Rambo is a 2008 action film starring Sylvester Stallone as Vietnam War veteran John Rambo. Stallone also co-wrote and directed the film. It is the fourth installment of the Rambo franchise, twenty years since the last film.
Rambo holds the record with the most kills out of the entire Rambo series, with 262 kills ;[2] also the number is more than that of the previous three movies combined. Stallone justified this in a press conference by saying the violence in the film was to underline the ongoing problems in Burma.[3][4][5]
Plot
The film opens with newsreels of the crisis in Burma. Burma (officially known as Myanmar) is under the iron fist rule of Than Shwe and takes harsher stances against the nation's pro-democracy movement. Rebels are thrown into a mine-infested marsh and then gunned down by the Myanmar Armed Forces, while the cigarette-smoking Burmese military officer Major Pa Tee Tint gazes grimly at the scene.
Former U.S. soldier John Rambo still lives in Thailand and now resides in a village near the Burmese border. He makes a living capturing venomous snakes and selling them in a nearby village. He also transports roamers in his boat. A missionary, Michael Burnett (Paul Schulze), asks Rambo to take him and his associates up the Salween River to Burma on a humanitarian mission. Rambo refuses, revealing himself to be bitter and cynical, but is convinced by Sarah Miller (Julie Benz) to take them.
The boat is stopped by pirates who demand Sarah in exchange for passage. After negotiation fails, Rambo kills them all. Although his actions save the missionaries, it greatly disturbs them. Upon arrival, Michael says that they will travel by road and will not need Rambo's help for the return trip. The mission goes well until the army, led by the Major Tint, brutally attacks the village, killing most of the villagers, sometimes after frightful torture and mutilation, and two missionaries, and kidnapping the rest. When the missionaries fail to come back after ten days, their pastor comes to Rambo to ask for his help in guiding hired mercenaries to the village where the missionaries were last seen.
Troubled by the small platoon (which includes a child), Rambo decides to accompany the soldiers, following them from behind. They come to the destroyed village filled with mutilated humans and animals, and hide when Myanmar soldiers arrive in a truck with villagers. As the soldiers are about to massacre the villagers, Rambo appears and shoots them all with a bow and arrows. Hijacking the soldiers' truck, they create a plan to save the hostages at the P.O.W. camp, doing so within fifteen minutes to avoid alerting the army. Rambo helps Sarah and the others to escape. The Myanmar Army (Tatmadaw) unit finds their hostages missing and organizes a massive manhunt. Everyone except for Rambo, Sarah, and "School Boy" is captured. Sarah and the School Boy hide in the trees while Rambo sets off a claymore mine in the jungle, causing an explosion that levels a large area and kills several soldiers. Meanwhile Sarah and the School Boy have found the others being brutally beaten by Tint. Just as the group is to be executed, Rambo appears, hijacks a truck-mounted .50-caliber machine gun and engages the Burmese army. Seeing this, Schoolboy begins shooting, and, as several of the soldiers are killed the mercenaries take their weapons and begin to fight back. After several missionary deaths a group of Karen rebels joins the fight to help Rambo and the mercenaries defeat the Burmese army. Michael, the previous pacifist, jumps a soldier and beats him to death with a small rock. Seeing that the battle is lost Major Tint decides to flee, only to run into Rambo's machete, who then proceeds to disembowel him.
Encouraged by Sarah's words, Rambo returns to the United States. The last scene shows him walking along a rural highway, past a horse farm and a rusted mailbox with the name "R. Rambo" on it (earlier, Rambo said that the only family he had might be his father). He makes his way down the gravel driveway as the credits roll.
Cast
Filming
Filming started on 23 February 2007 and ended on 4 May 2007. The movie was shot at Chiang Mai, Thailand, in Mexico and in the USA.
While filming near Myanmar, Stallone and the rest of the crew narrowly avoided being shot by the Burmese military. Stallone described Myanmar as a "hellhole." He said "we had shots fired above our heads" and that he "witnessed survivors with legs cut off and all kinds of land-mine injuries, maggot-infested wounds and ears cut off."[6]
Alternative titles
The most recent installment of the Rambo franchise has undergone many name changes during pre-release, and has been known as the following:
- Rambo IV
- John Rambo - Mirroring the final installment of the Rocky franchise, Rocky Balboa. In Germany, France, Norway, Sweden, Belgium, Hungary, Israel, Romania and Italy John Rambo will be used because First Blood's original title in these countries is Rambo. This title prevails in Spain too, where the first film was retitled as Acorralado ("Surrounded"). A workprint version of the movie that has made its way to the Internet has the title "John Rambo".
- Rambo: Regreso al Infierno (Rambo: Return to Hell in Spanish) - The name of the film in Mexico and Latin America, and Rambo: El Regreso (Rambo: The Return) in Chile, as First Blood was also known as Rambo in those territories.
