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Take Back The Planet.

2000



Battlefield Earth (2000)

Directed by 
Roger Christian    
  
Writing credits 
L. Ron Hubbard   (novel) 

 
Corey Mandell    
  
Cast (in credits order) 
John Travolta ....  Terl  
Barry Pepper ....  Jonnie Goodboy Tyler  
Forest Whitaker ....  Ker  
Kim Coates ....  Carlo  
Sabine Karsenti ....  Chrissie  
Richard Tyson ....  Robert the Fox  
Marie-Jos�e Croze ....  Mara  
Kelly Preston ....  Chirk  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Shaun Austin-Olsen ....  Planetship  
Michael Byrne ....  Parson Staffer  
Sean Hewitt ....  Heywood  
Michael MacRae ....  District Manager Zete  
Jim Meskimen ....  Blythe  
Christian Tessier ....  Mickey  
  
Produced by 
Jonathan D. Krane    
Elie Samaha    
Andrew Stevens   (executive)  
John Travolta    
  
Original music by 
Elia Cmiral    
  
Cinematography by 
Giles Nuttgens    
  
Film Editing by 
Robin Russell    
  
Production Design by 
Patrick Tatopoulos    
  
Art Direction 
Oana Bogdan    
  
Set Decoration 
Anne Gal�a    
  
Costume Design by 
Patrick Tatopoulos    
  
Makeup Department 
Ronald J. Rolfe ....  hair stylist  
  
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director 
Erick Adjuk ....  second second assistant director  
Penny Charter ....  second assistant director  
Walter Gasparovic ....  first assistant director  
Richard Martin (I) ....  second unit director  
  
Sound Department 
Eric Gotthelf ....  foley mixer  
  
Special Effects 
John Cornejo ....  digital compositor  
Steve Dellerson ....  visual effects producer  
Charles L. Finance ....  associate visual effects producer: post-
production  
Erik Henry ....  visual effects supervisor  
Matt Kelly ....  compositor  
Bill Pearson (I) ....  miniatures and special props supervisor  
Joe Viskocil ....  pyro supervisor  
  
Stunts 
Steve Lucescu ....  stunt co-ordinator  
Mark Riccardi ....  stunt double: Mr. Travolta  
  
Other crew 
Marie-Elaine Bailly ....  production co-ordinator  
Thomas Bartke ....  music transcriptor  
Tony Brazas ....  stand-in: Mr. Travolta  
Pierre Cheminat ....  assistant to publicist  
Jean Courteau ....  chief lighting technician  
Mike Flicker ....  music editor  
Gis�le Garneau ....  key dresser  
Pamela Godfrey ....  production spokeswoman  
Caleb J. Howard ....  technical director  
Adrian Knight (II) ....  location manager  
Brandon Lambdin ....  set production assistant  
Carl Lessard ....  graphic designer  
Erik Lundborg ....  orchestrator  
Massimo Nouhra ....  production financing  
Claude Par� ....  supervising art director  
Robert Stecko ....  camera operator: "a" camera  
Patrick Tatopoulos ....  creature designer  
Steven J. Winslow ....  assistant camera: Wescam camera
camera technician  
  
 
 
 
 

BATTLEFIELD EARTH
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 2000 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  * 1/2

In BATTLEFIELD EARTH, grown men get to dress up like Klingons having bad hair days, while uttering some of the silliest dialog this side of a bad 1950s sci-fi flick. The theater should be required to have signs warning customers: "Ye who enter in must be prepared to completely suspend disbelief." Although the film has a few nice, but too dark, special effects, the only reason to see the it is as a guilty pleasure, so you can laugh at John Travolta in an embarrassingly bad performance. His character laughs a lot, too - a hearty and silly "Ha. Ha. Ha. Ha," like a busted toy action figure whose voice chip is stuck in a loop.

Directed confusingly by Roger Christian (MASTERMINDS) and adapted for the screen by first-timer Corey Mandell, the film is based, as most people know, on the science fiction novel of L. Ron Hubbard, the founder of the Church of Scientology. One can only hope the book was more intelligent than it is portrayed on the screen.

