My theory on Verhoevens Starship Troopers (and the remake of War of the Worlds) is: It gets bad in the moment you do one or more of two wrong things:
- Disable your brain and stop thinking. You need to keep your eyes open and aware of the subtle effects inside it.
- Expect it to be exactly like the book. The book was written for an audience with a completely different habits how they perceive things. If you would write it true to the book, nobody on this planet would understand it or maybe even believe it just another "We against the aliens" movie.
Heinleins militarism might look very conservative in our current context, but in the 1950s, when the book was written, his understanding was pretty revolutionary. The US militarism of the time was still painted by WW2, Korea and cold war propaganda. Vietnam had not happened and the people had a deep trust in the army and the government. And the starship troopers novel showed how stupid this kind of thinking actually is.
The movie just tried to translate it, and sort of failed by just one thing - it did not understand itself. But still, I don't feel it is a bad movie. It is just not deserving the trademark Heinlein. Heinlein is maybe best described as "luring deep you into trouble, if you use your own brain." Even the stuff he wrote as teenager already has this kind of expectation, that you only achieve things, when you work hard yourself for them.
Simonpro: You mean "Total Recall" with the martian Arnie movie? Which brings us again to Verhoeven.
Based on a great short story (By Philipp K Dick, a name you should have on your reading list), implemented the Verhoeven style, which is perfect for the culture of the 80s... and still fails by the story being smarter as the director.
I just watched Deep Impact lately. It was realistic in science, and bad as movie. Even the
Augsburger Puppenkiste would have made it better.
There are many sci-fi goodies, which never got any good attention... does somebody remember Outland or Brazil?