RAMBO FIRST BLOOD (1982) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • Enjoy our reaction as we watch "Rambo First Blood" for the first time!
    You can check out this specific full-length reaction on Patreon here: bit.ly/4b1uKJF
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    //📖 C H A P T E R S
    00:00 - Intro
    03:38 - Reaction
    34:53 - Review
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Komentáře • 4,7K

  • @tristramcoffin926
    @tristramcoffin926 Před 5 měsíci +2684

    This movie is never what people think it is the first time they see it. It is not some mindless shoot em up action movie but a film about genuine loneliness and pain and Stallone is legendary in it.

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 Před 5 měsíci +181

      Sucks how they destroyed that legacy by making more movies (the Rambo sequels) and they all end up destroying what was supposed to be the message of the original First Blood.

    • @wadethegreat22
      @wadethegreat22 Před 5 měsíci +54

      @@osmanyousif7849 wrong. message still stands. Other "movies" not based on books had a message, too.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +35

      @@wadethegreat22 "Don't eff with a boatman who makes his own machetes and loves shooting people?"
      - What my daughter (was maybe 7ish) replied when I asked her the message from part 4🤣🤣🤣 And I do agree with you if I'm being serious.

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@wadethegreat22 , rephrase:
      By other movies, I’m talking about the Rambo sequels.

    • @jayeisenhardt1337
      @jayeisenhardt1337 Před 5 měsíci

      @@osmanyousif7849 All of them were about something and had a message but yeah all of them also went more shootem up as they went along as well.

  • @michaelrickert1284
    @michaelrickert1284 Před 5 měsíci +1058

    I remember when we got off the plane from Afghanistan, the first people we saw were Vietnam vets. They made it a point to be at every home bound flight in order to make sure all service members were properly welcomed back to the US. They said it was their goal that what happened to them upon their arrival would never happen again. 14 years later, coming home from another deployment, and the first people we saw were Vietnam vets. They were still coming out to welcome service members home.

    • @thedragonreborn9856
      @thedragonreborn9856 Před 5 měsíci +56

      Who will take their place when they’re all gone 😢
      Also thank you for your service 🫡

    • @dylankahler981
      @dylankahler981 Před 5 měsíci +39

      @@thedragonreborn9856 There are tons of people who still care. But I do speak from Texas, not sure how things are in other areas. In Texas we still stand and pay respects to all military leaving and coming in.

    • @sanjinn0311
      @sanjinn0311 Před 5 měsíci +30

      They were also there, to welcome us home, for us coming back from the 1st Gulf War. We tried to make sure they were recognized as well, as best as we could. My pop was also a Marine did his tour at Ah Hoa, Liberty Bridge in 1969. Coming home the first time from a war, he and I now shared a unique brotherhood. 1/5 baby SFMF, Rah

    • @kanteannightmare
      @kanteannightmare Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​.

    • @lordbison
      @lordbison Před 5 měsíci +17

      I Love Talking To The Vietnam, Korean War & The WW2 Veterans That Are Still With Us When I Visit The VA Hospital!

  • @TheJohmac
    @TheJohmac Před 5 měsíci +337

    That scene at the end is probably one of most powerful commentaries on the costs of war and PTSD I've ever seen. The acting by Stalone was brilliant.

    • @adspur
      @adspur Před 4 měsíci +7

      You are very correct.This movie has action but,it has a heavy underlying storyline.I forgot how great this film was.

    • @kurgisempyrion6125
      @kurgisempyrion6125 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Spot on both of you @@adspur

    • @ndnd2023
      @ndnd2023 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Based on a real dialogue account between a Vietnam Vet and original author.

    • @fistovuzi
      @fistovuzi Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ndnd2023 really? because in the book Rambo dies. there's no conversation in person, Troutman blows his head off with a shotgun.
      the end.

    • @WBookout10
      @WBookout10 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@fistovuziRambo died in the original ending to the movie as well. We got this ending either because test audiences thought it too depressing, or because they wanted to leave it open to a sequel.

  • @TheRealBamboonga
    @TheRealBamboonga Před 4 měsíci +220

    The welcome the Sheriff gave him was exactly the kind of welcome I got from the San Bernardino Sheriff's Department when I got home from Afghanistan. The way police treat vets is portrayed spot-on in this movie.

