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This paper considers the place of the 100-plus-episode Internet series of Red vs. Blue (Burns and Hullum, 2003–2007) in the context of the war film genre, given that machinima is a kind of cinema. Unfettered by nationalistic censors or profit-hungry studio bosses, makers of anti-war machinima movies often depict a futuristic scenario in which combatants openly mock the purpose of their military leaders and in Red vs. Blue the generic characteristics of the Hollywood pro-war film are parodied ruthlessly. The technological determinism lampooned in the series not only offers a critique of contemporary US warfare but it also self-reflexively parodies the first-person shooter computer game it grew out of, through its re-imagining of the mask-like faces, over-the-top weaponry and hyperbolic armoury of the player's typical avatar into a more positive vision in which these erstwhile killer cyborgs engage in life-affirming introspection and dialogue. The series thereby makes a cogent case for the pursuit of satisfying, meaningful human agency rather than jingoistic warfare and unrestrained arms racing and this is evidenced by the online forum postings from the community of ‘reverbing’ fans.
D. Bruno Starrs holds masters degrees from Bond University and the University of Melbourne. His 2009 PhD from the Queensland University of Technology resulted in a Research Fellowship at the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra, which, in turn, resulted in the publication of his book Dutch Tilt, Aussie Auteur: The Films of Rolf de Heer (VDM 2009). He is also the author of two works of fiction: the novel entitled I Woke up Feeling Thailand (Sid Harta 2004) and a collection of stageplays entitled Suicide Plays (VDM 2009).