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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bnjizmwizmmutm2e0mc00otexlwizyzetnwiznzg3m2vjzmq5xkeyxkfqcgdeqxvyntayodkwoq_v1.jpg]]
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3->''"Greetings, Starfighter! You have been recruited by the Star League to defend the Frontier against Xur and the Ko-Dan Armada."''
4
5What if you got a really high score in a video game, and then got recruited into an adventure where you needed to play the game for real? Well that's what happens in 1984's ''The Last Starfighter'', which serves as both an exploration and a {{deconstruction}} of wish fulfillment.
6
7Alex Rogan has spent his whole life stuck in his family's trailer park, but his wish to leave it turns into more than he bargained for when the space-shooter arcade game he manages to beat turns out to have been a test to find the best space pilots in the universe. When Alex discovers that the actual Star League chose him to fight against the very real Xur and the Ko-Dan Armada, he refuses to go along with it. When Alex demands to return home, he finds an android duplicate of himself, Beta, having a tough time playing the role of Alex in the trailer park. After he reluctantly returns to space, the fun really begins.
8
9''The Last Starfighter'' created all of its spaceship effects shots using only computer-generated images (one of the first films to do so), but since it did so during the very early days of CGI, said effects stand out as such. A Cray X-MP rendered all of the film's CGI; as a bit of perspective, the 800 [=MHz=] Pentium III processor available to consumers fifteen years later -- or the average smartphone of 2012 -- matches the processor power of what was then the most powerful supercomputer in the world.
10
11Not to be confused with ''Film/TheStarfighters''.
12----
13!! ''The Last Starfighter'' provides examples of:
14* TwoDSpace: The at-the-time brand new CGI effects allowed for a rare aversion of this trope; the battles are fought in a very noticeable 3D environment. The Gunstar chair that Alex sits in allows for full 360 degree movement, including flipping him upside down at one point, which makes even more sense, as the Gunstar is sort of an outer-space gunship, made to attack opponents in any direction regardless of the one the ship is aimed at (as opposed to the Ko-Dan, who are in traditional "fighters"), and Alex is the gunner, not the pilot.
15* AcePilot: Alex is a variation as he is a talented ''gunner'', not a pilot; Grig, the navigator, takes care of that, and the Gunstar, though fast and heavily armored, doesn't seem to be particularly maneuverable. The trope is otherwise played straight.
16* ActorAllusion: The fast-talking (but ultimately heroic) character of Centauri is clearly a JustForFun/RecycledInSpace version of Robert Preston's most famous character, Harold Hill from ''Film/TheMusicMan'', and Preston seemed to be having the time of his life playing him.
17* ActualPacifist: The novelization features the League as such. They had some real trouble recruiting soldiers - or even finding a politician to recite to them a RousingSpeech.
18* AlienNonInterferenceClause: The Star League has no intention of contacting Earth until it matures.
19* AliensInCardiff: Or rather, a remote California desert trailer park. However, it's justified in that the arcade machine that tests skills was ''supposed'' to be shipped to UsefulNotes/LasVegas.
20* AliensSpeakingEnglish: Centauri does, due to already being familiar with Earth from producing and distributing the ''Starfighter'' video games, but the Rylans and other aliens don't. Alex has to wait a bit until they give him a translator. Afterwards, aliens '''are''' heard speaking English even when Alex isn't around, but this is likely TranslationConvention.
21** The novelization makes it clear that both speakers need translators and handwaves Grig talking to the humans at the end by saying that Alex taught him some English before they landed.
22* AllJustADream: Beta assures Louis of this when he sees Beta ''take off his own head'' and start working on it.
23-->'''Beta:''' Louis. You are having a terrible nightmare. Go back to sleep. ''(when Louis keeps peeking)'' '''LOUIS!'''
24* AndYouThoughtItWasAGame: Alex (and everyone else in his town) thinks the Starfighter video game is just that. He's quite surprised to learn that it's a recruitment tool.
25* ArcWords: "Greetings, Starfighter! You have been recruited by the Star League to defend the frontier against Xur and the Ko-Dan armada!"
26* ArchnemesisDad: An InvertedTrope here -- the BigBad's father is the BigGood.
27* AsYouKnow: Ambassador Enduran uses this trope almost by name -- "as you all know" -- as he mentions to the Starfighters what the Frontier is, why it's important, and how, because of a dark betrayal (by Xur), the Frontier will soon collapse. Naturally, the audience and Alex are hearing this for the first time. Justified in that the Ambassador is giving a standard "Welcome to the Star League, New Starfighters" speech given to new recruits.
28* AscendedFanboy: Alex goes from being the best at a video game to being the best (and only) Starfighter. An InvokedTrope, since unknown to him the game was deliberately set up with the same controls.
29* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: Grig views death as this:
30-->'''Alex:''' Wait a minute, when did the hangar go out?\
31'''Grig:''' I told you, when Xur attacked.\
32'''Alex:''' And where were the starfighters?\
33'''Grig:''' In the hangar.\
34'''Alex:''' You mean they're dead!?\
35'''Grig:''' Death is a primitive concept. I prefer to think of them as battling evil... in another dimension!\
36''(Alex is unimpressed, giving Grig his best WTF face.)''
37* BattleChant: When Ambassador Enduran gives a pep talk to the personnel of the Starfighter base, he concludes by saying "Victory or death!". They all start chanting "Victory or death!" in unison.
38* BeamSpam: The Death Blossom attack fires both lasers and missiles in all directions to take out all enemies within a certain radius of the Starfighter. The attack uses a tremendous amount of energy and leaves the ship defenseless until the batteries recharge.
