First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"[addressing a reporter] Let me tell you something: I'm from Buenos Aires, and I say "Kill 'em all!""
"[eulogizing Dizzy Flores] Somebody asked me if I knew the difference between a citizen and a civilian. I know now. A citizen has the courage to make the safety of the human race their personal responsibility. Dizzy was my friend. She was a soldier. But more than that, she was a citizen of the Federation."
"[to Rico at a party] Figuring things out for yourself is the only freedom anyone really has. Use that freedom."
"Listen up! I expect the best and I give the best. [opens pod and pulls out a beer keg] Here's the beer. [everybody cheers. opens another pod with sports gear and music equipment] Here's the entertainment. [throws football] Have fun. That's an order."
"Hold here! Hold what you got!"
"[to Rico and Carmen after the Brain Bug is finally captured] We've got one of their Brains now. Pretty soon we'll know how they think. One day it will all be over. And everyone will forget that this was the moment. This was when it turned. It wasn't the mighty fleet, it wasn't some fancy new weapon. [they see the now-Private Zim being carried by the soldiers] It was a drill instructor named Zim, who captured a Brain."
"Dizzy Flores: [placating Rico after he fights Xander Barcalow over Carmen] Mobile Infantry and Fleet don't mix."
"Sky Marshall Diennes: [addressing the UCF Federal Council as it agrees to declare war against the Bugs] We must meet this threat with our valor, our blood, indeed with our very lives to ensure that human civilization, not insect, dominates this galaxy now and always!"
"When Paul Verhoevenâs Starship Troopers originally hit cinemas in 1997, the reviews were scathing. The Los Angeles Timesâ Kenneth Turan argued that the Dutch director of Robocop, Total Recall and Basic Instinct had delivered a space flick ârigorously one-dimensional and free from even the pretense of intelligenceâ, even suggesting that the film-maker had preserved the âfascist utopianismâ of the 1959 Robert A Heinlein novel that it had been based on. âTroopers takes us to a militaristic future where video bulletins encourage young people to âJoin the Mobile Infantry and save the worldâ,â wrote Turan. âSchools teach that âviolence is the supreme authorityâ and nothing solves problems with the efficacy of ânaked force.ââ The Washington Post described Verhoevenâs tone as âso inconsistent that itâs impossible to decide whether heâs sending up the Third Reich or in love with itâ."
"âItâs a very rightwing book,â the director told Empire magazine. âAnd with the movie, we tried, and I think at least partially succeeded, in commenting on that at the same time. It would be âEat your cake and have it.â All the way through we were fighting with the fascism, the ultra-militarism. All the way through I wanted the audience to be asking, âAre these people crazy?â"
"These days Starship Troopers sits easily alongside Verhoevenâs other sci-fi cult classics, Robocop and Total Recall, in a fabulous pantheon of futuristic, satirical silliness. Yes, these movies are violent, bloody, over-the-top and often hammily acted, but the director is very much in on the joke. Only an outsider like Verhoeven could have made films that overtly criticised the knuckleheaded excesses of 1980s and 90s American action cinema, yet somehow did a better job of delivering the eraâs trademark trashy bombast than Hollywood itself."
"Like his RoboCop, Verhoeven uses television clips and fake advertisements to take shots at society. But where RoboCop uses these moments to skewer Cold War politics and the American automotive industry, the ones in Troopers are more pointed. They are satirical extremes of military propaganda, showing happy citizens (not civilians), shots of children joyfully holding guns, all while pushing for enrollment into Federal Service. The ads dovetail into the depiction of a Nazi-like regime that is embraced and is working. The allusion to Nazism is so prevalent and over the top - from costuming to the use of a Nazi Eagle like symbol - that it clearly is satire to show the dangers of extremist policies, which somehow blew right past the critics of the day. Militarism is another victim of Verhoeven's critical eye. There is no plan for the Federation forces. They are told to go in and kill anything with more than two legs, and when that invariably goes sideways they simply bring in more soldiers. The graphic scenes of the dead are an unwavering display of the horrors of war, a visual representation of the dangers of unchecked policy. The real kicker comes at the end. Whereas other films would have the main characters learn about the dark side of their leadership, even opting to fight against it, Starship Troopers' protagonists instead become part of the system, a vicious circle where they are now the stars in the propaganda."
