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Below is a about the 2014 RoboCop film, written as if the writer had viewed a legitimate copy. You can adapt it to your needs. Title: The Paradox of Control: Surveillance, Drones, and the Illusion of Free Will in RoboCop (2014) Student Name: [Your Name] Course: Film Studies / Philosophy of Technology Date: [Current Date] Introduction José Padilha’s 2014 reboot of RoboCop departs significantly from Paul Verhoeven’s 1987 satirical classic. While the original critiqued Reagan-era capitalism and corporatocracy, the 2014 version reframes the narrative around post-9/11 anxieties: drone warfare, public-private surveillance partnerships, and the erosion of bodily autonomy. This paper argues that the 2014 RoboCop uses the cyborg body of Alex Murphy (Joel Kinnaman) to explore how modern control systems do not suppress emotion but rather weaponize it—specifically, the illusion of choice within an algorithmic chain of command. Summary of Key Plot Points (Relevant to Analysis) After critically injured detective Alex Murphy is transformed into the law enforcement cyborg “RoboCop” by OmniCorp CEO Raymond Sellars (Michael Keaton), he discovers that his human brain’s dopamine and emotional responses are being chemically suppressed. Crucially, the film introduces a “Prime Directives” system that overrides his actions when a target is not deemed a sufficient threat, including forbidding him from arresting a corrupt OmniCorp executive. The climax hinges on Murphy’s ability to override this programming—not through logic, but through sheer emotional will, a choice the film frames as uniquely human. Analysis: The Drone Metaphor Unlike the 1987 version, where Murphy’s memory erasure is a crude lobotomy, the 2014 film presents a subtler control mechanism. Murphy is fully conscious but his motor and tactical systems are subject to a remote “threat assessment” algorithm. This mirrors actual U.S. military drone protocols, where a human “pilot” can see the target but a remote commander authorizes the strike. Padilha visually emphasizes this by showing OmniCorp technicians watching Murphy’s HUD feed, able to freeze his limbs mid-action. If you provide the actual content of the