by Douglas Barnett, Mar 26 2012 // 3:15 PM

Repo Man (1984), not to be confused with the movie about two guys who go around repossessing people’s internal organs when they miss a payment, is a Punk Rock classic starring Emilio Estevez as a clean cut kid in the dirty business of repossessing cars in the seedy underworld of Los Angeles.
Otto Maddox (Estevez) has just been fired from his job as a supermarket stock boy due to his lack of respect for authority. Later that night at a Punk Rock house party, he also finds out that his girlfriend Debbie is cheating on him with his best friend Duke. To make matters worse, Otto also finds out that his hippie parents gave away money that was promised to Otto for finishing college to a sleazy televangelist. What’s a broke, depressed punker supposed to do now?
After a long night of drinking and wandering the streets, Otto runs into Bud (Harry Dean Stanton) who pleads with Otto to help get his pregnant wife’s car out of a bad area and deliver it to the hospital where she’s going into labor. Otto initially refuses to take the job for less than $20 and finds out that he has been suckered into stealing a car.
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Posted in: Action · Comedy · Cult Cinema · DVD · DVD Reviews · Indie · Monday Picks · Movies · Netflix · Sci-Fi · Universal Pictures
Tagged: Alex Cox, Emilio Estevez, Fox Harris, Harry Dean Stanton, Repo Man, Tom Finnegan, Vonetta McGee
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by Douglas Barnett, Mar 5 2012 // 2:00 PM
This week’s Monday Pick is the 1987 Sci-fi action film Robocop, directed by master filmmaker Paul Verhoeven (Total Recall, Starship Troopers, Flesh & Blood, Soldier of Orange, The Black Book). Peter Weller stars as slain police officer Alex Murphy who is brought back to life by corporate scientists to become the ultimate law enforcement weapon in the crime-ridden Detroit of the near future.
Robocop is not only a well made solid blend of sci-fi and action, Verhoeven and writers Ed Neumeier and Michael Miner splendidly poke fun at many institutions in American culture like the media, corporate greed, privatization, capitalism, and even masculinity.
OCP (Omni Consumer Products) is a vast corporation that specializes in space exploration, civilian and Military technology, and government intervention. OCP enters into an agreement to run and finance the Detroit police force in order to serve its needs, one being that OCP plans to turn Detroit into the city of tomorrow known as Delta City due to rampant crime and that the city is on the verge of financial collapse.
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Posted in: Action · Blu-Ray · Classics · Cult Cinema · DVD · DVD Reviews · MGM · Monday Picks · Movies · Netflix · Reviews · Sci-Fi
Tagged: Alex Cox, Dan O'Herlihy, Edward Neumeier, Kurtwood Smith, Michael Miner, Miguel Ferrer, Nancy Allen, Paul Verhoven, Peter Weller, Rob Bottin, Robert D'oQui, Robocop, Ronny Cox, Rutger Hauer
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