Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars

Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars is a 2017 Japanese-American adult computer animated military science fiction film directed by Shinji Aramaki and Masaru Matsumoto and written by Edward Neumeier.[3] The film is a sequel to Starship Troopers: Invasion (2012) and the fifth installment of the Starship Troopers film series. It also marks the return of two original actors from the first film. Casper Van Dien reprises his role as Johnny Rico from the first and third films and Dina Meyer reprises her role as Dizzy Flores from the first film.

Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars
Teaser poster
Directed by
Produced by
  • Joseph Chou
  • Max Nishi
  • Tomi Hashimoto
Screenplay byEdward Neumeier
Based onStarship Troopers
by Robert A. Heinlein
Starring
Music byTetsuya Takahashi
Production
company
Distributed bySony Pictures Home Entertainment
Release date
  • August 21, 2017 (2017-08-21)
Running time
88 minutes
Country
LanguageEnglish

Plot

After the events of Invasion, Johnny Rico has been demoted to the rank of colonel and relocated to a Martian space station to train a new batch of troopers. Unfortunately, his squad is incompetent. Mars overall has low support for the war, seeing their planet unaffected by the bug conflict and even suggesting pulling out from the war. Because of their laid-back attitude, the denizens of Mars weren't ready when the bugs attacked. Unknown to everyone, Sky Marshal Amy Snapp executes her plans for power.

Snapp plans to destroy Mars while gaining popular support for doing it. She was well aware of the bug nest growing under Mars for some time but decides to take advantage of the bug attack to gain social and political support to scuttle the whole planet. She stages a fleet attack run on the Arachnid Quarantine Zone (AQZ) as a massive distraction. While no one notices, she plans to capture General Carl Jenkins, then fabricate a story in which the Federation was too distracted in the AQZ to save Mars and had to detonate a Q-Bomb (a planet destroyer whose power was demonstrated in the third film) to cleanse the bug threat, thus blaming Jenkins for the loss of Mars. However things don't go according to her plan.

During the bug attack, Rico and his team survive the initial assault and manage to land on the Mars surface. While the bulk of the Federation start their attack run on the AQZ, Snapp captures Jenkins and disrupts all communications between Earth and Mars. However, before he was captured, Jenkins telepathically reached out to Carmen Ibanez to come back to Mars. Because Ibanez and Jenkins are trusted friends, Carmen redirects her ship back to Mars. Meanwhile, during a bug attack, Rico's troopers are found by a rescue drop ship and everyone makes it on board except for Rico, whom the team presumes dead. When regaining consciousness, Rico sees his dead lover, Dizzy Flores, who was killed in the first film, who asks him to help stop the Q-Bomb. Unknown to Rico, Dizzy is a telepathic projection from Jenkins. While being beaten and drugged by Snapp, Jenkins manages to telepathically motivate Rico to help stop the Q-Bomb. Snapp then publicly announces the fall of Mars.

Rico's surviving troopers realize he is alive and return to save him. Upon reuniting, the team heads towards the weather control tower to disarm the Q-Bomb. They overload the tower's systems to improvise a massive explosive device to thin out the enemy forces. With the Fed-Net back online, public reception of Snapp turns negative. Carmen arrives with a drop ship and rescues Rico's surviving team. Once evacuated, the tower's destruction destroys the bugs within its blast radius.

In the aftermath, Jenkins breaks free from his captors and later returns to power. Rico is promoted back to the rank of general and leads the operation to reclaim Mars, while Snapp's treachery is revealed to the public.

Cast

  • Casper Van Dien as Colonel Johnny Rico, a demoted general stationed on the frontier planet of Mars forced to train rather hopeless soldiers.
  • Dina Meyer as Dizzy Flores, Rico's deceased lover who appears as a telepathic hallucination induced by Carl Jenkins to inspire him.
  • Justin Doran as General Carl Jenkins, Minister of Paranormal Warfare.
  • Luci Christian as Captain Carmen Ibanez, Captain of the John A. Warden.
  • Emily Neves as Sky Marshal Amy Snapp, a genius who wishes to destroy Mars for political and social support as Sky Marshal.
  • Scott Gibbs as Lieutenant Toshi Baba[4]
  • DeRay Davis as Corporal "One-Oh-One",[4] a trigger-happy explosives expert.
  • Juliet Simmons as Tami Camacho,[4] the only female in the squad.
  • Chris Gibson as Dutch Cantor,[4] a red-haired jokester who was known for always being dismembered in simulations. He was killed in real life the same way.
  • Greg Ayres as Private 2nd Class Geo Malik,[4] a quiet soldier with a penchant for science over combat who was also known for his distinctive goggles.
  • Leraldo Anzaldua as Sergeant Major Guy "Ratzass" Cunningham, now Rico's right-hand man after the events of Invasion. His rowdiness has settled down as his reputation grows throughout the Federation. As the first recurring character in the Starship Troopers series aside from Rico, Jenkins and Ibanez, he is unfortunately killed when jumping from a gunship, as his helmet air seal fails, freezing his body in freefall.
  • John Swasey as George Baba,[4] Lieutenant Baba's cousin and a pilot of Martian National Guard
  • Ashley Forshaw as Bug scream
  • Andrew Love as Fed Net Official
  • Kyle C. Jones as Daniel
  • Rob Mungle as Special Branch Chief Torek
  • Maggie Flecknoe as Sana the Ticket Agent[5]

Production

Following Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles (1999) and Starship Troopers: Invasion (2012), Starship Troopers: Traitor of Mars is the third CG animated project in the film series' universe. Screenwriter Edward Neumeier (who wrote the first three films and directed Starship Troopers 3: Marauder) returned to write this entry.

Development and news of the animated film, made to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the release of the first film, happened rather discreetly. News of the film emerged on June 5, 2017, when Sony Entertainment debuted a trailer online.

Release

The film was given a one-night release on August 21, 2017, via Fathom Events.[3] It released video on demand on August 22, 2017 and home media on September 19, 2017.

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has 4 reviews, 1 positive, and 3 negative.[6]

See also

References

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