The point of the attack on the Skinny city in the book was to convince them that messing with the MI is a terrible idea and they should just stay out of the war or throw in on Earth's side. Which is why they were trying for maximum chaos but not going for a high body count. They wanted them to know, very clearly, that the MI could have hit their city much harder, which is why they only sent one platoon.
I know it’s small and pretty much semantics but it’s not power suits but “power armor” the reason I say that is because this book gave birth to the idea of that, master chief, Samus, Doom Guy, Starcraft, Warhammer 40K all started with this book
don't forget gundam and basically the entire "giant mech" concept. and i believe also the super sentai (power rangers) also came from this "power armor" origin.
master chief started from Doom not Starship Troopers. master chief is a direct rip off of Doom Guy 95's look. The part halo copied off Starship Troopers is the drop off scene.
In the book when they were talking about knives, Zim was using the knife as a metaphor for the mobile Infantry. Like a Knife they can be multi-purpose and also a precise killing tool.
Nobody mentions an essential par of the book: when the students are receiving lecture the teacher explicitly says the current form of government is not endorsed because is morally right but because it works and it must be changed once it stops working, the federation encouraged their members to question it
And yet the movie, reasonably, argues that the veterans, the only people able to vote, will avoid making changes to the system because it indoctrinated them enough (even though the military isn't actually winning the war and it seems endless).
@@suarezguy True but both, book and movie, point out that you can't vote until after your out of the military. Something along the lines of they would just vote down the war they are in. It leaves all voting to the veterans who have had to live through all the same hardships and turmoil the current enlisted are. And would "wishful thinking" take that into account. So those who go career military never get to vote until fully retired. Basically saying only those who fought in ww1 could vote on if we go into ww2
@@franciscodanconia45 Which kinda makes sense, since the story wasn't based on the book. Verhoeven and writer Ed Nuiman had the story all ready to go. I think it was called something like Attack on outpost 9. However they had been long enough in film business to know nobody would greenlight it. so........ they camouflaged it. get rights to do the book adaptation, changed the plot line on superficial parts to match the book, named things after the book and put it to a melting oven. Outcomes (outwardly): Stupid fun action splatter sci-fi with "Heinlein story" sticker on stop, which makes studio bosses see dollars roll in their eyes. while that camo net of the book smuggled the real story Ed and Paul wanted to tell all the way from the script to movie theaters. and then people go "but this doesn't match the book".... Yeah it isn't supposed to. The book name was just a trick to get the movie done in first place.
@@Longtail626 Drowning the enemy in the blood of billions might be acceptable to the 40k universe, but with a life feed from the battlefield ike in the movie? That becomes a tough sell for potential new recruits.
Rico in the book was also Filipino. He spoke Tagalog. Also, I think Verhooven implies that the asteroid attack was a false flag attack to justify an invasion of Klendathu since it would be literally impossible to send an asteroid from the other side of the galaxy in such a short time.
So glad someone else caught that the Ricos were Filipino, not tall, blond... well, we know where the film took that. I saw the film, then dug out the book and read it, and found the film far more offensive-- Heinlein puts his ideas out there for thought and discussion (including mech suits, long before anime!) while the film was pleased to consider a WWII veteran's views so fascist that they had to hammer the viewer with straight-up Nazi imagery. Ugh.
What do you mean, "a false flag attack?" Carmen narrowly avoids the meteor and states it's trajectory is toward Earth. When the Captain says to send a warning to fleet, they can't, their comms station was destroyed. So, no. Not a false flag.
The only thing I disagree with in this (and it's a minor point) is that Heinlein wasn't trying to say that aggressiveness is necessary for any continuing society, rather that the willingness and courage to BE aggressive when required IS necessary. The theme of the novel is effectively: In social structures, the longer you hide from the horror of the world, the sooner it lands at your doorstep.
@@autismobinch135 you mean the farms that had tunnels for the Viet kong, or the farms the Viet kong were using for supplies, remember the Viet kong were the same people who would take thermite to children and tell them to run up to the soldiers. So imagine a small child running up to you crying and you have zero idea if she was a bomb or just a scared child The viet kong were the US first encounter with asymmetric warfare, so while I agree the assholes in political power did not handle the war correctly or from a strategic understanding. Actions like bombing a farm actually makes sense, normally is standard warfare you know which farms supply the military and only bomb those, seeing as the politicians didn't know which farms were supplying the Viet kong, they went to all farms are supplying the Viet kong
@@andrewcook2625 First encounter with modern asymmetric warfare you mean. The US military was literally birthed by a century of constant asymmetric warfare against the Natives and other colonizing Europeans. Of the dozens of conflicts fought by the US only something like 7 were primarily conventional.
Also in the book, Rico is Philipino. Also, the book mostly centered around two points, basic training, and officer candidate school, the bugs were barely in the book and most of the deaths in the book happened during the basic training parts.
I saw a film documentary a few years ago where Edward Neumeier stated that the original idea for the film came from an idea of Verhoeven's. He wanted to make a film about a group of kids rising through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during World War 2, but do it in an exciting and triumphant way. They both realized such a concept would be impossible to get produced. A few years later Neumeier came back to Verhoeven saying "I think I might have a way to do this" and we get Starship Troopers. This explains a lot.
Fun facts #1:some of the props like the armor in the first movie were reuse in power Ranger lost galaxy Fun fact #2:the novel was an inspiration for gundam
One point of difference that seems minute but is actually a big point is the tactics of the MI in the book versus the movie. In the book, officers drop first is a major point discussed, that higher ranking officers are first on the ground before the enlisted men, despite officers carrying less weapons and armor. The reason is that way no matter what goes wrong, evenly a lowly private on his first drop with have someone more experienced to lead them. In the movie, tactics all together seem thrown out the window as the few field officers seen just shout and wave their arms and the enlisted are just thrown at the bugs hoping to win by numbers.
@@matiasfpm The animated Starship Troopers is kinda awesome. It's been a few years since I've seen them, but they take much more from the book than the movie, as I remember.
It's mentioned in the book if you only lose 1 trooper for every 50 bugs, you're losing. People that play Protoss versus Zerg understand this idea all too well. BTW, StarCraft is like the video game adaption of Starship Troopers with Protoss as the skinnies.
@walker jfs The book is one of the best works of science fiction ever written, and the movie, which might have been decent with a different name, is trash for stealing the name of the book.
none of your business I mean the first movie is amazing. I don’t know why you make an amazing movie then be like huh let’s take the members out. Like it’s obviously not to meant to have a sequel as they killed most people off. The sequels are pretty bad.
The bugs in the movie were really, really sad. In the movie they were pretty much unintelligent critters with no apparent tech that shot at ships in orbit with plasma farts and *somehow* aimed a small asteroid and fired it interstellar distances (at ludicrous speed) to hit a planet. In the book the bugs were smart enough to make *allies* of other alien races (the "skinnies" as an example), who killed the MI by use of *guns* and had their own interstellar space ships that they used to attack other star systems. The bugs weren't after us as food, they were after us because... y'know, the book never really said. It just implied that it was because we both use the same sort of planets to live on.
The Movie Bugs used organic technology, especially genetic engineering. Arguably the Federation's technology and FTL travel is the only reason they weren't overrun.
Totally didn't mention that this book is on nearly every required reading list for Military Officer Candidate Schools the world over, mostly because of how it portrays the role of the Officer and the supreme responsibility they have for their subordinates and the mission they are tasked.
Starship Troopers: the most controversial book Heinlein wrote, until his next one a few years later. It's funny that someone can be abhorred for being a fascist and a hippie. Personally, I don't think the book is quite the recruitment tool everyone likes to make it out to be. It always read like extrapolation rather than what he was hoping for. The 3 important Heinlein books (Starship Troopers, Stranger in a Stange Land, The Moon is a Harsh Mistress) are essential sci-fi reading.
Time Enough for Love is a raunchy epic whose protagonist's exploits include a trip back in time to seduce & impregnate his own unwitting soon-to-be mother -- thus becoming his own secret bastard father -- and cloning himself late in life to produce 2 female versions, who become as randy as he once they hit puberty & insist he join in frequent 3-way orgies with his teenage twin selves. (I am not kidding.)
No, it was never made clear.. Johnny was most likely mixed race.. Father with a Harvard accent, Bennie questioning his origins even after the fact etc... Heinlein did this (racially ambiguous characters) is many of his books
The political system described in the book is not anywhere close to fascism. Fascism necessarily requires an authoritarian state that is prioritized over individual liberty, which is not anywhere close to what is described. Even the movie, which was intended to satirize fascism, failed to depict a fascist system. While the recruiting ads were purposefully cheesy, everything shown on the news was actually verified through other perspectives throughout the movie.
@@autismobinch135 Only it does not. It promotes will and courage and responsibility. People are not only not encouraged to join the military, but are discouraged. Still, everyone is welcome nonetheless. So the way I see it we have three choices. You are 1 - idiot, 2 - troll, 3 - neither of the previous two, but just don't really know what you're talking about.
@@steelbear2063 not only the MI discourages people to join they also will not give a crap if you want to get out of the military... you just cant go back in after...
@@steelbear2063 Not only that, service for federation in book means you work for government, in hospital, as policeman or fire fighter, not only as soldier
@@autismobinch135 It promotes responsibility and the will to actually involve yourself with your community, keep in mind that Service to the Federation isn't always military. Infact most people who do serve the Federation aren't soldiers, they're doctors, researchers, mechanics, test subjects (that are humanely treated) it all depends on what you personally are capable of contributing. Are you also forgetting that the book specifically states that personal freedoms are at an all time high and that the only right non-citizens don't have is involvement with politics.
@@killian9314 Robocop is another classic with impressive practical effects. I hope Neil Blomkamp keeps that aesthetic for Robocop Returns. I'm pretty sure he mentioned that he'd be using lots of blood squibs for it, so that gives me hope at least.
@@rockinrecords4081 Neil Blompkamp is making a Robop Reboot!? i didnt know!, thanks man, i dont have much faither given that chappie and elisym were enjoyable but a disaster, even if i love Distric 9 to death, wow, lets hope the man gets it right again
One thing about the book a lot of people either overlook or are unaware of, is that while service was a guarantee of citizenship, service was not limited to the military... A person could serve in many different fields - such as medical, police, rescue, etc... Military was simply one of many options... I would have liked the movie better if they had changed the name and separated it from the book somewhat... The book is one of the most personally influential books I've ever read... On the other hand the movie was (to me at least) little more than somewhat entertaining...
Went through the comments to see if anyone else brought this up. Yes in the book it was Federal service to earn citizenship and anyone could join at any age. as it says in the book and I paraphrase, "If you are blind they will find something for you to do. Maybe counting hairs on a caterpillar by feel" And the movie with the knife through the hand part, not in the book, but it was brought up in the book. And Johnny never quit, he came close. And his mistake wasn't getting someone killed, it was in a simulated battle and he cheated, doing something that in real life would have got his men killed. I could go on and on. Part way through the movie a sat back and pretended it wasn't the book, enjoyed it much better
"The book is one of the most personally influential books I've ever read" That applies to a lot of us here. I know it troubled RAH that they (he, of course) couldn't have bio-kids. I hope he knows how many of us consider ourselves to be his children, to some extent. I'm pretty sure he does. Hope that pleases him.
Film makers did the same to "I, robot", and several other Science Fiction classics once the genre became lucrative. The best cinematic SF of the 1970s, 80s and 90s were written for the big or small screen; Star Trek, Star Wars, Babylon 5, Blake's 7, Firefly (admittedly 2002-2003) to name a few. The core of SF is generally hard to capture in a film, as they are rarely about the high action intense car chase that much mainstream movies is all about.
@@windwind3170 iirc it was hardly better for the K9 trooper who owned the dog when the dog died. they were effectively retired as psych cases after the loss of the dog half of the duo.
