3 Felton Perry films on 4K Blu-ray, ranked S to D by transfer quality. 2 S-Tier picks including RoboCop 2, RoboCop.
dir. Paul Verhoeven
Arrow's 4K transfer is called a reference disc for the format in collector circles. The grain structure is preserved, the practical effects are still effective, and the ED-209 stop-motion pops in a way it never did on Blu-ray. The 4K actually reveals too much for some people, like RoboCop's rubber chin guard and plastic armor textures. The original Arrow LE Blu-ray owners felt burned when the 4K came in identical packaging shortly after.
Arrow Video · Limited Edition
dir. Irvin Kershner
Shout Factory's 4K is a massive upgrade over the old Blu-ray. The steelbook artwork is polarizing, with Robo's face getting roasted in the comments, and most people recommending the standard 4K release instead. Region availability is limited to US and Canada, which frustrated international collectors. The slipcovers for RoboCop 2 and 3 line up nicely on a shelf, even though 3 is still Blu-ray only.
Shout! Studios · Limited Edition Steelbook
dir. Jerry Jameson
Dark Force #12 from January 2026, Jerry Jameson's 1971 directorial debut about a draft dodger and a hitchhiker stuck with mercenaries in Mexico. The 4K scan is from the only surviving 35mm interpositive and the disc is 4K UHD only with no Blu-ray included. Code Red did a 2015 webstore Blu-ray that's been hard to track down for years.
Dark Force Entertainment · 4K Ultra HD