This month, Battlefield Earth, the 2000 big budget flop based on Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard’s novel, won the Razzie for “Worst Movie of the Decade”. J.D. Shapiro, the film’s original screenwriter, accepted the award in person. This appeared first in today’s New York Post:
By J.D. SHAPIRO
Let me start by apologizing to anyone who went to see Battlefield Earth.
It wasn’t as I intended — promise. No one sets out to make a train wreck. Actually, comparing it to a train wreck isn’t really fair to train wrecks, because people actually want to watch those.
It started, as so many of my choices do, with my Willy Wonker.
It was 1994, and I had read an article in Premiere magazine saying that the Celebrity Center, the Scientology epicenter in Los Angeles, was a great place to meet women.
Willy convinced me to go check it out. Touring the building, I didn’t find any eligible women at first, but I did meet Karen Hollander, president of the center, who said she was a fan of Robin Hood: Men in Tights. We ended up talking for over two hours. She told me why Scientology is so great. I told her that, when it comes to organized religion, anything a person does to reward, threaten and try to control people by using an unknown like the afterlife is dangerous.
Nonetheless, Karen called me a few days later asking if I’d be interested in turning any of L. Ron Hubbard’s books into movies. Eventually, I had dinner with John Travolta, his wife Kelly Preston, Karen — about 10 Scientologists in all. John asked me, “So, J.D., what brought you to Scientology?”
I told him. John smiled and replied, “We have tech that can help you handle that.” I don’t know if he meant they had technology that would help me get laid or technology that would stop Willy from doing the majority of my thinking.
I researched Scientology before signing on to the movie, to make sure I wasn’t making anything that would indoctrinate people. I took a few courses, including the Purification Rundown, or Purif. You go to CC every day, take vitamins and go in and out of a sauna so toxins are released from your body. You’re supposed to reach an “End Point.” I never did, but I was bored so I told them I had a vision of L. Ron. They said, “What did he say?” “Pull my finger,” was my response. They said I was done.
During my Scientology research, I met an employee who I instantly had a crush on. She was kind of a priestess, and had dedicated her life to working for the church by becoming a Sea Org member. She said that she signed a billion-year contract. I said, “What! Really?” She said she got paid a small stipend of $50 a week, to which I said, “Can you get an advance on the billion years, like say, a mere $500,000?” And then she said as a Sea Org member, you can’t have sex unless you’re married. I asked her if she was married. She said yes. So I said, “Great! That means we can have sex!”
As far as I know, I am the only non-Scientologist to ever be on their cruise ship, the Freewind. I was a bit of an oddity, walking around in a robe, sandals, smoking Cuban cigars and drinking fine scotch (Scientologists are not allowed to drink while taking courses). I also got one of the best massages ever. My friends asked if I got a “happy ending.” I said, “Yes, I got off the ship.”
But if you’re reading this to get the dirt on Scientology, sorry, no one ever tried to force me to do anything.
Even after all the “trouble” I’d gotten into, people at the church liked me, so I read Battlefield Earth and agreed to come up with a pitch to take to studios.
I met with Mike Marcus, the president of MGM, and pitched him my take. He loved it, and the next day negotiations went under way. A few days after I finished the script, a very excited Travolta called, told me he “loved it,” and wanted to have dinner. At dinner, John said again how much he loved the script and called it “The Schindler’s List of sci-fi.”
My script was very, VERY different than what ended up on the screen. My screenplay was darker, grittier and had a very compelling story with rich characters. What my screenplay didn’t have was slow motion at every turn, Dutch tilts, campy dialogue, aliens in KISS boots, and everyone wearing Bob Marley wigs.
Shortly after that, John officially attached himself to the project. Then several A-list directors expressed interest in making the movie, MGM had a budget of $100 million, and life was grrrrreat! I got studio notes that were typical studio notes. Nothing too crazy. I incorporated the notes I felt worked, blew off the bad ones and did a polish. I sent it to the studio, thinking the next I’d hear is what director is attached.
Then I got another batch of notes. I thought it was a joke. They changed the entire tone. I knew these notes would kill the movie. The notes wanted me to lose key scenes, add ridiculous scenes, take out some of the key characters. I asked Mike where they came from. He said, “From us.” But when I pressed him, he said, “From John’s camp, but we agree with them.”
I refused to incorporate the notes into the script and was fired.
I have no idea why they wanted to go in this new direction, but here’s what I heard from someone in John’s camp: Out of all the books L. Ron wrote, this was the one the church founder wanted most to become a movie. He wrote extensive notes on how the movie should be made.
Many people called it a Scientology movie. It wasn’t when I wrote it, and I don’t feel it was in the final product. Yes, writers put their beliefs into a story. Sometimes it’s subtle (I guess L. Ron had something against the color purple, I have no idea why), sometimes not so subtle (L. Ron hated psychiatry and psychologists, thus the reason, and I’m just guessing here, that the bad aliens were called “Psychlos”).
