I feel that the film did a terrific job of showing the masculinity of women. The lead female, Dizzy, was very masculine in every aspect except she has the desire for Johnny. Dizzy volunteers to challenge the Drill Sergeant to a fight just to attempt to prove her worth, of course she lost but the fact that she tried shows strength and courage. On base the showers are coed and the women slap men's butts as if they were one …show more content…
In this film they actually did make the enemy inhuman by making the enemy arachnids. This attempt of making the enemies seem inhuman has always been the case in most war films. In every Vietnam War film that I have seen they refer to the enemy as "gooks" this is a way of dehumanizing the enemy. This process also makes it easier for those actually in battle to shoot and kill the enemy. If they are not thought of as humans then the concept of murder is not present. I have noticed that there are not that many films that show the "behind the line" action of the enemy, and this is because if they showed that they were just as worried about dying or if they missed their families then there would be sympathy towards the enemy and film makers do not want that. The viewer is supposed to be on the side of the good guys, in the case of Starship Troopers the planet