After the critical and commercial disaster of SHOWGIRLS, Paul Verhoeven returned to familiar territory: big-budget science fiction. This time, he re-teamed with ROBOCOP screenwriter Ed Neumeier to adapt Robert Heinlein’s 1959 novel Starship Troopers—but not in the way anyone expected.
What Verhoeven delivered was less a straightforward adaptation and more a brutal, satirical takedown of militarism and fascist ideology, all wrapped in the glossy sheen of a 1990s teen soap and bug-splattering war epic. The result? Critics hated it. Audiences didn’t get it. And the film was dismissed as dumb jingoistic schlock.
In this episode, we chart the course of STARSHIP TROOPERS from Heinlein’s source novel to Verhoeven’s gleeful subversion, its troubled marketing and release, and its slow but steady transformation into one of the most critically celebrated sci-fi films of its era.
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Coming Up:
STARSHIP TROOPERS (1997)
HOLLOW MAN (2000)
Theme Song: "There's Still a Little Bit of Time, If We Hurry and I Mean Hurry" by Slasher Film Festival Strategy.
This episode was written, produced and edited by Gary Horne, Justin Bishop, & Todd Davis.
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