39* BigBadWannabe: Xur only ''thinks'' he's in charge of the Ko-Dan armada. They barely tolerate his presence until they have crossed the Frontier.
40* BizarreAlienBiology: It's telling that Grig, a lizard-like humanoid, is perhaps the most normal-looking of all the aliens in the film (other than the Rylans, who look mostly human, other than having big foreheads and white hair in unusual styles). And then, of course, there's the Bogati, whose tentacle-thing Alex accidentally steps on.
41--> '''Alex''': I'm sorry. It was an accident, I didn't mean to step on your... whatever that is.
42* BloodKnight / ProudWarriorRace:
43** The Bogati, though they're never seen in action.
44** Grig also has his moments of Blood Knighthood.
45--->'''Alex''': [[OhCrap It'll be a slaughter!]]\
46'''Grig''': ''That's'' the spirit!\
47'''Alex''': No, ''my'' slaughter! One Gunstar against the ''armada?!''\
48'''Grig''': Yes, one Gunstar against the armada. I've always wanted to fight a desperate battle against incredible odds!
49* BreachingTheWall: The Ko-Dan Armada has been kept beyond the frontier of the civilized galaxy by an energy wall generated by thousands of satellites in a grid formation. That is, until the Ko-Dan laser-bore a hole in this wall, through which they launch meteors at Starfighter Base. After the Starfighter fleet is all but eliminated, the Armada then proceeds through the widened hole in the Frontier, expecting an unopposed march to the enemy's capital.
50* TheCaligula: It's implied that Xur's treachery and megalomaniacal tendencies are the result of something being very messed up in his head.
51* TheCallKnowsWhereYouLive: After Alex initially refuses TheCall, Xur sends an assassin after him. Centauri's [[spoiler:near-sacrifice]] shows him that his only chance of survival is with the Star League.
52--> '''Beta''': At least up there, you have a fighting chance in a Gunstar.
53* CardCarryingVillain: Xur. And everyone knows it. The only reason the bad guys even listen to him is because he holds vital information. [[spoiler: Once they use it, they get him off the bridge so they don't have to listen to his raving anymore. They obviously have to restrain themselves to keep him around that long, especially since he seems to have deluded himself into believing he's in charge.]]
54* Catch22Dilemma: A tactical variant, lampshaded by Alex when Grig explains the plan of attack against the Ko-Dan Armada.
55--> '''Alex''': Wait a second. We knock out the turret to get the fighters. But to get the turret, we've gotta get ''through'' the fighters. We're dead.
56* ChewTheScenery: Not one moment of Xur's onscreen time is wasted without a chunk of scenery getting toothmarks.
57* TheChosenMany: The Starfighters. Unfortunately, all but Alex die in the initial attack when the base is mostly destroyed.
58* ChristmasRushed: Gets an InUniverse mention.
59-->'''Rylan Bursar''': Return the money, Centauri.\
60'''Centauri''': Return the money! Are you delirious? Do you know how long it took to invent the games? To merchandise them? To get them in the stores by Christmas?
61* ClusterFBomb: ImpliedTrope. We don't hear what Alex is saying when he's told he's the only Starfighter left, but given whatever he's saying is [[SoundEffectsBleep drowned out by the noise of the ship's launch]], it's likely something that would have upped the film's rating.
62* ColonyDrop: The Ko-Dan command ship destroys Starfighter Command by firing a volley of small asteroids at it with a mass accelerator.
63* ComicBookAdaptation: By Creator/MarvelComics.
64* ContrivedCoincidence: Invoked by Centauri.
65-->'''Centauri''': The amusing thing about this, it's all a big mistake. That particular Starfighter game was supposed to be delivered to Vegas, not some flea-speck trailer park in the middle of tumbleweeds and tarantulas. So it must be fate, destiny, blind chance, luck even, that brings us together. And as the poet said, "the rest is history"
66* CoolCar: Centauri's, which took the angular wedge design of the [=DeLorean=], turned it up to eleven, then made it a transforming starship. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uvtt94Oz4N4 It's alien enough to be impressive to the average human, but not so alien as to be suspicious.]]
67* CoolOldGuy:
68** It's not made clear how old Centauri is, but he's definitely SeenItAll and has copious advice for Alex.
69** Otis gives Alex advice about making something of his life and helps give him the motivation to accept TheCall when it [[TheCallKnowsWhereYouLive makes its return trip]].
70* CoolOldLady: Maggie's grandma. [[spoiler:When Maggie is conflicted about whether to leave Earth to go with Alex, Granny encourages her, just so long as she writes back.]]
71-->[[spoiler:'''Granny''': Or, whatever it is they do up there.]]
72* CoolSpaceship:
73** As the first sci-fi film to have all its space scenes rendered in CGI, all the ships are fairly cool.
74** Alex's Gunstar is the top of the line: a SuperPrototype with advanced weapons and shielding systems that can take out an armada all by itself.
75* CosyCatastrophe: Louis is not afraid at all when Alex's Gunstar lands; he thinks it's awesome.
76-->'''Louis''': Woooo! All right, we're being invaded!
77* CoversAlwaysLie: Although Kril is the principal Ko-Dan bad guy, he is shown, red-lensed techno-monocle and all, in a Starfighter uniform for some unknown reason.
78* CrazyCulturalComparison: As Alex and Grig fly through the tunnels of an asteroid, Grig mentions that it reminds him of home. That leads to a chat comparing their species' differences in families, dwellings, and games... which inspires Alex to suggest [[spoiler:hiding as the Ko-Dan Armada goes by, then make a surprise attack on them.]]
