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| | #46 (permalink) | |
| The Enigma of Steel Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Indiana
Posts: 832
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
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| | #47 (permalink) |
| Medium Rare Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Georgia
Posts: 253
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Well, I think he had an idea and was serious about presenting it to the public in the form of a novel. That is what most science fiction authors do. They have an idea and mold it around a story idea that they also have. That doesn't mean they are hoisting a banner of military oligarchy and shouting "Revolution!" They are simply telling a provocative story. |
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| | #48 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 3,182
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
Thats what surprisingly many people dont get and thats exactly why i loved this book. Just cause he made a book of the idea and wrote a damn fine book doesnt mean he is as you put it " hoisting a banner of military oligarchy and shouting "Revolution!" Thats why i almost laugh at the so called crititcs who diss the book for being pro military and faschistic and so on. | |
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| | #49 (permalink) | |
| Noise Warrior Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Isle of Wight
Posts: 288
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
ST carries a warning that is very apt in the present world political climate if a "free" society is under threat it must be very careful in how it defends itself against the aggressors or it too could turn into an extremist state where civil liberties and rights take second place to the (private) agenda of the government. | |
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| | #50 (permalink) | |
| Medium Rare Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Georgia
Posts: 253
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
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| | #51 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: New Jersey
Posts: 14
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers First, I have to mention that I hadn't read fiction in years. I am a huge fan of ST - The Movie. When I read the criticism of this book on wikipedia as well as reading someones complaint of how the movie butchered the book.... well.. I HAD to read this book! One thing I observed that I think counters a lot of criticism of the book is how the whole thing is put togethor and told. This book reads like a true autobiography of someone that served in the military. If you changed some of the settings (and aliens), I don't think anyone could tell the difference between a real autobiography (of a soldier/sailor) and fiction. Whether this was Heinlein's intent or not, I thought that aspect was Brilliant. The whole book is a potrayal of one man as seen through HIS eyes and mind. I see a lot of criticisms of the book as complaints similar to "...well this is how I would have written it...". Well you DIDN'T write it! Its the life if a career military grunt/officer. The man is risking his life and killing for his job. Of course there is going to be a more positive spin from Rico in justifying (truthfully OR self deluding) his life/career. I think Heinlein also does some justice in NOT potrying everything as 'perfect'. For example, while it is always a military person in charge, Rico also brings up how there are politicians who simply did their minimal service in order to run for office. I didn't get the impression that those people are looked at as 'pure' military by other veterans. While Heinlein doesn't dwell on the 'less than perfect', he at least shows that it exists. One thing I noticed that seemed interesting is mention in the book how fighting is inevitable from the human race and that only one can win. It sounded a bit imperialistic. I wonder if in addition to the bugs correlating to communists (as someone mentioned earlier), but if that comment was also corelating to political ideals (democracy vs communism). I think anything else I would add is repeating was has already been said. |
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| | #52 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Sweden
Posts: 3,182
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers A very good post Beerclark. Sadly what you said isnt repeating cause many people cant get past the military view in the book. Very few has wrote well thought post like yours. Its interesting reading your post cause i have thought similer thoughts specially about how the fighting was ineviteable from the human race and that only one can win. I found that typicly human. War is the only way and victory is a must. They didnt even try to communiate to the Bugs in some way codes or anything. |
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| | #53 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: USA:
Posts: 26
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers I have never read Heinlein, but I became interested in him when I read recently that he, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke, are considered the pillars of modern science fiction. I have only read what I have been introduced to by my Dad, and that is Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke. After reading posts here I see he was of the school might makes right. I would tend to put Asimov and Clarke in the school of love is answer. I find it interesting that people whether from one school or the other admire his ability to write, regardless. Clearly this says the the two schools are not a matter of intelligence. I am somewhat of a scientist, by no means a rocket scientist, and so many scientists lack an education in the humanities, which Jacob Bronowski and C.P. Snow have pointed out is dangerous. My values have always come from their philosophic writing, Science and Human Values, and The Two Cultures. Capital punishment? What does Bronowski say about that? He says we fear the murderer in ourselves and end up commiting murder. Anyway very intelligent political analysis in this thread, makes me realize how much I have to learn about politics. I currently feel you can't go wrong with Einstein, and he said a truly advanced civilization would be vegetarian. I don't know, I love meat, perhaps he was more concerned with how cattle can convert a green pasture into mud that won't grow anything for a century if rains enough (that is they are not an effecient means of a viable ecology, perhaps). Or perhaps he meant respect of all life, intelligent or otherwise. I don't even kill spiders in the house anymore, even if my sister hates them. I let them crawl onto a piece of paper and release them outdoors, perhaps it is good for karma, or perhaps letting them be in their natural habitat is good for the Earth, I don't know, but I do know the earth is the only support system we have currently got, and evolution set things up a certain way, and I am not going to mess with it. |