Some of the elements could be viewed as Fascist, but it was clear their society still allowed for free speech, freedom of movement, et al. While the concept of "History and Moral Philosophy" is ambiguous in nature, the book was meant as a thoughtful critique of communism through a cast ethnically diverse characters (Rico being from the Philippines and not actually white.) while attempting to answer Aristotle's question of who should be allowed to vote by stating someone of virtuous character should be allowed to vote. The idea was that public service (which wasn't just the military which was the more obvious one) but who is willing to actually spend the time in the dirt working in some positive way to help the society. That's not say it would work but the idea was not a utopia but a democratic meritocracy or civic individualism that kept itself sane (subjective term but the best I got). If you read John Locke, Thomas Paine, John Stuart Mills, and Thomas Hobbs, you can see Heinlein built a lot of the book's philosophy on those philosopher's contributions to Classical Liberalism. However I can see where the critics could get concepts of racism, imperialism, and fascism as a lot can be interpreted as such, Heinlein was far from racist, and his ideas on individualism especially towards feminism and sexuality would hardly put him in the fascist category. Rather the book itself was more of a fictional answer to Marx and Engels's Communist Manifesto. This is just my opinion as I have read a lot of books. Doesn't necessarily mean I am right but that's what I've been able to conclude more or less.
Matthew Pierpont - Spot on. Thank you for articulating the not-so-obvious ideas Heinlein tried to convey. Unfortunately, too many have bought into the cliff's notes version from Heinlein's critics.
Interesting part of the book that no one ever seems to remember: Every MI is susceptible to hypnotic commands. It's played off as a way to help your troops get some much needed z's when things may be too hectic to do so naturally. I wonder if Heinlein ever considered the notion of the leaders simply taking control of the superhuman soldiers that come out of places like Camp Arthur Currie.
They could very well do so, but making descisions that end up with high amount of casualties or infringe upon hyrarchy of the command structure is punished severely and gets more severe the higher up you go. It can range from demotion to the death penalty depending on how severe the results are. Communication is quite open so i doupt if this could be used against the federation in a meaningful way.
Carl was killed on a research base on Pluto, not on Jupiter. The big twist of the book is at the very end where we find out that the entire time “Johnny” Juan Rico is actually Filipino. Rereading, you will find that he was never described in any way other than being rich and male. At a time where racism still plagued the armed forces, pointing out that the Terran Federation Army was multi-cultural was casually mentioned and that a much higher percentage of people from the “colony worlds” signed up for service was also intentionally casually stated to drive home the worth of a united and multi-ethnic humanity.
I read the book after the movie, and still say the opening chapter was far better than the entire movie. As pointed out, the book was more about the philosophy of military power in a merit based democratic society. The idea is that people that never sacrificed anything for a government should not have much of any say in how that government is ran. It's also overlooked that government service was not just military service as a small part of the book was about union ship workers wanted their particular area of work to count as federal service. A BIG difference overlooked is the reveal at the end that Johnny Rico is Filipino. Not sure Heinlein's reason for that set-up, but I think he wanted to throw the reader for a loop that humanity is just that, human with all the races that make it up and can be brothers/sisters in arms.
No "sacrificed anything for a government", but "committed themselves to the greater good." You could have spent your entire enlistment as an accountant or fighting on Klandathu, and it wouldn't have made any difference. It was the willingness to put yourself on the line that made the difference.
NukeMarine about mid way in the book he says his parents native lanauge is tagolic which is the language they speak in the Philippines so it was like a read between the lines callback
@Mists & Shadows your conclusions are drawn from discredited research, if not outright racism. Any difference in regional IQs can be explained by a combination of the history of the people and their ancestors access to nutrition and resources, biases in the test materials, and many other factors. White populations have much to gain by intermixing. A lack of genetic diversity, poor and lessening birth rates, mutations and harmful recessive traits, and many other shortfalls of the caucasian "race" can be corrected in this way. The picture you paint of whites bringing everyone else up could not be further from the truth, and is a viewpoint for which there is no justification or evidence. Obtain an education on these matters for your sake if for no other reason.
It's not that shocking that Verhoeven missed so many points of the book given he's said he never actually read it, he just wanted to make a parody of what he thought the book was about.
Well this fails due to a wrong base assumption.... Verhoeven wasnt aiming for the book. They had the whole movie scripted way before. Heck the original idea was blue eyed yanks being brain washed in Nazi military in 1930's (Verhoeven is dutch and lived through WWII occupation, got a pretty big axe to grind with fascist.) Neimier and Verhoeven knew nobody was going to greenlight it as contemporary movie (too controversial). So they decided to make a scifi, since scifi lets one have more freedom. So they did a plot based on a space war. Neimier had read the book years ago and suggested in name of getting the movie greenlit situating the movie in the Starshiptroopers setting. Hence why the plot don't line up and the pretty much nothing else lines up either..... Since it isn't using the plot of the Book or the message or the book or satire of the book. The inclusion of the book is camouflage. Since if they had told "hey we want to make sci-fi war propaganda satire movie, that kinda compares present USA militarism with nazis"..... Yeah.... that was gonna get greenlit so well..... So instead it was "we are making movie adaptation of Starshiptroopers.... You know that Heinlein book".
@@groomersgotohell he failed hard on what he wanted to do though and who ever wrote it put more of the clever deep elements of the b0ok sneakily into it either on purpose or by accident and ruined his message of the republic being facist completely. Its rather fitting that some pc baby sjw wouldnt do his research and fuck up his good intentions like that hadn't happened before, hell even the book says that the sjw do gooders of our age would destroy society through good intentions.
Zesc is here ! True, but the film wasn’t originally made as ‘starship troopers’ as at the point of scripting and starting to film they didn’t have the rights, plus it was always their intent to go with a young American cast.
Well, except for the Power Suits themselves, which were very faithful to Heinlein's description, the old Uchuu no Senshi anime was, storywise, only remotely inspired by the book.
Probably because it was actual based on the book.... Unlike the 1997 movie, that pretty much just loaned the starshipstroopers name and setting to get greenlit...... Intentionally. The movie idea was originally developed independent of the book and they had pretty much ready script with the satire and commentary they wanted. Then they glued the book setting on top to make it easier to get funding and greenlit.
@@aritakalo8011 ya the movie was originally supposed to be a movie called Bug Hunt at Outpost 9 and was almost finished when someone noticed some similarities to Starship Troopers and thus changed the name and such...
Heinlein's main idea from the book seems to be that the ideal society is closer to Roman Republicanism than Fascism. Service to the state is necessary in order to earn the ability to vote since said people are the most likely to have the best interests of the state at heart, rather than their own interests. Honestly, not that objectionable.
I agree wholeheartedly... Although I enjoyed the movie from a pure entertainment pov it said little about anything of substance... It also showed how little most people understood Atomic Weapons at that point in time, since the Troopers used Nukes almost like hand grenades, lol...
And that system is completely idiotic. Military is a form of dictatorship, where you must obey blindly all the orders given to you because this is what hierarchy is for and any disobedience is punished harshly. And you give those people the right to vote for the future of the nation? A bunch of brainwashed cavemen?! No wonder society in the movie/novel is similarly fucked up as our reality. Over there promoting violence (because voters were brutes themselves promoting inferior outdated concepts of their forefathers, the neanderthals. In our society every idiot is given that right. How about we apply capitalism to the end. No more voting. Do you see the cleaning lady or the newspaper boy deciding who the next CEO, department manager or other leader in the company??? No. Those are hired based on competency by other people that are skilled enough. And if these employees are bad, or god forbid steal from the company, they are fired and charged and sent to jail. Democracy is a failed system because in it's conception is flawed and in it's application as well, where votes are bought with various advantages, especially from religious groups and their "leaders".
@@mikebrandon8962 This is a good point. Conservative Americans seem to worship the military. At the same time they don't trust any democrat. Yet half the time the supreme leader of the military, The Commander in Chief, is a democrat (like Obama). My experience with my military service was mixed. When I was serving under incompetent officers, it was a nightmare, and it's not much you can do as a private. When I was serving under competent, charismatic officers that I trusted to make good decisions, however, it was a different story. But there is little you can do to control that part. Generation Kill and Band of Brothers describes this brilliantly.
Not quite correct- for Heinlein, it was not service to the state per se, it was that specifically those who proved willing to sacrifice their lives to ensure the lives of humanity (which in the book was at stake) were able to more or less run the state in such as way as to keep things going- he indicated that the "state" wasn't a utopia, and that it was only working "slightly" more on the plus than the minus side. Unfortunately, the only way to reliably test willingness to sacrifice one's life is to, in fact, risk (and often lose) it- conveniently, his state of humanity is in a fight for its life anyway, so opportunities abound.
Here’s a little quote for you kiddies. "I believe in my whole race. Yellow, white, black, red, brown --in the honesty, courage, intelligence, durability....and goodness.....of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on this planet. I am proud to be a human being. I believe that we have come this far by the skin of our teeth, that we always make it just by the skin of our teeth --but that we will always make it....survive....endure. I believe that this hairless embryo with the aching, oversize brain case and the opposable thumb, this animal barely up from the apes, will endure --will endure longer than his home planet, will spread out to the other planets, to the stars, and beyond, carrying with him his honesty, his insatiable curiosity, his unlimited courage --and his noble essential decency. This I believe with all my heart." - Robert A. Heinlein
I'll grant that there was much to like about Heinlein. He was exceptionally progressive in his views on race, and I praise him for that. I do have a problem with the blatant sexism in some of his books (Job comes to mind) and it is something to be aware of. Overall, for me Heinlein fits into the "from an earlier time so overlook some of his problematic themes) category, unlike, say, Orson Scott Card.
@@roguishpaladin Ideas only become problematic when they are viewed from the wrong context or without understanding the time period of the originator. All honestly conceptualized philosophies have SOME amount of merit to them, as no rational person applies an idea to their life that would not benefit them or someone they care about in some way, even if they are detrimental or destructive to someone else. I agree with you, though.
@@jonbrandre3006 Ideas aren't problematic when viewed at all. It's not until the idea is implimented that it can become a problem. For example: Genocide doesn't hurt anything at all.....Unless you impliment it on a population.
Hugo a group of Spartans would have had the movie version dead pretty quick. In cannon they never really lost a ground battle. Now the book I hear they are actually competent. But also behind the Spartans technology. Spartans have almost unbreakable bones, can run fast as hell average is like 40kmh while Kelly can do 60. Bread since 6 to be super soldiers. That’s not even bringing into the fact the power armor with its shields, he’ll the mark VII can be changed based on what the wearing wants it to look like.
@@44excalibur I don't dispute that it's very different from the book. You're correct that it's a crappy adaptation of the book. But whether or not the movie is a crappy movie should be judged independently. Verhoeven want to make a Nazi propaganda satire. So he borrowed some names and general plot points from the book, scrapped everything else, and made his Nazi satire. Most people agree that, judged as a propaganda satire, the movie is good.
Whats the difference you say... (not you Bryce per se but the greater internet ether collective writ large) Well I'm not sure, first off I'm already put off by CineFix's 'seemingly we are now rapidly approaching a weird totalitarian regime duels by propaganda now is as good a time as any'... insinuation that now 2 years into a Trump Presidency this is the case. I'm sick of such moronic idiocy reflexively vomited by millennial automaton group think nitwits too dumb to realize it is they have been indoctrinated by Modern Liberal totalitarians. Trumpism ironically with his populism conservatism seeking to preserve remnants of Classical Liberalism is not the cause nor even a symptom of the disease but the cure! Whats the difference... we are men not apes, we are sentient and if we wish to keep our sentience and inherent individual liberty which derives from sentience... we best get our collective head's out of our asses or the true totalitarians will kick our asses into subservience or simply take our heads off.
@ickisistheshitz Limited government, individual liberty, free markets rule of law, and national sovereignty, the classical liberal ideals which emanated from the Enlightenment. Everything conservatives seek to preserve and modern liberals seek to destroy.
@ickisistheshitz The good, the true, and the beautiful are timeless, the pursuit of these is what conservatives seeks to preserve. Your idolized Modern Liberals are nothing but stagnant sclerosed decayed totalitarians. Dont believe me? Who seeks to censor, censure, and silence free speech?? Pray that you realize it before their perfume wears off and you are stuck with their stench forever.
