Of course, I immediately thought of this cracked.com article.
You already knew that Starship Troopers was a satire, because any time somebody mentions this movie, they follow it up with an explanation of how nobody understands that it's a satire with a glint in their eye that, if you zoom in, is actually the concept of irony dying in a house fire. This is a movie in which the heroes dress in actual Nazi SS uniforms and high school teachers explain "the failure of democracy." The movie uses satire the way an eight-year-old uses curses when her mother is at the grocery store. Everybody gets that this movie is a satire. Everybody.
Although to be fair, although I can be smug and pretentious about it now, I do admit to being very confused about this movie when it first came out.
I think my confusion was mainly due to the disconnect between the actual themes of the movie and the way it was marketed. It wasn't marketed as a satire, it was marketed as just another shoot-em-up science fiction exploitation film.
See also my review of the book Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein, and my thoughts on Paul Verhoeven's DVD commentary.
1 comment:
Q: How many Europeans does it take to change a light bulb?
A: The issue isn't how many of them, but how long does it take for them to stop acting all enlightened as to how they know the reality behind how the light bulb works like you don't know there's some metaphysical realm behind it and they are holier than thou to point that out - just to realize they don't know how to do the basic of changing the light bulb in the first place. Maybe 3, if the 2nd guy who comes after the 1st refuses to give you the choice to interpret the light bulb in a common sensical way despite the freedom of choice.
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