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R.O.T.O.R.

  • 1987
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
2.7/10
4K
YOUR RATING
R.O.T.O.R. (1987)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:50
2 Videos
33 Photos
ActionSci-FiThriller

A prototype crime-fighting robot breaks free from its lab, initiating a relentless rampage as it malfunctions and targets innocents for destruction.A prototype crime-fighting robot breaks free from its lab, initiating a relentless rampage as it malfunctions and targets innocents for destruction.A prototype crime-fighting robot breaks free from its lab, initiating a relentless rampage as it malfunctions and targets innocents for destruction.

  • Director
    • Cullen Blaine
  • Writers
    • Cullen Blaine
    • Budd Lewis
  • Stars
    • Margaret Trigg
    • Richard Gesswein
    • Jayne Smith
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    2.7/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cullen Blaine
    • Writers
      • Cullen Blaine
      • Budd Lewis
    • Stars
      • Margaret Trigg
      • Richard Gesswein
      • Jayne Smith
    • 91User reviews
    • 52Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    R.O.T.O.R.
    Trailer 1:50
    R.O.T.O.R.
    R.O.T.O.R.: Just A Police Officer
    Clip 2:25
    R.O.T.O.R.: Just A Police Officer
    R.O.T.O.R.: Just A Police Officer
    Clip 2:25
    R.O.T.O.R.: Just A Police Officer

    Photos33

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    Top cast54

    Edit
    Margaret Trigg
    Margaret Trigg
    • Sony Garren
    Richard Gesswein
    • Barrett Coldyron
    Jayne Smith
    • Dr. Coren Steele
    James Cole
    • Greg Hutchins
    Stan Moore
    Stan Moore
    • Houghtaling
    Nanette Kuczek
    • Penny Gayle
    Brad Overturf
    • Moulie…
    Shawn Brown
    • Mokie Killion
    Michael Hunter
    • Earl Buglar
    Victor Kwasnick
    • Grotes
    • (as Victor Kawasnick)
    Ron Baker
    • Glorioso
    Diana Hurd
    • Kipster
    Bill Blair
    Bill Blair
    • Statum
    Bob Lennard
    • Fisherman
    Janiece Stamper
    • Waitress
    Robert Vicitation
    • Fighter…
    Leo Martinez
    • Gunman…
    Paul Vela
    • Driver…
    • Director
      • Cullen Blaine
    • Writers
      • Cullen Blaine
      • Budd Lewis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews91

    2.73.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5Hey_Sweden

    "It's like a chain saw set on 'frappe'."

    Richard Gesswein is Dr. Coldyron (if there's one thing I love about this movie, it's that name), a scientist working in the tactical / robotics department of a Texas police force. His big baby is the cutting edge robot R.O.T.O.R., which (accidentally) gets put into commission way ahead of schedule and predictably goes on a rampage. The good doctor must now go out and find his Frankenstein monster before it can harm too many people.

    Man, I've seen a number of "so bad it's good" low budget B movies in my time, but this one really takes the cake. While silly and tiresome at times, it's SO bad it holds a certain fascination. It will likely have its viewers scratching / shaking their heads regularly. It's wall to wall with laughable performances and genuinely bad dialogue (and even some supposed attempts at profundity!). The action is pretty rote: our robotic villain barely roughs up a few people, kills even less, and spends most of the movies' running time relentlessly tracking down Sonia a.k.a. "Sony" (Margaret Trigg), who witnessed the killing of her ex-fiancée.

    Gesswein is a dopey, mildly macho hero with a ranch and acres of goofy exposition to deliver. The memorable Jayne Smith plays an unlikely scientist who comes to the assistance of our hero. Trigg is a lovely woman and definitely appealing enough to keep us reasonably engaged through her protracted ordeal. Michael Hunter, who'd had a small role in "RoboCop" (viewers new to this one will likely automatically be reminded of that much more popular film), is the crooked commissioner Buglar, and he's a real ham.

    "R.O.T.O.R." must be seen to be believed. If prospective viewers have a high tolerance for general cinematic stupidity, they just might have a high old time with it.