In Heinlein's book, the troopers' power suit was a man amplifier, like the original design in the first Iron Man comic book. It was an armored shell with built-in armament. The producer of the anime Mobile Suit Gundam wanted to do a series like Starship Troopers, but giant robots were the rage in Japan, so the power suits in Gundam are giant robot type man amplifiers.
Okay yah didn’t read the book. The opening battle they’re doing the opposite of carpet bombing. A few Cap. Troopers are dropped in to cause a ruckus and then extract. No carpet bombing. It was a “cavalry raid”
@@Starius2 No one named names. That statement could have gone either way. I'm sure there's no shortage of people on either side ready to screech 'facist' at the other, completely with their own propaganda to that effect. If you see an attack on your side in that statement, maybe you should rethink your position. Or you just wanted an excuse to quote a meme like the fucking NPC you are.
The main difference can be summed up like this: In the novel the mobile infantry are "Space Marines" In the film the mobile infantry are "Imperial Guard" Also in the book and the film Sgt Zim is Full Metal Jacket Gunny on crack.
While it’s not credited, I believe the way the aliens and the approach to war are handled (including the way war is derided) are more inspired by The Forever War written by Joe Haldeman than by the Starhip Troopers book. I would not be surprised to learn the people involved in creating the movie had actually read the former.
"Seeing how we're rapidly approaching some totalitarian regime fueled by propaganda . . ." Where have you been the last 20 years? We started moving towards that in the 90s with the deregulation of the media, with that situation being achieved in the early 2000s.
@@Spider-Too-Too And when was that? When he militarized the capitol alleging a massive insurrection was imminent and that security was paramount over freedom? Wait, that was Biden and also Hitler. My bad.
@@Calbeck I’m not into all the American politics news (we don’t know what kind of future it will lead to yet), it will all just become another chapter of the human history
@@Calbeck btw, since we are in the comment section of starship trooper Here is a quote on freedom I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. I will accept any rules that you feel necessary to your freedom. I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do.” - Robert A. Heinlein
@@Spider-Too-Too Exactly he knew that societies cannot remain free without self discipline and laws that actually make sense. Selflessness and a respect for the rule of law is just as important as natural rights that you are endowed with. Live like a liberal, govern like a conservative.
7:25 "Written in the early days of the Cold War, shortly after the US halted its nuclear weapons testing" The last atmospheric nuclear weapon test by the US took place on November 4, 1962. The book Starship Troopers was published in November 1959.
Henlain wrote the truth, its not about constant agresion, quite the opposite. The problem happens, when you become unable to enact controlled agresion, when you stop facing problems with clear mind. When you start creating new words and meanings for obvious things and when saying the "bad" things could get you in trouble. The book never said violence is good, is just said what we all know: Violence can solve all problems. You cant deny that. That doesnt mean that we should always use violence, but i guess its hard to think between the lines.
I'm ashamed to admit that when I first saw this film, I completely missed that it was a satire. Then again, I didn't know it was based on a book until much later.
Understandable. It's pretty easy to miss that it's a satire because it's social commentary is entirely confused. It was an attempted satirization of fascism. The problem is that the society in the book akd in the movie isn't actually fascist. All of the people calling it that have absolutely zero understanding of political philosophy and certainly have no idea what fascism actually is.
@@ThatCreeNative1 a lot of those movies and shows you described as having no meaning absolutely do have subtextual meaning because all stories are thematically driven to one extent or another. It's just that many of them can be superficially enjoyed independent of their subtext.
Verhoven couldn't get past chapter 2, he said it was too hard or too bad to read. So, I don't think he deserves a a little latitude if he can't get to the 1/4 mark in the book.
You left out Johnny Rico is Filipino, not Casper whatever at all. Heinlein said if glorifying the military means paying respect to the Bloody Infantry, the duckfoot, the soldier that puts his life between destruction and civilization, and pays the ultimate franchise with their lives, then yes it glorifies the military. He said it always got him; he got mor hate mail from that book, but it sells and sells and sells. It’s now in its 45th reprint, translated into 14 languages, and sells as many today as 1959.
I was told by one of the guys on the production staff that the reason we didn't get orbital dropping power armor and each and every member of humanities soldiers...was because the blew the budget on the bugs CGI and didn't have any more money to spend. Also, I think Robert A Heinlein's purpose for the book wasn't simply a propaganda piece, but (like all of his books) was used to show a different social society humanity could use to function in the future. I honestly doubt they will make another movie based on his work because (without heavy editing) because his books showed how humanity, using logic and working together, could concur the stars...while all humanity is now interested in is blaming other for their problems and going along with the collective mob mentality...
There's nothing "humanity" can do to conquer the stars when the average person is concerned with feeding themselves and their family but you could blame government spending on weapons that kill more efficiently while having little real interest in space
@@jamesmccrea4871 It`s not really a failed satire, since a lot of people ot that it is a satire. I mean they even spell it for you at the beggining of the movie.
Imagine two argentinian teenagers watching this movie for the first time when it came out and finding that every character we follow trough was argentinian as well... it was frigging awesome! My brother and I couldn't believe it!
The movie was a spoof of a book the director never really read (he couldn't get past the first chapter, apparently it went right over his head. He had an intern/aid summarize the cliff notes to him) the book. A few names were the same, that's about it. They completely left out the third species and the power armor, got Juan's (Jonny's) heritage wrong. And completely failed to bring up any the core concepts or ideas in the book and pretty much wrecked the plot.
"Nothing of value is free; even the breath of life is purchased at birth only through gasping effort and pain. . .if you boys and girls had to sweat for everything the way a newly born baby has to struggle to live you would be much happier. As it is, with some of you, I pity the poverty of your wealth" This book is an absolute philosophical masterpiece and I cannot implore you to read it enough if you have not.
I can't believe they overlooked that the cast of the book is culturally diverse, e.g. Jonnie is Filipino in the novel or that Ace is African-American or that the book was also a slight reflection of the Korean War.
"The most fascist elements of the book" I don't see much fascism in the book. Infact i see a lot of stuff that rails against both Communism and Fascism. Its a hell of a lot more Jingoistic and hardline Libertarian than it is Fascist.
@@Garl_Vinland nationalistic aggressionism isn't a part of the United States. Our GOVERNMENT sure likes to start wars on flimsy reasoning, but these QUICKLY sour with the American people. From Vietnam to the middle eastern debacle started by Bush *SENIOR* and on going to this very day. You're conflating the USA Military industrial complex with general Americans culture, which is frankly an insane misrepresentation.
@@petercarioscia9189 The government reflects the people as a whole. You put these people in office, same as the German people elected Hitler as chancellor.
The film isn't based on the book. It was already pretty much scripted before they even found the book. I guess the money made Ginny's last years more comfortable.
One thing I never understood about the movie: the talk shows keep saying the bugs are mindless animals with no intelligence one second and oh by the way the bugs flung an asteroid across the galaxy a thousand light years and not only some how hit the earth but hit one specific city on earth. Seems like some complex math and FTL technology would be required for that. Or maybe I put more thought into that than the screenwriters.
The movie is junk and inconsistent. The book Bugs we’re intelligent w space ships and energy weapons. Think Enders Game... Starship Troopers fans & Veterans!🕷I re-did the audiobook 📚 w sound 🔊 💥 effects and voice acting! 🎤 8 hrs. Please 🙏🏼listen 👂 and SHARE!!! FB page “Starship Troopers the book” ruclips.net/video/zwFMszIVGko/видео.html
I think it was meant to imply that the humans did not know much about the bugs and there was classified information on the bugs. If I remember correctly, there was a scene where the characters were talking about how unreliable intel was, and the shock that the bugs are intelligent.
In the book, nobody is "recruited" into service. While the federation made it possible for anyone to sign up, they actively attempted to dissuade recruits at every stage of the process. A high school actively recruiting soldiers is a strong departure from the source material.
0:50 not so subtle recruiting efforts? what? MR.Bubois and Rassack in the book and movie respectively Debate over this, and most students dont even wanna join or make points that suggest they dont like it, and its their choice, if anything is is said by rico himself that he thinks the service is above such pesky younglings, as disencouraging, and making only the cream fo the crop, the ones who trully want to do it, dew it
@@saytax If you cannot see, I cannot help you there. And what Verhoeven originally wanted to do is less important than what he actually did. The film is a satire and a comedy. It certainly is not to be taken serious.
@@Alexander_Kale I can agree with you that the film is different from his original aim, which was to paint the Starship Troopers' society in a way fascistic theme. Did he deliver that accurately? No. In fact, he did the opposite and made a society where fascism is barely even present and the state doesn't dictate peoples' (it's a world government) lives in commerce or socially as it would in a truly fascist government. As for satire and comedy, your gonna have to point to an example.
Say what you want about the book but Heinlein did bring up some very good points. A strong and powerful military is very important to keep a society strong and protected and it’s even better when people enlist voluntarily, because it shows that they are willing to put their lives on the line to protect society. Although I personally don’t agree that citizenship should be earned through federal service, I see so many ways that corruption could spawn from that. I also don’t believe in abolishing the draft like what Heinlein wrote about in the book, because then if military service was strictly voluntary even during wartime (especially against super intelligent extraterrestrial pseudo-arachnids) that’s a good way to make yourselves weak and set you up for a crushing defeat. I think what the book was trying to communicate is that nothing comes free, especially not freedom. The Terran Federation in the novel doesn’t sound fascist at all because nobody is persecuted, nobody is put in concentration camps and there’s no mention of any evil dictator. The Terran Federation actually sounds more like modern day America with some speculative systemic differences that seem more in line with Heinlein’s personal views. Few laws, low taxes, more freedom and severe punishment for criminals (capital punishment for the one guy in Rico’s unit who murdered a little girl). The human way of life under this new system that Heinlein seems to think is better comes under threat from the Arachnids. So it seems like a story about the importance of fighting for the way of life that you want to have; because if you’re not willing to fight for it you may end up losing it and never get it back.
Maybe I am too young, but I allways thought that the Starship Troopers movie is brilliant. Case and point, the recruitment scene with the crippled Req. Officer. Contrary to what is stated in the video (which boggles my mind how the authors came up with that bullshit) the officer is clearly happy and enouraging of Carmen wanting to be a pilot. But soon as Rico states he is signing up for the Mobile Infantry he says something along the lines of "Good for you! The MI made me the man I am today!" in a very antagonistic tone and then we get the shot of him pushing away from the table and us seeing he is missing his legs, ontop of his robot arm, to which Rico frowns. Similarly Movie's Rasczhak is stating some things that can not be objectively denied but at the same time he isnt sounding like a propagandistic brain washer. One of my favourite parts of the movie is when he asks Rico a question (cant remember what exactly he asked off the top of my head) and after Rico answers it he says something along the lines of "Ahh straight from the book, but do you understand, do you believe it?" which should if not cause the movie's character to question those things, it certainly made me think about it back then. And there are lots more moments like this, in the movie. Which is why ontop of the some of the really obvious satire that was funny because its obnoxiously silly (soldiers giving kids ammo to play with for example, or them stomping on cockroaches) I find it, as stated earlier brilliant.
Starship Troopers was a Young Adult book too. Heinlein had a very different idea of what was appropriate for young adults back then compared to other authors of that category.
There isn’t even any fascism in the movie and very little in the book the reason everyone thinks the is is because of Carl’s uniform and the director saying as much with a few shots like that early recruiting video being similar to nazi propaganda. The federation is closer in political structure to the USA than nazi Germany as it is a federal republic, admittedly a highly militant and meritocratic one but still, it’s not fascism.
It's not even highly militant. It's the exact opposite. The book is set during the start of a war, and when Rico and Carl go to sign up they are dissuaded in the strongest terms. If the government was highly militant, they'd be welcomed with open arms and the people (like Rico's father and Dubois) would be harassing their children to serve. But they aren't, they are (at least before the bugs started attacking and smashed Earth) actually told: "You can't all be real military men; **we don't need that many** and most of the volunteers aren't number-one soldier material anyhow...[W]e've had to think up a whole list of dirty, nasty, dangerous jobs that will ... at the very least make them remember for the rest of their lives that their citizenship is valuable to them because they've paid a high price for it ... " Hardly militant.