The only time I saw the movie was at the premiere, which was one too many times.
Once it was decided that I would share a writing credit, I wanted to use my pseudonym, Sir Nick Knack. I was told I couldn’t do that, because if a writer gets paid over a certain amount of money, they can’t. I could have taken my name completely off the movie, but my agent and attorney talked me out of it. There was a lot of money at stake.
Now, looking back at the movie with fresh eyes, I can’t help but be strangely proud of it. Because out of all the sucky movies, mine is the suckiest.
In the end, did Scientology get me laid? What do you think? No way do you get any action by boldly going up to a woman and proclaiming, “I wrote Battlefield Earth!” If anything, I’m trying to figure out a way to bottle it and use it as birth control. I’ll make a mint!
UPDATE: J.D. Shapiro just sent me his Razzie acceptance speech:
I want to thank the studio for sticking to their convictions– and firing me for sticking to mine.
I want to thank Corey Mandel for rewriting my script in a way I never, ever, EVER — could have imagined or conceived of myself.
I especially want to thank the dozens and dozens of people… who went to see the movie… A movie I consider my Stoddard Temple.
To my fans out there, I’m gearing up to direct a new movie. To find out more about it go to 524ad.com. That’s known as shameless self-promotion. It’s a spoof in the vein of the first movie I ever wrote, Robin Hood: Men In Tights.
I’d like to end with three quotes about Battlefield Earth that touched me very deeply:
The critic for The New York Times said, “Battlefield Earth is about the extinction of the human race. And after seeing this movie– I’m all for it!”
The Banana Daily wrote; “I’d like to call the movie a train wreck, but that’s not really fair to a train wrecks, because people actually want to watch a train wreck.”
And my favorite quote of all: “This is worst fucking piece of shit movie I’ve ever seen in my enter fucking life.” That quote was from my mother.
I’m going to keep this in my belly button. Thank you!
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.
Let me start by apologizing to anyone who went to see Battlefield Earth.

“I told her that, when it comes to organized religion, anything a person does to reward, threaten and try to control people by using an unknown like the afterlife is dangerous.”
Absolutely brilliant. Thanks for saying it, J.D.
Now THAT story would make a great movie!!
Agreed. Could be pretty funny.
Thanks for sharing the speech.
That, is a fantastic idea.
this is brilliant
Best line: “No one sets out to make a train wreck. Actually comparing it to a train wreck isn’t really fair to train wrecks, because people actually want to watch those.”
As someone who sat through it and still occasionally wakes up at a Dutch angle in the middle of the night screaming, I can attest that movie was truly an abomination. It was the movie equivalent of Sarah Palin. Here’s what Ebert said at the time. I’ve searched for hours for that video of Travolta and his crazy “Psychlo” action figure doing the talk show circuit before the film came out. It’s long gone from Youtube, but if anyone has a link, let me know. As I recall, he was going on and on about how this was going to be the next Star Wars, etc.
Here’s an interview from this month with the director Roger Christian who has somehow not gone into hiding.
Finally, if you’re at all curious about Scientology, you might want to check out http://www.Xenu.Net.
Seeya, rat brains!
Xenu, your politics are showing.
Okay, whatever. So here’s video of Shapiro accepting the award.
So are Shapiro’s for that matter. Next comment?
Guess you’ll need a body guard after reprint of this… but, seems the way every script goes, crazy subject or not.
Really funny. Also very sobering on the machinations of how major productions can sometimes go astray.
In my eyes, this man has achieved the redemption and validation that the creepy voodoo cult he was temporarily affiliated with never will.
Netflix has this available for ‘instant view’!
Awesome!
So someone finally said what they did and signed there name and moved on. BRAVE and COOL. The best unknown writer I know my age, is a former member of Scientology. He put it all into his work and just moved on.
I know what they both went through, but we had the same thing happen on our fist Junior High movie and the school started to fuck with us instead of a religion. It scared me, but by the time I was in High School I was making films with the help of the whole community and all my teachers and schools.
I’ve read this four times now and still have no idea what the fuck you are trying to say.
That’s a YP, not a MP.
Your problem, not mine
I agree. For someone who “makes movies” he certainly has zero command of the written English language.
Dude you just admitted your own ignorance, ha ha. Seriously though, ” That’s why I make movies” is not an explanation for writing a statement that no can understand.
The sad part is the original book is actually very damn good. Could have a been a great movie. I am not, never have been and have no desire to be a Scientologist. Just a sci-fi geek who read the book as a kid. It was good!!
You. Have. Got. To. Be. KIDDING!
It really was a good book. I enjoyed the first half more than anything but the second half regarding the alien political system kinda bored me. But I agree with SciFiGeek!
I. Like. To. Use. Periods. Too.
You’re right, the original book was not a bad piece of sci-fi. Shame it was butchered so badly by the studio. Is the original Shapiro script anywhere online so we can see what might have been?
I wonder if we’ll ever get a letter like this from Josh Olson.
