Star Ship Troopers Nude

Star Ship Troopers Nude




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Star Ship Troopers Nude
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Like that time Mary Poppins herself bared all.
Sometimes, you go to a movie expecting full frontal. Other times...not so much. Whether it was the inexplicable PG-13 rating or nudity from a star who seems too wholesome to strip down ( Mary Poppins fans should click away now), audiences were shook when they saw these actors in the flesh. Here, some of the most shocking nude scenes in cinematic history.
In the middle of her run as America's sweetheart/ultimate girl-next-door Joey Potter on Dawson's Creek , Katie Holmes shocked audiences by appearing topless in 2000's The Gift .
"I have done it before when I was young, the right time to do it," the actress said of the nude scene years later, while promoting The Giver in 2014 (opens in new tab) . "But if the part called for it, sure, I'd do it again. I think people need to embrace themselves, their creativity and their bodies."
The fact that there was nudity in Kevin Smith's 1995 comedy Mallrats is not what's surprise. The shock of this moment was in the content of the nudity—which featured a topless psychic with a third nipple. 
The co-ed, naked shower scene in 1997's sci-fi satire Starship Troopers is a bit jarring at first, but shouldn't be to surprising, considering the movie was directed by Paul Verhoeven, the man behind the camera for Showgirls and Basic Instinct. Still, the weirdest, most surprising thing about the nudity in the scene is the part viewers can't see: The crew was naked during filming, too. 
"One cast member said they would only get naked if we did," Verhoeven told (opens in new tab) Empire (opens in new tab) . "Well, my cinematographer was born in a nudist colony and I have no problem with taking my clothes off, so we did. It is strange, but of course Americans get more upset about nudity than ultra-violence. I am constantly amazed about that. I mean, I haven't seen any sex scenes in American film that are anything other than completely boring. A bare breast is more difficult to get through the censors than a body riddled with bullets."
In Short Cuts , Robert Altman's 1993 comedy-drama, audiences were surprised by a controversial (opens in new tab) scene of waist-down nudity from Julianne Moore.
"People ask all the time if sex scenes and nudity are hard," the actress later said (opens in new tab) , reflecting on the nude scenes she's filmed during her career. "What’s hard? Not the lines or the physicality, but the emotion."
In Amy Schumer's 2015 rom-com Trainwreck , John Cena stole the show as one of Amy's regular hookups. After one of the film's most hilarious sex scenes, Cena nearly bared all—save for what a tiny washcloth could cover.
It's pretty standard to see nudity in an R-rated comedy. In fact, we go in expecting raunchiness and a least some nakedness at this point. But because #sexism, usually it's the women who strip down. So when Jason Segel went full frontal in Forgetting Sarah Marshall , jaws dropped.
Titanic is one of the biggest moneymakers of all time—and the PG-13 rating certainly helped (an R rating limits a film's audience and, thus, its earning potential). But in spite of that family-friendly rating, Kate Winslet went topless for one of the most famous nude scenes ever.
The Big Lebowski is one of the least predictable movies ever, and perhaps its least predictable moment might just be when Julianne Moore swings from the ceiling while fully nude. (To be fair, her character was making "vaginal art.")
Oh hey, it's just Cameron Diaz, all business-like, walking into an NFL locker room. And then BAM : Penis. So much penis.
There's nothing Kathy Bates can't do—including nail a nude scene. Her nonchalant nakedness in About Schmidt's hot tub moment was completely amazing and completely surprising.
Jonah Hill famously wore a prosthetic for his nude scene in The Wolf of Wall Street— but hey, if Martin Scorsese wants you to masturbate with a fake penis, at least he'll get you an Oscar nomination for your trouble.
Does it count as nudity if it's puppets? When it's as utterly shocking as the sex scene in Team America: World Police , yes.
Another PG-13 movie that snuck in some light nudity: The Fifth Element shows a fully naked Leeloo being born. To be clear, we're obviously all born naked—just not all of us are born looking like a 22-year-old Milla Jovovich.
This movie is rated R, and it definitely earned its rating: Amanda Peet's unexpected gun-wielding nude scene is just one of the many scenes she steals.
Angelina Jolie is currently one of the biggest stars in the world, but she was just a 20-year-old up-and-comer when she very briefly bared her breast in this PG-13 movie.
Jamie Lee Curtis has starred in so many horror movies that she's earned the nickname "Scream Queen." Interestingly, she never went nude in these films (as Scream taught us, getting naked during a scary movie ensures you're in for a bloody end), so fans were shocked when she nonchalantly went topless in the 1983 comedy Trading Places .
In 1981, America's sweetheart Julie Andrews (yes, she played Mary Poppins...and Maria Von Trapp) went fearlessly topless in S.O.B., a movie written and directed by her husband Blake Edwards.
This 2008 dark comedy based on the novel of the same name by Chuck Palahniuk isn't a surprising place to find nudity, but we'll admit that we were shocked to see Community star Gillian Jacobs go topless in the flick. 
This PG-13 teen comedy from the '80s has a classic, very Twelfth Night -y—high school girl poses as a guy to prove sexism is a thing. Pretty normal, right? The surprising thing is that, at the very end of the movie, to reveal her true sex, our heroine rips open her tux, exposing her, uh, secret. Didn't see that coming.
We've pointed out plenty of PG-13 nudity, but the old-school Romeo and Juliet from 1968 wins the award for the most family-friendly nude scene. The film is rated PG, yet features a blissfully topless Juliet after her wedding night with Romeo.
With a title like Bare , you knew this one was going to have some less-than-clothed moments. But the 2015 drama forced the world to see Glee star Dianna Agron in a very new light. 
Molly Ringwald spent the '80s making a name for herself as the princess/girl next door of teen movies. By 1995, she was ready to shed the squeaky clean teen queen vibes and she did exactly that in an erotic thriller called Malicious , in which she played a "disturbed medical student" who stars stalking her school's star baseball player after a brief fling. 
If you wouldn't exactly expect nudity in an '80s sports drama starring a pre-couch jumping Tom Cruise, then you're not alone. If you really wouldn't expect that nudity to come from Lorraine McFly herself, Lea Thompson, then you're also not alone, but that's exactly what you'll get in All the Right Moves . 
Kayleigh Roberts is a freelance writer and editor with more than 10 years of professional experience. Her byline has appeared in Marie Claire, Cosmopolitan, ELLE, Harper’s Bazaar, The Atlantic, Allure, Entertainment Weekly, MTV, Bustle, Refinery29, Girls’ Life Magazine, Just Jared, and Tiger Beat, among other publications. She's a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