I know this is a few years late but there is one detail you said that I would like to question. In the movie, the bugs were out to exterminate all life that was not bug or did not bend to their will. When the humans made the colony that first encountered the bugs, the bugs idea of first contact was exterminating the colony.
*I like both versions, but I think Heinlein is misunderstood as glorifying it especially when he has characters that practically beg the main character not to join up.His version is a more idealized version of the U.S. in which you aren't even expected to join up and if you get cold feet you aren't tracked down. Both versions have good messages to come to a middle ground that works, you need to be able to be aggressive and ruthless when it is necessary but you shouldn't become the very thing you're fighting by devolving the entirety of society around war. You also forget the main reason the movie was different was because the people working on it thought it was too boring first and foremost, and that is fine considering that book wasn't written for the generation that made the movie. They're both excellent in the context of when they were made.*
Guts The Berserker very well said and an interesting read, thank you. Both the Book and Movie have their place, compromise well and you are right about what Heinlein was trying to portray
Everyone gets something else from reading a book. The big thing I saw was his criticism of the comfortable choices for short term gains. Almost every "disaster" in the book starts with either group or n individual thinking they know better or not wanting to confront an uncomfortable choice. The US at the time made a lot of shortsighted decisions, not demanding our bomber crews back from the the Russians, giving Vietnam back to the French after promising them independence, allowing the formation of Soviet puppet states in violation of the occupation treaties and etc. In the book Debois uses generalization of these decisions based on feelings and emotion to point out that they lead to more conflicts overall. The big thing was the coddling of children. In many of Heinlein's books he point out how important it is that one is self sufficient, being able make shelter, provide, provide effective first aid and so on. Rather than being a burden to those around you being an asset. In SSt at one point the instructor is trying to help a recruit who out of a false sense of entitlement refuses to comprehend the full scope of his actions and ends up facing a worse punishment and loosing his opportunity to gain a franchise. Rico suffers as well because he thinks he he can pull something off despite the reg saying to do it differently. The alluring decapitation strike on Klendatu because it would spare suffering resulted in disaster. Treating the bugs like a normal enemy instead of the hivemind they are almost lost the federation the war. Not being challenged physically and mental results in loosing the race a life. See Sanctuary for those who read the book. TL;DR The book is a cautionary tale of making short sighted decision based on emotions and feeling rather than logic. The book provides some exceptions but that just confirms the rule.
Also, this was not the first movie based on Heinlein’s work. Back in, I think., 1949 there was a movie called Destination Moon. It was about a fist mission to the Moon based on a Heinlein short story. I saw it in 1950 when I was seven years old. I even made a model of the rocket (with a little adult help). There was a shot in the movie of the Earth above the Lunar landscape. I’m reminded of it whenever I see the famous photo taken from Apollo 8, “Earthrise”.
So much wrong with this video. Did you guys read the book or just the Cliff Notes? There's no nuke grenades, they'd kill themselves. There are mini-nuke rockets. Carl was killed on Pluto, not Jupiter. And the Federation isn't Fascist at all, it's more of a meritocracy. You also left out the fact that the directer admitted he never read the book, he just wanted to lampoon it because he perceived it to be something he didn't like. I read the book well after I saw the movie. As a kid I loved the movie, though that was more for the explosions and shower scenes. As an adult I can't stand the movie but the book is one of my all-time favorites.
Dude, just think of the movie as a fun bug killing movie. Verhoeven failed at the satire of film, he made the Federation cool. And, yes, the book is awesome. The Federation in the book is the true sense of the word, a republic.
@@MrSmith-zy2bp True, I'm just annoyed that this video is supposed to display the differences between the book and movie and it's like they didn't even do the research.
Just finished the book and I found it quite good. I still love the movie though, having watched it first. I found myself comparing the two while reading the book. Wish I had read it sooner.
Excellent video and very informative. I haven’t read the book in years but you summed up my thoughts on the differences very well with a few extra titbits to boot. Thanks.
Rico is from Philippines, a brow skinned rich boy actually. the media is not even there, in my opinion, this is not a facist novel at all (maybe Dubois and his concept of force misunderstood). The citizen stuff it was not widely explain in the movie. The federation is not the only goverment in the galaxy, some are similiar but not the same. Read the chapter about "you cannot walk in the park anymore", it will change your mind because it´s already happening. Society in here is built into pure meritocracy not facism, come on, The movie is more like Forever war clone movie.
Based on... Bull... He admits he found the book boring who used a cliff notes... As to the whole "the enemy cannot...", In the book Sarg explains that "if you have a dog who pees on the carpet, you would not shoot him"... Violence is balanced. It must be. You don't use a air strike to handle a bank robber. As to the active expounding the political systems, he was an extreme libertarian, who wanted to model an anti fascist society. It is simply called fascistic by people who confuse the military with dictatorship.
All volunteer military (US had a draft until early 1970s) Women readily accepted as Fleet level officers (show me that in 1959) A society where race and ethnicity are irrelevant (as opposed to today where they define who you are based on inter-sectional ranking). A book written by a white guy in 1959 where the main character is Filipino (I challenge you to show me that TODAY). A future society rising from the ashes of ruin caused by partisan, self absorbed, power hungry, entitled narcissists where the right to vote is based on voluntarily service and self sacrifice (As opposed to the current requirements of being over 18 and having a pulse). The book is often accused of being racist, xenophobic and fascist yet in the context of the environment and time when it was written, was very progressive. The movie was created by a man who admits he never read the book, and then set out and made the most white washed satirical insult to the source material he could. BTW, the line from the classroom scene is "force" or the threat of it, has solved more problems in history than any other form of authority, not "violence" specifically. Ask yourself why you ultimately pull over when a police officer flashes his lights behind you (Instead of flipping him the bird and ignoring him)?
which raises a very good point: WHY would the Heinlein estate agree to such a blatant rip off of the intellectual property? someone sell them a bag of empty promises? or did the heirs take all the money they could get and walk away? it's hard to imagine someone consenting to that epic POS.
oh please the reveal that he's Filipino happens so late its like saying the original Samus was groundbreaking for having a woman as it's main character
@@graceshiflett6526 His name is Juan Rico in the book, it really took you to the end of the book to figure out that he wasn't the usual Ameri-Euro caucasian male like you usually find in English language books of the era?
I love this video. I've heard or read so many critiques of Starship Troopers where they clearly didn't read the book I read. This video is honest and fair to both the book and the movie.
The point of the attack on the Skinny city in the book was to convince them that messing with the MI is a terrible idea and they should just stay out of the war or throw in on Earth's side. Which is why they were trying for maximum chaos but not going for a high body count. They wanted them to know, very clearly, that the MI could have hit their city much harder, which is why they only sent one platoon.
Yep. They were trying to drive a wedge between the Skinnies and their Arachnid allies.
I know it’s small and pretty much semantics but it’s not power suits but “power armor” the reason I say that is because this book gave birth to the idea of that, master chief, Samus, Doom Guy, Starcraft, Warhammer 40K all started with this book
don't forget gundam and basically the entire "giant mech" concept. and i believe also the super sentai (power rangers) also came from this "power armor" origin.
Iron Man also began with this book...
Doomguy 95 doesnt wear power armor.
Also T-51 power armor
master chief started from Doom not Starship Troopers. master chief is a direct rip off of Doom Guy 95's look. The part halo copied off Starship Troopers is the drop off scene.
The enemy cannot push the dislike button if you disable his hand!
MEDIC!
You sir, are brilliant
Noses.
In the book when they were talking about knives, Zim was using the knife as a metaphor for the mobile Infantry. Like a Knife they can be multi-purpose and also a precise killing tool.
Neigh way, Jose
Get it though?
It means no but is also a thing horses say
It works on every level!
Nobody mentions an essential par of the book: when the students are receiving lecture the teacher explicitly says the current form of government is not endorsed because is morally right but because it works and it must be changed once it stops working, the federation encouraged their members to question it
but muh fascism though
none of these reviewers actually read the book. they just watch the movie a lot. Much of the philosophy is lost to them.
so the purest form of Realpolitik?
And yet the movie, reasonably, argues that the veterans, the only people able to vote, will avoid making changes to the system because it indoctrinated them enough (even though the military isn't actually winning the war and it seems endless).
@@suarezguy True but both, book and movie, point out that you can't vote until after your out of the military. Something along the lines of they would just vote down the war they are in. It leaves all voting to the veterans who have had to live through all the same hardships and turmoil the current enlisted are. And would "wishful thinking" take that into account. So those who go career military never get to vote until fully retired. Basically saying only those who fought in ww1 could vote on if we go into ww2
“Psychics” are definitely in the book
They use them to map out the tunnels the drones digs
And to determine whether or not a someone is fit to be a drill instructor or not
As soon as I saw the movie tile and "whats the difference", I thought, well just about everything.
Same.
Considering Paul Verhoven didn’t even read the book, I think you’re right on the money.
@@franciscodanconia45 He trashed it. Anime has taken over much of the universe with better movies.
@@mikecimerian6913 Agreed, Traitor of Mars is probably the best, and closest to date.
@@franciscodanconia45 Which kinda makes sense, since the story wasn't based on the book. Verhoeven and writer Ed Nuiman had the story all ready to go. I think it was called something like Attack on outpost 9. However they had been long enough in film business to know nobody would greenlight it. so........ they camouflaged it. get rights to do the book adaptation, changed the plot line on superficial parts to match the book, named things after the book and put it to a melting oven.
Outcomes (outwardly): Stupid fun action splatter sci-fi with "Heinlein story" sticker on stop, which makes studio bosses see dollars roll in their eyes.
while that camo net of the book smuggled the real story Ed and Paul wanted to tell all the way from the script to movie theaters.
and then people go "but this doesn't match the book".... Yeah it isn't supposed to. The book name was just a trick to get the movie done in first place.
Humans in the:
Book: Space Marines
Movie: Guardsmen
Why didn't anyone else come to that conclusion?
XD
Most 40k oriented pages typically point that out
I was thinking
Book: Halo spartans
Movie: Halo Marines
Sort of the same thing though
I feel like the Guardsman would do a much better job than the mobile infantry
@@Longtail626 Drowning the enemy in the blood of billions might be acceptable to the 40k universe, but with a life feed from the battlefield ike in the movie? That becomes a tough sell for potential new recruits.
Rico in the book was also Filipino. He spoke Tagalog. Also, I think Verhooven implies that the asteroid attack was a false flag attack to justify an invasion of Klendathu since it would be literally impossible to send an asteroid from the other side of the galaxy in such a short time.
So glad someone else caught that the Ricos were Filipino, not tall, blond... well, we know where the film took that. I saw the film, then dug out the book and read it, and found the film far more offensive-- Heinlein puts his ideas out there for thought and discussion (including mech suits, long before anime!) while the film was pleased to consider a WWII veteran's views so fascist that they had to hammer the viewer with straight-up Nazi imagery. Ugh.
What do you mean, "a false flag attack?" Carmen narrowly avoids the meteor and states it's trajectory is toward Earth. When the Captain says to send a warning to fleet, they can't, their comms station was destroyed.
So, no. Not a false flag.
@@saytaxactually it clips off her ship, which changes the direction, and she was flying off course
@@gonintendo1 You can find a clip of the footage here on RUclips.
And they tout their asteroid defense system at start of movie... lol where was that when this thing was coming in?
The only thing I disagree with in this (and it's a minor point) is that Heinlein wasn't trying to say that aggressiveness is necessary for any continuing society, rather that the willingness and courage to BE aggressive when required IS necessary.
The theme of the novel is effectively: In social structures, the longer you hide from the horror of the world, the sooner it lands at your doorstep.
This ^
Wise, but lost on the ultra left wing cynics criticizing the book including this video
Sam Hale
I guess it’s a good thing we napalmed all those Vietnamese farmers then huh?
@@autismobinch135 you mean the farms that had tunnels for the Viet kong, or the farms the Viet kong were using for supplies, remember the Viet kong were the same people who would take thermite to children and tell them to run up to the soldiers.
