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Battlefield Earth
 
 

Battlefield Earth (2000)

Starring: John Travolta, Forest Whitaker Director: Roger Christian Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Format: DVD
2.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (449 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

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When Battlefield Earth was released in May 2000, this inept sci-fi epic qualified as an instant camp classic, prompting Daily Variety to call it "the Showgirls of sci-fi shoot-'em-ups." Other reviews were united in their derision, and toy stores were left with truckloads of Battlefield Earth action figures that nobody wanted. As the film's star and coproducer, John Travolta must have felt an urge to enlist in the witness protection program.

Recklessly adapted from the novel by sci-fi author and Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard and set in the year 3000, the film is no worse than many cheesy sci-fi flicks, but the sight of Travolta as a burly, dreadlocked alien from the planet Psychlo provokes unintentional laughter from first frame to final credits. As Terl, the Psychlo security chief who conquers Earth and hatches a secret scheme to steal all the gold from Fort Knox (which sits conveniently in wide-open vaults), Travolta hams it up as if he knows he's in a camp-fest. (In a cameo as a long-tongued Psychlo seductress, Travolta's wife, Kelly Preston, only adds to the absurdity.) Barry Pepper (the praying sharpshooter from Saving Private Ryan) tries his best to convey charisma as Jonnie, the human slave who leads an uprising against Terl's tyranny, but he's adrift in a foolish plot that makes even smart humans look stupid.

The decrepit look of a dreary future is convincingly established (the ruins of Washington D.C. recall Logan's Run on a grander scale), but in the wake of its ludicrous climax, the best that Battlefield Earth can hope for is a Dune-like fate: it might improve in a longer director's cut--but that's wishful thinking. --Jeff Shannon

Product Description
In the year 3000 john travolta leads the alien captors of earth against human freedom fighters struggling to take back the planet in this explosive eye-popping science-fiction extravaganza. Special features: storyboard montage: 2 threatrical trailers and 2 tv spots: and much more. Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 05/10/2005 Starring: John Travolta Forest Whitaker Run time: 117 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Roger Christian

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Customer Reviews

449 Reviews
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4 star:
 (46)
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 (55)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.4 out of 5 stars (449 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars "Battlefield Earth" drinking games!, January 5, 2005
By Richard Goddard (Hillsborough, NJ) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

Finally, a "Plan 9 from outer space" for our own generation. One simply cannot derive greater campy fun from this film, which has spawned a thousand drinking games! Here are some of my favorites:

***** LEVERAGED DOUBLE-WORD DRINKY-DRINK *****
Take a swig whenever someone says one of those silly hyphenated nouns (e.g. man-animal, crap-lousy), Double-swig whenever you hear the word "Leverage"

***** LOGIC-LAPSE QUAFF-FEST *****
Take a drink whenever confronted with a point in the plot that makes no sense whatsoever - e.g.

- that this group of savage men can learn to fly fighter jets in a day or two; well, OK, I can suspend disbelief for that, but...

- that the aforementioned jets can operate after 1000+ years of sitting idle

- the part where Johnny Goodboy (LOL) is running around without air for, say, 15 minutes

- that the Psychlos call themselves "Psychlos" but call these humans from Earth "man-animals"

- when the "man-animals" are sent to go mine gold, none of these super-smart Psychlos notice that they've apparently mined perfectly smelted gold bars

- when Johnny goes into the library, he peruses 1000+ year old books with fully intact covers and pages; they simply just need a bit of dusting

- that these super-intelligent and strong Psychlos, who conquered Earth in 9 (Yes, 9!) minutes, can barely walk in their silly "Kiss" hand-me down boots and can hardly grasp anything with their big floppy rubber gloves

- while observing the stranded man-animals catching rats to eat, the Psychlos assume rats must be their favorite food, even though there were no other edibles to catch

***** SILLY-QUOTE CHUG-A-LUG *****

Take a sip whenever confronted with nuggets of wisdom such as these:

"I am going to make you as happy as a baby Psychlo on a straight diet of kerbango."

"It will go straight to the home office!"


