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Starship Troopers (film)

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Starship Troopers
Directed byPaul Verhoeven
Written byOriginal novel:
Robert A. Heinlein
Screenwriter:
Edward Neumeier
Produced byJon Davison, Alan Marshall
StarringCasper Van Dien
Denise Richards
Dina Meyer
Jake Busey
Neil Patrick Harris
Clancy Brown
Michael Ironside
CinematographyJost Vacano
Edited byMark Goldblatt
Caroline Ross
Music byBasil Poledouris
Distributed byUSA/Canada
TriStar Pictures
International
Touchstone Pictures
Release dates
United States:
November 7, 1997
United Kingdom:
January 2, 1998
Running time
129 min
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100,000,000[1]
Box officeUnited States
$54,768,952[1]
Worldwide
$121,100,000[1]

Starship Troopers is a 1997 American satirical military science fiction film, written by Edward Neumeier (screenplay), directed by Paul Verhoeven, with some names and details taken from Starship Troopers, a science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein. It was the first of three films released in the Starship Troopers franchise. The film had a budget estimated around 100 million US dollars and grossed over 120 million dollars worldwide[1].

The story follows a young soldier named Johnny Rico and his exploits in the Mobile Infantry, a futuristic military unit. Rico's military career progresses from recruit to non-commissioned officer and finally to officer against the backdrop of an interstellar war between mankind and an arachnoid species known as "the Bugs".

Starship Troopers was nominated for an Academy Award (visual effects) in 1998. The film has attracted controversy and criticism for its social and political themes, which some critics claim promote militarism[2]; and for its distortion and misrepresentation of the novel whose name it bears. The film received mostly positive reviews from major movie critics.

Plot

In the distant future, humans are at tense relations with an alien race whose homeworld is the planet Klendathu (they have many planets) named the Arachnids, or "Bugs." John D. "Johnny" Rico (Casper Van Dien), his girlfriend Carmen Ibanez (Denise Richards), and best friend Carl Jenkins (Neil Patrick Harris) (who possesses psychic abilities) graduate from high school in Buenos Aires; Carmen and Carl enlist in the military to become citizens. Johnny, wanting to follow Carmen, goes against his parents' demands and enlists himself. He finds that his grades are too low to join Carmen in Flight School, and is assigned to the Mobile Infantry while Carl joins Military Intelligence. He and the rest of the recruits are drilled by the brutal Career Sergeant Zim (Clancy Brown). Johnny shows himself to be an outstanding leader and is made squad leader. He also meets a former high school classmate, "Dizzy" Flores (Dina Meyer), who requested transfer to Johnny's unit ostensibly because the unit is the toughest but mainly because she's infatuated with Johnny. Johnny learns that Carmen is happy with her training and is working with his high school rival, Zander (Patrick Muldoon). Her decision to make the fleet her career dashes Johnny's dreams as well as the future of his romance with her. After a training incident in which one of his squad members is killed, Johnny is demoted from squad leader and publicly flogged. As Johnny is telling his parents via videophone that he is quitting the Infantry the transmission is interrupted; the Bugs have directed an asteroid at Earth, destroying Buenos Aires and killing his parents. Earth declares war on the Bugs and Johnny stays with the Infantry.

The Federation's forces mount a large-scale invasion of Klendathu, which becomes an unmitigated disaster due to underestimation of the Bugs' combat abilities. Bug "plasma" discharges from the surface which were thought to be harmless turn out to be a surface-to-space barrage that destroys much of the Fleet. Cut off from air support, the Mobile Infantry is swarmed by thousands of Bug warriors on the surface. Over 100,000 troops are killed before a retreat can be made (when Carmen looks up Johnny, it shows over 308,000 died). Johnny's squad is almost wiped out, and Carmen believes he is dead due to an error on the casualty list. Federation scientists are baffled by the Bugs' use of military tactics and postulate that there must be a caste of "Brain Bugs" that serve as generals for the Arachnids.

Johnny, Dizzy, and fellow squad member Ace (Jake Busey) are brought into the "Roughnecks", led by Johnny's old high-school teacher, Lieutenant Jean Rasczak (Michael Ironside). A new Sky Marshal revises the campaign, using strikes on other planets in the Klendathu system to learn more about the Arachnids. After aerial strikes against the planets, Lt. Rasczak's squad lands on Planet P to mop up. Johnny's leadership and his skill in combat while destroying a tanker bug earn him a field promotion to Corporal. That night, Lt. Raszcak grants the unit rest and relaxation, during which Johnny and Dizzy wind up in bed. A few days later, the Roughnecks are assigned to investigate an outpost on Planet P; they find the garrison killed and learn that the Bugs have sucked out the brains of some of the dead. The outpost is ambushed, killing many of the squad, including Lt. Rasczak. Johnny takes command and requests an evacuation ship, which happens to be flown by Carmen and Zander. Dizzy is stabbed by a Bug and dies in Johnny's arms. Johnny and Carmen are joined by Carl, now a high-ranking colonel in military intelligence. Carl admits that the Roughnecks had been used as bait to test a theory, which angers Carmen, but the theory has proven correct; the existence of "brain bugs" that control much of the Arachnid behavior. Carl assigns the Roughnecks to search for a brain bug. Carl gives Johnny a promotion to lieutenant and command of the Roughnecks.