So imagine a small child running up to you crying and you have zero idea if she was a bomb or just a scared child
The viet kong were the US first encounter with asymmetric warfare, so while I agree the assholes in political power did not handle the war correctly or from a strategic understanding. Actions like bombing a farm actually makes sense, normally is standard warfare you know which farms supply the military and only bomb those, seeing as the politicians didn't know which farms were supplying the Viet kong, they went to all farms are supplying the Viet kong
@@andrewcook2625 First encounter with modern asymmetric warfare you mean. The US military was literally birthed by a century of constant asymmetric warfare against the Natives and other colonizing Europeans. Of the dozens of conflicts fought by the US only something like 7 were primarily conventional.
Also in the book, Rico is Philipino. Also, the book mostly centered around two points, basic training, and officer candidate school, the bugs were barely in the book and most of the deaths in the book happened during the basic training parts.
I saw a film documentary a few years ago where Edward Neumeier stated that the original idea for the film came from an idea of Verhoeven's. He wanted to make a film about a group of kids rising through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during World War 2, but do it in an exciting and triumphant way. They both realized such a concept would be impossible to get produced.
A few years later Neumeier came back to Verhoeven saying "I think I might have a way to do this" and we get Starship Troopers. This explains a lot.
Fun facts #1:some of the props like the armor in the first movie were reuse in power Ranger lost galaxy
Fun fact #2:the novel was an inspiration for gundam
Some armor was re-used for government troops in the Firefly series.
Mobile Suit Gundam?
I believe the armor was also used in Imposter(2001) staring Gary Senise
Fun fact. Juan Rico is filipino.
Looks more like Starcraft...
One point of difference that seems minute but is actually a big point is the tactics of the MI in the book versus the movie.
In the book, officers drop first is a major point discussed, that higher ranking officers are first on the ground before the enlisted men, despite officers carrying less weapons and armor. The reason is that way no matter what goes wrong, evenly a lowly private on his first drop with have someone more experienced to lead them.
In the movie, tactics all together seem thrown out the window as the few field officers seen just shout and wave their arms and the enlisted are just thrown at the bugs hoping to win by numbers.
That's the thing, you NEVER beat the bugs by numbers! The bugs ALWAYS have the numbers! Dale Gribble could tell you that much!
Whelp. Even the Starship troopers OVAs are more kinda related to the book with that perspective
Thats stupid.
@@matiasfpm The animated Starship Troopers is kinda awesome. It's been a few years since I've seen them, but they take much more from the book than the movie, as I remember.
It's mentioned in the book if you only lose 1 trooper for every 50 bugs, you're losing. People that play Protoss versus Zerg understand this idea all too well. BTW, StarCraft is like the video game adaption of Starship Troopers with Protoss as the skinnies.
Jonny Rico or Juan Rico in the books is actually Filipino!
walker jfs better than the film
@walker jfs The book is one of the best works of science fiction ever written, and the movie, which might have been decent with a different name, is trash for stealing the name of the book.
Ow really. Well the more you know....
none of your business I mean the first movie is amazing. I don’t know why you make an amazing movie then be like huh let’s take the members out. Like it’s obviously not to meant to have a sequel as they killed most people off.
The sequels are pretty bad.
@@DevinEMILE The first film is also trash using the name Starship Troopers.
The bugs in the movie were really, really sad. In the movie they were pretty much unintelligent critters with no apparent tech that shot at ships in orbit with plasma farts and *somehow* aimed a small asteroid and fired it interstellar distances (at ludicrous speed) to hit a planet.
In the book the bugs were smart enough to make *allies* of other alien races (the "skinnies" as an example), who killed the MI by use of *guns* and had their own interstellar space ships that they used to attack other star systems. The bugs weren't after us as food, they were after us because... y'know, the book never really said. It just implied that it was because we both use the same sort of planets to live on.
That's it. We have what they want or the other way around. That's usually enough to spark conflicts
The Movie Bugs used organic technology, especially genetic engineering. Arguably the Federation's technology and FTL travel is the only reason they weren't overrun.
Rico was Filipino in the book. Wish someone would take a shot at making Forever War into a movie...
They are already trying to screw that up. I have read articles that they want Channing Tatum in the part of Mandella.
@@darkage5 I wouldnt put too much stake in that...I've been reading those rumors (with various actors) for 30+ years! =D
Sorry, there's another six Thor and Avengers movies to make.
I love that book
Yep his name is juan rico and they didnt notice that.hmmm
Totally didn't mention that this book is on nearly every required reading list for Military Officer Candidate Schools the world over, mostly because of how it portrays the role of the Officer and the supreme responsibility they have for their subordinates and the mission they are tasked.
Starship Troopers: the most controversial book Heinlein wrote, until his next one a few years later. It's funny that someone can be abhorred for being a fascist and a hippie.
Personally, I don't think the book is quite the recruitment tool everyone likes to make it out to be. It always read like extrapolation rather than what he was hoping for.
The 3 important Heinlein books (Starship Troopers, Stranger in a Stange Land, The Moon is a Harsh Mistress) are essential sci-fi reading.
Agreed. If you read his juveniles, getting kids to think for themselves seemed to be the main goal of those novels.
i think another good one is the cat who walks through walls, as it explores what can go wrong after harsh mistress
Time Enough for Love is a raunchy epic whose protagonist's exploits include a trip back in time to seduce & impregnate his own unwitting soon-to-be mother -- thus becoming his own secret bastard father -- and cloning himself late in life to produce 2 female versions, who become as randy as he once they hit puberty & insist he join in frequent 3-way orgies with his teenage twin selves. (I am not kidding.)
What A Horrible Night To Have A Podcast really enjoyed ‘moon is a harsh mistress ‘ TANSTAFL
A few others I would have had in there are I shall fear no evil and Friday.
Didn't even mention that book Rico is a Tagalog-speaking Filipino.
No, it was never made clear.. Johnny was most likely mixed race.. Father with a Harvard accent, Bennie questioning his origins even after the fact etc... Heinlein did this (racially ambiguous characters) is many of his books
The political system described in the book is not anywhere close to fascism. Fascism necessarily requires an authoritarian state that is prioritized over individual liberty, which is not anywhere close to what is described. Even the movie, which was intended to satirize fascism, failed to depict a fascist system. While the recruiting ads were purposefully cheesy, everything shown on the news was actually verified through other perspectives throughout the movie.
J Monseur
Oh yeah the book totally promotes individualism
By promoting militarism as one of the most important parts of a society
@@autismobinch135
Only it does not. It promotes will and courage and responsibility. People are not only not encouraged to join the military, but are discouraged. Still, everyone is welcome nonetheless. So the way I see it we have three choices. You are 1 - idiot, 2 - troll, 3 - neither of the previous two, but just don't really know what you're talking about.
@@steelbear2063 not only the MI discourages people to join they also will not give a crap if you want to get out of the military... you just cant go back in after...
@@steelbear2063 Not only that, service for federation in book means you work for government, in hospital, as policeman or fire fighter, not only as soldier
@@autismobinch135 It promotes responsibility and the will to actually involve yourself with your community, keep in mind that Service to the Federation isn't always military. Infact most people who do serve the Federation aren't soldiers, they're doctors, researchers, mechanics, test subjects (that are humanely treated) it all depends on what you personally are capable of contributing.
Are you also forgetting that the book specifically states that personal freedoms are at an all time high and that the only right non-citizens don't have is involvement with politics.
anyone realize that the practical and some of the vfx still holds up today
The space sequences with the ship miniatures hold up surprisingly well when compared to some modern space movies relying on CGI
@@rockinrecords4081 yeah, verhoeven loves practical effects, its a dying art
@@killian9314 Robocop is another classic with impressive practical effects. I hope Neil Blomkamp keeps that aesthetic for Robocop Returns. I'm pretty sure he mentioned that he'd be using lots of blood squibs for it, so that gives me hope at least.
@@rockinrecords4081 Neil Blompkamp is making a Robop Reboot!? i didnt know!, thanks man, i dont have much faither given that chappie and elisym were enjoyable but a disaster, even if i love Distric 9 to death, wow, lets hope the man gets it right again
Not only do the effects hold up, but they're actually better than those of most movies made today.
One thing about the book a lot of people either overlook or are unaware of, is that while service was a guarantee of citizenship, service was not limited to the military... A person could serve in many different fields - such as medical, police, rescue, etc... Military was simply one of many options... I would have liked the movie better if they had changed the name and separated it from the book somewhat... The book is one of the most personally influential books I've ever read... On the other hand the movie was (to me at least) little more than somewhat entertaining...
Oh yeah, i remember reading about special unit with talking smart dogs and that dogs would be killed out of mercy if their owner dies.
Went through the comments to see if anyone else brought this up. Yes in the book it was Federal service to earn citizenship and anyone could join at any age. as it says in the book and I paraphrase, "If you are blind they will find something for you to do. Maybe counting hairs on a caterpillar by feel" And the movie with the knife through the hand part, not in the book, but it was brought up in the book. And Johnny never quit, he came close. And his mistake wasn't getting someone killed, it was in a simulated battle and he cheated, doing something that in real life would have got his men killed. I could go on and on. Part way through the movie a sat back and pretended it wasn't the book, enjoyed it much better
"The book is one of the most personally influential books I've ever read"
That applies to a lot of us here. I know it troubled RAH that they (he, of course) couldn't have bio-kids. I hope he knows how many of us consider ourselves to be his children, to some extent. I'm pretty sure he does. Hope that pleases him.
Film makers did the same to "I, robot", and several other Science Fiction classics once the genre became lucrative.
The best cinematic SF of the 1970s, 80s and 90s were written for the big or small screen; Star Trek, Star Wars, Babylon 5, Blake's 7, Firefly (admittedly 2002-2003) to name a few.
The core of SF is generally hard to capture in a film, as they are rarely about the high action intense car chase that much mainstream movies is all about.
@@windwind3170 iirc it was hardly better for the K9 trooper who owned the dog when the dog died. they were effectively retired as psych cases after the loss of the dog half of the duo.
Some of the elements could be viewed as Fascist, but it was clear their society still allowed for free speech, freedom of movement, et al. While the concept of "History and Moral Philosophy" is ambiguous in nature, the book was meant as a thoughtful critique of communism through a cast ethnically diverse characters (Rico being from the Philippines and not actually white.) while attempting to answer Aristotle's question of who should be allowed to vote by stating someone of virtuous character should be allowed to vote. The idea was that public service (which wasn't just the military which was the more obvious one) but who is willing to actually spend the time in the dirt working in some positive way to help the society. That's not say it would work but the idea was not a utopia but a democratic meritocracy or civic individualism that kept itself sane (subjective term but the best I got). If you read John Locke, Thomas Paine, John Stuart Mills, and Thomas Hobbs, you can see Heinlein built a lot of the book's philosophy on those philosopher's contributions to Classical Liberalism. However I can see where the critics could get concepts of racism, imperialism, and fascism as a lot can be interpreted as such, Heinlein was far from racist, and his ideas on individualism especially towards feminism and sexuality would hardly put him in the fascist category. Rather the book itself was more of a fictional answer to Marx and Engels's Communist Manifesto. This is just my opinion as I have read a lot of books. Doesn't necessarily mean I am right but that's what I've been able to conclude more or less.
There was nothing communist about the society of the earth federation.
@@allyourbase50 Mostly it was the bugs that were viewed as the communist collective or a kind of Hive mind.
Matthew Pierpont - Spot on. Thank you for articulating the not-so-obvious ideas Heinlein tried to convey. Unfortunately, too many have bought into the cliff's notes version from Heinlein's critics.
The ideological opposition was militarism not fascism or communism. It's just fascists and commies tend to be militarists
Matthew Pierpont, you are right.
Interesting part of the book that no one ever seems to remember:
Every MI is susceptible to hypnotic commands.
It's played off as a way to help your troops get some much needed z's when things may be too hectic to do so naturally. I wonder if Heinlein ever considered the notion of the leaders simply taking control of the superhuman soldiers that come out of places like Camp Arthur Currie.
