I think it's trying to do what a few other Paul Verhoven movies (i.e. "Robocop", "Total Recall") did more successfully - be a deliberately wild, whimsical, and freaky action movie while at the same time cleverly parodying some aspects of American culture in order to give a clever satirical subtext to the mayhem.
^ The book is not a joke. The movie is. So if you read the book first, you're likely to be severely disappointed.
Me too.I never read the book (I am not a novel reader) but I just loved the movie. Very fun and entertaining.
Rubbish. The ordinary WWII-era German didn't view the Allies as an inhuman plague that had to be wiped out at all costs; they saw them as deeply misguided hypocrites trying to keep Germany down yet again. To toot my own horn, a much better analogy would be a Nazis vs. zombies movie. So we'd be/we are rooting for Nazis there. So? Not that hard or deep when the deck is stacked so strongly.I think its subversive aspect is not something contained in the story itself but in its effect on a general audience. It's subversive when it is able to whip up audience frenzy, who find themselves cheering on a society that is clearly fascist and simply demonizing its enemy, and who never once make the connections that this could have been a WWII propaganda film following Nazis who are threatened by frighteningly ugly "Westerners".
Slobbering Hick American Masses? Wasn't their hometown in Brazil or other South American Country?Rubbish. The ordinary WWII-era German didn't view the Allies as an inhuman plague that had to be wiped out at all costs; they saw them as deeply misguided hypocrites trying to keep Germany down yet again. To toot my own horn, a much better analogy would be a Nazis vs. zombies movie. So we'd be/we are rooting for Nazis there. So? Not that hard or deep when the deck is stacked so strongly.I think its subversive aspect is not something contained in the story itself but in its effect on a general audience. It's subversive when it is able to whip up audience frenzy, who find themselves cheering on a society that is clearly fascist and simply demonizing its enemy, and who never once make the connections that this could have been a WWII propaganda film following Nazis who are threatened by frighteningly ugly "Westerners".
And here's the real crux of the matter, imho: that the movie wants to have it both ways. The producers sought to make money off what Verhoeven sees as the slobbering, hick American masses by having endless battles and a rah-rah upbeat ending, but he also threw in a few half-assed instances of fascist imagery for the more educated. This way, the masses get their peppy violence fix, and the smarter cookies get to look down their noses at them and laugh at their lack of sophistication. It just comes across to me as lazy pandering to two groups at the expense of what could have been a much more interesting and focused full-on satire.
To toot my own horn, a much better analogy would be a Nazis vs. zombies movie. So we'd be/we are rooting for Nazis there. So? Not that hard or deep when the deck is stacked so strongly.
And here's the real crux of the matter, imho: that the movie wants to have it both ways. The producers sought to make money off what Verhoeven sees as the slobbering, hick American masses by having endless battles and a rah-rah upbeat ending, but he also threw in a few half-assed instances of fascist imagery for the more educated. This way, the masses get their peppy violence fix, and the smarter cookies get to look down their noses at them and laugh at their lack of sophistication. It just comes across to me as lazy pandering to two groups at the expense of what could have been a much more interesting and focused full-on satire.
^ The book is not a joke. The movie is. So if you read the book first, you're likely to be severely disappointed.
The book is a joke, too. (Unless you'd like to argue?)
I meant the audience, not the characters.Slobbering Hick American Masses? Wasn't their hometown in Brazil or other South American Country?
It is about individuals, and there is a strong story, and it's good overall, but it isn't quite great, imo. There's a climactic battle sequence that just goes on and on and on, a good deal longer than it had any need to.@whoever asked me if I've seen Saving Private Ryan and so on, no not yet. Is it any good? If it's just plain violence, then I probably won't for several more years. I like storylines about individuals, not just big battle scenes for the gore.
I don't know if this was deliberate or not, my imagination or not...
I seem to remember that the flying bugs come out *after* the humans start aerial bombardment, the tank bug comes out after the humans start using tanks...
I thought the movie was subtly playing up the idea that humans are teaching the bugs how to make war.
Anyone else catch that? Did I hallucinate it?
Complex evolution through observation and sheer willpower?!I don't know if this was deliberate or not, my imagination or not...
I seem to remember that the flying bugs come out *after* the humans start aerial bombardment, the tank bug comes out after the humans start using tanks...
I thought the movie was subtly playing up the idea that humans are teaching the bugs how to make war.
Anyone else catch that? Did I hallucinate it?
You mean a Nazi v. zombie movie where the zombies were never human, were most likely minding their own business and then the Nazis instigated an excuse to conquer them for lebensraum?To toot my own horn, a much better analogy would be a Nazis vs. zombies movie. So we'd be/we are rooting for Nazis there.
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