*For the hardcore kerbango-fan, while drinking, tilt your body at a 30-degree angle for no apparent reason, just like the cinematographer did with the camera!
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36 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A completely ludicrous film, August 6, 2002
By "qmlhcb" (Michigan) - See all my reviews
When you sit down to see a movie, you know suspension of disbelief is a must. Especially when the film is a science fiction. You know a lot of things in the movie can't really happen, but you can let yourself believe you can for those two hours you're immersed in another world. Unless, of course, the movie is too ludicrous and everything that happens screams disbelief. Battlefield Earth has enough unbelievable situations for three terrible movies. (Warning, minor spoilers ahead).

The premise of the film asks you to accept that a supreme alien race conquered Earth in 9 minutes, and then for 1,000 years have reaped the land for natural resources, namely gold. So a civilization so advanced it can take control of a planet so quickly, hasn't found all the gold on Earth yet? And hasn't even found Fort Knox yet? And they don't have a clue that humans are intelligent enough to operate mining equipment (They laugh at the thought of humans being able to do any work), yet they live in the ruins of Denver, surrounded by obvious signs of an intelligent race which they enslaved. At one point in the film, even, these humans, who have been forced to live in caves or cages, find an army base filled with still working planes and weapons, and learn how to operate everything as good as any experienced pilot or soldier, in only a few days. I could go on; these are just the tip of the iceberg.

Besides the ridiculous leaps of belief the movie asks you to make, there is more to despise here. For example, the pacing is atrocious. In the first 5 minutes of the movie, you meet Jonnie (Barry Pepper) as he returns to his home tribe, says a few words to the woman we're told he's romantically involved with, gets in a fight with the head of the tribe about how they should venture out of their caves, and leaves. The film doesn't show us how they live, explore their culture, examine the relationship Jonnie has neither with the head of the tribe nor with his girlfriend, or even give Jonnie any in depth characterization. Instead, the whole movie moves so fast, we don't know these characters any better then the extras without any speaking lines.

However, there are a few things to admire in this film. Primarily, there are some beautiful scenery shots of mountains, fields, and cities overgrown and taken back by the wilds. There are even a few good ideas peppered throughout the film. Just don't blink, you might miss them.

If you're not at all fussy about intelligent (or even somewhat believable) science fiction, or character development, or even acting (a can of worms I didn't open, John Travolta is terrible as the bad alien Terl), then Battlefield Earth might be worth a quick glance. Otherwise stay away. Stay far, far away.

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48 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars You want plot holes? Here you go., May 20, 2000
By "messiah13" (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
#1 Johnny Goodboy used a Psychlo learning machine, and learned "Euclidean" Geometry. I guess the psychlos were fans of the ancient Greeks.

#2 The tribes lived in caves in Denver for 1000 years, but one spoke with a heavy British accent.

#3 They had no system of writing any more, but after using the learning machine that taught him Pyschlo, Johnny knew how to read English

#4 It took the psychlos 9 minutes to defeat the combined armies, navies, air force, marines of the USA, China, Russia, and England etc... but it took 9 minutes for a dozen cavemen to defeat them?

#5 If the psychlos were so smart that they had a learning machine, then how come they couldn't learn English, but needed to teach Johnnie their language? Also, the ancient teacher from another alien race spoke to Johnnie in English.

#6 The Styrofoam creatures at the mini golf place looked mighty nice after 1000 years. I guess styrofoam really doesn't biodegrade.

#7 The Psychlos have advance mapping capabilities that allowed them to detect a tiny bit of gold from a earthquake in the rocky mountains, but they couldn't find Ft. Knox in 1000 years. It took cavemen a few days to figure that out.

#8 The library of congress is topped with the capitol dome.

#9 The Psychlos fought a war, albeit a short one with humans with aircraft, yet thought dogs were smart and humans were unable to operate mining equipment.

#10 The Pyschlos taught the most rebellious human to use their flying equipment, which is dumb in and of itself. How did they beat us in the first place? But then, he sneaks off in the craft for a week, cruising to Ft. Knox, Washington D.C., and Ft. Hood, Texas, and they don't notice it or track it with radar.

#11 In Ft. Hood Texas, the rebels arrive 1000 years after humanity was decimated, to find that the power was still on. I guess the military paid their electrical bills way in advance. Not only was the power on, but there were harrier jets with full gas tanks, missiles, and a flight simulator that was still functioning and turned on when they arrived. Oh, and there was a nuclear bomb left out in the open for them to grab too. How convenient.

