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.






J. D. Shapiro wrote, directed, and starred in “We Married Margo”. Light years away from B. E.
Wildly funny, amazing comedy of abominations that shows once more that truth indeed is stranger than fiction and far, far more hilarious. (not to mention the subsequent commentaries evoked from this article)Ditto on making THIS a movie.
No movie is worse than a root canal. I need to see BE.
Though I’ve been told that I’m the only human out there to say this… “I love Battlefield Earth.”
Hey man- not even as a joke. It’s still too soon.
re: Elie Samaha…
Say what you want, the guy made a lot of movies. Good, bad or ugly, the Elie made money, made a ton of flicks and somehow managed to dictate the terms, even when that meant running the company (Franchise) into the ground. Not too many out there can say the same.
Are you kidding, there’s something to admire here? Say what YOU want but no actually, nobody aspires to make a lot of bad movies that show terrible judgment and taste, and run a company into the ground stealing people’s money.
Keep this in mind regarding Elie Samaha:
The investor, Intertainment, sued producer Franchise Pictures for fraud. Franchise claimed the budget was $75 million instead of the actual budget of $44 million. Franchise Pictures was sentenced to pay Intertainment $121.7 million in damages and went bankrupt.
Your comment is like saying Bernie Madoff is a great investor because he made SOME people rich.
When JD said that “John’s camp wanted to make big changes to the script” did he meant John Travolta? I though Travolta knew what a good script looked like. So apparently he does not or was he merely blinded by his undying devotion to practice of Scientology? I thought the best thing about the movie was Barry Pepper. I have had a crush on him ever seeing him in Saving Private Ryan.
Me too, I thought Barry Pepper would be a huge star after Saving Private Ryan. Then this movie happened for him. It’s tragic.
I never got the term man-animal. Why don’t they just call them manimals? Just wait, Hollywood will reboot this one. At this point, they will reboot anything. Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000 3D.
Hush your mouth! You know some development pinhead just read this and ran into his boss’s office to pitch it.
Typical moron Clams to think the best guy to adapt Elron’s opus was the guy who did “Men in Tights.” Was Paul Haggis too low on the OT ladder back then?
And I wish I had a dime for every writer who said “What ended up on the screen was NOT what I wrote.”
I wonder what everyone else sees in this movie that I somehow missed. Battlefield Earth, to me, is a seriously campy, funny science fiction comedy, Rat Boy. John Travolta was hysterical and had me laughing so hard I thought I would hurt myself. I don’t care what anyone was trying to do when they made this movie. What they ended up with was campy comedy.
Did it not occur to you that its kind of creepy to be laughing hard when the whole theatre is silent and rest of audience is thinking WTF…
The problem is, it was NOT supposed to be campy. Travolta promoted it like it was a truly serious movie that was supposed to be bigger than Star Wars.
JD is a brilliant, funny guy…ugly as hell but brilliant. You should check out some of the stuff he’s done that isn’t in the Razzie’s, like “We Married Margo”…a very funny low budget flick. JD’s always full of god ideas, his latest is a good one…www.524ad.com. Keep at it JD.
“Transformers: The Revenge of the Fallen” is definitely right alongside “Battlefield: Earth” in badness, but “Transformers 2,” at least, has the kind of laugh-at-it incredulity going for the thing. When you need twenty minutes of AT&T commercial-style magic hour shots to lead up to the final battle, it’s laughable and you think the movie is funny because of the hubris it took to make it. “Transformers 2″ is fun to watch and mock, a’la “Showgirls.” “Battlefield: Earth” is the opposite. You start watching, start mocking, but you find yourself making the same jokes over and over. It’s just a dull piece of shit where nothing happens.
What’s really scary is that they thought it was going to be this great propaganda tool that turned people onto Scientology in droves. If it was “Star Wars” or “The Matrix,” all those susceptible minds might be like, “Yeah, I WOULD like to get a personality test.” It almost feels like Fate stepped in and said, “No, not a SINGLE MAN-ANIMAL will fall for this film as I will make sure it is THE WORST MOVIE EVER – NO QUESTION, NO SINGLE REDEEMING VALUE.”
And then did so.
The apology’s an entertaining enough read, but I’d like to actually see his original script. I haven’t seen the movie since its release, but I remember it being something that could have been okay if you’d given a solid writer an outline of the basic plot and given them freedom to do whatever they wanted from there. I just have a hard time from this guy’s credits thinking he’s that kind of writer. Otherwise, he’d eventually have gotten some other decent gigs, right?
I don’t know… Meet The Spartans I think was the worst.
I laughed my ass off when I read the one line review of it
“I’m moving to Europe.”
