Exactly. Therefore, the film plays the bugs as the good guys, the innocent victims who were only defending themselves.![]()
I don't think it's that simplistic.
The FedNet narrator said that the colonists "disregarded Federal warning", but what this exactly was, is unclear. We don't know what the Feds warned them *about*. Could have been just something like "that's a dangerous area, don't go there".
Checking out a script online says the colonists knew it was within the bug quarantine zone and further along it does say the bugs were there before the colonists set up shop.
In any case, there had to have been something else the bugs could have done to warn the colonists away, other than wholesale slaughter... The 'brain bugs' are intelligent, why didn't they say something? "Hey you, this is our land, get out"?
I don't recall either side making much attempt to communicate with the other, which is why I don't paint either side as good or bad.
Either way, it's not a guarantee two intelligent species will be able to communicate with one another easily at all, especially given humans are mammals and the bugs are seemingly insectoid (with smaller hive minds, given the Brain Bugs?)--two entirely different ways of being and thinking.
The only "communication" that goes on that I recall is a pyschic impression of what the Brain Bug feels after being captured--fear or pain or something along those lines.
No, I don't think the war had started yet.
Again, reading the script online, it looks like the war was in effect at essentially the start of the film.
So, at this point Humans were at war with the bugs, having military invading bug planets, when the Mormon colonists landed. It's also stated right from the start about the meteors supposedly coming from them--again, I say supposedly only because we never see the bugs using any technology that would be capable of doing something like that...