Rodrigo listed their names one by one.


Why does that bleached hair look so good on him?


AOC's husband-to-be is an "easygoing redhead" who lives with her in D.C.


Once you've finished 'The Crown,' cue up one of these royally good films.


Also Daniel Radcliffe was in two minds about 'Harry Potter.'


And we mean fully nude—as in, not a shred of clothing.


"The easiest yes!" Simone wrote about the couple's engagement.


They welcomed a baby via surrogate.

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Starship Troopers Nude Scenes - Does It Contain Nudity?
Neil Patrick Harris (Colonel Carl Jenkins)
Clancy Brown (Career Sergeant Zim)
Michael Ironside (Lieutenant Jean Rasczak)
Seth Gilliam (Private Sugar Watkins)
Denise Dowse (Sky Marshal Tehat Meru)
Curnal Achilles Aulisio (Sgt. Gillespie)
John Cunningham (Fed Net Announcer (voice))
Robert David Hall (Recruiting Sergeant)
Patrick Bishop (Engineering Officer)
Mara Duronslet (Communications Officer)
Ronald L. Botchan (Jumpball Referee)
Edward Neumeier (Defendant (uncredited))
Brooke Morales (Cheerleader (uncredited))
Julie Pinson (Female Trooper (uncredited))
Mary Ann Schmidt (Female Trooper (uncredited))
Aaron Stielstra (Trooper (uncredited))
This movie has no scenes, add one using the button above!
This product uses the TMDb API but is not endorsed or certified.
No, we have no record of Starship Troopers containing any nudity. If you think we are missing something, please add it using the 'Add Scene' button below.
Set in the future, the story follows a young soldier named Johnny Rico and his exploits in the Mobile Infantry. Rico's military career progresses from recruit to non-commissioned officer and finally to officer against the backdrop of an interstellar war between mankind and an arachnoid species known as "the Bugs".

