Without a doubt one of the best action films in more than a decade and a very worthy installment to the Rambo saga. Before I go any further, one might look at my previous reviews and simply presume I'm just in love with action movies, or older movies in general but for me it goes much deeper than that. Action movies headed by men like Chuck Norris, Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger and older films in general are amongst the few things giving me the hope and the drive to get out of bed in the morning.
The world around me seems so weak, Hollywood portrays men today as weak, society in general as weak and the world seems lost in a sea of bullshit. I get up in the morning, I get my day done with and I come home to sink into entertainment. Not just any entertainment but movies and television that take me back to a world when Hollywood portrayed people, especially men as strong courageous individuals willing to die for what they believed in. Films like the Rambo movies give me hope, they literally help me to believe that the world is worth fighting for and that all is not lost. This version of Rambo is no different in that regard.
In it, Rambo guides a group of missionaries into war torn Burma so that they can help the people living there who are terrorized on a daily basis by thugs working for a corrupt regime that has zero respect for human life. Rambo is reluctant at first, essentially warning the missionaries that you can't stop bullets with bibles. That the kind of people running Burma understand one thing and one thing only, war.
Still, Rambo leads them in and drops them off as they've asked him to do. Soon the missionaries are taken hostage and held, forced to watch unarmed villagers slaughtered, children murdered and women raped and beaten. All the while Rambo, back in Thailand is unaware of what's going on. Shortly after the chaos in Burma a team of mercenaries hired to find the kidnapped missionaries come to Rambo and ask him to guide them down river to the village where the missionaries were last known to be.
The mercenaries hope to rescue the church group and lead them out of Burma to safety but upon arriving at the village, they are astonished at the carnage that's that's taken place. Most of them want to quit and go back but as is typical of his character, Rambo refuses. In no short order one hell of a war breaks out between the army in Burma, Rambo and the mercenaries.
Let me warn you in advance, this is without a doubt one of if not the most shockingly violent Rambo movies to date. This film might well leave you emotionally scarred for life but yet, as with the other installments in the Rambo saga it's a very poignant film. This movie goes out of its way to draw a line in the sand between the good guys and the bad guys. It goes out of its way to make you feel the pain and torment of people living under a dictatorship, under a crooked regime that would murder a child simply for refusing to pick up a gun. Further, it goes out of its way to make the statement that war can only be stopped by war. While we argue politics and political correctness in the comfort of our homes, babies are murdered for fun, women raped and brutalized by the scum that serve these sorts of Regimes and innocent unarmed men of all ages are gunned down like animals.
The acting is so solid here that you can't help but believe that what your seeing is real. The special effects are fantastic, the direction script writing and cinematography are all nearly flawless. But above all, like in the previous films Rambo becomes the killing machine he was trained to be. He fights to save as many lives as he can while putting his own life on the line. I would argue that in this film, he battles harder and with a greater purpose than he has ever fought before. This is a fantastic action film that just about anyone should be able to enjoy provided you can handle the blood gore and violence, the latter of which there is plenty.
One last note, if you've been following the Rambo saga then the ending here will leave you breathless. There is some debate as to whether or not this is indeed the final installment of First Blood. If it is, then it is a perfect finale to the series.
One final and sad note, and I truly am heartbroken by it, is that Richard Crenna (aka Colonel Trautmen) Rambo's mentor and likely his only friend in the world is not in this movie. Crenna passed away in 2003 long before this movie was made. Not only am I sad that such a talented actor died, but it also saddens me greatly that the voice calling Rambo's name when the mercenaries come looking for him wasn't that of Colonel Trautmen. The films makers worked it in such a way that it pays a tribute of sorts to Crenna but still, it's sad that Crenna wasn't part of this movie and even sadder that he is gone from this world forever.
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