    • @seanboy4386
      @seanboy4386 Před 4 měsíci +28

      Thank you for your service God bless and may he go before you and be beside you and have his protection over you and your family, friends and children (present and future) we pray this if you will say it with me I Jesus Christ name we pray Amen. Thank The Father, The Son Jesus and The Holy Ghost and may he heal you of all your wounds in Jesus Christ name we pray Amen ❤

    • @billymichaels2889
      @billymichaels2889 Před 4 měsíci +18

      Thank you for your service my friend. No one and I mean no one has the right to treat you that way. That dude needed fired and jailed for that.

    • @stanleydavidlepretre4241
      @stanleydavidlepretre4241 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Thank you for your service. Stay safe wish you and those close to you nothing but the best.

    • @billymichaels2889
      @billymichaels2889 Před 4 měsíci +8

      I thank you for you service brother. And I hope those bastards got justice for their actions.

    • @jameslongest6410
      @jameslongest6410 Před 4 měsíci +20

      My wife's father did three tours in Vietnam. He said he did the extra tours because he felt safer and more appreciated in country than he did here in the States.

  • @yyctallguy2365
    @yyctallguy2365 Před 5 měsíci +783

    For anyone who says Stallone can’t act never watched the ending to this film. He’s incredible and showed why he’s an academy award winner

    • @michaelwatson266
      @michaelwatson266 Před 5 měsíci +54

      I think his monolog at the end is his best acting of his career

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@michaelwatson266 Monologue, Mr. Watson.

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Před 5 měsíci +10

      The ending is totally different in the 1972 novel that inspired the film, *FIRST BLOOD by David Morrell* . Also, a lot of people die. Plese read the novel if you like. No spoilers, please. 👍

    • @trulybtd5396
      @trulybtd5396 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@hughjorg4008 monolog in oh, so many languages, one of which is probably on that persons autocorrect.

    • @michaelwatson266
      @michaelwatson266 Před 5 měsíci

      @@hughjorg4008 ya. Autocorrect 🤗

  • @coyotefever105
    @coyotefever105 Před 5 měsíci +588

    That ending monologue hits so close to home how badly the US treated our troops after Vietnam. I personally have once or twice had a PTSD experience like he did at the end but it’s nothing compared to the trauma troops had to go through and what they actually experienced; Stallone captured it so effectively. Anybody who says he’s a bad actor need to look no further.

    • @Youdontknowwhatliterallymeans
      @Youdontknowwhatliterallymeans Před 5 měsíci +46

      He's an excellent actor. The problem is a prejudice in Hollywood. If a man's a bodybuilder or martial artist then he's automatically not taken seriously.

    • @beowulfthedane
      @beowulfthedane Před 5 měsíci +10

      IMO Stallone would get more acting credit but make less money if he stopped with the sequels. Rocky 2 was okay. Rocky 3 started to get real silly with him fighting Hulk Hogan. Rocky 4 was pure escapism. I haven't seen the rest because Rocky 5 was so bad. Rambo 2 was a rip off of "Uncommon Valor" and "Missing in Action". Rambo 3 was just silly.

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 Před 5 měsíci +13

      The only thing that I kind of wish happen, was that they stick to the original ending like in the book. Where Rambo has gone too far to turn back, and due to the trauma he went through, dies with Colonel Trautman there to see. It would actually stay more true to the theme of the novel, especially since the author hated the fact that they wanted to make more movies.

    • @davidwoolbright3675
      @davidwoolbright3675 Před 5 měsíci +19

      I think you missed the point of Rocky 3. Fighting Hulk Hogan was silly and Rocky knew it. He was becoming a sideshow and wanted a legitimate fight.

    • @Ismail-sl3th
      @Ismail-sl3th Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@beowulfthedanehe fought Clubber lang aka Mr. T in Rocky 3. Hogan was a gimmick fight for charity. But Rocky 4 was my absolute favorite as a kid and after watching 1 and 2 as an adult, they became my favorites .5 is trash and I can’t even remember the rest before the creed versions came out because they were so awful.

