Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles

Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles

The DVD cover of Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles - The Complete Campaigns
Genre Military science fiction
Action
Dramedy
Developed by Richard Raynis
Duane Capizzi
Jeff Kline
Voices of Jamie Hanes
David DeLuise
James Horan
Bill Fagerbakke
Rino Romano
E.G. Daily
Trish Hicks
Nicholas Guest
Rider Strong
Alexander Polinsky
Steve Staley
Thomas Wagner
Irene Bedard
R. Lee Ermey
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 36 + 4 clip shows
Production
Executive producer(s) Paul Verhoeven
Richard Raynis
Producer(s) Audu Paden
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Verhoeven-Marshall
Foundation Imaging
Columbia TriStar Television
Adelaide Productions
Distributor Sony Pictures Television
Bohbot Kids Network (BKN)
Release
Original network Syndication
Original release August 30, 1999[1] – April 3, 2000
Chronology
Related shows Starship Troopers (film)

Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles is a CGI animated television series, based on the novel by Robert A. Heinlein and the 1997 film adaptation. The film's director, Paul Verhoeven, served as executive producer. It follows the exploits of the Mobile Infantry squad, "Razak's Roughnecks," during the SICON–Bugs War between a newly united humanity and an extraterrestrial race, known as the "Bugs," also sometimes referred to as Arachnids. The show focuses mainly on the Roughnecks' missions, rather than addressing the larger war.

The show was geared towards an adult-oriented science fiction audience without being too violent, mature or controversial for the Saturday morning age group. The series aired for one season on BKN beginning in August 1999 and in syndication in the United States and Canada. It was later picked up by the Sci-Fi Channel in the US and Teletoon in Canada. The entire series is available to be streamed on Crackle in the US, along with several Minisodes. Despite its short run, the series developed a cult following.

The show combines elements of Verhoeven's film and the original novel, such as the extraterrestrial race known as the Skinnies, powered armor suits and drop pods. The series also adds some original elements (e.g., the war starts on Pluto), while omitting the political aspects of the original work and film.

Synopsis

When the Mobile Infantry defeats an infestation on Pluto, the world is united as the Strategically Integrated Coalition of Nations (SICON) declares war on the insectoids.

The main story focuses on a group of troopers known as Alpha Team  otherwise known as Razak's Roughnecks  who are headed back to Pluto after Operation Pest Control.

After destroying Bug City on Pluto, SICON sights a giant Transport Bug. This reveals that the Bugs are not native to Pluto. They track it to the planet Hydora, which orbits a star in the Constellation Virgo and encounter a Brain Bug, an intelligent Bug that controls the other castes so they won't go insane and destroy each other. The Bugs are planning to take control of the entire universe and won't stop until the human race is extinct.

SICON attempts to set up a base on the planet Tophet, inhabited by a species nicknamed Skinnies. The Skinnies, however, have been enslaved by the Bugs to mine Xylon, a precious mineral used for Transport Bugs. The Mobile Infantry are able to destroy the Control Bugs overseeing the Skinnies and free Tophet, but the victory costs them their comrade Carl Jenkins, who has been put into a state of mental trauma. The Skinnies soon enlist in SICON to fight the Bugs, mainly due to their lack of interstellar travel technology.

SICON soon discovers the existence of the Bug homeworld Klendathu. They attempt to destroy the Bug Queen but she escapes, headed for Earth. Her Transport Bug is destroyed before she reaches the human homeworld, but she nevertheless makes it to Earth. With numerous battles on the home front and the arrival of Bug reinforcements, the battle had only just begun.

Campaigns

The series is divided into eight story arcs or "campaigns," with five episodes each. Each campaign takes place at a different location. In the DVD release, each campaign is on a single disk.

  1. The Pluto Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on Pluto.
  2. The Hydora Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on Hydora, which is almost entirely covered by water.
  3. The Tophet Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on Tophet, a desert planet which is home to the Skinnies.
  4. The Tesca Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on the jungle moon of Tesca Nemerosa.
  5. The Zephyr Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on a frozen asteroid.
  6. The Klendathu Campaign (5 episodes) Takes place on the Bugs' home world Klendathu.
  7. Trackers (5 episodes) 1st takes place on the journey from Klendathu to Earth. The others are recaps. 4th has Rico floating through space. 5th investigates Razak.
  8. The Homefront Campaign (5 episodes; 4 others planned but never completed) Takes place on Earth.