As the Roughnecks explore the surface of Planet P, the warship Rodger Young, on which Carmen is stationed, is hit by Arachnid fire, and Carmen and Zander evacuate in an escape pod that lands deep inside a Bug nest. Johnny learns of Carmen's situation and tells the rest of the squad to keep searching while he, Ace, and Sugar Watkins (Seth Gilliam) search for Carmen. It's indicated that Carl (who has telepathic powers), guided him along somewhat through his mind. They come across Carmen and Zander just as Zander's brain is sucked out by the brain bug. Carmen saves herself by injuring the bug with a knife that Zander handed to her earlier. Watkins, injured, sacrifices himself to wipe out the bug nest. Johnny, Ace and Carmen arrive on the surface and learn that the brain bug was caught by the Infantry, led by former Sergeant Zim, who had himself demoted to Private in order to take part in combat. As everyone celebrates, Carl joins Johnny and Carmen on the surface, explaining that they will be able to learn how the Bugs think and can turn the tide of the war. Johnny, Ace, and Carmen continue their service in the military as heroes and prime examples to incoming recruits with Johnny as leader of the Roughnecks and Carmen as captain of her own ship.

Cast

Development

Production

Badlands of Hell's Half Acre, Natrona County, Wyoming, where parts of Starship Troopers were filmed.

The "bug planet" scenes were filmed in the badlands of Hell's Half Acre in Natrona County, Wyoming.[3]

Several cameos in the film include producer Jon Davison as the angry Buenos Aires resident who says to the FedNet camera, "The only good Bug is a dead Bug!", and screenwriter Ed Neumeier as the quickly captured, convicted, and condemned murderer in another FedNet clip. Former U.S. Marine Dale Dye, whose company Warriors, Inc. provided technical military advice on the film, appeared as a high-ranking officer following the capture of the Brain Bug ("What's it thinking, Colonel?"). Director Paul Verhoeven, producer Jon Davison, writer Edward Neumeier, creature effects designers Phil Tippett and Craig Hayes, and composer Basil Poledouris were all involved with the original RoboCop movie. Actor Michael Ironside was also considered for the role of Murphy/RoboCop. Ironside did appear in Verhoeven's Total Recall. The cast agreed to do the naked shower scene only if the director agreed to direct the scene naked. Verhoeven directed the scene with no clothes on.[3]

The movie received much criticism in that many of the characters are described as just graduating from high school, despite the fact that the actors who played them were in their late twenties or early thirties at the time the movie was filmed. In the commentary track of the DVD release of the film, Verhoeven remarks that he had hoped to cast actors whose age more closely matched that of the characters—and indeed of real-world soldiers—but that the producers felt such actors would look too young. The teacher and leader of the "Roughnecks" in the novel are combined into one role played by Michael Ironside.[3]

Like Verhoeven's films before this, Starship Troopers was threatened with an NC-17 rating. Bits cut included several shots of mutilated bodies and a decapitation.

Comparison with the novel

File:Starship-Troopers---rico.jpg
Van Dien as Johnny Rico in Starship Troopers ambushed by a huge Tanker Bug resembling a bombardier beetle emerging out of the ground.

There is a vast divergence between the original book and film. A report in an American Cinematographer article around the same time as the film's release states the Heinlein novel was optioned well into the pre-production period of the film, which had a working title of Bug Hunt at Outpost Nine; most of the writing team reportedly were unaware of the novel at the time. According to the DVD commentary, Paul Verhoeven never finished reading the novel, claiming he read through the first few chapters and became both "bored and depressed."[4]

The film was also characterized by a conspicuous absence of anything resembling Heinlein's mechanized Mobile Infantry; in the novel, troopers wore powered 'man amplifier' suits that followed the trooper's movements but added force and speed beyond human limits, as well as shielding the head and body from most weapons; in the film, troopers wore unpowered armor that seems to provide little-to-no protection against the Bugs; indeed, it seemed to only slow them down, as the MI abandoned all but the most rudimentary armor later on in the movie. Their weaponry was somewhat advanced, having the use of small shoulder-launched tactical nuclear missiles, fired much like an RPG. However, the MI fought as infantry for most of the movie, and aside from a single scene featuring air support (Lt. Rasczak stated that they would be landing only after air support had "glassed the planet"), employed virtually no form of combined arms.

In addition, the Bugs in the film are similar to the ones in the novel in that they are insectoid; the Bugs in the novel had superior technology, including starships and beam and plasma weaponry. Also missing was the other alien race: the Skinnies.