79--> '''Grig''': Your plan might really have worked. What a pity there are no Starfighters left to carry it out.
80* {{Cult}}: Xur's father mentions the "Xurian cult" that had to be put down in his IHaveNoSon speech.
81* CurbStompBattle: Alex is convinced that he and Grig are heading into this - one Gunstar against the Armada - and for a moment, it looks like they're in for it; the Gunstar's main weapons are depleted and the Armada is closing in. Then [[spoiler: Alex triggers Death Blossom...]]
82* CurseCutShort: Alex, when Centauri's Star Car first takes off.
83--> '''Alex''': Ohhhh, Shh- ''(Engine Roars)''
84* CuttingTheKnot: How to get through the fleet to get to the turret that makes the fleet so effective? [[spoiler:Wait in something like an asteroid for the ships to pass, and you have an open shot at the turret.]]
85* DamnYouMuscleMemory: Inverted and exploited. The Starfighter arcade cabinet mimics the control setup on a real Gunstar, so the game is actually training the reflexes necessary to be a real Starfighter. After some warm-ups in the real thing, Alex is [[ShootTheBullet blasting Ko-Dan fire before it hits]] exactly as he did in the game.
86* DangerTakesABackseat: How the second Zando-Zan kills the police officer.
87* DareToBeBadass:
88** Centauri's reponse to Alex's RefusalOfTheCall:
89---> '''Alex''': Listen, Centauri. I'm not any of those guys, I'm just a kid from a trailer park...
90---> '''Centauri''': If that's what you think, then that's all you'll ever be!
91** Otis gives one to Alex early on, minutes before he beats the Starfighter record and kicks off the plot.
92---> '''Otis''': Things change. Always do. You'll get your chance. The important thing is when it comes- you've got to grab with both hands and hold on tight.
93** Grig gives an understated one, when Alex thinks up a plan to [[spoiler:hide in asteroid caves to let the Ko-Dan armada pass, then attack the communication turret from behind.]]
94--->'''Grig''': Your plan might really have worked. ''(in a tone heavy with implication)'' What a pity there are no Starfighters left to carry it out.\
95'''Alex''': ''(after a long pause)'' Grig? Maybe there is a Starfighter left.
96* DeadpanSnarker:
97** Unsurprisingly, Alex is a little cynical.
98--->'''Alex:''' Teriffic. I'm about to get killed a million miles from nowhere with a gung-ho iguana who tells me to ''relax''.
99** Beta, surprisingly - the ''clone'' is snarkier than the original.
100--->'''Beta:''' ''(rolling his eyes)'' Oh. Save the whales but not the universe.
101* DecompositeCharacter: In the {{Novelization}}, Kril's MookLieutenant is split into multiple Ko-Dan officers performing different functions on the command ship's bridge.
102* {{Defictionalized}}: A fan game that attempts to recreate the arcade game depicted in the film [[http://www.roguesynapse.com/games/last_starfighter.php was released 23 years after the movie]]. The [[LicensedGame Atari game]] planned along with the movie and mentioned in the credits never materialized. One year later it was released as ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iabq8cSmYiE Star Raiders II]]'', with the player fighting enemies resembling Ko-Dan fighters and command ships from the Zylon Empire.[[note]]InNameOnly sequel to [[VideoGame/StarRaiders a highly successful game.]] considered a KillerApp for 8-bit Ataris back in 1979, itself an adaptation of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' with [[SerialNumbersFiledOff lawyer-friendly names]]. The true sequel was stuck in a mostly finished state since shortly after UsefulNotes/TheGreatVideoGameCrashOf1983.[[/note]] While quite good [[FairForItsDay for 1985]] and fairly close to the film, it still has TwoDSpace.
103* DeflectorShields: Largely averted. The Frontier itself seems to be a massive energy shield, but none of the ships, even capital ships, seem to have shields. Alex's prototype Gunstar is said to have "Deflector Plating", but that's just a kind of armor.
104* DescriptionCut: Happens right after Xur shows the torturous execution of the master spy for all of the Starfighters to see.
105--> '''Centauri''': Heh... so! You still wanna go... and miss all the excitement?\
106''[Cut to Centauri and Alex in the car, returning to Earth]''\
107'''Centauri''': Little brat.
108* DiesWideOpen: [[spoiler: Centauri, after his [[HeroicSacrifice heroic sacrifice]] to save Alex from an assassination attempt.]]
109* DigitalDestruction: The 2009 (25th anniversary) DVD and Blu-ray editions are missing a dramatic-sting music cue about half an hour in, when Beta Alex is shown with goopy skin under his blankets. Strangely, this omission doesn't seem to be the fault of the conversion to 5.1, as the 1999 (Collector's Edition) DVD is in 5.1 and has the cue. 1999's also had the rarely-included Universal Studios and tour banners at the end, but not 2009's.
110** Although most of the 1999 DVD's extras are brought over to the 2009 edition, they are of considerably worse image quality, with lots of interlacing artifacts and dot-crawl (and a cropped trailer). In fact, everything on the disc, including the feature, takes up less space on the 2009 DVD, and even with a new 20-minute retrospective the entire disc is smaller. The only thing keeping the 1999 DVD from being superior, apart from a slightly dirtier film transfer and one new extra, is the replacement of the original Universal and Lorimar logos with the 1997 Universal logo.
111* DisappearedDad:
112** When Alex shows Grig a family photo, it is of himself, Louis, Maggie, and ''both'' of his parents, but his dad never appears elsewhere in the movie and his mom is obviously working to support the family. It is unclear if he left or died.
