Space marine

The space marine, an archetype of science fiction, is a soldier that operates in outer space or on alien worlds.[1] Historical marines fulfill amphibious roles: ship defence, landing parties, and general high-mobility deployments. By extension, space marines defend spaceships, land on planets and moons, and fulfill rapid deployment throughout space.

Contents

History

The first space marine unit, the Galactic Marines, was used in E. E. Smith's Lensman series, published starting in 1937., but the lesser known Bob Olsen (1884-1956) also wrote a few stories and novelettes about Space Marines in Amazing Stories ("Captain Brink of the Space Marines", November 1932; "The Space Marines and the Slavers", December 1936).

The phrase "space marines" appears in Robert A. Heinlein's "Misfit"[2] (1939) and is again used in "The Long Watch"[3] (1941). Heinlein's Starship Troopers (1959) is considered the defining work for the concept; for example, the actors playing the Colonial Marines in Aliens (1986) were required to read Starship Troopers as part of their training prior to filming.[4] Heinlein intended for the capsule troopers of the Mobile Infantry to be an amalgam of the shipborne aspect of the US Marine Corps relocated to space and coupled with the battlefield delivery and mission profile of US Army paratroopers.

As a gaming concept, space marines play a major role in the Warhammer 40,000 miniatures wargame, in which they are genetically altered super-soldiers and the most powerful fighting forces available to the Imperium of Man. In computer games, playing a space marine in action games was popularized by id Software's Doom series, first published in 1993. It is a convenient game back-story as it excuses the presence of the character on a hostile alien world with little support and heavy weaponry. Some critics have suggested it has been overused to the point of being an action game cliché.[5]

Characteristics

In film and television space marines often appear in squads, while in video games the protagonist marine is usually alone or in very small squads. Depending on the mission, they may be deployed via dropship or another specialised insertion craft. Their battledress varies between media, ranging from equipment comparable to modern-day fatigues (or just being contemporary, such as the equipment of Colonial Marines in the re-imaged Battlestar Galactica) to environmentally sealed suits of powered armour. Equipment and weaponry is similarly varied, often incorporating various fictional technologies. Directed-energy weapons are common, though conventional firearms are not unheard of either. If the marine's armour is particularly bulky, their weapons may be similarly scaled up.

Non-fiction aspects

The United States Marine Corps's Project Hot Eagle considers the use of spacecraft to deliver marines to a target on the ground. "Within minutes of bursting into the atmosphere beyond the speed of sound – and dispatching that ominous sonic boom – a small squad of Marines could be on the ground and ready for action within 2 hours."[6]

Appearances in fiction

Books and Short Stories

Author Title Year(s) Published Unit Name
E. E. Smith Lensman series 1934–1954 Galactic Marines
Robert A. Heinlein "Misfit" 1939 Space Marines
Robert A. Heinlein "The Long Watch" 1941 Space Marines
Robert A. Heinlein Starship Troopers 1959 Mobile Infantry
Joe Haldeman The Forever War 1974 United Nations Exploratory Force (UNEF)
Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle The Mote in God's Eye and related novels 1975 Imperial Marines
Jerry Pournelle and S. M. Stirling The Prince or Falkenberg's Legion series 1976–1993; 2002 CoDominium Marines
David Weber Starfire series 1990–Present Federation Navy Marine Corps
David Weber Honor Harrington series 1992–Present Royal Manticoran Marine Corps (RMMC) of the Star Kingdom of Manticore, et cetera
David Sherman and Dan Cragg StarFist series 1997–Present Confederation Marine Corps
Ian Douglas
  1. Heritage Trilogy,
  2. Legacy Trilogy,
  3. Inheritance Trilogy
1998–Present United States Marines Corps, United Star Marine Corps
John Varley Rolling Thunder 2008 Martian Naval Corps

Films and TV

Director Title Year(s) Published Unit Name
Michael E. Briant Doctor Who serial Death to the Daleks 1973–1974 Marine Space Corps
George Lucas Star Wars 1977–Present Galactic Marines of the Grand Army of the Republic, originally known as the 21st Nova Corps. Imperial Stormtroopers of the Original Trilogy also fit the role of space marines of the Galactic Empire. The Rebel Alliance has an entire regiment of Space Operations, nicknamed "Rebel Marines".
Lewis Gilbert Moonraker 1979 United States Marine Corps on a space shuttle armed with lasers
Leiji Matsumoto Star Blazers 1979–1984 Ground combat units found on the 11th planet are known as "Space Marines"
James Cameron Aliens 1986 United States Colonial Marine Corps
Douglas Netter and J. Michael Straczynski Babylon 5 1994–1998 EarthForce Marine Corps (also known as "Gropos" or "GROund POunderS")
Glen Morgan and James Wong Space: Above and Beyond 1995–1996 United States Marine Corps Space Aviator Cavalry
John Weidner Space Marines (film) 1996 United Planets Marines
Keiji Gotoh Kiddy Grade 2001–2002 GOTT Marine Corps
David Eick and Ronald D. Moore Battlestar Galactica 2004–2009 Colonial Marine Corps, Colonial Marine Corps Reserve
Brad Wright and Robert C. Cooper Stargate Atlantis 2004–2009 United States Marine Corps attached to the Atlantis Expedition
James Cameron Avatar 2009 Ex Marines and mercenaries working with the RDA Corporation on Pandora.

