Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation Movie Review
Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation Review
"Starship Troopers 2: Hero of the Federation" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Phil TippettProducer : Jon Davison
Screenwiter : Edward Neumeier
Starring : Bill Brown,Richard Burgi,Kelly Carlson,Cy Carter,Tim Conlon,Sandrine Holt,Ed Lauter
Everybody likes a good fight, especially if it’s in a galaxy far, far away. And
on that score, the original Starship Troopers delivered. In spite of — nay, in
large part because of, its campy, tongue-in-cheek approach to the hard-boiled
war genre, the sheer high-impact, bug-crushing carnage of the 1997 release
captured the imaginations of America’s violence-drenched youth and raised
insect extermination to the level of high service to humanity.
Well, forget all that. Starship Troopers 2 is 91 minutes of tediously inane
straight-to-DVD boredom. Directed by Phil Tippet, the animation brainiac who
designed the Sean Connery-voiced dragon in Dragonheart, this unreasonably lame
sequel offers virtually nothing in the way of either animation or direction. Or
anything else, really.
A few years after the point where the first film left off (when, if you’ll
recall, Doogie Howser discovered an enormous “brain bug” in a cave and was
preparing to interrogate it), a platoon of troopers finds itself isolated on a
distant planet, surrounded by bugs, with no daylight in sight. (Someone must
have seen Pitch Black and thought a world of eternal darkness would be a cool
idea for this movie, too.) After about 10 minutes of hopelessly uninspired
pretend fighting, during which the cast takes turns repeating a few of the
first film’s best catch phrases, the survivors find their way to a small,
abandoned outpost in the middle of a desert plain.
The only remaining survivor in the place is a soldier named Dax, who has been
locked up for killing his previous commanding officer for reasons unknown.
Before long, a trio of unknown troopers shows up to join the fun. Only these
are no ordinary troopers: They’ve been infected by a new kind of bug that takes
over people’s bodies, and they’re planning to hitch a ride to Earth in hopes of
wiping out our species.
The rest of the film consists of a single scene in which a bug enters a person’
s mouth and turns him or her into a zombie. This scene repeats over and over
again, with different actors playing the roles of infector and victim, until
only two troopers remain. With only Dax and a hot chick left alive, the bugs
take over the compound, the chick gets away, and Dax stays behind for no reason
at all, getting needlessly overrun by the invading bug infestation.
The one standout performance of the film belongs to Richard Burgi, who plays
Dax. He has a naturally rugged charisma that comes across easily on camera. You
almost get the sense that, if this was a different film, Burgi’s performance
would have been interesting. Unfortunately, most of his lines are so trite and
stupid that it’s hard to enjoy any of it.
Oh, and there’s also about ten minutes of footage of Kelly Carlson (no, not
that chick from American Idol) running around naked, putting bugs in people’s
mouths. And that’s okay to watch, too.
If you liked the original, you’ll hate the sequel and everyone involved in the
making of it. Sure, the first Troopers was ridiculous, but it managed also to
be fun, surprising, brutal, and sexy in a way that convinced us to laugh along.
More importantly, things actually happened in that film. In this film, nothing
happens. Ever.
Reviewer: Robert Strohmeyer



