Classical rocks
Andy Gilham
Andy.Gilham at BTINTERNET.COM
Tue Jan 6 17:05:46 EST 1998
On Tuesday, January 06, 1998 6:57 PM, J Strobridge
[SMTP:eset08 at HOLYROOD.ED.AC.UK] wrote:
> Andy Gilham writes:
>
> well I work in the English Literature dept (secretary, admittedly), have
> read a fair number of what are euphemistically called "the classics" in
> literature and also listen to Hawkwind.
Well there you go :) - I tend to assume that everyone on the net is a
computer person unless I know different!
>
> > ObMovie - _Starship Troopers_!!!
>
> you jest(?) For about 10 mins I thought there was going to be an
> intelligent film interwoven among the dross but I gave up that hope
> soon enough and my sympathy is entirely with the stick insects!
No, I thought it was superb. I know Verhoeven brings out strong feelings
both for and against, but I think he is a much more intelligent film-maker
than he is often accused of being. His penchant for graphic violence does
bring accusations of voyeurism - even I didn't see _Showgirls_, and I'm
generally a big fan of his - but if you're making a film where one of the
themes is the horror of war, then I think you have to show some of the
horror. Verhoeven himself isn't, I think, necessarily militaristic himself
- but the film does pose the question, can you be a pacifist when your life
is on the line? And the Californisation of world culture is one of the
film's many little jokes. It's got a lot of parallels with his earlier
_Soldier of Orange_, where Hauer and Krabbe started off as student pals and
ended up as embittered resistance fighters.
What was there not to like about it? (Unless you're a Heinlein fan who
doesn't like liberties being taken with the original? :)
-Andy
--
mailto:Andy.Gilham at btinternet.com; http://www.btinternet.com/~andy.gilham
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