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Worlds Without End Blog

Come Aboard, We’re Expecting You Posted at 12:59 AM by Paul Thies

Savalas

The Last StarfighterAs military recruitment propaganda films go, I find The Last Starfighter to be something of an odd duck.

The Last Starfighter is ostensibly a mid-1980’s escapist entertainment about a trailer park kid who’s conscripted into some kind of galactic corps, thanks to his prowess at video games. But underneath, the film is something more nefarious – namely, yet another misguided government attempt to ramp up recruitment in lieu of mandating a draft, by making military service seem fun and adventurous.

Directed by Nick Castle, who co-wrote Escape From New York with John Carpenter, The Last Starfighter burst onto the scene in 1984 and if memory serves was largely embraced and cherished by the filmgoing populace.

Having seen the film last night, I’m left with one burning question. Why?

I went in with high hopes. Castle, after all, was the man responsible for much of the New York humor of Escape From New York, including the character of Cabbie. For my money, anyone who can shoehorn Ernest Borgnine into a John Carpenter film deserves an Oscar nod.

Our hero, Lance Guest, the trailer park kid with the hot hand, spends much of the film in a state of reluctance. I don’t really blame him. I spent much of this film in a state of reluctance, too.

Lance doesn’t embrace being the last starfighter because it’s dangerous, and he only agrees to take the helm after much cajoling from the supporting cast. Robert Preston never worked so hard. (It was a long time after The Music Man, but Bob still had the sparkle.) Reluctant Hero

(SIDE NOTE: I spent a good deal of time worrying that I wouldn’t make it all the way through The Last Starfighter, which doesn’t bode well for my scheduled viewing of Battlefield Earth. I need your moral support. Please. The things I do for you people.)

Lance’s reluctance can be ultimately traced back to what I call “The Stubing Effect.” ™

The Stubing Effect refers to the fact that the Rylans (the good aliens Lance is conscripted to fight for) all look like Captain Stubing from The Love Boat.

Even the females.

When even the women in your film look like Captain Stubing from The Love Boat, you know you’re in trouble. Big trouble.

It’s the over indulgent use of Gavin MacLeod clones that I think is the downfall of this film. That, and the fact that the film is heavily laden with CGI. Now consider we’re talking 1984 CGI here. My Atari 2600 was pumping out better pixels than The Last Starfighter.

I could almost forgive the cheesy CGI. But the overuse of Stubing is too much.

The Stubing EffectNow, I love Gavin MacLeod as much as the next person. I’m a big fan of The Gav. Big fan. But somehow His Stubingness just doesn’t translate well into science fiction.

So I ask the United States Air Force (who undoubtedly was behind the making of this film), “As a recruitment film, do you really think female Stubings are the way to psychologically press gang young men into military service?”

Female aliens with male pattern baldness just don’t really impress me as a way to entice America’s youth to be all they can be.

Admittedly, I don’t remember much more from the film than that, reeling as I was from Stubingness. There was something called a Zando-Zan that looked like a crawfish taking potshots at Lance and his robot twin in a trailer park. And they finished the film with the dreaded Death Blossom starship attack. Beyond that, it’s a blur.

For my money, the better military recruitment film from 1984 was Red Dawn, featuring well-choreographed Patrick Swayze musical numbers. “Nobody puts Baby in a corner!”  Now isn’t that exactly the go-get ’em attitude you want from your armed forces?

DON’T FORGET – BATTLEFIELD EARTH CHARITY CHALLENGE!

Worlds Without End created a tribute fund through St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

Help us reach our charity goal. Make a donation, be my charity sponsor, and I promise I will sit through an entire viewing of Battlefield Earth, no matter how painful it gets.

5 Comments

whargoul   |   08 May 2010 @ 13:10

Wow, it’s been forEVER since I’ve even thought of that move. It was fun watching it as a kid in the 80’s, but thinking back on it now as an adult it barely seems watchable. I wonder if it’s something Hollywood would consider remaking?

jwbjerk   |   08 May 2010 @ 14:42

As a young teen "Last Starfighter" seemed moderately cool though my memory is pretty vague.I doubt "Battlefield Earth" is any worse, though opinions may vary.

Pierre   |   08 May 2010 @ 17:20

The Last Starfighter is part of my library, and one I regularly take out, for viewing of course. I have actually never thought of this movie as a conscription tool and definitely not with having the captain of the Love Boat lookalikes. I just relinquished these funny looking forms and special effects to the probable low budgetary requirements of the production (and beginnings of CGI). For me, this movie is a simple story about a simple guy who is obsessed with a video game when personal computers were starting to show up, and the game Alien Invaders was the rage. It was just a means to attract the young crowd to the theatres at a time when Return of the Jedi had finished its run, and so it has. The movie does end with an unreluctant Lance Guest with his teenage squeeze. Besides, the cameo appearance of an unrecognizable Marc Alaimo, Gul Dukat from another verse, re-attracts curiosity.With the thought of the lethal day fast approaching, I do offer my sincerest condoleances if you believed The Last Starfighter is bad! In lieu of a donation, would family accept flowers? 🙂

Pierre   |   08 May 2010 @ 17:58

Forgot to say the sequel Starfighter with Lance Guest is said to be released this year!

Paul   |   08 May 2010 @ 20:01

Pierre, I appreciate the well wishes. I am looking forward to Battlefield Earth as a test of human endurance. Of course, when the fateful day comes, I may have a different perspective. A sequel to Starfighter? Say it isn’t so! And Whargoul, I wouldn’t put a remake out of the question – after all, internet buzz says that remakes of The Black Hole and Flight of the Navigator are in the works, so anything’s possible.

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