Games

Title Publisher Game Type Year(s) Published Unit Name
Traveller Game Designers' Workshop Role-playing game 1977 Star Marines, Terran Confederation Marine Corps, Imperial Marine Force, Solomani Marine Corps, and Zhodani Consular Guard
Starfire series Task Force Games; Starfire Design Studio Board wargame 1979–1980 Federation Navy Marine Corps
Metroid Nintendo Action-adventure game 1986–Present Galactic Federation Marine Corps/07th Platoon
Warhammer 40,000 Games Workshop Wargaming; Tabletop game; Dice game 1987–Present Imperial Space Marine Chapters, and also, to an extent, Chaos Space Marines. Some forces from other armies - notably the Stormtroopers of the Imperial Guard, Eldar Swooping Hawks and Warp Spiders, and Grey Knights operate in this manner.
Wing Commander Franchise Origin Systems, Inc. Space combat simulation 1990–1999 Terran Confederation Marine Corps
Duke Nukem series 3D Realms First-person shooter; Platform 1991–Present Earth Defense Forces (EDF)
Doom series id software First-person shooter 1993–Present United Nations Space Marine Corps
Command & Conquer series former Westwood Studios,

now Electronic Arts

Real-time strategy; First-person shooter 1995–Present Global Defense Initiative can deploy certain infantry units directly from its space stations
Quake Series id software First-person shooter 1996–Present SMC (Space Marine Corps) Marines
Outwars Microsoft Third-person shooter; Tactical shooter 1998 Colonial Marines
StarCraft Blizzard Entertainment Real-time strategy 1998–Present Confederate Marine Corps, the Dominion Marine Corps, the Alliance Marine Corps, the Alpha Corps, the United Earth Directorate Powered Infantry and numerous more
Ground Control Sierra On-Line Real-time tactics 2000 Crayven Corporation's Marines
Halo series Microsoft Game Studios First-person shooter; Real-time strategy 2001–Present UNSC Marine Corps and the elite Orbital Drop Shock Trooper divisions (special forces qualified for drop pod insertion).
Red Faction series THQ First-person shooter; Third-person shooter 2001–Present Earth Defence Marine Corps (E.D.M.C.) and Earth Naval Guard (E.N.G.)
Natural Selection Unknown Worlds Entertainment First-person shooter; Real-time strategy 2002–2007 Frontiersmen (human space marines)
TimeSplitters 2 Eidos Interactive First-person shooter 2002 Space Marines (Sergeant Cortez and Corporal Hart)
Killzone series SCEE First-person shooter 2003–Present Interplanetary Strategic Alliance Marines
TimeSplitters: Future Perfect Electronic Arts First-person shooter 2005 Space Marines (Sergeant Cortez)
Mass Effect series Microsoft Game Studios; Electronic Arts Action role-playing game; Third-person shooter 2007–Present Systems Alliance Military, Including Commander Shepard, because there are no service branches anymore.
Dead Space series Electronic Arts Survival horror; Third-person shooter 2008-present USM Marine Corps - They are seen during the game when the ship USM Valor crashes on the USG Ishimura and the player must board the crash site to recover a singularity core.
Turok Touchstone Interactive Action game; First-person shooter 2008 Marines(Elite Commandos)
Eat Lead: The Return of Matt Hazard D3 Publisher Action game; Third-person shooter 2009 Space Marines
Alien Swarm Valve Corporation Action game; Third-person shooter; Shoot-em-up; Top-down 2010 Space Marines - The game can be single player or 4 players co-op. Theres 4 classes with 2 characters for each class: Officer, Special Weapons, Medic and Tech.

See also

References

  1. ^ Prucher, Jeff (2007), Brave new words: the Oxford dictionary of science fiction, Oxford reference online, Oxford University Press, p. 205, ISBN 0195305671, http://books.google.com/books?id=iYzi8m8FbEsC&pg=PA205 
  2. ^ "The parade ground voice of a First Sergeant of Space Marines cut through the fog and drizzle..."
  3. ^ "Space marines, arms reversed and heads bowed, stood guard around [the coffin]..."
  4. ^ "Internet Movie Database: Aliens Trivia". http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090605/trivia. Retrieved 2006-03-04. 
  5. ^ Adams, Ernest (February 2001). "Dogma 2001: A Challenge to Game Designers". Gamasutra. http://www.designersnotebook.com/Columns/037_Dogma_2001/037_dogma_2001.htm. Retrieved 2007-11-13. "4. There shall be no...space marines" 
  6. ^ "Marines in Spaaaaaace!". Defence Tech.org. September 19, 2005. http://www.defensetech.org/archives/001815.html. Retrieved 2006-04-03.