  • @SofianeHaciane
    @SofianeHaciane Před 5 měsíci +144

    The last scene is so underrated, its one of the most emotional scene in cinema history and ,its a fact and true to what happened to soldiers who returned from Vietnam back home

    • @akse
      @akse Před 4 měsíci +4

      I didn't even remember this scene really. But now seeing it felt like this is what the movie was about.. in a single moment.

    • @SofianeHaciane
      @SofianeHaciane Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@akse exactly, brilliant

    • @stanleydavidlepretre4241
      @stanleydavidlepretre4241 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Sylvester Stallone is a great actor. If you haven't already seen Copland I highly recommend it. Stallone holds his own opposite Harvey Keitel, Robert DeNiro etc. My response to people who say he can't act... *Jeously is never a good look.*

    • @fistovuzi
      @fistovuzi Před 4 měsíci +1

      bit different to the end of the book.

    • @Corn_Pone_Flicks
      @Corn_Pone_Flicks Před měsícem

      What is the last scene rated?

  • @margameplays5246
    @margameplays5246 Před 5 měsíci +114

    I remember when my grandfather (who served in Vietnam) showed me this movie, he told me that Stallone interpreted exactly what many comrades felt when they were socially rejected after having given everything in a war, losing their humanity and awareness, many ended up in psychiatric hospitals. and those who were lucky returned home with quite a few post-war traumas. I remember my grandfather reciting exactly the phrase that Rambo says "many of us were fortunate enough to return home, but we never really came back."

  • @haydenlindquist7006
    @haydenlindquist7006 Před 5 měsíci +537

    That final monologue really demonstrates Stallone's exceptional acting skill.

    • @jediknightjairinaiki560
      @jediknightjairinaiki560 Před 5 měsíci +8

      If only he could enunciate. I couldn't understand a damn thing he said.

    • @aronscott9698
      @aronscott9698 Před 5 měsíci +29

      @@jediknightjairinaiki560yes you could you just have to have something to say.

    • @mm9773
      @mm9773 Před 5 měsíci +1

      *decent acting skill

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Před 5 měsíci +13

      I think its perhaps, one of the best scenes Stallone has ever filmed. He's an underrated writer and actor. I was disappointed by the path he chose in Hollywood, but of course, it made him famous and immensely rich, so, I inderstand why he went down the route he did with action films.

    • @PainInTheS
      @PainInTheS Před 5 měsíci +23

      Funny, English is not my first language and I can make out what he says just fine.
      People like to bash on Stallone's speech.

  • @44excalibur
    @44excalibur Před 5 měsíci +339

    The reason that Sheriff Will Teasle resented John Rambo was because in the novel it was explained that Teasle was a Korean War veteran, a plotline that was deleted from the movie. Many Korean War veterans felt that they had become veterans of a forgotten war, and their service and sacrifice had been forgotten as well, while Vietnam veterans got all the attention. Also, many Vietnam veterans came home from the war resentful and critical of the US government's actions during the Vietnam War, which many Korean vets felt was unpatriotic and unbecoming a US soldier.

    • @Rio..o7..
      @Rio..o7.. Před 5 měsíci +29

      add to the fact that Korean War was widely looked at as a victory vs the Vietnam War which was looked at more as a defeat

    • @joebloggs396
      @joebloggs396 Před 5 měsíci +19

      In Teasle's office isn't there something representing his military service?

    • @JohnSmith-bn9sw
      @JohnSmith-bn9sw Před 5 měsíci +18

      A silver star which they talk about more in the book

    • @44excalibur
      @44excalibur Před 5 měsíci +21

      @@joebloggs396 Yes, there are several medals in a cabinet in Teasle's office that are never explained, but originally the film was going to mention that Teasle was in the Korean War. It was cut because the director felt that it was unnecessary and took away from the pace of the film. The original cut of First Blood was nearly three hours long, according to Sylvester Stallone.

    • @Kaspar.C0LD
      @Kaspar.C0LD Před 5 měsíci +26

      "They get all the attention!"
      The attention: Being spat on, harangued, told they're baby killers, resented publicly, etc.
      Good old Teasle.

