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]: Ann goes in to the SAINT processing room in "Crash And Burn" to kill Kaydick, despite full well knowing that she'll die in the process. Robocable also sacrifices himself to stop SAINT so that Murphy and his son (and the rest of the city) can live.
* [[How Many Fingers?]]: Ann's sidekick says this to Murphy once he reactivates in "Resurrection".
* [[Impossibly Cool Weapon]]: Robo has his standard "Auto-9" a fully automatic pistol which holds more ammunition than the weapon should be physically capable of, and has selectable ammunition types from his HUD. Robocable gets two.
** Ann's blue electronic staff.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:RobocopRoboCop: Prime Directives]]
[[Category:TropeScience Fiction Series]]
[[Category:Canadian Series]]
[[Category:RoboCop]]
[[Category:TV Series]]