113** The [[AllThereInTheManual novelization adds a bit of dialogue]] when Alex shows Grig the photo, making it clear Alex's father died not too long ago.
114** Maggie appears to have nobody but Granny, with no mention of her [[DisappearedDad dad]] ''or'' her [[MissingMom mom]].
115* DisneyDeath: [[spoiler: Centauri]]
116-->[[spoiler: "Me, die? And miss all the excitement? Oh, no. I was merely dormant while my body repaired itself."]]
117* DittoAliens: Although the member species of the Star League are visually diverse, members within most species are distinguishable only by their clothing. [[RuleOfFunny Played for laughs]] when Grig rapidly flashes through photos of his 6000-member family; the images are a blur of various LizardFolk of different height and dress, all sharing the ''same'' face.
118* DoNotAdjustYourSet: Xur's introduction at the Starfighter base, when he takes over all their communications.
119* DoomAsTestPrize: In the novelization, Alex’ internal narration refers to being recruited to fight in a real interstellar war as his "prize" for winning an arcade game as, "The booby prize."
120* DreamDeception: During the period where a robot duplicate, Beta, is standing in for Alex, his little brother Louis wakes up in the middle of the night and sees Beta performing self-maintenance. Beta tells Louis he's having a nightmare and to go back to sleep.
121* TheEighties: Primarily the video gaming culture that had spawned that decade.
122* EurekaMoment: Alex and Grig comparing their homes, with Grig's people living in caves, causes Alex to reminisce about playing hide-and-seek in the caves near the trailer park. [[spoiler:This sparks a train of thought about using the asteroid cave they're in to hide from the armada, then attack from behind.]]
123* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: The {{Novelization}} reveals that Kril has a family he loves.
124* EverybodysDeadDave: Alex returns to the Starfighter base to find it in ruins, with the majority of the personnel dead and all but one of the Gunstars destroyed.
125* EvilIsHammy: Xur, oh so very much. It's amazing the hull of his command ship was able to withstand his intense [[ChewingTheScenery scenery chewing]].
126* EvilLaugh: Xur at the end of his speech to the Starfighter base personnel. He also does it in the faces of the Ko-Dan commanders and the First Officer is all for throwing him out the airlock right there and then.
127* EvilWearsBlack: Xur wears a black outfit.
128* ExcaliburInTheStone: It's implied that Centauri has recruited starfighters this way before as he's accused of using the "Excalibur Test" to recruit Alex from Earth.
129* ExplosiveBreeder: Grig tells Alex that back home, he has ''"a wifeoid and 6,000 little Griglings."''
130* FaceDeathWithDignity: Villain though he is, Kril exhibits this trope.
131-->'''Ko-Dan Officer''': We're locked into the moon's gravitational pull! What do we do?\
132'''Commander Kril''': ''(monocle/visor snaps into place)'' We die.
133* FacePalm: When Beta sees a Zando-Zan landing outside his window, he just sighs, pinches the bridge of his nose, and shakes his head. It's worth noting that his head was detached and sitting on a desk at the time, and he shook it by rotating it back and forth with his other hand — sort of a third-person face palm.
134* TheFaceless: Beta before shaking hands with Alex. This apparently is some sort of DNA extraction / analyzer, as Beta is growing a new face - Alex's - that night.
135* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: The spy is executed by Xur by having ''his skull then brain melted''. And no, there's no GoryDiscretionShot. Even the DVDCommentary acknowledges how extreme it is compared to the rest of the film.
136** It's even worse in the novel: the spy has a helmet placed over his head, then the helmet ''shrinks'' around the poor guy's head, ''crushing his skull, [[ToThePain slowly]].'' At the end, all that's left of the spy's head is a pointed nub of neck bone.
137* FamousFamousFictional:
138-->'''Centauri:''' Alex! Alex! You're walking away from history! ''History!'' Did Chris Columbus say he wanted to stay home? Nooooo. What if the Wright Brothers thought that only birds should fly? And did Galoka think that [[WhatMeasureIsANonCute the Ulus were too ugly to save?]]
139-->'''Alex''': Who's Galoka?
140-->'''Centauri:''' Never mind.
141* {{Fanfare}}: The theme is one, which adds even more trumpets at the end.
142* FatalFamilyPhoto: Inverted. One might expect Grig showing Alex the photos of his family to lead to this, but instead it helps Alex realize what he's fighting for.... and [[EurekaMoment how to fight for it]].
143* TheFederation: The Star League.
144* FictionalVideoGame: Atari Inc. was originally slated to develop arcade and home video games based on the movie (the game(s) were even mention in the closing credits). They were cancelled for various reasons, including the sale/division of Atari Inc. into Atari Games and Atari Corp. The home computer game was eventually released (with minor changes) as ''VideoGame/StarRaiders II''.
145* FighterLaunchingSequence: PlayedForLaughs, as the ship takes off when Alex is basically told that he has to take on the Ko-Dan Armada all by himself, and he's likely cussing up a storm under his helmet.
146* FinalSpeech: Centauri's big death scene. [[spoiler:Or so we think.]]
147* {{Foreshadowing}}: Alex destroys the videogame Command Ship in the same way he'll critically wound the real one.
148* TheGameComeToLife: Inverted. The game is based on a space war that was already in progress.
149* GirlsHaveCooties: Louis doesn't actually believe this (having his stash of Playboys and all), but when he sees Alex and Maggie being romantic, he rolls his eyes and mutters, "Diarrhea!" in disgust.