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The Most Pause-Worthy Moments In Starship Troopers


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The Most Pause-Worthy Moments In Starship Troopers

By Miles Schneiderman / Updated: Feb. 2, 2022 9:03 am EDT
Multiple decades after Paul Verhoeven's "Starship Troopers" turned Robert Heinlein's celebrated sci-fi war novel into one of cinema's strangest satires, the film still has its fans — arguably more than ever, in fact. But whether it holds up is beside the point; the Casper Van Dien/Denise Richards/Jake Busey blockbuster was intentionally designed to look like bad military propaganda (per its source material), with a cast of beautiful young actors that some believe were chosen specifically because they couldn't act. The movie was never intended to be "good" in the traditional sense; nevertheless, it was marketed as an action blockbuster — and all these years later, it's still worth a watch whether you don't want to think about it (in which case it is fun, mindless popcorn fluff) or whether you do want to think about it (in which case, it might just be brilliant ).
In terms of its narrative significance as well as its sheer spectacle, there are plenty of moments in "Starship Troopers" that are worth pausing — either to admire the skill with which the film navigated the early days of CGI, inspect the subtext, or simply get a better look at the actors. To celebrate this one-of-a-kind film and its journey from box office oddity to enduring cult classic, here are the most pause-worthy "Starship" moments, from giant monsters to shower scenes. Be advised that spoilers lie ahead, so before marching boldly forward, be sure you're prepared to answer a question familiar to every "Troopers" fan: Would you like to know more?
"Starship Troopers" is considered to be the third of Verhoeven's so-called "Triple Dutch" trilogy , following the hit sci-fi satires "RoboCop" and "Total Recall." Those films similarly mix gleefully provocative imagery and brutality with off-putting, over-the-top screen programming to drive their themes home, and "Starship Troopers" is no different — although the fascist propaganda seen on its screens aren't meant to serve so much as commercials as they are "on demand" information that bears an uncanny resemblance to the internet — or at least, the promise the internet held in its 1997 infancy.
It makes some sense, as the nascent World Wide Web (Internet Explorer had been released two years prior ) held promise of allowing media consumers to move from topic to topic with the click of a cursor, for example, suggesting the presence of hyperlinks. If you look hard enough, you might also detect faint traces of the super-online future to come — the ability to focus on "Top News" could be seen as predicting invented-a-decade-later social media websites like Twitter.
Of course, the internet aspect of the movie's opening montage pales in comparison to its fascist overtones. The sequence draws directly from "Triumph of the Will," the notorious Leni Riefenstahl Nazi propaganda film, complete with eagle imagery. "When the soldiers look at the camera and say, 'I'm doing my part!' that's from Riefenstahl," Verhoeven, who grew up under Nazi occupation, told Entertainment Weekly in 1997 . "We copied it."
Some images from "Starship Troopers" are pause-worthy because of what we know, others because of what we never will. 
Case in point: The biology teacher from the high school attended by "Starship Troopers" protagonists John Rico (Van Dien), Carmen Ibanez (Richards), and Carl Jenkins (Neil Patrick Harris) definitely has something going on that warrants closer inspection. She only appears in a single scene, but that scene is incredible. 
The teacher (Rue McClanahan from "The Golden Girls!") prowls around her classroom as Rico and Carmen dissect an Arkellian sand beetle, extolling the virtues of the alien Arachnid species and proclaiming the foolishness inherent in any notion of human superiority. While the scene mostly serves to introduce aspects of the Arachnids that will be revisited later in the film, it's impossible to look away from the teacher, who sports a white lab coat over her suit and a pair of futuristic dark glasses over her eyes, the burn-like scars around them suggesting that she's been blinded. 
Between her aesthetic and her ideology, it would be fascinating to learn more about her backstory. Imagine having Blanche from "Golden Girls" in your crazy science fiction movie — and only using her in one scene! If nothing else, we just want to keep the movie paused on McClanahan long enough to write our own fan-fiction backstory for her character.