On October 12, 2007, Lionsgate announced that the film title was being changed to Rambo: To Hell and Back. After some negative feedback from the online community, Stallone spoke with AICN's Harry Knowles[7] and said:
"Lionsgate jumped the gun on this. I just was thinking that the title John Rambo was derivative of Rocky Balboa and might give people the idea that this is the last Rambo film, and I don't necessarily feel that it will be. He's definitely a superb athlete, there's no reason he can't continue onto another adventure. Like John Wayne with The Searchers."
Box office
Rambo opened in 2,751 theaters on January 25, 2008 and grossed $6,490,000 on its opening day,[8] and $18,200,000 over its opening weekend. It was the second highest grossing movie for the weekend behind Meet the Spartans.[9] As of June 29, 2008, the film has a domestic box office gross of $42,754,105 and a foreign gross of $70,488,548, giving it a worldwide total of $113,242,653.[10]
In an unprecedented move, Europe's biggest cinema chain (and the third biggest in the world), Odeon, controversially refused to show the film on any of its screens in Britain, blaming "commercial differences".[11] UCI has followed suit in its Republic of Ireland cinemas, which are managed by Odeon.[12]
The film was, however, shown in Britain and Ireland by other theater chains such as Empire Cinemas, Vue, Cineworld and Ward Anderson. The film was not shown in the French-speaking part of Switzerland due to legal and commercial problems with the distributor, even if it was available on screens of France and the Swiss German-speaking part.[13]
Critical reception
In his review for the New York Times, A.O. Scott wrote, "Mr. Stallone is smart enough — or maybe dumb enough, though I tend to think not — to present the mythic dimensions of the character without apology or irony. His face looks like a misshapen chunk of granite, and his acting is only slightly more expressive, but the man gets the job done. Welcome back." [14] Michael H. Price of Fort Worth Business Press wrote, "Stallone invests the role with a realistic acceptance of the aging process, and with traces reminiscent of Humphrey Bogart in 1951’s The African Queen and Clint Eastwood in 1992’s Unforgiven — to say nothing of the influences that the original First Blood had absorbed from Marlon Brando in 1953’s The Wild One and Tom Laughlin in 1971’s Billy Jack." [15] Jonathan Garret (a former writer for the Atlanta Journal Constitution) said in an interview: "Rambo is the most violent movie I have ever seen. The last 11 minutes of the film are so violent, it makes We Were Soldiers look like Sesame Street".
When asked what his take on the film was, First Blood writer David Morrell said, "Overall, I'm pleased. [...] This is the first time that the tone of First Blood the novel has been used in any of the movies. [...] It's not a 4-star movie--the villains are superficial, and the climax is overextended. But this is a solid three stars."[16]
The Burmese military junta has ordered DVD vendors in Myanmar not to distribute the film due to the movie's content.[17] Rambo is available on bootlegs however, and it is a great hit amongst the Karen Freedom Fighters and Burmese exiles critical of the Burmese military dictatorship. According to Karen Freedom Fighters, this movie gave them a great boost of morale. Burmese Freedom Fighters have even adopted dialogue from the movie (most notably "Live for nothing, or die for something") as rallying points and battle cries. "That, to me," said Sylvester Stallone, "is one of the proudest moments I've ever had in film." [18] Also, overseas Burmese praise the movie for its vivid portrayal of the Burmese military's oppression of the Karen people.[19]
Sequel
On February 2, 2008, Sylvester Stallone informed Reuters in an interview that making a fifth Rambo would depend on the success of the fourth movie but that he thought he was "gearing one up" and that it would "be quite different".[20] On March 10, 2008, Moviehole.net revealed that in an interview with Metro magazine, Stallone said that he was "half-way through" writing Rambo V and that it would not be another war movie.[21] On March 20, Moviehole.net also said that ScreenDaily.com had revealed that the film would be shot in Bulgaria and later received word from a source that Bulgaria was to double for John Rambo's home town in Arizona.[22][23]
Home video release
The DVD and Blu-ray Disc editions were released in the U.S. on May 27, 2008. The DVD is in 1 and 2 disc editions. The Special edition has a 2.40 anamorphic widescreen presentation and a Dolby Digital 5.1 EX track. The single editions have a standard 5.1 Dolby Digital track. The Blu-ray Disc has Dolby Digital 5.1 EX and DTS HD 7.1 Tracks. The DVD and Blu-ray on disc one have the film, deleted scenes, 6 featurettes, and commentary by Sylvester Stallone. The Blu-ray also has 2 extra special features, that includes a trailer gallery.
The 2-disc DVD and Blu-ray Disc editions have a digital copy of the film. There is also a 6 disc DVD set of all four Rambo films, packaged in a limited edition tin case with over 20 bonus features. A Blu-ray set with Rambo 1-3 was also released.[24][25][26]
The DVD was released in the UK on June 23, 2008.
Director's Cut
When asked about the moral of the film in a Daily Yomiuri Online interview, Sylvester Stallone mentioned that he will be doing a Director's Cut of the film, which will go by the original title of John Rambo. Nevertheless, the news became most well known after a May 2008 interview with Jay Leno when he announced the work of a director's cut, and that the proceeds would go to Burma. On top of this, an online petition appeared shortly after the announcement in order to "motivate" Stallone in completing this new cut.[27]
References
External links
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