Rambo agrees to Podovsky's condition, but instead threatens Murdock on the radio that he is "coming to get you. He then escapes from captivity into a nearby jungle with Co's help. Co then tends to Rambo's wounds and begins to implore him to take her to the United States. Rambo agrees and they kiss; however, they are then attacked by some Vietnamese soldiers and Co is killed.
Rambo kills them all except for Lieutenant Tay , who escapes and then buries Co's body in the jungle so it isn't scavenged upon by animals. Following his escape, the camp's Vietnamese soldiers and Soviet Spetznaz commandos are sent to look for him. Rambo assembles his weapons, and using his knife and compound bow to perform guerrilla warfare tactics, is able to kill a large number of enemy troops in the jungle, including Tay, saving him for one of his explosive arrows.
He proceeds to a small enemy camp and destroys it and several vehicles with explosive arrows. He destroys most of the camp with the helicopter, then lands and arms himself with the machine gun that is mounted on the Huey, kills the remaining soldiers, and rescues all the POWs.
They get to the helicopter and head towards the American command center in Thailand. Podovsky chases them in his Mil Mi helicopter gunship. Although Rambo's helicopter is heavily damaged by Podovsky's helicopter, he manages to land his helicopter on a river, then fakes his death.
When Podovsky comes near him and gets careless, Rambo fires a rocket at Podovsky's chopper, obliterating it to shreds. Rambo then returns to the base and wrecks Murdock's command center. Trautman then comforts Rambo and tries to pacify him. An angry Rambo responds that he only wants his country to love its soldiers as much as its soldiers love it. As Rambo leaves, Trautman asks him, "How will you live, John? James Cameron and Sylvester Stallone both wrote the film. Cameron was actually working on Aliens while the release on The Terminator was being delayed during production of the film.
Cameron said that he only wrote the action scenes, while Stallone wrote more of the serious and politically-oriented dialogue. Originally, the filmmakers wanted to cast John Travolta as Rambo's partner, but Stallone felt it was unnecessary and would make the film cheap, so they decided against it. Stallone cast George P. Cosmatos as the director because his son, Sage, recommended him after seeing his work in the film Of Unknown Origin, and Dolph Lundgren was originally set to play Podovsky, but was recast after Stallone realized he was playing the villain in Rocky IV.
After Co Bao was killed, Rambo shouted 'No! Test audiences laughed at this, however, and it was cut down to the simpler, more quiet grieving we see in the film. Most of the Mexican flags on the planes were covered up to make it look like an American air hangar in Thailand.
Director George P. Cosmatos, who was hired by the producers because they loved his previous movie Of Unknown Origin , originally wanted to shoot the movie in the city of Chiang Mai in northern Thailand, which proved to be logistically and financially impossible for such a massive production. Instead, they shot the movie entirely on location in Acapulco, Mexico because it was cheaper and closer to the U.
The Mexican jungles doubled for Vietnam, and the production cleverly inserted small details in an effort to make it seem like they were in Asia. It was then painted over again and used in the jungle temple where Rambo meets Co Bao, which was a set created by the production only 10 minutes away from their hotel as well.
The U. The most costly location was an actual rice paddy that was planted by the production and used during the scene where Rambo attempts to escape with the POWs. The beachfront digs at least made the potentially grueling production a bit easier … that is until Hurricane Odile destroyed most of the sets during shooting in September of The setback caused the production to shut down temporarily, which forced Cosmatos and Stallone to have to think fast.
In order to make up for lost days, they decided to shoot insert shots and close-ups at their hotel while production got back up and running. The influential scene has since been copied and parodied numerous times in subsequent films.
First Blood required Stallone to be ripped he shot Rocky III shortly before starring in the first Rambo movie, which helped , but for the second outing he really needed to pump some iron. Twenty-five years later, Stallone would develop and co-write The Expendables , an ensemble action movie starring Stallone and a handful of his fellow s action stars, about an elite group of mercenaries given high-risk missions.
Russell Mulcahy , the original director of the third installment of the Rambo series, was fired two weeks into the production of the movie due to creative differences. The eventual director, Peter MacDonald —who was originally hired as a second unit director—was given only two days notice before picking up where Mulcahy left off only portions of the footage directed by Mulcahy remain in the final film. The plot of the third movie involves Rambo teaming up with Mujahideen fighters in Afghanistan funny enough, the movie was mostly shot in the deserts of Israel to combat Russian soldiers and save Colonel Trautman during the Soviet-Afghan War.
A flower like that need good soil to grow. Many time under earth is bones of animal Killed in jungle. Make soil rich. Grows most beautiful flower. You call orchid. Many deaths in jungle.
Vietnamese, V. Many beautiful flowers. CO terrified What was that? Come on. Let's move. He's coming in on our open side. And the death scene dialogue from the movie [quote]CO Rambo? CO You Rambo is rocking her, willing the life to stay in her, his expression anguished. My name is John. CO very weak It doesn't hurt. Why doesn't it hurt? It'll be great. We can do what we want Co's eyes are glazed, half-open. She is gone. Rambo sobs. Somehow this one tragedy renders all the others pale.
He kisses her mouth fiercely. Trying to make her live, to infuse her cooling flesh with some of his vast will. While the movie was a commercial success particularly with young male fans of action films, it was reviled by critics. The film also had an impact on the cultural landscape of the s. When the film was released, the "political" content of the movie was considered controversial. Many felt the Vietnam conflict was "altered" to look and sound heroic.
A newly-coined word "Rambo-ism" became a descriptive of such a mentality. Cameron commented that he only wrote the "action" and that Stallone wrote the "politics". James Cameron , '86 TIME: "I recognize parts of it", Cameron says manfully, but adds, " I was trying to create a semi-realistic, haunted character, the quintessential Vietnam returnee, not a political statement".
Because they had these psychological problems that they had to work out. It's like an inner demon to be exorcised. I did a bit of that in Rambo, but it didn't get used. I actually thought the first one was a pretty good film. That's what attracted me to the second one, the underdog story. I was kind of fascinated by Vietnam at that point and what a weird and surreal kind of war that was.
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