  • @markchavarria5187
    @markchavarria5187 Před 5 měsíci +53

    I tear up during the final scene when Rambo compares civilian life with military life. That resonates deeply with me as I too struggled to “assimilate” back to civilian life after 14 years of knowing nothing but being in the military. We did have a code of honor, a brotherhood. It didn’t matter where you were from or what you looked like. We had each others backs because our survival and accomplishing the mission depended on it. Then we come back and you have, what seemed at the time, the majority of your own countrymen hating you. We give our lives for them and that was our “thank you”. That’s why we vets keep to ourselves or associate with other vets because we want that brotherhood back. Thank you for watching this film and learning about what we go through and showing appreciation. You’re part of the few.

  • @pablosuarez4592
    @pablosuarez4592 Před 4 měsíci +20

    REMEMBER FOLKS!!! All Rambo wanted was something to eat!!!

  • @gunchman01
    @gunchman01 Před 5 měsíci +311

    My father came back from Vietnam and never talked about it until I was almost 30. Just learned how to live with all the bad things that happened over there. Even after he told me some of the stories, I could not imagine going through live like that. Before he passed he finally built a display case for his medals. He received the silver star for saving the lives of 5 soldiers after they got shot down. He loaded his helicopter down with too many people and was able to crash it back in friendly territory after taking numerous hits to the helicopter and crash landing. One of the guys who he saved actually came to his funeral and spoke. That brotherhood just does not ever die.

    • @stephengamber7000
      @stephengamber7000 Před 5 měsíci +9

      Thanks for sharing this story!

    • @isabadacoo
      @isabadacoo Před 5 měsíci +8

      Legend. 🫡

    • @yaimavol
      @yaimavol Před 5 měsíci +15

      We actually did a lot of bad things over there and a lot of guys had a hard time with it. You can justify a lot of things in war, but when you get back home and you start remembering, you question everything. Vietnam is really a country of very gentle and peaceful people. We should have never been fighting them. We could have taken out their government and it would have been over.

    • @wileyroberts5759
      @wileyroberts5759 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Your father's "experience" sounds AWFULLY similar to First Blood 2. I'm sure it actually happened.

    • @alrokx13
      @alrokx13 Před 5 měsíci +2

      My pops is like that too.

  • @65chevelle44
    @65chevelle44 Před 5 měsíci +320

    I'm 52 years old and I first saw this movie with my dad who was an Army Sargeant Vietnam Vet he enlisted when he was about 19 straight out of high school a young Mexican American from Northern Ca. Who wanted to serve his country his base camp was in Tu Duc near Bien Hoa he did 2 tours of duty in Nam from 1966 to 68 and was decorated. Sadly Agent Orange took him at age 59 in Feb. 2006. I remember when we were watching this movie and at the ending I heard someone crying I looked over and it was my Hero my dad the first time I ever saw him cry. The man who I always thought who was invincible is a memory I will never forget. He would never talk about his time there very much and he would be distant when I asked him what he did to be awarded his medals. RIP "Pops" 1946-2006 🙏🇺🇲🕊🕊 God Bless all service men and women who have proudly served this nation past, present, and future.🙏🇺🇲

    • @SeanBlader
      @SeanBlader Před 5 měsíci +24

      I'm 50 and I watched this with my dad on HBO when I was like 10 or 11. My dad was a door gunner, but came back without his legs, like Lt. Dan. He died from liver cirrhosis when I was 13 in the late 80s. Honestly I'm not sure who had it harder, your dad or mine.

    • @kevinbyrne4537
      @kevinbyrne4537 Před 4 měsíci +12

      Fucking true hero. God bless your Pops.

    • @lespaul36
      @lespaul36 Před 4 měsíci +7

      My ex wife's dad was hit with orange. Got cancer and it may show signs of issues with offspring. I can say my ex maybe off and has 2 kids with autism. Agent Orange was a bad call.

    • @terryduncan31
      @terryduncan31 Před 4 měsíci +4

      RiP to your dad.

    • @wetspotswimwear1199
      @wetspotswimwear1199 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Why do you call yourself Mexican American ?
      Just like the African Americans, stop it, we're all Americans regardless of race or ethnicity.
      When we stop categorizing ourselves as one or another type of American, we can finally be brothers, we can all just be Americans

  • @spinynorman887
    @spinynorman887 Před 3 měsíci +10

    I STILL get choked up during the last scene where Rambo breaks down.