They could very well do so, but making descisions that end up with high amount of casualties or infringe upon hyrarchy of the command structure is punished severely and gets more severe the higher up you go. It can range from demotion to the death penalty depending on how severe the results are. Communication is quite open so i doupt if this could be used against the federation in a meaningful way.
Carl was killed on a research base on Pluto, not on Jupiter.
The big twist of the book is at the very end where we find out that the entire time “Johnny” Juan Rico is actually Filipino. Rereading, you will find that he was never described in any way other than being rich and male. At a time where racism still plagued the armed forces, pointing out that the Terran Federation Army was multi-cultural was casually mentioned and that a much higher percentage of people from the “colony worlds” signed up for service was also intentionally casually stated to drive home the worth of a united and multi-ethnic humanity.
If violence doesn't solve your situation, you're not using enough violence.
sounds like you need an extra dose of brutal force
Maybe putting less salt in the soup would make it less salty, but what do I know. Bang that shaker, bang it GOOD!
VIOLENCE DOESN'T SOLVE ANYTHING EXCEPT FOR ALL THE THINGS IT DOES. (c) Mr. Torgue
What if a mosquito lands on your balls
@@tylerwinkle323 Flick laterally!
I read the book after the movie, and still say the opening chapter was far better than the entire movie. As pointed out, the book was more about the philosophy of military power in a merit based democratic society. The idea is that people that never sacrificed anything for a government should not have much of any say in how that government is ran. It's also overlooked that government service was not just military service as a small part of the book was about union ship workers wanted their particular area of work to count as federal service.
A BIG difference overlooked is the reveal at the end that Johnny Rico is Filipino. Not sure Heinlein's reason for that set-up, but I think he wanted to throw the reader for a loop that humanity is just that, human with all the races that make it up and can be brothers/sisters in arms.
No "sacrificed anything for a government", but "committed themselves to the greater good." You could have spent your entire enlistment as an accountant or fighting on Klandathu, and it wouldn't have made any difference. It was the willingness to put yourself on the line that made the difference.
NukeMarine about mid way in the book he says his parents native lanauge is tagolic which is the language they speak in the Philippines so it was like a read between the lines callback
Ah, missed that part. Thanks.
@Mists & Shadows your conclusions are drawn from discredited research, if not outright racism. Any difference in regional IQs can be explained by a combination of the history of the people and their ancestors access to nutrition and resources, biases in the test materials, and many other factors.
White populations have much to gain by intermixing. A lack of genetic diversity, poor and lessening birth rates, mutations and harmful recessive traits, and many other shortfalls of the caucasian "race" can be corrected in this way.
The picture you paint of whites bringing everyone else up could not be further from the truth, and is a viewpoint for which there is no justification or evidence. Obtain an education on these matters for your sake if for no other reason.
That'strueenough. Mydadwasa ship fitter apprenticeatthe charlestown naval shipyardwherethey worked 34 hoursa dayabd turnedout three fleet destroyers month!But, like the merchant marinesandthe women shuttle pilotswho delivered planestothefrontlinebases, theirservicedidn't countas fed service(until yearsaftethe war)!
DO YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE?
Then watch fox news
Click here
Um, actually it's:
"Would you like to know more?"
Trust me, I'm right on that😎
@@quantumphaser you are, but we still got the reference :P
Yeah. Was the shower scene in the book?
It's not that shocking that Verhoeven missed so many points of the book given he's said he never actually read it, he just wanted to make a parody of what he thought the book was about.
Well this fails due to a wrong base assumption.... Verhoeven wasnt aiming for the book. They had the whole movie scripted way before. Heck the original idea was blue eyed yanks being brain washed in Nazi military in 1930's (Verhoeven is dutch and lived through WWII occupation, got a pretty big axe to grind with fascist.) Neimier and Verhoeven knew nobody was going to greenlight it as contemporary movie (too controversial). So they decided to make a scifi, since scifi lets one have more freedom. So they did a plot based on a space war. Neimier had read the book years ago and suggested in name of getting the movie greenlit situating the movie in the Starshiptroopers setting.
Hence why the plot don't line up and the pretty much nothing else lines up either..... Since it isn't using the plot of the Book or the message or the book or satire of the book. The inclusion of the book is camouflage. Since if they had told "hey we want to make sci-fi war propaganda satire movie, that kinda compares present USA militarism with nazis"..... Yeah.... that was gonna get greenlit so well..... So instead it was "we are making movie adaptation of Starshiptroopers.... You know that Heinlein book".
@@groomersgotohell he failed hard on what he wanted to do though and who ever wrote it put more of the clever deep elements of the b0ok sneakily into it either on purpose or by accident and ruined his message of the republic being facist completely. Its rather fitting that some pc baby sjw wouldnt do his research and fuck up his good intentions like that hadn't happened before, hell even the book says that the sjw do gooders of our age would destroy society through good intentions.
@@aritakalo8011
good comment. that sets aside a lot of discussions.
He was a socialist so that explains his lack of understanding
@kevin willems What do they do thats fascist
What the movie got wrong was that John Rico was a Philippino
Zesc is here ! True, but the film wasn’t originally made as ‘starship troopers’ as at the point of scripting and starting to film they didn’t have the rights, plus it was always their intent to go with a young American cast.
Juan Rico is played by Casper VAN DIEN. Life got it close enough.
The anime version of Starship Trooper is much closer to the book. It even has Power Suits and all.
There was also a CGI version called Roughnecks which tried to combine the book and movie.
Well, except for the Power Suits themselves, which were very faithful to Heinlein's description, the old Uchuu no Senshi anime was, storywise, only remotely inspired by the book.
Probably because it was actual based on the book.... Unlike the 1997 movie, that pretty much just loaned the starshipstroopers name and setting to get greenlit...... Intentionally. The movie idea was originally developed independent of the book and they had pretty much ready script with the satire and commentary they wanted. Then they glued the book setting on top to make it easier to get funding and greenlit.
@@aritakalo8011 ya the movie was originally supposed to be a movie called Bug Hunt at Outpost 9 and was almost finished when someone noticed some similarities to Starship Troopers and thus changed the name and such...
Heinlein's main idea from the book seems to be that the ideal society is closer to Roman Republicanism than Fascism. Service to the state is necessary in order to earn the ability to vote since said people are the most likely to have the best interests of the state at heart, rather than their own interests. Honestly, not that objectionable.
I agree wholeheartedly...
Although I enjoyed the movie from a pure entertainment pov it said little about anything of substance...
It also showed how little most people understood Atomic Weapons at that point in time, since the Troopers used Nukes almost like hand grenades, lol...
Said idealized Roman Republic in the novel still involed commiting warcrimes.
And that system is completely idiotic.
Military is a form of dictatorship, where you must obey blindly all the orders given to you because this is what hierarchy is for and any disobedience is punished harshly. And you give those people the right to vote for the future of the nation? A bunch of brainwashed cavemen?! No wonder society in the movie/novel is similarly fucked up as our reality.
Over there promoting violence (because voters were brutes themselves promoting inferior outdated concepts of their forefathers, the neanderthals.
In our society every idiot is given that right.
How about we apply capitalism to the end.
No more voting. Do you see the cleaning lady or the newspaper boy deciding who the next CEO, department manager or other leader in the company??? No. Those are hired based on competency by other people that are skilled enough. And if these employees are bad, or god forbid steal from the company, they are fired and charged and sent to jail.
Democracy is a failed system because in it's conception is flawed and in it's application as well, where votes are bought with various advantages, especially from religious groups and their "leaders".
@@mikebrandon8962 This is a good point. Conservative Americans seem to worship the military. At the same time they don't trust any democrat. Yet half the time the supreme leader of the military, The Commander in Chief, is a democrat (like Obama).
My experience with my military service was mixed. When I was serving under incompetent officers, it was a nightmare, and it's not much you can do as a private. When I was serving under competent, charismatic officers that I trusted to make good decisions, however, it was a different story. But there is little you can do to control that part. Generation Kill and Band of Brothers describes this brilliantly.
Not quite correct- for Heinlein, it was not service to the state per se, it was that specifically those who proved willing to sacrifice their lives to ensure the lives of humanity (which in the book was at stake) were able to more or less run the state in such as way as to keep things going- he indicated that the "state" wasn't a utopia, and that it was only working "slightly" more on the plus than the minus side. Unfortunately, the only way to reliably test willingness to sacrifice one's life is to, in fact, risk (and often lose) it- conveniently, his state of humanity is in a fight for its life anyway, so opportunities abound.
shower scene
that is all
Too bad Carmen wasn't there :(
@@coolluckyme2007 Umm... Wild Things
THEY’RE COED. Oh my.
No sex in the book, and nothing coed
Dat ass!
Here’s a little quote for you kiddies.
"I believe in my whole race. Yellow, white, black, red, brown --in the honesty, courage, intelligence, durability....and goodness.....of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on this planet. I am proud to be a human being. I believe that we have come this far by the skin of our teeth, that we always make it just by the skin of our teeth --but that we will always make it....survive....endure. I believe that this hairless embryo with the aching, oversize brain case and the opposable thumb, this animal barely up from the apes, will endure --will endure longer than his home planet, will spread out to the other planets, to the stars, and beyond, carrying with him his honesty, his insatiable curiosity, his unlimited courage --and his noble essential decency. This I believe with all my heart."
- Robert A. Heinlein
I'll grant that there was much to like about Heinlein. He was exceptionally progressive in his views on race, and I praise him for that. I do have a problem with the blatant sexism in some of his books (Job comes to mind) and it is something to be aware of. Overall, for me Heinlein fits into the "from an earlier time so overlook some of his problematic themes) category, unlike, say, Orson Scott Card.
@@roguishpaladin Ideas only become problematic when they are viewed from the wrong context or without understanding the time period of the originator. All honestly conceptualized philosophies have SOME amount of merit to them, as no rational person applies an idea to their life that would not benefit them or someone they care about in some way, even if they are detrimental or destructive to someone else. I agree with you, though.
@@jonbrandre3006 Ideas aren't problematic when viewed at all. It's not until the idea is implimented that it can become a problem. For example: Genocide doesn't hurt anything at all.....Unless you impliment it on a population.
Types of Starship Troopers:
Book-master chief
Movie-storm trooper
Jordan L correction Book-master chief + ironman
Hugo a group of Spartans would have had the movie version dead pretty quick. In cannon they never really lost a ground battle.
Now the book I hear they are actually competent. But also behind the Spartans technology. Spartans have almost unbreakable bones, can run fast as hell average is like 40kmh while Kelly can do 60. Bread since 6 to be super soldiers. That’s not even bringing into the fact the power armor with its shields, he’ll the mark VII can be changed based on what the wearing wants it to look like.
Correction....... having political debates while waiting for Master chief moments to come (and they dont)
Book: Serious
Film: Satire
Movie: Parody of the Book
@@RecklessFables Not a parody of the book, satire of Nazi propaganda.
Paul Taylor But the book had nothing to do with Nazi propaganda, so that's why this movie is crap.
@@44excalibur I don't dispute that it's very different from the book. You're correct that it's a crappy adaptation of the book. But whether or not the movie is a crappy movie should be judged independently. Verhoeven want to make a Nazi propaganda satire. So he borrowed some names and general plot points from the book, scrapped everything else, and made his Nazi satire. Most people agree that, judged as a propaganda satire, the movie is good.
That idiot Verhoeven didn't mention anything about this movie being a satire or a parody until AFTER the movie came out & was slammed.
Anyone else love the short animated design of the book moments in this video?
Come On you Apes! Don't you want to Ask: What's the Difference?!
Wait what ffs
Whats the difference you say... (not you Bryce per se but the greater internet ether collective writ large)
Well I'm not sure, first off I'm already put off by CineFix's 'seemingly we are now rapidly approaching a weird totalitarian regime duels by propaganda now is as good a time as any'... insinuation that now 2 years into a Trump Presidency this is the case.
I'm sick of such moronic idiocy reflexively vomited by millennial automaton group think nitwits too dumb to realize it is they have been indoctrinated by Modern Liberal totalitarians.