Production

The show was produced by Columbia Tristar and Sony Pictures for daily television syndication and ended its run of a single season with a cliffhanger instead of a proper series finale.

Though originally planned for 2-D animation, Sony contracted Foundation Imaging to produce the episodes with 3-D computer animation. Since Foundation was unable to keep up with the production schedule, Flat Earth Productions were involved with creating episodes 12 and 13, Hyper Image with 20 to 22, and Rainbow Studios with 23 to 25.

The series was to end with a titanic battle (on a larger scale than any previous episode) against the Bug forces on Earth, but production halted before this story arc was fully developed. Of the 40 episodes originally scheduled, only 36 were completed due to the production problems. Each week was to be a separate campaign with five daily episodes.

In the Homefront Campaign only five episodes were completed, with the last three episodes ("Gates of Hell," "Circle of the Damned" and "Final Inferno") left incomplete, along with "Homefront," a key episode in the campaign. "Homefront" was to show the destruction of Buenos Aires, referenced in later episodes. Summaries of two of these episodes are available at the TrooperPX website.[1]

The missing episodes had their dialogue recorded and some of their animation completed. This existing material was not included in the series' DVD release. Some of that material leaked online. A version of the lost episodes was performed once in 2000 as an audio play at the annual Gathering of the Gargoyles fan convention.

In order to fulfill Sony's 40-episode order, four clip shows were produced, reusing footage from previous episodes along with snippets of new material. "Pluto and Beyond" and "Propaganda Machine" can be thought of as coming near the beginning of the Tophet Campaign. These summarize the events of that the preceding Pluto Campaign and a few Tophet events, without adding new material. In "Marooned," one of the main characters becomes lost alone in space and has flashbacks about events from the Pluto through Zephyr Campaigns (in no particular order); it appears intended to take place in the midst of the Klendathu Campaign. "Court-Martial of Lt. Razak" also takes place during the Klendathu Campaign (specifically, day 165), with various characters giving testimony (shown as previous-episode flashbacks from the entire series); of the four clip shows, it is the only one to introduce significant plot points. All four have been released on DVD.

Problems

Fan sites bemoaned production and distribution problems that prevented the series from finding an audience before it was canceled. Among the issues cited by Glen Oliver of Ain't It Cool News are:

Fan campaign and DVD releases

With a fan campaign begun by the now defunct Roughneck Chronicles website, the Pluto Campaign was released on DVD. Based on sales, the other arcs were released on DVD. However, these subsequent DVDs were released in order of popularity, not in chronological order. The last DVD released was called "Trackers," containing an episode bridging the gaps between the Klendathu Campaign and Homefront Campaign DVDs, and the four clip show episodes. Unlike the other DVDs, "Trackers" did not have any cast or crew commentaries.

The DVDs were re-released as a 4-disc Roughnecks: Starship Troopers Chronicles The Complete Campaigns box set, which consists of stripped down versions of the individual DVD releases, removing the cast and crew commentaries (and in the United Kingdom edition the Tesca Campaign is incorrectly listed as volume 2, instead of volume 4).

Given the success of the earlier DVDs, it was hoped that the sales would encourage Sony to produce a final direct-to-DVD movie to complete the original Homefront Campaign story arc, but there have been no new announcements regarding the Roughneck series. The original production company, Foundation Imaging, has since dissolved.

While the series ends on a cliffhanger, the story editor of the final arc outlined his plan for the final three episodes on the crew commentary of the Homefront Campaign DVD (not included on the box set version).

Mill Creek Entertainment announced the complete series on DVD.

Characters

Earth forces

Alpha Team a.k.a. Razak's Roughnecks (later Rico's Roughnecks)

SICON (SICO)

Bugs

Introduced in the Pluto campaign

Introduced in the Hydora campaign

Introduced in the Tophet campaign

Introduced in the Tesca campaign

Introduced in the Zephyr campaign

Introduced in the Klendathu campaign

Other alien creatures

Technologies

In the show, there are various technologies used by SICON and the Skinnes:

Deviations from the book

References

  1. 1 2 "Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles Episode Guide". TrooperPX. 1999–2002. pp. Part 2. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Oliver, Glen (September 21, 1999). "Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles' Debacle!!!". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
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