  • @brindlebucker4741
    @brindlebucker4741 Před 4 měsíci +14

    First Blood was a genuinely good movie. You have to take into account the historical context. This was 1982, so 9 years after the end of the Vietnam War. That war was an ugly scar on our psyche back then. This movie addresses that. Here's a guy with PTSD probably, who never got any respect once he got back home for his service and sacrifice. You see, you guys grew up in the post 2001 ear. 'Thank you for you service' is something you say almost like 'gesundheit' or 'bless you' after someone sneezes. But back then, if you had long hair, you were immediately suspect- it didn't matter if you served or not. America itself was at a point where it was about to change, but had not yet. That's what this movie is all about, and it's weird for me, because I don't really think of myself as old, but I was born in the 60s. And I watched all this take place. I remember the Moon landings, Vietnam, Nixon resigning. I remember this film coming out and watched it in the cinema.
    Yeah, I don't really know what I'm trying to say, but it's interesting to note how outraged you are at the behaviour of the police. Back then, that's how it was. No internet. No mobile phones. It was your word against the word of the police, and who do you think they believed? Back then, this is true, Rambo would have been shipped out to the county work farm for a few months or rustled out of town like that for vagrancy.

  • @zardox78
    @zardox78 Před 5 měsíci +317

    5:56 He was going to see Delmar because he was his last wartime buddy. But functionally, for the story's sake, he goes there to establish how completely alone and directionless he currently feels/is.
    He brought a pocket full of pictures and memorabilia for the two of them to sit and reminisce about. But once he hears that Delmar's dead, he gives the widow the picture with her husband and immediately throws the rest of it in the trash. He's held onto it all this time, but it's suddenly worthless. Worse than worthless, it's outright depressing. There is no one left who would appreciate any of it. Nobody to reminisce with, and he clearly has no interest in doing so alone.

    • @themiddleagedgamer3503
      @themiddleagedgamer3503 Před 5 měsíci +19

      Great interpretation. Thank you.

    • @technofilejr3401
      @technofilejr3401 Před 5 měsíci +21

      I thought that was Delmar’s mother

    • @billielachatte4841
      @billielachatte4841 Před 5 měsíci +13

      I think she was.

    • @JustinChristopher-ov7gw
      @JustinChristopher-ov7gw Před 5 měsíci +4

      She looked more like a mother but otherwise yeah spot on.

    • @zardox78
      @zardox78 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@technofilejr3401It's possible, I suppose. But all the other kids running around do look pretty young. Are those his siblings? Did she have her first kid and then wait 20 - 25 years to have a bunch more? One would assume that Delmar was roughly the same age as Rambo, give or take 5 - 10 years. Eh, maybe she was supposed to be his older sister or something.

  • @clevelandcbi
    @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +250

    ANOTHER TRUE STORY: When my daughter was 4, she got me out of a speeding ticket by telling the cop *"I was rooting for Rambo the whole time."* Got him laughing so hard with how serious her face was that he literally fell over. Pulled us over a month later just to tell us that everyone calls him "Teasle" now and literally boo him when he walks into the station each morning. And yes, its still going on 10 years later. His daughter and mine are BFF's.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 5 měsíci +16

      Lol. The 'whole time' part was hardcore.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +28

      ​​@@ct6852She just texted me (from upstairs) saying "I said the whole freaking time, Dad. Do better." And yes she's still a smartazz. Obviously

    • @stanleydavidlepretre4241
      @stanleydavidlepretre4241 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Um... *Bwhahaha.*

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@clevelandcbi Lol. That's brave. I was so freaked out by cops as a kid.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +7

      ​​@@ct6852She was going through a very overprotective phase around that time. A few months earlier she said way too darn loud "Excuse me, but my dad doesn't date girls!!" to an extremely cute female cashier that was flirting with me at our local Dollar General. l still get messed with for that. Just got a "So how are Bob and the kids?" about a week ago. 🤬🤬🤬 I had my mom with me, and she was trying not to crack up the whole ride home.

  • @THXbox
    @THXbox Před 5 měsíci +31

    The older I get, and the more I learn about what happened in Vietnam, the more devastating the ending is. His breakdown and the things he says…Stallone’s best acting ever.