Speaking of great actors who make small cameos in "Starship Troopers," Rico and his fellow Mobile Infantry aspirants are trained by Sergeant Zim, played with over-the-top intensity by perennial villain Clancy Brown. His drill sergeant characterization is undoubtedly familiar to anyone who's seen a war movie before, but Brown, along with Jake Busey, also delivers one of the film's most memorable images — one that deftly subverts expectations and drives home just how brutal boot camp can be in a militaristic dystopia.
Mobile Infantry recruit Ace Levy (Busey) is practicing throwing knives, but is having trouble with it. Frustrated, he demands to know why the skill is necessary to learn, considering most combat in this particular future is fought using nuclear weaponry, which merely requires the push of a button. Zim, in response, commands Ace to put his hand against a nearby wall. Ace clearly has no interest in putting his hand against the wall, but reluctantly follows the order. In most movies, the pay-off to this set-up would be for Zim to throw a knife and intentionally (but just barely) miss Ace's hand, or to hit something else with the knife instead. But not in "Starship Troopers." 
Zim throws the knife directly into Ace's palm, pinning it to the wall, then calmly walks over and explains to the rest of the trainees that it's difficult to push a button without a hand. It's a classic moment that helps set the entire film's tone.
Upon its late-'90s release, the coed shower scene from "Starship Troopers" made a lot of news. All these years later, the scene is still as potentially abrasive as a dry loofah. 
Mobile Infantry recruits, both male and female, all shower together — though as Verhoeven has pointed out , a similar thing happens in the police locker room in "RoboCop," so, perhaps Verhoeven's take on the future is simply that it's going to result in a lot of lawsuits. Actually, the fact that "nobody seemed to notice" the "RoboCop" scene galvanized Verhoeven to go even harder in the "Starship Troopers" showers, which feature an entire room full of beautiful young actors not wearing any clothes ( Verhoeven claims that he and his cinematographer were naked during the shooting of these scene as well, for what that's worth). But that's not the reason to pause during this scene. What you want to do is pause and look at the faces of the characters, none of whom display any sexual interest whatsoever in those around them.
It turns out that the shower scene means a lot more than audiences initially thought. As the recruits discuss their lives and ambitions, the fact that they're doing so while naked in the shower together seems to barely matter to them. They have more important concerns. 
"These so-called advanced people are without libido," Verhoeven said in 2014 . "It is sublimated because they are fascists." 
True, Rico has sex later on in the film with fellow soldier Dizzy Flores (Dina Meyer) — but Dizzy herself walks into the shower at one point in the scene, and it makes no difference. Look at their eyes. They're a bunch of teenagers in the shower together, and their eyes never even glance down.
In stark contrast to the shower scene, the tattoo scene doesn't have any deeper thematic meaning. But it's no less an iconic image, one that stood out in the original trailer and features a tattoo design that has since been used in a ton of "Starship Troopers" merchandise. It's actually that very tattoo design that makes this moment pause-worthy. 
Think about it: Why do Mobile Infantry soldiers Rico, Ace, Dizzy, and Kitten, who have just joined a fighting force that deals exclusively in ground warfare, have tattoos that say "Death from above?" It's particularly confusing when you consider that right before they get these tattoos, Rico gets in a fight with Zander Barcalow, an officer of the Fleet (which does hit the enemy from above) after which Dizzy explains to him that "Mobile Infantry and Fleet don't mix."
In fact, the tattoo design is a relic of Heinlein's book, so much so that it doesn't actually fit in Verhoeven's movie. Verhoeven had nothing but contempt for his source material, to the extent that his adaptation is specifically designed to satirize it. He changed a ton, including the fact that in the book, the Mobile Infantry drop onto enemy planets from orbit — hence the "death from above" slogan. Since the kids are no longer drop troops in the movie, the tattoos make no sense. 
But they look cool — and, they're an interesting Heinlein easter egg in a film that has little respect for the author.
One of the changes made by Verhoeven in his adaptation of "Starship Troopers" was to combine the character of history and philosophy teacher Jean V. Dubois with the character of Lieu
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