150* GlowingEyes: [[spoiler: Centauri, when not wearing his human prosthetic mask.]]
151* GoodColorsEvilColors: Rylos and the Ko-Dan sets were set up this way, as told in the DVDCommentary.
152* GreaterScopeVillain: The Ko-Dan Emperor is never seen or heard in the film, only being mentioned a couple of times by other characters. However, he's the one providing the armada Xur uses to breach the Frontier and attack Rylos (and presumably the one who gives Kril permission to [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness get rid of Xur once his usefulness]] in getting past the Frontier was over).
153* TheGreys: What Centauri looks like without his human mask. Interestingly, this is also what Beta resembles before he finishes shapeshifting into Alex.
154* GuyInBack: {{Inverted}} and {{Deconstructed}}. The hero is a gunner, not a pilot, which would traditionally be the rear position. However, the Gunstars are so sophisticated that the rear position is for navigation rather than piloting; the ship pretty much flies itself. [[note]]May count as TruthInTelevision. This mimics the setup of the real world AH-64 Apache helicopter gunship, which also set the gunner in the front for maximum field of view in combat.[[/note]]
155* HandWave: "Oh, I won't bore you with the details." Complete with a literal hand wave.
156* HeroicSacrifice:
157** Centauri [[spoiler:sacrifices himself to save Alex from an assassin. He gets better]].
158** [[spoiler:Beta prevents a Zando-Zan spy reporting that Alex is still at large by ramming the spy's ship with a truck, causing an explosion that takes out the spy, the ship, and himself]].
159* HoistByHisOwnPetard: If Xur hadn't sent assassins to kill Alex, he might never have returned to Rylos.
160** Also ordering an invasion ensured the fleet rushed ahead, making Alex's sneak attack even easier.
161* HologramProjectionImperfection: While Xur's HugeHolographicHead is appearing in the Starfighter base, it flickers and distorts.
162* HugeHolographicHead: Xur uses one to communicate with the Star League.
163* IChooseToStay: [[spoiler:After saving the galaxy, Alex and Maggie leave Earth to seek their future in the stars.]]
164-->[[spoiler:'''Grig:''' You will stay, won't you, Alex?]]
165-->[[spoiler:'''Centauri:''' Of course he'll stay.]]
166-->[[spoiler:'''Alex:''' ... Stay.]]
167* IHaveNoSon: Xur's father disowns him for his monstrous crimes.
168* IKnowMortalKombat: The movie is an explicit justification of this trope; the video game is designed to be a training and recruitment tool.
169* ILikeThoseOdds: One Gunstar against the entire Ko-Dan armada. Grig likes the idea, but subverts the trope in that he thinks it'll be a BolivianArmyEnding.
170* InsignificantLittleBluePlanet: Earth isn't advanced enough to even know about the Star League, much less participate. Centauri retorts that it's irrelevant.
171-->'''Centauri:''' Earth's in danger too, isn't it?
172* ItBeganWithATwistOfFate: At one point, Centauri chuckles to Alex that the Starfighter arcade machine was never intended to be delivered to a trailer community -- it was intended to be shipped to UsefulNotes/LasVegas. One of the greatest Starfighters who ever lived (Centauri's words) was found in the middle of nowhere.
173* IWishItWereReal: Except that when it does turn out to be real, all Alex wants is [[RefusingTheCall to go home again]].
174* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: While Centauri seems like a SnakeOilSalesman, he means it when he says he always had the best intentions for Alex. He's also correct in pointing out that while Earth isn't advanced enough to be introduced to the Star League, they're still in danger from the Ko-Dan armada and thus Alex has every right to help fight the Ko-Dans.
175* KarmaHoudini: At the end of the movie, Xur flies off in an escape pod and is never seen again (though it was done as a SequelHook).
176* KillAndReplace: Zando-Zan assassins do this to a local cop and a hitchhiker.
177* LargeHam: Xur, to the point that even his Ko-Dan allies find him insufferable.
178--> "How long must we endure this fool?"
179** Centauri has his share of moments (Robert Preston seems to be having a grand ol' time) and Grig has one or two as well.
180* TheLastTitle: The title.
181* LikeADuckTakesToWater: Alex manages to be an exceptional Starfighter, despite having grown up in a trailer park on Earth. Justified as Alex has been playing the game repeatedly, and since the gunner's real controls are actually near-identical to the game's, the game has actually been training Alex to operate a Gunstar. Alex inherently has the rare skill and reflexes needed to be a Starfighter.
182* LizardFolk: Grig is a heroic example.
183* LosingYourHead: The Beta unit can remove (and replace) its [[CranialProcessingUnit head]], which can still remotely control the body.
184* MacrossMissileMassacre: Coupled with BeamSpam, Death Blossom is a DesperationAttack that fires all of the Gunstar's weaponry at once.
185* MeaningfulEcho: When Alex repeats the attraction line from the video game, just before readying to attack the actual armada.
186* TheMole: The Rylan recruitment officer who argues with Centauri after Alex is brought in later sabotages the base's defenses during Xur's attack.
187* MoleMen: Grig's species live underground.
188* MoodWhiplash: When Alex's mom comes home, he's beaming from breaking the ''Starfighter'' record ("This is where they're going to say it all started"); his mom is a flat "that's nice, dear", then reveals Alex failed to get enrolled in the university he wanted, which crushes the entire mood.
189* TheMothership: The Ko-Dan mothership is the home of their fleet and also serves the role of TheBattlestar.