    Five out of 10.
    1ThingyBlahBlah3

    The Holy Grail of bad movies

    Say what you want about something like "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel" or "Wolverine", but at least they were made by people who knew the basics of movie making. Ya know, little things like making sure that it doesn't suddenly go from day to night to day again from one shot to the next, or the benefits of having two consecutive lines of dialogue that are related logically to each other, or finding actors who don't literally read from cue cards or stare at the floor to make sure they hit their marks.

    After hearing about this movie's pure awfulness for so many years, I finally got to catch it on On Demand. I was hesitant to watch it because I didn't think it could possibly live up (or down) to my expectations. Needless to say, it did.

    If you do choose to subject yourself to the pure bliss (or pure torture, depending on your tolerance for really bad movies) of ROTOR, make sure you stick around for the very end of the credits. No, there's no post-credits scene or anything, but you can amuse yourself with the fact that they even managed to mess up the copyright frame at the very end of the credits. It just says "(C)" with no year next to it, followed by "MPAA #" with no number next to it. My guess is that the MPAA sent it to the producers and nobody knew that they were supposed to fill it in before they inserted it. For we bad movie aficionados, it's just one more gift from the gods.
    2BA_Harrison

    Difficult to comprehend.

    Police robotics expert Captain Coldyron (Richard Gesswein) attempts to track down R.O.T.O.R., a renegade robot cop who punishes every crime with death.

    R.O.T.O.R. has me completely baffled: it's a dreadful 80s sci-fi film that rips off other better known classics (notably RoboCop and The Terminator), but while there's nothing particularly unusual about that, it is so thoroughly terrible in every imaginable way that it's hard to understand how such a dire film actually came into being. Gesswein's charmless performance; the pitiful action scenes; the lousy 80s music; the embarrassingly bad stop-motion endoskeleton that practises karate; Dr. Steele, the muscle-bound female scientist with the 'skunk-stripe' hairdo; Shoeboogie, the moronic 'American Indian' lab assistant; Willard, the comedy-relief police robot with the peaked cap; the diabolical dialogue (my favourite line being from Coldyron's strangely poetic account to the police "a buttery morning sunlight painted a golden glow through the ranch house windows"; the man sure has a way with words): so much cringe-worthy nonsense in just the one film is hard to take.

    Although part of me would like to believe that R.O.T.O.R.'s awfulness was intentional, a calculated attempt to appeal to B-movie fans who lap up such trash, I sincerely doubt it, the film alternating too wildly between complete inanity and total seriousness; part of me would also dearly love this to be a genuine case of bad film-making (the 80s being THE decade for such drivel), but I find it impossible to accept that people can be THAT untalented.
    1Iama5yrold

    This is the worst movie I have ever seen, and I love it.

    This movie gets a 5 out of 10 not because it deserves five points, in fact, I don't think the quality is such that it deserves one point. But it is just so god damn bad that I love it enough to boost up the points.

    To begin with, Richard Gesswein is the worst leading man ever to grace the silver screen. They had to get someone to pull a voice-over for his role, Coldyron (Yeah, that's a tough name), as well as his leading lady, Dr. Steele's part. Dr. Steele, by the way, is a bodybuilder woman with a skunk on her head.

    The opening scene reveals the end of the movie immediately telling you that you are wasting an hour and a half. These three guys (the director, writer and star) came up with enough money to take RoboCop, The Terminator, and Judge Dredd (which was merely in comic book form at the time) into one completely awful masterpiece.

    When we go back to the beginning of the story, the clock strikes 5:00 and Coldyron wakes up. Just as a quick note to the viewers, the filmmakers then had the clock read 4:50, as if to say, "Please, it's not too late for you, turn off the TV and RUN!" Of course, I didn't follow the directions, I just laughed. Shortly thereafter he fills up a cup of coffee with far too much sugar and you're thinking, "Wow, he sure likes sugar." (This is a joke that you will soon be hoping the filmmakers didn't find to be funny). He grabs carrots from the fridge and heads outside, to his horse. You think the carrots are for the horse, right? But he gives the horse the coffee! THAT'S why there was so much sugar! Then HE eats the carrots himself! AHA! SO FUNNY!! This is about how great the entire movie is.