  • @reinaldo-maciel
    @reinaldo-maciel Před měsícem +6

    In Brazil, Rambo First Blood is titled as "designed to kill" but, if you pay close attention to the movie, Rambo doesn't kill anybody.

  • @bigredtlc1828
    @bigredtlc1828 Před 5 měsíci +316

    Stallone dedicated his speech at the end to all the vets that came back from that horrible war wounded, both emotionally and physically. I know a lot of vets who say he spoke for them and for what they went through. Incredible turn of events at the end there were you think this is just standard action flick and then Stallone turns it into a treatise on the war and its effects. Amazing.

    • @archersfriend5900
      @archersfriend5900 Před 5 měsíci +7

      I think it worked in many ways.

    • @eve-llblyat2576
      @eve-llblyat2576 Před 5 měsíci

      You sure. I think that speech should depicture that the soldiers leaving the army are kids. Nerver learned any thing of adulthood, never had any resposibilities, dont know the social structure, cant handle the task of an adult.
      And they get told that the will be heros, honered and loved. But thats worthless and meaningless. They see the reality, that other made carrier and be sucessfull compared to them who cant do the simplest paperwork.
      At the army they handle million dollar equipment, and back home they recognize that they cant handle anything.
      I dont think the vets want to hear the hard truth. They just chooesed the wrong job.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 Před 5 měsíci +7

      I was just talking to a gentleman a couple of weeks ago. He said for a long time he was ashamed to tell anyone he was a Vietnam veteran.
      I told him that was awful, and thanked him for his service and sacrifice.

    • @7Earthsky
      @7Earthsky Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@eve-llblyat2576 What choice? In those days people were drafted.

    • @joshuasanders6893
      @joshuasanders6893 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@eve-llblyat2576 Well, that is certainly a way to look at it. Not sure what choice they had since they were conscripted but sure.

  • @poppletop8331
    @poppletop8331 Před 5 měsíci +226

    Just makes me think, how many men were fighting that inner war all their life with no help from anyone, makes me cry. Sly nailed it.

    • @wmason1961
      @wmason1961 Před 5 měsíci +10

      "Were?" Many are still.

    • @LIGHTNING132YTG
      @LIGHTNING132YTG Před 5 měsíci +1

      The War At Home starring Emilio Estevez is another great example of this

    • @ozymandias1758
      @ozymandias1758 Před 5 měsíci +7

      They are still fighting it now. VA and other organizations only help so much. Like Plato wrote over two thousand years ago, Only the dead have seen the end of War.
      Prayers for the fallen and the walking wounded, our warriors. May they all be healed and made whole🇺🇸

    • @joshuaortiz2031
      @joshuaortiz2031 Před 5 měsíci +9

      I still am. I served from 2006-2015. Was medically discharged for a torn rotator cuff. I don't really get the help I need for any mental health stuff vets like me are on our own.

    • @wmason1961
      @wmason1961 Před 5 měsíci

      @@joshuaortiz2031 help is there. You have to seek it. Do you use the VA at all?

  • @evil1259
    @evil1259 Před 4 měsíci +14

    as a veteran of foreign war (2014-2015) i have come home to treatment not unlike this ..not to this extreme but with the same intensity..but with the same level of ignorance and malice. this movie is so well done and speaks to PTSD in the most real way possible

  • @Falorik
    @Falorik Před 5 měsíci +29

    This was the first movie I saw as a kid and it influenced my whole life. The kind of heroism of Rambo, never giving up no matter the odds, letting no one push him around, that really impressed me. Im a grown man now and the last scene still makes me cry.
    By the way, nice reaction video, you two are sweet together. Have a nice day

  • @ingobordewick6480
    @ingobordewick6480 Před 5 měsíci +153

    That monologue at the end is one of Stallones finest performances. And this was one of the first movies that portraied Vietnam Vets the way most of them felt when they came back. That's why this movie was and is so important.

    • @Fangtorn
      @Fangtorn Před 5 měsíci

      The only bit I don't like is that it perpetuates the myth that Vietnam vets were routinely harassed and spat upon as "baby killers" by the public. That was a myth spread by the Nixon administration to smear the anti-war movement. It was the government that forced them to fight a pointless war and then abandoned them afterwards.