190* MotileVehicularComponents: Gunstar One had an unique new feature that separated it from other Gunstars, a prototype weapon called Death Blossom Mode, installed by Grig. Panels along the engine block would open up, referred to by Grig as Petals, and expose [[PhotoprotoneutronTorpedo Photon Orb launchers]] and extra laser cannons, which would, when engaged, allow the Gunstar to spin in a spherical axis and obliterate every target in range.
191* MultiDirectionalBarrage: What makes the "Death Blossom" attack so effective is that the ships rotates like crazy on all three axis, making sure no direction is safe when in range.
192* MundaneMadeAwesome: Granted, beating a difficult video game is worthy of a high five or two, but when Alex goes for, and beats the Starfighter record, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJRmY9VXf1g the trailer park acts as if]] Music/TheBeatles just came to town (though it is probably the most exciting thing that's happened there lately).
193* TheMusical: This was adapted into an off-Broadway musical. Seriously, this exists. (If you're curious, the Death Blossom is simulated using a swiveling rolling chair.)
194* NiceGuy: Alex, who's sick of being selfless. He's constantly helping the hapless trailer park residents with their problems, but never has any sort of time for himself. When he gets turned down for financial aid at a university he was interested in (possibly forcing him to go to the local city college), he suffers a HeroicBSOD.
195* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Alex initially refuses to be a Starfighter and returns to Earth, but changes his mind when he (and Centauri) are attacked by Zandozan assassins who were deployed by Xur. Had Xur simply ''left Alex alone'', he would have stayed on Earth, and there would have been no Last Starfighter to oppose the Ko-Dan invasion.
196* NintendoHard: Starfighter is an InUniverse example. Despite being a RailShooter, the second Alex lets Louis take over, he's immediately killed. Apparently, no one has ever defeated the Command Ship before, which attracts Centauri's attention.
197* NoodleIncident:
198** Grig mentioning Centauri's "old Excalibur (Test) tricks" when he finds out how Alex was recruited.
199** Centauri's FamousFamousFictional mention of Galoka and the Ulus.
200* {{Novelization}}: Written by Creator/AlanDeanFoster. Most noted for a ''vastly'' expanded space battle against the Ko-Dan armada, the removal of the Death Blossom super-weapon, and "refueling" the Gunstar by flying it near the surface of a star.
201* OhMyGods: Centauri tells Alex Rogan, "May the luck of the Seven Pillars of Gulu be with you at all times."[[note]]"Oh, these cheapskates are going to thank Centauri, trust me. ''Bula!''"[[/note]]
202* OnlyMostlyDead: [[spoiler:Centauri was just going into a deep sleep while his HealingFactor kicked in.]]
203* TheOnlyOne:
204** Alex Rogan escaped the Ko-Dan Armada's destruction of Starfighter Command by ColonyDrop because he was off-planet at the time, having refused to become a Starfighter in the first place.
205** The Gunstar he ends up piloting was in a separate hangar because it was an [[SuperPrototype advanced prototype]].
206* OrganAutonomy: When the first Zando-Zan has its arm shot off by Centauri, we see that is it still capable of firing the gun it is holding.
207* PardonMyKlingon: The audience does get to hear some Rylan putdowns before the TranslatorMicrobes are activated.
208-->'''Rylan Bursar:''' ''(on seeing Alex, and clearly unimpressed)'' ... ''eh sanchay..!''[[note]]From contextual clues, "eh sanchay" probably means "a human" or "a primitive"[[/note]]
209* ParentalObliviousness: There is no sign that Alex's mother notices anything wrong with Beta, who's pretending to be him. Justified in that she's almost always at work, and Alex seems to be just a moody teen who just learned he was turned down for a college loan when she ''is'' home.
210* PassingTheTorch: As Alex and Maggie head into space, his younger brother, Louis steps up to the Starfighter video game, and watches as the Gunstar flies into the stars. It's implied that Louis might join his brother among the stars.
211* PerfectPacifistPeople: The Star League, who had to recruit from hundreds of member planets to find a roomful of warriors who "possess[ed] the...gift". The novelization even describes the League President as turning queasy at hearing their BattleCry.
212* PhotoprotoneutronTorpedo: The checklist that Alex runs down with Grig while they ready their Gunstar for battle includes "particle beams" and something called "photon bolts". In the novelization, Grig says that the real names involve science too advanced to translate, so he uses the game terms for the sake of convenience.
213* PintSizedPowerhouse: The Gunstar, particularly Alex and Grig's SuperPrototype. While it's large by fighter standards (it might possibly even be classified as a corvette), it has disproportionately enormous firepower capable of taking on an entire fleet of fighters and bringing down a capital ship single-handedly. It's the reason the titular Starfighters are the gunners who man the weapons rather than the navigators who steer the craft, as so much of the Gunstar is dedicated to weapons. It's also a tough little ship.
214* PoorCommunicationKills: A key difference between Xur and the Ko-Dan is their reaction to a partial transmission.
215* PornStash: "Back to sleep, Louis, or I'm telling Mom about your Magazine/{{Playboy}}s!" (Followed by...)
216* PostWakeUpRealization: Alex has been replaced by a Beta Unit (android double) while he's off in outer space. Late at night, the Beta Unit takes off his own head to try to repair it. Alex's brother Louis is sleeping in the same room and wakes up. When he sees what appears to be his brother with his head removed, he starts to go back to sleep and then does a DoubleTake and becomes fully awake.
217* PrecisionFStrike.
218-->'''Louis:''' What the ''shit''?!\
219'''Beta:''' I ''said'' back to sleep, Louis, or I'm telling Mom about your Playboys!