Earth, we learn, in 3000 AD will look a lot like 3000 BC, thanks to our having lost a 9-minute war with the Psychlos, an alien race who has no respect for "man animals" or our "puny sized planet." Earthlings have been reduced to cavemen, who worship the stars in the heavens as gods.

In an over-the-top performance, John Travolta plays Terl, the Psychlos' security chief for earth and the story's main villain. He is a slimeball who is hated by man animals and other Psychlos, as well. (You'll be forced to stare at the Psychlos' ugly pusses and dirty teeth in endless close-ups until you're ready to surrender.) Even Terl's superiors hate him. "Look up," a visiting mucky-muck tells him. "One day, you'll die. And when you end up in hell, it'll be a step up from this planet." Poor earth, which is mainly in ruins, gets dissed a lot in the movie.

The cinematography uses various shades of a slimy blue-green. The picture tries hard to look gross and succeeds. Just to make sure that no one is surreptitiously having a good time, there are some raw rat eating scenes tossed in to spice up the viewing.

Against this race of oppressors, a hero rises up to smite them down. He is Jonnie (Barry Pepper), a man animal whom Terl foolishly hooks up to the Psychlos' learning machine. The Psychlos, who act like imbeciles, think man animals are so stupid that they can't even be taught how to operate simple machinery and are good only for manual labor.

Try to count the number of films that the movie borrows from liberally. First and foremost is STAR WARS, but others include BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID, STAR TREK, BRAVEHEART, BLADE RUNNER, PLANET OF THE APES, MAD MAX and Wagner's "The Ring" series of operas. But whereas the originals are engrossing, BATTLEFIELD EARTH is long and tedious.

As a guilty pleasure, nothing is better than BATTLEFIELD EARTH's totally preposterous concluding segment. As the cavemen keep saying "Piece of cake," they become overnight experts in everything from advanced fighter pilot skills to nuclear engineering. Wow, can those guys ever crack a book. All of that time in the cave must have softened their brains into veritable cranial sponges for knowledge, as they absorb facts at light speed.

Whatever you do, try not to laugh. It may spoil the effect for those around you. They may be buying the story, hook, line and stinker -- I mean sinker.

BATTLEFIELD EARTH runs a long 1:57. It is rated PG-13 for violence and would be acceptable for teenagers. Given the movie's dark intensity, I'd be careful about taking kids under 13.

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Have I seen this movie: Yes
And what did I think: I was deeply disappointed by Battlefield Earth. I was expecting an exciting sci-fi shoot-em up, save the earth thriller in the grand tradition of Independence Day. What I got was a rather boring movie where I kept looking at my watch to see when it would be over. The movie is devoid of any kind of excitement, has a terrible script, plot holes, and lifeless characters. The film just dragged on and on with way too many slow motion action shots. Heck, it took almost two minutes of the main human crashing through plates of glass after being shot. I didn't like the aliens which were called Psychlos, a stupid name to begin with. They were from where else... Planet Psychlo, which of course we didnt know exactly where it was. The aliens looked like Jamaican Klingons and were more pathetic then evil. I thought John Travolta would be playing this fearsome leader bent on global domination. Instead, he plays this security chief stuck at his job on Earth, and he wants to be able to mine gold. Travolta really hams it up here and the supporting cast is not much better. After the movie was done, I thought of so many plot holes. For instance, the Psychlos said the human race was conquered in 9 minutes. I guess we didnt bother to fight since the Fort they go to is stocked with military weapons never used. Also after a 1000 years, everything works in tip top shape as well. The Pscychos said they knew everything about the human race, yet for some reason they didn't know that Fort Knox existed stocked with Gold. They didn't think that humans would be even able to mine for gold, even after reading about all our accomplishments. Heck, they didnt even know what humans liked to eat, which set up one of the more stupider parts of the film. I never read L. Ron Hubbard's book, but I hope it was better then the movie. I hope this isn't the start of a slew of bad summer action flicks. Avoid Battlefield Earth, or you'll think a 1000 years have passed since you went into the theater.

I give Battlefield Earth 1.5 out of 5 stars
Review written May 17, 2000
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