"When Starship Troopers was released, critics panned it as a simplistic B-movie. Former film critic Janet Maslin called it âraunchiness tailor-made for teen-age boysâ in the New York Times. Itâs not a totally unfair description of a movie in which most scenes involve characters being sprayed with lime-green alien guts."
"Itâs hard not to draw a parallel with Americaâs 17-years-and-counting of engagement in the Middle East. What comes after the war? More war. This is a surprisingly radical message for a big budget ($100 million) studio film. âI donât think that will be done again, a movie like that,â Verhoeven admits over the phone. âItâs so surprising that this was made. I donât think anyone nowadays would dare to make a movie like that.â"
"Heinleinâs book has been seen to suggest that âthe best societies would be run by military dictatorships.â However, Verhoeven described Starship Troopers as âa movie about fascists who arenât aware of their fascism.â"
"In The New York Times, Janet Maslin complained that the film was nothing more than âcrazed, lurid spectacle.â Roger Ebert described it as âtotalitarian.â Reading those initial reviews, it seems as though Starship Troopers fell victim to Poeâs Law, the inevitability that at a certain point it becomes impossible to distinguish between an extreme example of a thing and a parody of that thing. Was Starship Troopers fascist propaganda or a parody of fascist propaganda? History has been somewhat kinder to Starship Troopers, as demonstrated by a slew of retrospective pieces that enthusiastically recognized it as âone of the most misunderstood movies everâ and a piece of social commentary that was âway ahead of its time.â"
"The layers that were thereâespecially with the most political movie, "Starship Troopers." It's never that we thought, We're going to do a representation of the United States as a metaphor. On the other hand, many elements of the movie came from American life ... it was all based on things that were vaguely there in American life. Especially in Texas and stuff like that ... but we never set out to do that. We needed something to put our point of view also there, you know? We don't think this is so great in anyway, this kind of, "let's go to war, let's kill.""
"If I tell the world that a right-wing, fascist way of doing things doesn't work, no one will listen to me. So I'm going to make a perfect fascist world: everyone is beautiful, everything is shiny, everything has big guns and fancy ships, but it's only good for killing fucking bugs!"
"VERHOEVEN: We were making some statements underneath the movie. The peripheral layer is interwoven with the main narrative. Itâs very much visible in the newsreels, which are all based on German fascism. I felt that this was talking about upcoming fascism, of course. Even the Germans, I would say 80 to 90 percent of the Germans, when all this happened, didnât think that it was happening. You see all the newsreels from the streets of Berlinâtheyâre all of very happy looking guys or girls. They were not aware of the threats, the diabolical deaths underlining the politics of the government. At that point I did not feel, in all honesty, that this was really something of a possibility in the United States. Otherwise we wouldâve been prophets."
"VERHOEVEN: We were paraphrasing elements of Riefenstahl movies. Everybody seemed to be sculpturesâI wanted these people to be like proto-Nazis, proto-Aryans. Their faces are kind of sculptures. So I thought to choose actors who would have streamlined faces, and certainly Johnny Rico has that. I think that was a necessity to make it believable to myself, the exaggeration. Thereâs no question, the bugs are fantasy and comic book-y! So if you use those kinds of elements, then you should be careful not to make your caricature around them completely real because they clash! If you have a caricature enemy you canât have a very realistic protagonist. I think it was necessary to make them two comic book figures, that was the idea."
"VERHOEVEN: It was too difficult; I think theyâve never seen a movie, a really big Star Wars kind of movie with this message. I donât think they were ready to accept the fact that the film was political. You can see that it was political 15-20 years later, with all thatâs happened. People have started to realize that a dominant layer of the movie was political. I thought it was very audacious what we did, but it didnât pay off very well."
"Starship Troopers has the most rock-dumb and dirt-simple plot of any science fiction feature in recent memory: Humanity is at war with gigantic creepy-crawlies from outer space, and a crew of determined youngsters must do battle with them."