220* ThePreciousPreciousCar: Blake's red Dodge pickup. When Beta "[[HeroStoleMyBike borrows]]" it to chase after the Zando-Zan impersonating a cop, Blake warns him not to scratch the paint. He does a lot more than scratch the paint; he ends up crashing it into the alien assassin's ship, blowing both vehicles to bits.
221* PresentPeeking: Referenced by Centauri.
222--> '''Centauri:''' ''(to Alex)'' Hey, are you kind of kid who reads the last page of a mystery first? Who pesters the magician to tell you his tricks? Who sneaks downstairs to peek at his Christmas presents? Noooo, of course you're not.[[note]]"That's why I'm not-gonna-tell-you!"[[/note]]
223* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Some of the Starfighters are from a race called the Bogati, [[{{Cthulhumanoid}} Cthulhumanoids]] that are noted for their love of fighting. Given their still tiny number, this is only relative to the rest of the pacifist Star League.
224* RaceForYourLove
225* RailShooter: How the Gunner deals with enemies, which makes the arcade game "simulator" a Justified Genre.
226* RammingAlwaysWorks: Combined with TakingYouWithMe in both cases.
227** [[spoiler: Beta crashes his borrowed truck into the assassin's spaceship.]]
228** [[spoiler: Commander Kril gives the obligatory order in an attempt to ram Alex's immobile Gunstar.]]
229--->[[spoiler: '''Kril:''' FORGET THE GUNS! '''''RAMMING SPEED!''''']]
230* RedEyesTakeWarning: Averted with Centauri's true form, which has red eyes but is not evil. Still striking enough to cause a minor JumpScare the first time we see it. And then there's the Bogati, who have ''six'' of them, although they're still technically good guys (albeit ones who it's best to tread lightly around).
231* RedPillBluePill: Subverted at first; Centauri does a very hard sell to pressure Alex into becoming a Starfighter, up to "kidnapping" him (but not really), and taking him to the Star League and having him sit in a mission briefing, but Alex still [[RefusalOfTheCall turns down the offer.]]
232* RefusalOfTheCall: Alex wants to get out of his small town, but isn't sure he wants to get involved in an interstellar war. Yet this refusal is followed by [[TheCallKnowsWhereYouLive Xur And The Ko-Dan Armada Know Where You Live]].
233* RidiculouslyHumanRobot: Beta absorbs Alex's DNA and thereby copies him with near perfection, but has a hard time learning all of the humans' customs. Like the tongue in the ear thing.
234* RoboticReveal: Beta is shot by the assassin, revealing his robotic insides to both his attacker and Maggie.
235* RobotMe: Beta is a duplicate of Alex intended to cover up his absence from Earth.
236* RobotNames: "Beta" is not a name, but a designation for a type of robot.
237* RousingSpeech:
238-->'''Alex:''' ''(depressed)'' Otis, I just never have a chance to do anything around here.
239-->'''Otis:''' Things change. Always do. You'll get your chance! Important thing is, when it comes, [[CarpeDiem you've got to grab it with both hands, and hold on tight!]]
240* RuleNumberOne: "Always trust Centauri!"[[note]]According to Centauri. Though, technically, this piece of advice is actually #3. The first was "You're on Rylos, my boy. Stop thinking Human." Followed by "You've got a good thing going here. Keep smiling. Don't blow it."[[/note]]
241* RuleOfSymbolism: Why is the official starfighter test called the "Excalibur test"? It's because the idea for this movie came from one of the filmmakers watching kids play arcade games, while he read ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'', and thought of a video game being a sword in the stone. So the term is an in-joke.
242* SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale:
243** The Frontier is an energy field that encapsulates (or at least cordons off) an entire section of the known galaxy. The energy field is projected by field generators that are placed, at best, ten kilometers apart. That would be a septillion (10 to the power of 24) generators per square light year of barrier, with a few billion of those for one third of the galaxy.
244*** The novelization changes this to state that the Frontier is a political designation and that, rather than knowing how to defeat it, Xur instead knows the location of the Starfighter base. Also, it changes the destruction of a force field to the traitor giving the enemy the codes for the League NoWarpingZone generators.
245** The Ko-Dan command ship's ColonyDrop against the Star League base. Leaving aside the pinpoint accuracy required to hit a particular planetary target from space distances, the Frontier is apparently well within Rylos' star system because otherwise it would've taken tens of thousands of years for the meteorites to hit at sublight velocities.
246** The distance from Rylos to the Frontier is apparently really short as well, given the brief flight in the Gunstar. Grig says they'll be there in "twenty klicks" and that he'll have a solution to getting past the fighters to hit the command ship before they do. When he finishes speaking, an alarm sounds, and they're at the Frontier.[[note]]By the look on Grig's face, however, it's more likely he made a mistake in distance.[[/note]] In real life "klicks" is a common slang term for "kilometers"...
247** The running gunfight at the end concludes a few minutes after it started just inside the Frontier with the out-of-control Ko-Dan flagship colliding with Rylos' moon. Either both sides continued to travel at superluminal speeds throughout (which seems unlikely given how long it took the Mothership to close on the stationary Gunstar) or the Frontier really is inside the Rylos system. [[note]] Logically, as the (only?) military base and primary launch/training platform of the Starfighters, Rylos would be close to the border of an obviously hostile star nation. [[/note]]
248* ScrewThisImOutOfHere: Alex's reaction to being unknowingly "recruited" into an alien war is about what you'd expect.
249* SeizeHim: Commander Kril gives this order to the Ko-Dan soldiers after Emperor Xur screws up.
