6/10
A fun and over the top 90's Sci-Fi with great effects and spectacle
22 June 2020
Budgeted at a huge $100 million dollars plus, its safe to say in retrospect not everyone got the vibe of Paul Verhoeven's big budgeted satirical take on Robert A. Heinlein's popular book of the same name, with many critics unable to stomach its seemingly intentional wooden acting, over the top violence and full-blown satire of the American military regime and gung-ho attitude but in the years following its initial release, Verhoeven's spectacle driven blockbuster has garnered a significant following of fans.

Spawning a collection of direct to video sequels that are better off never thought about, Trooper's throws subtlety out the window as it introduces us to a militaristic future where mankind is waging war at home and across the galaxy against a race of alien bugs hellbent on colonizing Earth for their own purposes, with Verhoeven marching full steam ahead at all times as his flesh and gore-filled event rolls along without an ounce of care for stopping and smelling any type of roses, instead choosing to trample on them on its way past.

Introducing us to the new world order through some news clips and advertisements (not dissimilar to those we saw in another Verhoeven satire Sci-Fi Robocop), Trooper's doesn't waste too much time on its set-up as we are then introduced to our films main players, Casper Van Dien's Johnny Rico (this man's jaw-line is hard to look away from), Denise Richard's wannabe pilot Carmen Ibanez and Dina Meyer's Dizzy Flores, all graduating students set on joining the fight against their buggy enemies.

It's not unfair to say all performers here deliver their lines and inhabit their characters as if they are being fed lines of dialogue off camera, with Van Dien making his counterpart Van Damme seem like an Oscar winning thespian but mostly their stilted and unenthusiastic performances suit the films nature, a nature that is never too far away from a set-piece or moment of computer generated/proptastic bug attack.

The films biggest strength and one that can't be denied is even in this day and age of computer wizardry much of Trooper's big moments still work thanks to some fantastically realized CGI work and molding together with some great creature props.

Many films of the 90's era have aged terribly in these departments but Trooper's ageless space battles and limb-flinging wars have managed to remain entertaining and thrilling, offering up respite from many of the films moments of badly worded dialogue and uninteresting romantic interludes that could've easily bought the film down to dark depths of Razzie worthy notoriety.

Final Say -

Far from what you would call classy cinema or deep thinking sci-fi, Starship Troopers is still a whole lot of fun, with a bitingly self-aware examination of fascist military operations firmly in its sights at all times, making this a film that remains relevant and entertaining to this day.

3 blind teachers out of 5
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