Michael Miner is a Director, Scriptwriter and Director of Photography American
Michael Miner
Michael Miner participated to
10 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
3 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Scriptwriter
, 1h57
Directed by José PadilhaOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Thriller,
Fantasy,
Action,
Horror,
CrimeThemes Films about computing,
Films about terrorism,
Transport films,
Aviation films,
Films set in the future,
Superhero films,
Films about disabilities,
Political films,
Cyberpunk films,
Dystopian films,
Anticipation,
Robot filmsActors Joel Kinnaman,
Gary Oldman,
Michael Keaton,
Samuel L. Jackson,
Jay Baruchel,
Abbie CornishRoles Characters
Rating60%
In 2028, multinational conglomerate OmniCorp revolutionizes warfare with the introduction of robotic peacekeepers capable of maintaining law and order in hot spots such as Iran. Led by CEO Raymond Sellars, the company moves to market its tech to domestic law enforcement, but the passage of the Dreyfus Act, forbidding deployment of drones on U.S. soil, prevents this. Aware that most Americans oppose the use of military systems in their communities, Sellars asks Dr. Dennett Norton and his research team to create an alternative. The result is a proposal for a cyborg police officer. However, Norton informs Sellars that only someone who is stable enough to handle being a cyborg can be turned into one, and some candidates are rejected., 1h42
Directed by Paul VerhoevenOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Thriller,
Social science fiction,
Action,
CrimeThemes Films about computing,
Medical-themed films,
Transport films,
Aviation films,
Films set in the future,
Superhero films,
Films about psychiatry,
Films about disabilities,
Political films,
Cyberpunk films,
Dystopian films,
Anticipation,
Robot filmsActors Peter Weller,
Nancy Allen,
Peter MacNicol,
Dan O'Herlihy,
Ronny Cox,
Kurtwood SmithRoles Writer
Rating75%
In a dystopian near-future, Detroit, which is now bankrupt and overrun with crime, gives Omni Consumer Products (OCP) control of its struggling police force. The company plans to replace the poor, run-down sections of Old Detroit with the high-end "Delta City," but must first address the city's high crime rate. As an alternative to existing law enforcement, OCP senior president Dick Jones (Ronny Cox) offers the prototype ED-209 enforcement droid, but it accidentally kills a board member during a demonstration. The OCP chairman, nicknamed "The Old Man" (Dan O'Herlihy), decides instead to back Jones' young rival, Bob Morton (Miguel Ferrer), and his experimental cyborg police officer program, "RoboCop., 1h57
Directed by Irvin KershnerOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Thriller,
Action,
Adventure,
CrimeThemes Films about computing,
Medical-themed films,
Films about drugs,
Films set in the future,
Superhero films,
Films about disabilities,
Political films,
Cyberpunk films,
Dystopian films,
Anticipation,
Robot filmsActors Peter Weller,
Nancy Allen,
Dan O'Herlihy,
Belinda Bauer,
Tom Noonan,
Gabriel DamonRoles Characters
Rating58%
In the year after the success of the RoboCop program and Jones's death, Omni Consumer Products (OCP) has created a new plan to have Detroit default on its debt so that OCP can foreclose on the entire city, take over its government, and replace the old neighborhoods with Delta City, a new planned city center independent of the United States government, enabling them to effectively have an entire city to be controlled by OCP.