250* SentryGun: An array of automatic defensive turrets protects the Star League's base, and do quite well at it until they are sabotaged.
251* SeriousBusiness: Getting a high score in a video game is so important that it gets the entire trailer park's attention. Given Alex' complaints about how boring his hometown is, it may well be the most exciting thing around. Also, Alex seems to be well-known and well-liked (at least among the older residents), so it may have been less about breaking the record, and more about ''Alex'' breaking the record.
252* SequelHook: The Frontier is still down, Xur escapes, and the Ko-Dan Emperor presumably could send more ships to attack. Too bad there never was a sequel.
253* SimulationGame: The Starfighter game is a simulation of the real thing.
254* SmallTownBoredom: Alex lives in a trailer park with so little to do that a video game is considered the pinnacle of excitement.
255* SnakeOilSalesman: Centauri is a space version, peddling video games to planets too primitive for the Star League and conveniently failing to mention that they are a recruitment tool. Downplayed in that while Centauri does prize wealth, his intentions are ultimately heroic (he's not above issuing a sincere DareToBeBadass or even TakingTheBullet), and he's only trying to hoodwink people into doing the right thing.
256* SoundEffectBleep: What is surely a [[ClusterFBomb truly spectacular string of profanity]] from Alex is conveniently drowned out by the noise from his and Grig's Gunstar taking off.
257* SpaceFighter: The Gunstars and Ko-Dan fighters. The Gunstars apparently operate without the support of a battlestar-equivalent.
258* StayWithTheAliens: Alex [[IChooseToStay remains with the Star League]] to help them rebuild and to train their next generation of Starfighters.
259* SuperPrototype: The Gunstar that Alex and Grig use is stated to be an "advanced prototype" featuring numerous improvements over the current line of Gunstars, such as better armor, better weapons, and experimental systems such as Death Blossom. Since it was a work-in-progress kept in a separate part of the base from the main hangar, it's also the only Gunstar to survive Xur's sneak attack. [[spoiler:It also ''breaks down'' after annihilating the armada due to the prototype superweapon draining all power, and Grig has to hot-wire the life support systems to jumpstart the reactor in order to get them out of the way of the charging command ship]].
260* SyntheticVoiceActor: Most of the aliens that are not largely human in appearance have heavily filtered voices, with the notable exception of Grig.
261* TakingTheBullet: Centauri does it to save Alex from a Zando-Zan energy bolt.
262* TechMarchesOn: Grig's amazing photo album - thousands of pictures stored in a device you can hold in your hand/tentacle/pseudopod! It seemed fantastic, back in the TheEighties. Now, of course, it doesn't do ''enough'' compared to what's available only 30 years later, though it might have other capabilities that weren't shown.
263* ThirdPersonPerson: Careful listeners will notice that Centauri never says "I", but "Centauri" (though he does say "me".)
264* TraitorShot: One of the Rylans is secretly a Xur follower. The camera holds on his face just before he plants an explosive device.
265* TranslatorMicrobes:
266-->'''Alex:''' You speak English?\
267'''Rylan Officer:''' No, you ''hear'' English thanks to the translator device.
268** Viewers with good ears can tell when the device becomes active, because the background chatter switches instantly from Rylan to English.
269** TranslationConvention takes effect after Alex is given the translation device, as conversations among aliens from then on are heard in English even when Alex isn't around.
270* TrashyTrailerHome: Alex lives in the [=StarLite=] [=StarBrite=] trailer park, which his mom manages. Alex is responsible for repairs and maintenance.
271* UnfinishedUntestedUsedAnyway: The Death Blossom device in Alex's Gunstar has never been tested. Grig tells Alex that using it might overload the systems and blow up the ship. Alex convinces him to use it anyway, and it destroys all of the Ko-Dan fighters, however it does overload the systems and leaves them adrift in space.
272* UnusualHiringPractices: The Star League hires pilots by seeing who does the best at video games, and seed arcades with their training game cabinet.
273* VanityPlate: Centauri's CoolCar has "RYLOS" as a license plate.
274* VerticalKidnapping: Attempted when an alien assassin is sent to kill Alex.
275* AVillainNamedZrg: Xur fits, pronunciation-wise.
276* VillainousBreakdown: Xur, once his allies have had enough of his [[TheCaligula bizarre personality]].
277-->'''Xur:''' How dare you! I am the Emperor of Rylos! I and I alone command this entire arm-- ''(guards begin to drag him away)'' Release me! I ''command'' you! '''''YOU WILL PAY FOR THIS WITH YOUR LIVES!'''''
278* VillainExitStageLeft: Xur, during the impact strikes of the Gunstar. SavedForTheSequel that never happened.
279* VoluntaryShapeshifting: The Zando-Zan assassins are shapeshifters. Also Centauri, to some extent.
280* WarriorHeaven: Grig prefers to think his fallen comrades are "battling evil in another dimension".
281* YouOweMe: Beta, almost word for word, to an absent Alex [[spoiler: during his HeroicSacrifice]].
282-->"You owe me one, Alex."
283* YoureNotMyFather: Inverted. Xur mocks his familial relationship to his father, who in turn [[IHaveNoSon disowns him]].
284* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: While Xur believes himself the leader of the Ko-Dan armada, he is in fact useful to them in exactly one way: by having the codes to the Frontier. Once he's served that purpose, he is rapidly shunted aside. Earlier, the Ko-Dan second-in-command whispers to Kril, "How long must we endure this fool?" Kril motions for him to shut up, since Xur is still in the room.

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