#12 The rebels, aside from Johnny did not get the learning machine experience, but he was able to train them to read English in seven days. He got them enough training time each in the flight simulator for them to learn battle tactics and to fly advanced military aircraft to beat the evil aliens in battle. Let's see. 10's of thousands of air force personnel who trained for years and years were vanquished by the Psychlos, but 3 dozen hillbillies with a week of training in English, battle tactics, and flying were able to destroy them without breaking a sweat.

#13 When Johnny is shot with a pyschlo radar gun, he goes through 5 or 6 plate glass windows without getting a cut.

#14 The night they defeat the aliens, Johnnie's hair is all thrashed around and going this way and that, after a hard night of battle, he emerges with clean hair that is nicely braided in front.

#15 The books in the Denver library were still very readable after 1000 years of exposure to atmosphere.

#16 The buildings still had glass in the windows 1000 years later.

#17 Cars were slightly rusted, but still had their original paint job from 1000 years ago.

#18 Cars still had air pressure in their tires after a millenium of disuse.

#19 The nuclear bomb had no casing, but the rebels didn't show signs of exposure.

#20 The humans instead of mining the gold, got bars of it from Ft. Knox. I was surprised that John Travolta's character noticed, but Johnny said that they melted it down into bars for them. Yeah, from what foundry near by?

#21 Johnny was tortured by the Psychlos, testing if he could survive for 4 minutes without oxygen which they didn't breathe. He runs through the place, and there are several fires burning despite the lack of oxygen. I guess the laws of chemistry are suspended in the 31st century.

So...the guy who said the film had no plot holes apparently possesses quite a few holes in his own thinking. This is not the kind of stuff on which you base suspension of disbelief - this is inexcusable tripe from talentless filmmakers (and a hack scifi writer who was the laughing stock of his generation) aiming only to cash in on the success of numerous superior films. And since when is scifi poorly received in the press? Movies like "The Matrix," "Star Wars," and "Pitch Black" all received well-deserved accolades. The reviews for "Battlefield Earth" have been resoundingly negative not due to any religious bias but due to the simple fact that it's an ineptly filmed, poorly acted, incoherent, derivative attempt to milk genre fans of their money.

But, judging from the dismal box office receipts, it's nice to see that the proposed sequel will probably never happen. Thank God.

Now go watch some real scifi flicks, and hey, go read some books by Heinlein, Campbell, or Bradbury, a group of writers who each possessed more talent in their pinky fingers than L. Ron Hubbard exhibited through a career propelled by some of the worst prose ever produced. Scientologist or not, the guy just plain sucked.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars It really is that awful. 4%
I heard about this movie when it came out nine years ago and haven't seen it until last week. I remember seeing stuff about it when it was released and everyone rightfully said... Read more
Published 14 days ago by Duckman

1.0 out of 5 stars Worst film ever
This movie definitely deserves the title: Worst Sci-fi movie ever created. It had terrible acting by an A-List actor(John Travolta), over a billion plot holes, and weird camera... Read more
Published 1 month ago by AM

1.0 out of 5 stars Abysmal in every sense of the word
For this movie, I would KILL to be able to score NO STARS!!

I don't know who came up with the notion that this movie was **supposed to be funny! Read more
Published 3 months ago by kori1701

1.0 out of 5 stars wow, I can't believe a movie can be this horrible
To quote my good friend's uncle "Battlefield Earth was crap" I don't need to say much more about this god-awful movie except that it's perfect for a laugh if you are down.
Published 4 months ago by Benjamin M. Cady

1.0 out of 5 stars book good, movie BAD
Anyone who has read the book just knows there would be no way to make a movie of it. So why try? The book was the first science fiction I ever read and I loved every single far... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Y. Rhoton

5.0 out of 5 stars Intergalactic awefullness at it's best!!
Don't care what anyone says out there. This movie was great in it's right and is just plain fun to watch. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Carson Hines

5.0 out of 5 stars Battlefield Earth rocks! Put simply!
I had loads of negative thoughts going through my head when I first saw Battlefield Earth. People rave that this is one of the worst movies ever and that it was a piece of junk... Read more
Published 7 months ago by G. Watson

3.0 out of 5 stars Plan 9 From Outer Space, Move Over
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1.0 out of 5 stars Riff away!
I was so happy to find this piece-o-turd for about a buck and a half at a yard sale. Now I can download the Riftrax and enjoy listening to the former MST3K pros tear it to shreds.
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