Trumpism ironically with his populism conservatism seeking to preserve remnants of Classical Liberalism is not the cause nor even a symptom of the disease but the cure!
Whats the difference... we are men not apes, we are sentient and if we wish to keep our sentience and inherent individual liberty which derives from sentience... we best get our collective head's out of our asses or the true totalitarians will kick our asses into subservience or simply take our heads off.
[Want to know more intensifies]
@ickisistheshitz Limited government, individual liberty, free markets rule of law, and national sovereignty, the classical liberal ideals which emanated from the Enlightenment. Everything conservatives seek to preserve and modern liberals seek to destroy.
@ickisistheshitz The good, the true, and the beautiful are timeless, the pursuit of these is what conservatives seeks to preserve. Your idolized Modern Liberals are nothing but stagnant sclerosed decayed totalitarians. Dont believe me? Who seeks to censor, censure, and silence free speech?? Pray that you realize it before their perfume wears off and you are stuck with their stench forever.
In Heinlein's book, the troopers' power suit was a man amplifier, like the original design in the first Iron Man comic book. It was an armored shell with built-in armament. The producer of the anime Mobile Suit Gundam wanted to do a series like Starship Troopers, but giant robots were the rage in Japan, so the power suits in Gundam are giant robot type man amplifiers.
Okay yah didn’t read the book. The opening battle they’re doing the opposite of carpet bombing. A few Cap. Troopers are dropped in to cause a ruckus and then extract. No carpet bombing. It was a “cavalry raid”
and then there is the full CGI TV series...
"Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles"
WAY BETTER
And the anime Starship troopers!
Oh this is going to be a special video.
first 6 seconds of the video, they just had to pull a "ORANGE MAN BAD", ehhh?
@@Starius2
No one named names. That statement could have gone either way. I'm sure there's no shortage of people on either side ready to screech 'facist' at the other, completely with their own propaganda to that effect. If you see an attack on your side in that statement, maybe you should rethink your position.
Or you just wanted an excuse to quote a meme like the fucking NPC you are.
@@SquallAKALeon NPC sounds about right. Or old guard. Either one works really.
I demand you tell me what your comment on the cloverfield lane video meant Vicente. Tell me now.
Don't forget in the novel Juan Rico's race isn't American. He is an Phil-American. Half American and Half Filipino.
Heinlein is very correct about a civilization that lacks aggression. It can be seen in our country today.
The main difference can be summed up like this:
In the novel the mobile infantry are "Space Marines"
In the film the mobile infantry are "Imperial Guard"
Also in the book and the film
Sgt Zim is Full Metal Jacket Gunny on crack.
What you said about Sgt. Zim was an understatement!
While it’s not credited, I believe the way the aliens and the approach to war are handled (including the way war is derided) are more inspired by The Forever War written by Joe Haldeman than by the Starhip Troopers book. I would not be surprised to learn the people involved in creating the movie had actually read the former.
"Seeing how we're rapidly approaching some totalitarian regime fueled by propaganda . . ."
Where have you been the last 20 years? We started moving towards that in the 90s with the deregulation of the media, with that situation being achieved in the early 2000s.
When little mustang man showed all the power hungry men how awesome it is to be totalitarian
@@Spider-Too-Too And when was that? When he militarized the capitol alleging a massive insurrection was imminent and that security was paramount over freedom? Wait, that was Biden and also Hitler. My bad.
@@Calbeck I’m not into all the American politics news (we don’t know what kind of future it will lead to yet), it will all just become another chapter of the human history
@@Calbeck btw, since we are in the comment section of starship trooper
Here is a quote on freedom
I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. I will accept any rules that you feel necessary to your freedom. I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do.” - Robert A. Heinlein
@@Spider-Too-Too Exactly he knew that societies cannot remain free without self discipline and laws that actually make sense. Selflessness and a respect for the rule of law is just as important as natural rights that you are endowed with. Live like a liberal, govern like a conservative.
I always get the shakes before a drop.
7:25 "Written in the early days of the Cold War, shortly after the US halted its nuclear weapons testing" The last atmospheric nuclear weapon test by the US took place on November 4, 1962. The book Starship Troopers was published in November 1959.
Henlain wrote the truth, its not about constant agresion, quite the opposite. The problem happens, when you become unable to enact controlled agresion, when you stop facing problems with clear mind. When you start creating new words and meanings for obvious things and when saying the "bad" things could get you in trouble.
The book never said violence is good, is just said what we all know: Violence can solve all problems. You cant deny that. That doesnt mean that we should always use violence, but i guess its hard to think between the lines.
I'm ashamed to admit that when I first saw this film, I completely missed that it was a satire.
Then again, I didn't know it was based on a book until much later.
Because it is not a satire.
Claiming that it was a satire, was Verhoeven's self-defense against those who would accuse in sympathies for fascism.
Understandable. It's pretty easy to miss that it's a satire because it's social commentary is entirely confused. It was an attempted satirization of fascism. The problem is that the society in the book akd in the movie isn't actually fascist. All of the people calling it that have absolutely zero understanding of political philosophy and certainly have no idea what fascism actually is.
@@ThatCreeNative1 a lot of those movies and shows you described as having no meaning absolutely do have subtextual meaning because all stories are thematically driven to one extent or another. It's just that many of them can be superficially enjoyed independent of their subtext.
@@Tyler_W there’s a difference between a militaristic society and a fascist society
its a failed satire
"To the everlasting glory of the Infantry.”
“Shines the name, shines the name of Roger Young!”
Such a tale could have ended no other way.
Surprise the director who didn't read the book couldn't stay true to the book.
Verhoven couldn't get past chapter 2, he said it was too hard or too bad to read. So, I don't think he deserves a a little latitude if he can't get to the 1/4 mark in the book.
The characters and I think plot are pretty similar nonetheless.
suarezguy not...at all?
Dizzy was a dude.....
@SgtBaker16 Cry me a river.
You left out Johnny Rico is Filipino, not Casper whatever at all. Heinlein said if glorifying the military means paying respect to the Bloody Infantry, the duckfoot, the soldier that puts his life between destruction and civilization, and pays the ultimate franchise with their lives, then yes it glorifies the military. He said it always got him; he got mor hate mail from that book, but it sells and sells and sells. It’s now in its 45th reprint, translated into 14 languages, and sells as many today as 1959.
I was told by one of the guys on the production staff that the reason we didn't get orbital dropping power armor and each and every member of humanities soldiers...was because the blew the budget on the bugs CGI and didn't have any more money to spend.
Also, I think Robert A Heinlein's purpose for the book wasn't simply a propaganda piece, but (like all of his books) was used to show a different social society humanity could use to function in the future. I honestly doubt they will make another movie based on his work because (without heavy editing) because his books showed how humanity, using logic and working together, could concur the stars...while all humanity is now interested in is blaming other for their problems and going along with the collective mob mentality...
There's nothing "humanity" can do to conquer the stars when the average person is concerned with feeding themselves and their family but you could blame government spending on weapons that kill more efficiently while having little real interest in space
One of the best satires of all time. One of the worst adaptations of ll time.
It's a failed satire, that's why people actually love the movie and it has such a cult following.
@@jamesmccrea4871 People hated it when came out
@@PABSmalaga I love this movie
@@jamesmccrea4871 It`s not really a failed satire, since a lot of people ot that it is a satire. I mean they even spell it for you at the beggining of the movie.
@@PABSmalaga The hate came from the washington goverment department who labeled the movie and the Rico actor as nazis.
There’s gotta be a Space Force joke around here somewhere
And I would like to know more!!!!!!!!
Imagine two argentinian teenagers watching this movie for the first time when it came out and finding that every character we follow trough was argentinian as well... it was frigging awesome! My brother and I couldn't believe it!
The movie was a spoof of a book the director never really read (he couldn't get past the first chapter, apparently it went right over his head. He had an intern/aid summarize the cliff notes to him) the book. A few names were the same, that's about it. They completely left out the third species and the power armor, got Juan's (Jonny's) heritage wrong. And completely failed to bring up any the core concepts or ideas in the book and pretty much wrecked the plot.
"Nothing of value is free; even the breath of life is purchased at birth only through gasping effort and pain. . .if you boys and girls had to sweat for everything the way a newly born baby has to struggle to live you would be much happier. As it is, with some of you, I pity the poverty of your wealth"
This book is an absolute philosophical masterpiece and I cannot implore you to read it enough if you have not.
I can't believe they overlooked that the cast of the book is culturally diverse, e.g. Jonnie is Filipino in the novel or that Ace is African-American or that the book was also a slight reflection of the Korean War.
Well in the movie Rico is Argentinian. Not like they're all just white Americans.
"The most fascist elements of the book"
I don't see much fascism in the book. Infact i see a lot of stuff that rails against both Communism and Fascism.
Its a hell of a lot more Jingoistic and hardline Libertarian than it is Fascist.
Most people today unfortunately think that fascism is the opposite of communism rather than being two implementations of the same ideology.
I think it’s the nationalist aggresionism that people are referring too. A trait that exists in both America and Nazi Germany.
@@Garl_Vinland I'm pretty sure the federation is justified in invading the bugs after they wipe out Buenos Ares killing millions.
@@Garl_Vinland nationalistic aggressionism isn't a part of the United States. Our GOVERNMENT sure likes to start wars on flimsy reasoning, but these QUICKLY sour with the American people. From Vietnam to the middle eastern debacle started by Bush *SENIOR* and on going to this very day.
You're conflating the USA Military industrial complex with general Americans culture, which is frankly an insane misrepresentation.
@@petercarioscia9189 The government reflects the people as a whole. You put these people in office, same as the German people elected Hitler as chancellor.
The film isn't based on the book. It was already pretty much scripted before they even found the book. I guess the money made Ginny's last years more comfortable.
One thing I never understood about the movie: the talk shows keep saying the bugs are mindless animals with no intelligence one second and oh by the way the bugs flung an asteroid across the galaxy a thousand light years and not only some how hit the earth but hit one specific city on earth. Seems like some complex math and FTL technology would be required for that. Or maybe I put more thought into that than the screenwriters.
The movie is junk and inconsistent. The book Bugs we’re intelligent w space ships and energy weapons. Think Enders Game...
Starship Troopers fans & Veterans!🕷I re-did the audiobook 📚 w sound 🔊 💥 effects and voice acting! 🎤 8 hrs. Please 🙏🏼listen 👂 and SHARE!!! FB page “Starship Troopers the book”
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I think it was meant to imply that the humans did not know much about the bugs and there was classified information on the bugs.
If I remember correctly, there was a scene where the characters were talking about how unreliable intel was, and the shock that the bugs are intelligent.
In the book, nobody is "recruited" into service. While the federation made it possible for anyone to sign up, they actively attempted to dissuade recruits at every stage of the process. A high school actively recruiting soldiers is a strong departure from the source material.
*Denise Richards.... God you are beautiful.*
If they were bmore faithful ti the book we would have seen her bald:) but doogie howser would have died:(
0:50 not so subtle recruiting efforts? what? MR.Bubois and Rassack in the book and movie respectively Debate over this, and most students dont even wanna join or make points that suggest they dont like it, and its their choice, if anything is is said by rico himself that he thinks the service is above such pesky younglings, as disencouraging, and making only the cream fo the crop, the ones who trully want to do it, dew it
Duh, he is talking about the movie there, he in fact says that in the book is the complete opposite. Did you watch the video?
Paul Verhoeven's starship troopers is a comedy and it should be viewed as one
Because he can't read a book?
@@saytax Because it is a comedy.
@@Alexander_Kale In what way? I dont recall Verhoeven saying he was making a comedy, nor seeing comedy as the overarching theme.
@@saytax If you cannot see, I cannot help you there. And what Verhoeven originally wanted to do is less important than what he actually did. The film is a satire and a comedy. It certainly is not to be taken serious.
@@Alexander_Kale I can agree with you that the film is different from his original aim, which was to paint the Starship Troopers' society in a way fascistic theme. Did he deliver that accurately? No. In fact, he did the opposite and made a society where fascism is barely even present and the state doesn't dictate peoples' (it's a world government) lives in commerce or socially as it would in a truly fascist government.