While some of the dialogue comes straight from the book, or variation of it, much of the dialogue and many of the themes are not from Heinlein's story. Additionally, most of the characters have been significantly altered. In the novel the lead character's name is Juan Rico, and he speaks Tagalog at home and does not originate from Buenos Aires. Flores is female in the movie in order to add a love interest sub-plot. In the novel, Dizzy Flores is male, has no relation to Rico save the fact they were soldiers in the same platoon, and is only mentioned in the first chapter, due to the fact that he dies during a drop. Indeed, there were no women in the MI at all; women almost exclusively serve as starship pilots. Additionally, "Carl Jenkins" of the movie did not even exist in the book. Carl and Jenkins are completely different people, with Carl being Rico's best friend, and Jenkins simply being another soldier. Some scenes are more like a modern college coed dorm (complete with coed showers) than like the sex-segregated facilities in most armed forces, both in Heinlein's day and our own.

Release

Reception

Starship Troopers polarized both popular audiences and critics, as did the original book. A prominent theme of the film is the human practice of senseless violence without reflection or empathy, which parallels the senseless aggression of the "Bugs". As such, the movie attracted widely divergent responses. This is reflected by a mixed critical response, receiving a 62% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[5] Starship Troopers was nominated for a number of awards in 1998 which included a nomination for the Academy Award for Visual Effects, and won Saturn Awards for Best Costumes and Best Special Effects at the 1998 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films, USA Awards.[6] The movie earned over $22 million on its opening weekend and has grossed a total of $121,214,377 worldwide.

The film included visual allusions to propaganda films, such as Why We Fight, Triumph of the Will, The Battleship Potemkin, and wartime news broadcasts. However, this satire was embedded in slickly produced action sequences with clever special effects.[7][8]

In the DVD audio commentary for the film, director Paul Verhoeven states unambiguously that the movie's message is "War makes fascists of us all", and that he sees the movie as a satire of American militarism. (The dress uniforms bear a distinct resemblance to those worn by members of the Third Reich.) On the same commentary, screenwriter Ed Neumeier (who had previously worked with Verhoeven on RoboCop) broadly concurs, although he sees the satire as applying to the whole of human history, rather than solely to the United States. Since the filmmakers did not make these statements at the time of the film's release, viewers have interpreted it variously: as a satire, as a celebration of fascism, or as a simple action film.[3]

The direct-to-video sequel Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation, released in 2004, was not as popular as the first, mostly due to its low budget and the fact it was more in the horror genre than the sci-fi/action original[citation needed]. In May 2006, MovieHole.net reported that Ed Neumeier returned to write the script for a second sequel, Starship Troopers 3: Marauder, and also stated that original cast members would be returning, including Casper Van Dien.[9] This movie was released directly to DVD in August 2008.

Merchandise

In 1997, Avalon Hill released Starship Troopers: Prepare For Battle!, a boardgame based on the film version rather than Heinlein's book. Its gameplay focused on limited skirmishes rather than larger battles. The "Skinnies" do not appear, nor is there a political element.[10] Avalon Hill released a game called Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers in 1976.[11] The 2000 real-time tactics video game titled Starship Troopers: Terran Ascendancy was released. This game also incorporated the powered suits in Heinlein's novel into the Verhoeven version of the Mobile Infantry. It was developed by Australian software company Blue Tongue Entertainment. A first-person shooter game also titled Starship Troopers was released November 15, 2005. This version was developed by Strangelite Studios and published by Empire Interactive. Set five years after the events of the movie, the game also featured Casper van Dien voicing the in-game version of Johnny Rico. Sega Pinball released a pinball machine based on this movie.[12]

The movie was released simultaneously with a graphic novelization, which retold events from the movie. There were also additional series that were released based in the Verhoeven universe, though not directly related to the movie. Further series were published by Dark Horse Comics and Markosia. The film was followed by the CGI animated television series Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles, which is loosely set inside the events of the movie just after Rico and Diz join the Roughnecks but before Rico gets promoted (though the events and tone of the show differ from those of the film).

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Box Office History for Starship Troopers Movies". The Numbers. Los Angeles, California, USA: Nash Information Services. Retrieved 2009-05-31.
  2. ^ "Scott Rosenberg's critic of the movie from Salon.com, describing a fascist "G.I. Joe" novel". Retrieved 2006-04-18.
  3. ^ a b c d Verhoeven, Paul and Neumeier, Ed (1997). Audio Commentary for "Starship Troopers" (DVD). Buena Vista International.
  4. ^ Robley, Les Paul (1997). "Interstellar Exterminators. Ornery insects threaten the galaxy in Starship Troopers". American Cinematographer. 78 (11). California, United States of America: American Society of Cinematographers: 56–66. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ "Starship Troopers (1997)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-08-19.
  6. ^ "Awards for Starship Troopers". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  7. ^ Tobias, Scott (2005-10-19). "Who Will Love The Brown Bunny? A Decade Of Underrated Movies (1997 Starship Troooper)". A.V. Club. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  8. ^ "Commentary Tracks Of The Blessed (1997 Starship Troooper)". A.V. Club. 2005-03-25. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  9. ^ Morris, Clint. "Sony Debugs Starship Troopers". MovieHole.net. Retrieved 2007-02-19.
  10. ^ "Starship Troopers: Prepare For Battle!". Retrieved 2006-12-03.
  11. ^ "Starship Troopers (1976)". Board Game Geek. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  12. ^ "Starship Troopers". Internet Pinball Machine Database. Retrieved 2007-08-03.