Starship Troopers: Invasion

2012

Action / Animation / Sci-Fi

57
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 49%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 49% · 1K ratings
IMDb Rating 5.8/10 10 11945 11.9K

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Plot summary

The troopers of two starships have joined forces to terminate a massive bug attack at a Federation outpost. Before the mission can be completed and the survivors evacuated, one ship abruptly departs and goes inexplicably dark. The remaining battle-hardened troopers race to the rescue only to discover that the threat from the bugs is about to hit home.


Uploaded by: OTTO
November 20, 2012 at 04:29 PM

Director

Top cast

Karl Glusman as Gunfodder
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
650.12 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds 8
1.20 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
Seeds 49

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by daozhongbuer 7 / 10

Way better than ST2 and ST3, though still have distance to ST1

I've been quite against of watching any new ST movies in recent years, because both ST2 and ST3 are really unsatisfactory for me. However after watching this movie, I have the feeling the ST movies have started going back to the right track.

Firstly, the movie has found the right audience. It's a movie for a simple story, a small incidence in the ST universe, not for deep philosophy. However, you have to admit that if the story writer can really put a little bit of philosophical ideas from the original novel into conversations and the environment around characters, just like the ST1 did, this new movie will be on a new level. And that's why ST1 is always way ahead of other ST movies. For the story, I give 7/10, with 3 marks off for the absence of in-depth philosophical ideas.

And then, I like the design of weapons and ships and many tiny concept things. This includes very careful design of a fleet of starships that follows the style of ST1. Other things like the suit of mobile infantry. Weapon designs. Airdrop of mechanized MI. Main guns of the space station. I should say I have seen the shadows of the original novel, and you can tell the designer have really put a lot of effort to making these things look comfortable, and surely it's just very fun to watch how these men's stuffs to work in the movie. For the artistic design, I give 9/10, with one mark off for the illogical uselessness of the protection ability of the MI armor.

In terms of the characters, everybody is poker-face. There is no room for showing the personality. There is also not enough conflict between characters as well. A good movie has to have conflict between characters, that's why Alien and Star Wars is epic. I can only give this part 5/10.

Therefore, if you are looking for a simple, straight forward movie, with cool graphic and awesome boy stuff. You should watch this movie. If you want to see some philosophical content, then you better wait for the next ST movie, not this one.

Reviewed by dee.reid 7 / 10

An ultra-violent, action-packed blast - nothing more, nothing less

"I always get the shakes before a drop. I've had the injections, of course, and hypnotic preparation, and it stands to reason that I can't really be afraid. The ship's psychiatrist has checked my brain waves and asked me silly questions while I was asleep and he tells me that it isn't fear, it isn't anything important - it's just like the trembling of an eager race horse in the starting gate... ...I couldn't say about that; I've never been a race horse. But the fact is: I'm scared silly, every time" - Juan "Johnnie" Rico, first lines, Robert A. Heinlein's "Starship Troopers"

I don't pretend to know everything that late sci-fi writer Robert A. Heinlein intended to put forth in his controversial landmark 1959 military science fiction novel "Starship Troopers." I do know that it's been hugely influential in science fiction literature and film ever since its publication 53 years ago. It was adapted into Paul Verhoeven's wildly prescient 1997 feature-length movie (which appeared to be more of a pro-/anti-war satire of Heinlein's novel), and more importantly (to me, anyway) the cast members of James Cameron's "Aliens" (1986) - my #5 movie, by the way - were required to read the book as part of their "basic training" for the film.

Regardless of what you think of Heinlein's points in the book, it's first-rate sci-fi entertainment and pro-war military propaganda of the first degree. I saw Verhoeven's 1997 film adaptation first, and to this day I still absolutely love that movie. I read the book some time afterward; I completed it in a single day - that's how immersed I was in Heinlein's insanely in-depth futuristic universe. Two sequels to Verhoeven's original film have been produced, and one animated sequel from "Appleseed" (2004) director Shinji Aramaki - 2012's "Starship Troopers: Invasion" (which was ultimately supported by an ultimately flawed script by screenwriter Flint Dille).

"Starship Troopers: Invasion" is the most worthwhile sequel so far to Verhoeven's 1997 cinematic offering of Heinlein's most celebrated work (for me, that is). Like the not-so-freakin'-bad "Starship Troopers: Marauder" (2008), "Invasion" takes a little bit more inspiration directly from the pages of Heinlein's original novel, even though "Invasion" is, in fact, a direct sequel - more or less - to Verhoeven's first live-action movie.

