DIRECTOR
Paul
Verhoeven
SCREENWRITER
Ed Neumeier
based
on the novel by
Robert
A. Heinlein
PRODUCERS
Jon Davison
Alan Marshall
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Jost Vacano
MUSIC
Basil Poledouris
EDITORS
Mark Goldblatt
Caroline Ross
CAST
Casper Van Dien (Johnny Rico)
Dina Meyer (Dizzy Flores)
Denise Richards (Carmen Ibanez)
Jake Busey (Ace Levy)
Neil Patrick Harris (Carl Jenkins)
Clancy Brown (Zim)
Seth Gilliam (Sugar Watkins)
Patrick Muldoon (Zander Barcalow)
Michael Ironside (Jean Rasczak)
Rue McClanahan (Biology Teacher)
Marshall Bell (General Owen)
Amy Smart (Lumbreiser)
MPAA rating: R
Running
time: 129m
U.S. release: November 7, 1997
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Official
site
Other Paul
Verhoeven films
reviewed on this website:
- Hollow
Man
- Showgirls
|
Starship
Troopers is about Earth
vs. big bugs, so of course I loved every absurd minute of it.
I make no apology for that. Breathlessly stupid and endearingly
cheesy, this is the best guilty pleasure since Anaconda
-- if you're in the right mood and in the right company. Put
yourself in a state of amused anticipation, and go with at least
one witty friend with whom you can play Mystery Science Theater
3000, and you will have a great trashy time.
A film that aims high and misses can still be worthwhile but
also frustrating -- you think, It wants to be great, but
it just isn't getting there. Starship Troopers doesn't
want to be great; all it wants to do is have some fun. It aims
low and hits, again and again, with hammering relentlessness
and a steady stream of rude satire -- not to mention a horde
of stunning CGI critters that fold, spindle and mutilate a good
percent of the hapless cast. These guys are hands-on (or legs-on)
killers, and they wipe the floor with the ETs in the tedious
Independence
Day. The movie is everything ID4 should have been
-- a big, shiny, straight-faced parody so outrageously violent,
so outlandishly corny, that it has a kind of moronic purity.
Starship Troopers (the title evokes SS troopers) is based
on a 1959 novel by Robert A. Heinlein -- a meat-and-potatoes
war story that happens to involve starships and giant bugs. Heinlein,
a retired Navy officer, filled his book with military anecdotes,
strategies, and ethics. The novel is nuke-'em-till-they-glow
militaristic pulp, but it's compulsively readable and fairly
provocative: Like the best sci-fi, it touches on thorny issues.
The society is divided into two groups: citizens -- those who
serve the government, preferably in combat -- and civilians.
If you want a peaceful civilian life, nobody begrudges your choice;
you just lose the right to vote. Heinlein's point may be that
as our enemies get more ruthless and totalitarian, so will we.
As Nietszche warned: "Battle not with monsters, lest ye
become one."
Director Paul Verhoeven and scripter Ed Neumeier, who worked
together on Verheoven's breakthrough hit RoboCop, distill
Heinlein's story into a heavy-metal shoot-'em-up with barbs of
satire. Remember RoboCop's grotesquely insensitive TV
clips and commercials? Starship Troopers is punctuated
with sunshiny ads recruiting fresh cannon fodder -- JOIN UP NOW!
-- and wonderfully sick commercials in which smiling soldiers
distribute guns to eager children. The rest of the movie is equally
cartoonish, with swipes from Star Wars and Aliens
so audaciously blatant you laugh -- just as you laugh at everything
else, especially when a stupid civilian muses "Looks like
rain" before the Bugs wipe out Buenos Aires.
Starship Troopers follows young soldier Johnny Rico (Casper
Van Dien) through basic training in the hardcore Mobile Infantry,
whose motto is "Everyone fights, no one quits." Yes,
everyone: Women fight (and shower) alongside men without
conflict, harassment, or even much sexual tension. In the book,
women weren't troopers; they were trained as starship pilots
due to their superior math skills and coordination. In the movie,
women fly ships and fry bugs, but Verhoeven doesn't make
a big political deal out of it, as G.I.
Jane did so ineptly.
The setting may be futuristic, but the characters are out of
a '50s big-bug movie. The cast is full of young hunks and babes,
mouthing dialogue so corny it's retro-hip. Verhoeven could have
directed them with a lyric from Tom Lehrer's "The Hunting
Song": "You just stand there looking cute/And when
something moves, you shoot." The best line in Starship
Troopers is delivered by one-armed lieutenant Michael Ironside
with grim intensity: "They sucked his brains out!"
When all is said and done, you may feel as if Verhoeven had sucked
your brains out, too. But brain-sucking has rarely been
so fun. |