As for satire and comedy, your gonna have to point to an example.
Say what you want about the book but Heinlein did bring up some very good points. A strong and powerful military is very important to keep a society strong and protected and it’s even better when people enlist voluntarily, because it shows that they are willing to put their lives on the line to protect society. Although I personally don’t agree that citizenship should be earned through federal service, I see so many ways that corruption could spawn from that. I also don’t believe in abolishing the draft like what Heinlein wrote about in the book, because then if military service was strictly voluntary even during wartime (especially against super intelligent extraterrestrial pseudo-arachnids) that’s a good way to make yourselves weak and set you up for a crushing defeat.
I think what the book was trying to communicate is that nothing comes free, especially not freedom. The Terran Federation in the novel doesn’t sound fascist at all because nobody is persecuted, nobody is put in concentration camps and there’s no mention of any evil dictator. The Terran Federation actually sounds more like modern day America with some speculative systemic differences that seem more in line with Heinlein’s personal views. Few laws, low taxes, more freedom and severe punishment for criminals (capital punishment for the one guy in Rico’s unit who murdered a little girl). The human way of life under this new system that Heinlein seems to think is better comes under threat from the Arachnids. So it seems like a story about the importance of fighting for the way of life that you want to have; because if you’re not willing to fight for it you may end up losing it and never get it back.
Maybe I am too young, but I allways thought that the Starship Troopers movie is brilliant. Case and point, the recruitment scene with the crippled Req. Officer. Contrary to what is stated in the video (which boggles my mind how the authors came up with that bullshit) the officer is clearly happy and enouraging of Carmen wanting to be a pilot. But soon as Rico states he is signing up for the Mobile Infantry he says something along the lines of "Good for you! The MI made me the man I am today!" in a very antagonistic tone and then we get the shot of him pushing away from the table and us seeing he is missing his legs, ontop of his robot arm, to which Rico frowns. Similarly Movie's Rasczhak is stating some things that can not be objectively denied but at the same time he isnt sounding like a propagandistic brain washer. One of my favourite parts of the movie is when he asks Rico a question (cant remember what exactly he asked off the top of my head) and after Rico answers it he says something along the lines of "Ahh straight from the book, but do you understand, do you believe it?" which should if not cause the movie's character to question those things, it certainly made me think about it back then. And there are lots more moments like this, in the movie. Which is why ontop of the some of the really obvious satire that was funny because its obnoxiously silly (soldiers giving kids ammo to play with for example, or them stomping on cockroaches) I find it, as stated earlier brilliant.
Starship Troopers was a Young Adult book too. Heinlein had a very different idea of what was appropriate for young adults back then compared to other authors of that category.
There isn’t even any fascism in the movie and very little in the book the reason everyone thinks the is is because of Carl’s uniform and the director saying as much with a few shots like that early recruiting video being similar to nazi propaganda. The federation is closer in political structure to the USA than nazi Germany as it is a federal republic, admittedly a highly militant and meritocratic one but still, it’s not fascism.
It's not even highly militant. It's the exact opposite. The book is set during the start of a war, and when Rico and Carl go to sign up they are dissuaded in the strongest terms. If the government was highly militant, they'd be welcomed with open arms and the people (like Rico's father and Dubois) would be harassing their children to serve. But they aren't, they are (at least before the bugs started attacking and smashed Earth) actually told:
"You can't all be real military men; **we don't need that many** and most of the volunteers aren't number-one soldier material anyhow...[W]e've had to think up a whole list of dirty, nasty, dangerous jobs that will ... at the very least make them remember for the rest of their lives that their citizenship is valuable to them because they've paid a high price for it ... "
Hardly militant.
The movie is clearly a satire of fascism, maybe not the more familiar European fascism but a more familiar US jingoism
Book Rico : heavily implied to be Filipino.
Much as how the Robin Hood stories strongly imply that he is an Englishman.
Rico is Filipino. Full stop.
Great job on the graphics and illustrations, guys! 😍
I know this is a few years late but there is one detail you said that I would like to question.
In the movie, the bugs were out to exterminate all life that was not bug or did not bend to their will. When the humans made the colony that first encountered the bugs, the bugs idea of first contact was exterminating the colony.
They didn't mention one of the biggest differences.-- Juan Rico was a Filipino (or Asian) in the novel.
God forbid if a brown guy will take the lead.
I had the book, the board game (Avalon Hill), and the 7” single (I lost my heart to a starship trooper). When the film came out, my life was complete.
*I like both versions, but I think Heinlein is misunderstood as glorifying it especially when he has characters that practically beg the main character not to join up.His version is a more idealized version of the U.S. in which you aren't even expected to join up and if you get cold feet you aren't tracked down. Both versions have good messages to come to a middle ground that works, you need to be able to be aggressive and ruthless when it is necessary but you shouldn't become the very thing you're fighting by devolving the entirety of society around war. You also forget the main reason the movie was different was because the people working on it thought it was too boring first and foremost, and that is fine considering that book wasn't written for the generation that made the movie. They're both excellent in the context of when they were made.*
Guts The Berserker very well said and an interesting read, thank you. Both the Book and Movie have their place, compromise well and you are right about what Heinlein was trying to portray
Everyone gets something else from reading a book. The big thing I saw was his criticism of the comfortable choices for short term gains. Almost every "disaster" in the book starts with either group or n individual thinking they know better or not wanting to confront an uncomfortable choice. The US at the time made a lot of shortsighted decisions, not demanding our bomber crews back from the the Russians, giving Vietnam back to the French after promising them independence, allowing the formation of Soviet puppet states in violation of the occupation treaties and etc. In the book Debois uses generalization of these decisions based on feelings and emotion to point out that they lead to more conflicts overall. The big thing was the coddling of children. In many of Heinlein's books he point out how important it is that one is self sufficient, being able make shelter, provide, provide effective first aid and so on. Rather than being a burden to those around you being an asset. In SSt at one point the instructor is trying to help a recruit who out of a false sense of entitlement refuses to comprehend the full scope of his actions and ends up facing a worse punishment and loosing his opportunity to gain a franchise. Rico suffers as well because he thinks he he can pull something off despite the reg saying to do it differently. The alluring decapitation strike on Klendatu because it would spare suffering resulted in disaster. Treating the bugs like a normal enemy instead of the hivemind they are almost lost the federation the war. Not being challenged physically and mental results in loosing the race a life. See Sanctuary for those who read the book.
TL;DR The book is a cautionary tale of making short sighted decision based on emotions and feeling rather than logic. The book provides some exceptions but that just confirms the rule.
Also, this was not the first movie based on Heinlein’s work. Back in, I think., 1949 there was a movie called Destination Moon. It was about a fist mission to the Moon based on a Heinlein short story. I saw it in 1950 when I was seven years old. I even made a model of the rocket (with a little adult help). There was a shot in the movie of the Earth above the Lunar landscape. I’m reminded of it whenever I see the famous photo taken from Apollo 8, “Earthrise”.
The Puppet Masters came out before Starship Troopers
So much wrong with this video. Did you guys read the book or just the Cliff Notes? There's no nuke grenades, they'd kill themselves. There are mini-nuke rockets. Carl was killed on Pluto, not Jupiter. And the Federation isn't Fascist at all, it's more of a meritocracy. You also left out the fact that the directer admitted he never read the book, he just wanted to lampoon it because he perceived it to be something he didn't like.
I read the book well after I saw the movie. As a kid I loved the movie, though that was more for the explosions and shower scenes. As an adult I can't stand the movie but the book is one of my all-time favorites.
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Dude, just think of the movie as a fun bug killing movie. Verhoeven failed at the satire of film, he made the Federation cool. And, yes, the book is awesome. The Federation in the book is the true sense of the word, a republic.
@@MrSmith-zy2bp True, I'm just annoyed that this video is supposed to display the differences between the book and movie and it's like they didn't even do the research.
The book version sounds like something out of Halo
I'm brazilian and the opening sentence of this video made me laugh nervously :'D
Our inside joke in our friend group is the woman in the ship saying ¨That was one big god damn mistake!¨
i love that shoutout to Michael FUCKING Ironside. BADASS
chris FRENCH who doesn’t love Michael Ironside, what a man, what an actor!
Just finished the book and I found it quite good. I still love the movie though, having watched it first. I found myself comparing the two while reading the book. Wish I had read it sooner.
Jeremy Robinson it’s a fantastic read and one myself I never read until a few years ago, a shame I missed out on it for so long!
Was the first part of this review literally an “Orange man bad” moment? Wow.
1st Amendment, everyones got it.
The first time I ever cried to a death in a book was when Lt. Rasczhak died. H was a character for like a page and a half, but he was so important.
It made you feel that way because the character in the book feel that way. That is how you write a character.
Dutch's death a few pages before was one of the few things to make me audible gasp in surprise and discomfort
2:47
in fact the original John Rico was from Philippines, not a white blonde guy XD
Excellent video and very informative. I haven’t read the book in years but you summed up my thoughts on the differences very well with a few extra titbits to boot. Thanks.
"I did my part!"
RE: Motive unclear - He did it to impress a girl. That's it.
Probably in my top 5 fav movies.
Definitely in my 5 top movies.
Rico is from Philippines, a brow skinned rich boy actually.
the media is not even there, in my opinion, this is not a facist novel at all (maybe Dubois and his concept of force misunderstood). The citizen stuff it was not widely explain in the movie. The federation is not the only goverment in the galaxy, some are similiar but not the same. Read the chapter about "you cannot walk in the park anymore", it will change your mind because it´s already happening. Society in here is built into pure meritocracy not facism, come on,
The movie is more like Forever war clone movie.
Based on... Bull... He admits he found the book boring who used a cliff notes... As to the whole "the enemy cannot...", In the book Sarg explains that "if you have a dog who pees on the carpet, you would not shoot him"... Violence is balanced. It must be. You don't use a air strike to handle a bank robber. As to the active expounding the political systems, he was an extreme libertarian, who wanted to model an anti fascist society. It is simply called fascistic by people who confuse the military with dictatorship.
All volunteer military (US had a draft until early 1970s)
Women readily accepted as Fleet level officers (show me that in 1959)
A society where race and ethnicity are irrelevant (as opposed to today where they define who you are based on inter-sectional ranking).
A book written by a white guy in 1959 where the main character is Filipino (I challenge you to show me that TODAY).
A future society rising from the ashes of ruin caused by partisan, self absorbed, power hungry, entitled narcissists where the right to vote is based on voluntarily service and self sacrifice (As opposed to the current requirements of being over 18 and having a pulse).
The book is often accused of being racist, xenophobic and fascist yet in the context of the environment and time when it was written, was very progressive. The movie was created by a man who admits he never read the book, and then set out and made the most white washed satirical insult to the source material he could.
BTW, the line from the classroom scene is "force" or the threat of it, has solved more problems in history than any other form of authority, not "violence" specifically. Ask yourself why you ultimately pull over when a police officer flashes his lights behind you (Instead of flipping him the bird and ignoring him)?
which raises a very good point: WHY would the Heinlein estate agree to such a blatant rip off of the intellectual property? someone sell them a bag of empty promises? or did the heirs take all the money they could get and walk away? it's hard to imagine someone consenting to that epic POS.
Patrick Hugill Even the pulse thing is optional so long as you vote Democrat.
oh please the reveal that he's Filipino happens so late its like saying the original Samus was groundbreaking for having a woman as it's main character
@@graceshiflett6526 His name is Juan Rico in the book, it really took you to the end of the book to figure out that he wasn't the usual Ameri-Euro caucasian male like you usually find in English language books of the era?
@@graceshiflett6526 Does that change the fact that both are correct?
I see a starhip trooper, I click
I used to really like playing the board game adaptation
with all the cardboard squares and surface/underground hex maps
poor skinnies
I love this video. I've heard or read so many critiques of Starship Troopers where they clearly didn't read the book I read. This video is honest and fair to both the book and the movie.
I love both the book and the movie, and you nailed both. Spot on.