It must have been really difficult for JD Shapiro to have seen his artistic vision corrupted, especially if he felt his career suffered as a result. Maybe now that he’s “apologized” by criticizing the producers and attempting to blame John Travolta (who apparently had the gall to take JD Shapiro to dinner, on a cruise, and compliment him on his work, all of which I guess is a bad thing?), JD will finally be able to sell that Oscar-winning script he’s been hiding in his sock drawer during the decade since Battlefield Earth was released. I’m sure that Hollywood is fairly tripping over itself to work with JD, now that he’s shown what a truly class act he is.
Oh, get a clue. Please.
With a cost of around 100 million and a worldwide gross of around 30 million, I find that pretty humorous!
I don’t think there was much that could have saved this movie. The novel itself was riddled with not-so-subtle messages on L. Ron’s views, particularly the evil aliens being called Psychlos and the leaders of their race were a class known as Catrists. That’s right. Psychlo Catrists. Say it together. Even the novel was a mess of self-induldged propaganda.
But then again I could just be saying that because Xenu is my lord and master. Hail Xenu!
A better story would be how Shapiro teamed up with the father of the kid who settled the lawsuit with Michael Jackson in the 80′s and sold their Robin Hood screenplay to Mel Brooks.
One question: why would the church tap the writer of “Robin Hood: Men In Tights” to script B.E.? They couldn’t find one writer with some kind of Sci-Fi/action background? I mean, why not go after a staff writer from the “Golden Girls” or “Blues Clues”? So bizarre.
Hilarious.
dudes
TRANFORMERS 2 was WAAAAAAAAYYYY worse than battlefield earth–Michael bay is the biggest fucking hack of the century and always will be–the only bigger douchebags than michael bay are those cult fucks in scientology–you want to see rich characters and good writing? watch a british movie–or most stuff from the BBC–better than this grade 3 level American shit
peace out
I dunno — to me this “apology” is incredibly self-serving. His script was a quality piece of work that got ruined by the idiots who actually made the movie. Gee I’ve never heard that from a writer before. A REAL apology would have been — “I wrote a piece a shit. I’m sorry.” not “I wrote a brilliant script that they fucked up.” I’m with Peg — if Mr Shapiro is, as he claims, an excellent writer whose work has been sullied by Travolta etc, where are the subsequent quality scripts?
Why are you all doing it so very very wrong?
You don’t watch BE, you experience it.
Like bad chicken, you suffer cramps of pain so bad you swear you’re dying, then afterwords you feel like you have won.
You survived.
You didn’t think you would, but you DID!
And then you set out to work around the pain, defy it and live on in spite of it!
Battlefield Earth is a great MS3K movie, in that, without sound it has some of the best WTF ever seen on celluloid. I highly recommend that if you have netflix and either a large monitor or a way to show net content on a TV, you gather some friends and make some popcorn, and have fun spoofing the hell out of this movie tonight!
Some scenes are great, some effects are awesome, and the costuming and facial expressions never get old, because you just don’t see shit this bad anywhere else.
I almost saw BE twice. The first time, I was drunk at the start, stone cold sober and hugging my knees while trying to work up the motivation to claw my own eyes out. And the two bottles of vodka I practically downed afterwards had no effect. Apart from putting me in hospital with alcohol poisoning, which was therapeutic, nay, a hedonistic summer holiday in Hawaii by comparison.
The second time it got as far as the opening scene when I realised what was happening, removed the disc from the player and microwaved it. I’ve been a bit hesitant about using the microwave since…
…and interestingly, the video store where it was rented wasn’t too upset about it either. They just charged me a late return fine and didn’t bother with getting it replaced.
And there’s a book? Cool, another book that the Cthulhu mythos would enjoy.
This depiction of the progress from a well intended scrip to an ugly piece of crap, and the mundane reasons of a reasonable rationalist’s brush with scientology, actually pay me off for some of the time I lost watching the movie when it went to the screens (yep, I saw it at the cinema… luckily, I might say, I had no friends with me at the time, because such a spectacle can easily shatter some friendships).
My thanks to mr Shapiro, for this humourous apology – possibly, not really needed… I suppose that not all that trash came out of his pen – and for the util lesson.
“Beware of the religions that are said to have good chicks among their believers, as they may involve you in horrible movies”
You just gotta love it when someone, anyone, doesn’t take themselves too seriously where it counts.
Interesting that the final outcome of Battlefield Earth deviated so far from the original script that Shapiro had written, but the perfectly depicts the “development hell” as Epstein describes in The Big Picture. Ultimately, when president of MGM Mike Marcus loved the script, it was critical to the securing of John Travolta to the script, which ensured that several A-list directors would be interested in the script. After the script is given the green light, the directors have the most control over the direction that the script goes, even if it does not stick to the final script that was green-lighted, in order the play the movie to their directing strengths.
So I suppose… the writer does of course literally write the script, but he doesn’t write the movie, so why can’t he take his name off the credit? He did not write that.