What connects this particular feature to its predecessors - despite being animated - is that three central characters from Verhoeven's 1997 film reappear here: Johnny Rico, Carmen Ibanez, and Carl Jenkins (who were played, respectively, by Casper Van Dien, Denise Richards, and Neil Patrick Harris in Verhoeven's first film). Van Dien and "Starship Troopers" screenwriter/long-time Verhoeven collaborator Ed Neumeier serve as producers on "Invasion." "Starship Troopers: Invasion" is a nicely animated feature with a largely Japanese Anime' production team behind it, with American actors voicing the parts.

The film begins with the mysterious disappearance of the Federation Starship "John A. Warden," which was apparently conducting clandestine experiments involving the Arachnids, which was under the supervision of Carl Jenkins, now the head of the Ministry of Paranormal Warfare. A group of M.I. (Mobile Infantry) troopers, along with Captain Carmen Ibanez, are sent to investigate, only to discover a Bug plot that threatens the very fate of everything on Earth. And Johnny Rico, now a general, is forced to join the fray in order to save his friends and the galaxy from a full-scale Bug infestation.

Unlike its predecessors, the plot to "Starship Troopers: Invasion" is pretty straight-forward science fiction warfare and lacks the vicious humor aimed at satirizing wartime values and military propaganda that marked its three predecessors. Despite that, there is some slight humor to be found here (of the tough-guy military variety and not satirical), and some decidedly course language (and some gratuitous nudity). Instead, "Invasion" seems more closely tied to "Aliens" in its presentation and characterizations. You also see a more prominent display of the "powered suits" made famous in the pages of Heinlein's original novel.

Characters are pretty thin and it's hard to separate some of them from one another, but it's true here that both prominent and stock characters alike get slaughtered viciously in some particularly gruesome ways (even though it's also true that the Bugs appear to suffer a much heavier body count than the humans do). (It's quite remarkable that the presentation and overall appearance of the Bugs here is still quite faithful to their presentation in Verhoeven's original - where they were first designed by special effects artist Phil Tippett - though they're more for cannon-fodder here, rather than a misunderstood indigenous species defending their home from hostile foreign invaders.)

Shinji Aramaki created a lean, mean, and focused Japanese-style animated feature with "Starship Troopers: Invasion." The film takes a little more inspiration from Robert A. Heinlein's original book (which is quite good, in my opinion, for the film, at least), but it's still very much in line with the legacy put forth by Paul Verhoeven's 1997 film adaptation. It's an ultra-violent, action-packed blast - nothing more, nothing less.

7/10

Reviewed by paul_haakonsen 6 / 10

Well worth watching for fans of the franchise...

Actually "Starship Troopers: Invasion" was a much needed injection to the "Starship Troopers" franchise after it had suffered with not so great sequels and much worse animated episodes. This 2012 installment to the franchise takes us back to the level of the first original movie, except it is a CGI animated movie, not a real live action movie.

The story is as to be expected from a "Starship Troopers" movie; lots of action, lots of bugs, lots of guns, and not too deep dialogue. A bug controlled ship is heading for Earth, and it is up to the mobile infantry to stop a bug invasion on Earth. But the psychic division is working on something top secret.

Despite it being an entertaining movie and good enough story, it was basically just a repeat of stuff from previous movies. There wasn't all that much innovation here, aside from the bug that controlled the ship and the newfound powers of Carl.

Something did puzzle me, with the vast size of the Federation, why are Carl, Carmen and Rico always, and I mean always, running into one another no matter what part of the universe a story takes place in? It is starting to get to the point where it is pathetically lame. Take the franchise and use some of the established characters if you have to use familiar faces, but these three running into each other again and again is just starting to wear thin. Introduce new faces and expand on the lore and story of the franchise, don't just have the new faces become cannon-fodder (which most of them sadly turns out to be).

And now that we are on the topic of the same characters running into each other again and again, it would have worked better if they had actually cast the original actors and actresses to do the voices for these repeat-appearing characters. It would have lifted up the believability a notch.

The CGI used in "Starship Troopers: Invasion" was great. I really loved the details in textures and all the small details that you'd notice if you are a 'real' fan of the franchise. However, personally, I do think that the nudity (despite it being CGI) was tacky and pointless, and the movie would have fared a bit better if they had opted not to have nudity in it.

"Starship Troopers: Invasion" is a great comeback for the "Starship Troopers" franchise, and it is a well worthy addition to any movie collection. However, despite the movie can be seen independently of the prior movies (live action and animated alike), I would suggest that you do watch them, to get up to speed with the lore and with the character's stories and motivations.

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