He will not fucking read your post!
This was hilarious. I haven’t checked Mr. Shapiro’s credits but I can imagine how hard it has been getting work after this debacle.
I must say the advertising and buildup for this movie at the time was brilliant. I mean a real turkey but they got me to see it. I remember seeing this with my brother and several times during the movie we would look at each other like “are you serious?”.
I don’t think people realize that some turkey’s are REALLY costly. I swore to never go and see another John Travolta movie again. And I haven’t and WHADDYA know…I haven’t missed much!
Very, very funny and insightful. You’d think that afterlife threats and promises wouldn’t be effective or dangerous with anyone over the age of six, but apparently they are–just follow the news from Iraq and Pakistan…
I can enjoy a stupendously bad movie for the cringe factor as much as anybody, but for some reason I couldn’t get into BE. It was on a cable movie channel recently and I sat down in earnest to see if I could make it through to the end. I could not. After about a half hour, I was lunging for the remote. Maybe I should’ve had a dozen drinks beforehand.
Two words: Elie Samaha.
Yep. I can’t believe anybody took Elie Samaha seriously or even let him in the door. However desperate Hollywood is to find money, when somebody is that much of an oily cheeseball SURELY your warning bells have got to go off and loudly. Mine did when I met the guy in the mid-90′s.
I worked on on BE and yes they JOHN and his producers after seeing dailies one day came back and told the crew this was the next Stars Wars if not better…! Rest of course is history!
John is a nice guy, I’ve worked with him before, but almost clueless when it comes to anything creative.
I’ve seen this movie two or three times. I have to say (with all due respect to the writers mother) that this is definitely not the worst movie of the decade. Maybe the worst Big Budget Movie, I’ll give them that. But I’ve seen plenty of other movies I would classify as far worse than this movie. I’m not a big Travolta fan and there are only three things I’ve seen him in that I liked. Welcome Back Cotter, Broken Arrow and Sword Fish (which were good in spite of Travolta not because of him).
It’s really too bad they altered the original screenplay because the book is pretty good. I wonder if the idiots who did the altering learned a lesson? Naaaa, this IS Hollywood we’re talking about.
Look its a pretty bad movie, but I would definitely put Episode I and the last Indy adventure beneath it. You can laugh at Battlefield and make a pretty good drinking game out of it, but those two…they just stink up joint.
Alboone, I think you’ve been smoking a joint..B.E. is the stinker and it cannot be compared to the last Indy movie or Episode I. They are terrific movies. There must have been something about Travolta’s character’s 18 foot tongue that got to you….maybe it’s the joint and the tongue….yuck.
This is funny. Wonderfully written!!
Who do you think sent in those notes to you? I’m guessing but what do you want to bet the notes weren’t made by the Corporate Chairman megolomuckiac David Miscavige himself?
I heard that John Travolta was GOD around the Church (read: David Miscavige)(who was pulling the puppet strings and thinking he himself was the genius) until the catastrophic public response, at which point Miscavige went ballistic and blamed it all on him!
OUCH!!!!
Nicely done. But, I am slightly disappointed that Mr. Shapiro didn’t include MY favorite review of BE. This is Jonathan Ross from The Mirror, London: “Everything about Battlefield Earth sucks. Everything. The over the top music, the unbelievable sets, the terrible dialogue, the hammy acting, the lousy special effects, the beginning, the middle, and especially the end. God above, it’s bad. Sweet baby Jesus, it’s bad. By all that is holy and sacred on the Earth, this is a bad, bad, bad film.”
You rarely if ever get the truth in Hollywood.
At least J.D. Shapiro sets the record straight.
He should get an award just for telling the truth.
You should make your own version of “Hearts of Darkness” and document the making of “Battlefield Earth”. It would certainly be more eye-opening and revealing than the “Apocalypse Now” doc was.
Hilarious!
A man animal getting leverage over a Psychlo?! Ha hah ha ha ha ha ha!!!
Hey, I’m a Psychlo and no man-animal ever gets the best of me!
(A woman on the other hand…)
How could this be considered the worst film of the last decade when pictures like “League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” and “Transformers” exist?
Just watch Battlefield Earth. You will think Michael Bay is Scorsese. It really does not get any worse than BE.
Seriously? I saw Battlefield Earth, I saw League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and I saw Transformers. In fact, I almost walked out on Transformers but it was the first time I’d been to the movies since my kid was born and I’d lost $10 already so I figured WTF. LoEG was pretty weak, but it tried.
Battlefield Earth is unquestionably worse than the other two. Battlefield Earth is worse than a root canal (I’ve had one, so I know this for a fact). Battlefield Earth was torturous.
And for those that might try to tell you otherwise, the book ain’t no great shakes either. It has its moments, but the last 200 pages crap out on you.
It’s campy, but not on purpose!
Every time I watch this I fall a sleep about 20 minutes in to this movie… I wake up when the credits start to roll…
And now I realized I’ve been blessed and have never been more grateful!