"But try this: Watch Starship Troopers through the lens of somebody in the world in which itâs set. Imagine youâre watching this as a denizen of this legitimately scary society. As Republican candidates for president in 2016 went on about possibly repealing birthright citizenshipâa legal precedent established centuries ago that stands unquestioned in nearly every country in the New Worldâthis a movie from 20 years ago paints a perfect picture of what a society without it would look like. The filmâs newsreels and secondary characters repeat that âService Guarantees Citizenship,â meaning that if you voluntarily enlist in the military, you are granted citizenship. Nowhere in this sunny propaganda film of an action movie is there any mention of what not being a citizen means. This is a world where the fascists have already won. All society is geared around and idealizes the military. In the filmâs opening scenes, when Johnny and friends are finishing high school, weâre given glimpses into what this is doing to society. Their teachers are disfigured and unhinged war veterans. Michael Ironside plays an amputee who fills his studentsâ heads with war propaganda, flatly telling them that violence is the solution to political disputes, and maybe you should ask Hiroshima how being a peacenik works out, huh?"
"All fascism is about Us vs. Them at base. The most insidious regimes encourage this enmity not just toward other states, but toward other citizens. Itâs in the filmâs second reel, when the young cadets all head off to boot camp, that we get a few more details about who is the Us and who is the Them. Some of Johnnyâs fellow recruits want to do things like have children or start businessesâbut the government regulates all those things and only citizens are allowed, or at least fast-tracked to permission. If you arenât out there sacrificing your limbs for the militaryâs dumb wars, you donât deserve any of societyâs other benefits. One of the cadets gives a little shrugâperhaps the same one you did when they imposed the indoor smoking ban in your state. Thatâs just the way it is now."
"Even 20 years later, very few filmsâ endings have ever made me so completely question everything preceding them. It didnât dawn on me the third or even the fifth time I saw this film that the ending is showing us that this has been, as I said before, a propaganda film from the opening shots. Are we seeing a movie thatâs actually a dramatization of Johnnyâs rise, starring some pampered actor and some disingenuous representation of the bugs? Is this the To Hell and Back of the Starship Troopers universe, with Johnny Rico playing himself, just as Audie Murphy did? I wasnât old enough to âgetâ Starship Troopers when I first saw it. I found the violence shocking and off-putting as a teen. It wasnât until later that the realization of why itâs such an ugly movie caught up with me. As a child, Verhoeven lived next to a Nazi military base in the Netherlands that became a target of allied bombings. The violence in his science fiction films is always brutal, but itâs the sickening sense of the characters being enveloped in a callous world over which they have no control that draws a line under the bullets and blood."
"Itâs in Starship Troopers that Verhoeven does his job too well, essentially throwing a desperate warning at the audience that says, âThe right action movie director can even make fascism look just this cool, guys.â"
"Genocide doesn't compare to this."
"Prepare for Battle"
"The paratroopers of the future are here... and their enemies aren't HUMAN"
"When you battle 6 trillion enemies that will eat you alive, there are only two rules... EVERYONE FIGHTS. NO ONE QUITS."
"The only good bug is a dead bug"
"Mankind just became an endangered species"
"Forget the insecticide, bring on the nukes!"
"You can't step on these ones"
"In every age there is a cause worth fighting for, but in the future the greatest threat to our survival will not be man at all. Now the youth of tomorrow must travel across the stars to face an enemy more devastating than any ever imagined."
"They came to our planet, they destroyed our cities. But on November 7, they'll learn, they messed with the wrong species."
"This Fall, TriStar Pictures takes you to the front lines of the next frontier."
"Casper Van Dien â Pvt/Cpl/Sgt/2nd Lt Johnny Rico"
"Dina Meyer â Pvt/Cpl Dizzy Flores"
"Denise Richards â LT/CAPT Carmen Ibanez"
"Jake Busey â Private Ace Levy"
"Neil Patrick Harris â Colonel Carl Jenkins"
"Clancy Brown â Career Sergeant Zim"
"Seth Gilliam â Private Sugar Watkins"
"Patrick Muldoon â LT Zander Barcalow"
"Michael Ironside â Lieutenant Jean Rasczak"
"Marshall Bell â General Owen"
"Lenore Kasdorf â Mrs. Rico"
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.