    Absolutely nothing makes sense in this movie. Gesswein says that ROTOR will be ready in 25 years, then says he needs at least 4. Shortly thereafter a Native American character named Shoeboogie puts his headphones in the wrong place and sparks ROTOR. It just makes no sense at all.

    I won't go into too many more details, but the worst part of the entire movie must be the fact that ROTOR can take off his sunglasses AND SEE INTO THE PAST! Apparently a function called SENSOR RECALL was built into his system, but it is so insanely dumb that the screenwriter didn't even bother trying to come up with some sort of half-assed explanation. None of the technical jargon even sounds like it makes sense, but he didn't even try going into sensor recall.

    You have to see SENSOR RECALL in action to truly appreciate it's sheer madness.

    At the conclusion of the movie, Coldyron utilizes a technique Shoeboogie spoke of earlier to kill ROTOR, as if to tie everything together in some sort of nice neat way. One of the problems is that Shoeboogie never spoke to Coldyron. Another is that a few pieces of string defeat this unstoppable supercop.

    Another is that I am trying to make sense of a movie in which the comic relief is delivered by a Robot who can think on his own, but the supercop won't be ready for another 25 years.

    ROTOR is the worst movie ever made. If you can find something worse, please bring it to me, because I need it.

    Please see ROTOR. It is so bad, you will hate me for making you watch it.

    And then you will make all of your friends watch it...and you will love me once more.

    "Look at these cheekbones: I'm either an Indian or a sissy. And, heh heh, I sure ain't no sissy." (or something like that...) -Shoeboogie
    1Neonsamurai

    If I ever find that shop assistant...

    My friend Dave and I went to our local newsagents to see if we could hire out RoboCop. This was back in the days when you could rent videos from newsagents, before laws were introduced to stop the assistants from recommending films. Unfortunately for us, such laws had yet to be invented and this lady behind the counter said that they didn't have RoboCop yet, but they had R.O.T.O.R. Now being young and naïve, we looked at the box and saw that both films had similar letters in their titles and R.O.T.O.R. had a picture of a robot man jumping off a bike and firing a gun. WE WERE SOLD!!

    My therapist thinks that a lot of my current problems stem back to this film and our decision to hire it. I have tried to block it from my mind, but it's burned in there and it won't go, it just flashes images from the film at me from time to time.

    Here's what it just flashed at me:

    There's a stainless steel Desert Eagle in it. How do I remember that? Because I think it's the only pistol they had in the film. Watch for the bit when R.O.T.O.R. is in the boat and he's going to fall I the water, and the DE turns into a toy Colt Python. I could just imagine some redneck off screen saying `You ain't getting' my sweetheart, I mean Desert Eagle, wet. That gun an me have a special relationship. She's real pretty.'

    From what I remember of the story, this woman makes some kind of driving violation, so R.O.T.O.R. chases her across the country and tries to kill her. His programming has gone wrong so he'll kill anyone who gets in his way. Harsh? Yes it is, but if the punishment for speeding was death then we'd all drive a little more carefully.

    Well, the budget isn't quite up to that of Water World, and I think that it was made by a group of friends (one of who was going through that transition of man to woman), but I can't really get mad at these guys 'cos at least they tried.

    However, heed my warning. If a motorcycle cop who looks like a bulimic Ned Flanders ever stops you, then run for your life! You might just have met the R.O.T.O.R!!

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      David Adam Newman plays Shoe Boogie, the jive-talking Native American janitor.
    • Goofs
      When Coldyron's alarm clock goes off, it says 5:00. When he gets out of bed, the clock says 4:50.
    • Quotes

      Coldyron: Let me tell you something, mister. You fire me and I'll make more noise than two skeletons making love in a tin coffin, brother.

    • Crazy credits
      Willard the Robot receives an end credit, although it is unclear who provided his voice.
    • Connections
      Featured in Best of the Worst: The Vindicator, Cyber Tracker, Robot Jox, and R.O.T.O.R. (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Changing The Channel
      Written and Performed by Larry's Dad

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    FAQ15

    • How long is R.O.T.O.R.?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 1988 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Robotor
    • Filming locations
      • Southern Methodist University - 3128 Dyer Street, Dallas, Texas, USA(Brett Coldyron sequence, as University of Oxford)
    • Production companies
      • Manson International
      • WestWind Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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