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| | #54 (permalink) | ||
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,203
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
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| | #55 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Colorado
Posts: 151
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Anyone else notice how RAH seems to leave out something critical to how things work or won't work in his books? the society in ST is all well and good, however the idea that it works beacuse all the people with fighting spirit are now in the government didn't hold. I'm aware the he mentioned that the military run state worked because, well, it worked. was fairly close to how things really go on, but beyond revolution? I don't think so. the rules RAH had in the book were that you didn't becoime a citizen of the state unless you did a term of military service. this does not mean that all the people wishing to change the world joined up. just the ones who thought they might like to change the world, could handle following orders, could get the job done as required by the current regime, and didn't die trying. this did not mean that someone who left, didn't sign up in the first place, or just didn't care to join the military in the first place. didn't have the fighting spirit, intelligence, or force of will to "cry revolution" and pull it off. if the government doesn't annoy the masses to the point where they decide to do something different to make life better, then the government is really doing its job. when the majority of the people are starving in the streets, dying because of unopposed invasions, or even having their creature comforts taken away (by their personal defiinition) THEN the cry of revolution is made. (my take at least) personally I liked the book, still get tickled by the 30 second bomb. yeah I saw the comments about society in general, and the pictures he painted about why "this" won't work, or "how in all the holies did THAT work?" (specifically comment about 90% dead headers and 10% combatants in wet navy) wonder if he wasn't a navy man in Korea..... (if he was he was probably a morale officer), but overall I thought it was a decent book about the workings of the average mind of the average person, doing an average job, and being just a little brainwashed about the perfection of society and his place in it. The Movie. I don't care about political satire etc.... if yer gonna name a movie after a book, do a little bit more than grab the stupid names!!!!!. more books than I care to think about have been butchered in that way. some more subtely than others. (Dracula.... a LOVE STORY? HUH!?!?!?!!??!?!) they could have at least done SOME kind of a nod towards the equipment heinlein described (in as close to loving detail as anything I've seen him describe) okay enough of my preachiness for now. |
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| | #56 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: New Jersey
Posts: 14
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Connavar: Thanks Ghost: It is a shame that Verhoven (ST Movie Director) took so little from the book. According to IMDB, he was even a little insulting to the book. He claimed to have gotten too bored to finish it. But from what I understand, he was writing a screenplay about an interstellar bug war and someone pointed out to him that his story was similar to ST so he decided to combine them. What are you going to do though... its hollywood! |
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| | #57 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Colorado
Posts: 151
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers me? dream of learning how to CGI a few minutes of scenes into the (loosely defined) movie. have been thinking about it over the years, just don't have enough skill in computers (or relevant programs) to pull together what I think would have at least nodded to RAH. The scene I have in mind is where the 'kids" are getting their butts handed to them by the bugs at night, add in several minutes flipping back and forth between the ground troops tripping over their tails and cgi'd insertion of a platoon from orbit (chapter 1 stuff in moving pictures). when casper is alone against bugs, with a holy leg, the part where they hit black fast extend to a TRUE cap trooper using a bug to break some of his momentum, lol, TRUE death from above.... pull back and see the platoon using described heavy infantry weapons to double duty, kill bugs, and make pickup. then fade off to the rest of the movie. might have added a couple million to the bottom line, but would have had about ten times the return from RAH and sci-fi fans seeing someone actually tap SOMETHING straight from a legend, they botched Asimov's three laws, Bicentennial man and a human ordering a robot to help them die?!?!?!?!?!? or in I robot, a robot calculating percentages on who would be likeliest to survive so disregard the person more likely to die?!?!?!? sorry bee in bonnet about Hollywood destroying the pinnacles of legendary author's works. don't even want to list possible horror stories in case someone decided it would be a good thing to run with. sigh, and people wonder why I despise TV, and seem to be snippy on leaving watching movies... |
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| | #58 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: USA:
Posts: 26
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
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| | #59 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,203
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Hmmm... Not quite sure I'd describe him in that fashion, either... However, love is a theme Heinlein explores quite a bit in his work, from man/woman bisexuality to learning to love others enough to sacrifice oneself in possibly the most difficult way... giving up one's own identity to make things better for the whole (Double Star)... |
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| | #60 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: USA:
Posts: 26
| Re: Robert Heinlein: Starship Troopers Quote:
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