  • @ThomasCorp
    @ThomasCorp Před 5 měsíci +239

    The entire ending scene gets me every time. It feels like everyone focuses on Stallone in the entire ending and understandably so, yet I always feel like Richard Crenna gets overlooked in that scene. Specifically, his acting where he quietly conveys Trautman struggling not to cry hearing Rambo’s breakdown.

    • @Archie2c
      @Archie2c Před 5 měsíci +7

      There's There's Snipit of the alternate cut in Rambo 4

    • @spursfan99
      @spursfan99 Před 5 měsíci +9

      In the book and alternate cut of the film Trautman kills Rambo when he consoles Rambo. In test screening with audience, they didn’t like the message that killing Rambo was the answer with Vietnam vets struggling with PTSD. They reshot it with Rambo living.

    • @leomarlonestrada5954
      @leomarlonestrada5954 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@spursfan99 Yeah! I've heard of this too. Deep inside I refused to believe it. Until now.....thank you for confirming it. I am a believer now.

    • @zeusdarkgod7727
      @zeusdarkgod7727 Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@spursfan99I always heard it was Stallone who didn't want to send that message, instead ending it on a high note.
      But in an alternate ending of the movie he ends himself.

    • @derekdecker555
      @derekdecker555 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Even without the book, I always got the vibe Troutman was internally debating on killing Rambo. Like “is he so broken that if I let him live I’m gonna be responsible for what happens?” Or, if you want a bleak outlook “Can I fix him enough for him to be an asset again?”

  • @alexalston3001
    @alexalston3001 Před 5 měsíci +14

    The breakdown at the end gets me in tears every time. The pain is real.

  • @KlassicKolt5612
    @KlassicKolt5612 Před 5 měsíci +93

    This first Rambo movie was more than just a run-of-the-mill action flick. It was meant to pay homage to Vietnam veterans who were ostracized by the American public when they returned home. Rambo's final rant about his struggles to assimilate back into civilian life was meant to voice how many, if not all of them, must have felt. Amazing movie.

    • @Fangtorn
      @Fangtorn Před 5 měsíci

      The idea that Vietnam vets were ostracized by the public is a myth. There were some soldiers that were spat upon and called baby killers, but those were mostly soldiers being tried for war crimes like killing babies. It didn't happen en masse. Soldiers from any war often struggle to assimilate back into civilian life and the failure there is on the government for not providing the support they deserve.

  • @srairmand
    @srairmand Před 5 měsíci +255

    When I left the military in 96, there was little to none help for vets. I wrote the VA about getting any kind of help but I got no response. I felt depressed and alone. I had to get a job as a stock person at a grocery store. From being a Sgt. to a stock boy was hard to take. When he said "nobody would help, I can totally get it."

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Před 5 měsíci +18

      Sorry you went through that, brother. I terminated in 1992, after the Gulf War, and nearly felt the same way. Being disabled meant I could get care, but only for direct service-related conditions. Thankfully, serious reforms happened with the VHA, starting in the mid-90s, ending with a limited form of universal primary care, which has grown. Been a rocky road, but there've been a couple times I might not have made it if I didn't have the option of going to the ER, etc. Very thankful for that. Anyway, thanks for sharing, and best of health to you!

    • @thedragonreborn9856
      @thedragonreborn9856 Před 5 měsíci

      My respect for veterans is the highest humanly possible. Thank you for your service 🫡. You too @rollomaughfling380 🫡

    • @SarthorS
      @SarthorS Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@rollomaughfling380 We just don't hear of this happening in the UK. Vets get their military pensions and that's pretty much it. Any sort of medical or psychiatric help they might need is covered by the NHS. They get whatever help is needed free of charge, same as everyone else. We also don't have politicians using our servicemen to drum up support and then kicking them into a gutter when they need help.

    • @Davelakful
      @Davelakful Před 5 měsíci +6

      So very sorry our country treated you so poorly. I hope you are doing ok.

    • @srairmand
      @srairmand Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@rollomaughfling380 I wish you well brother. Things are good now. It was a long road to get to where I am. We just gotta keep fighting.

  • @ken_9359
    @ken_9359 Před 5 měsíci +8

    I went to locksmith school and there was five vietnam vets in our class. A lot of them are the coolest type of people you'll ever meet. There was John, Jet-ski, another guy we called Earthquake because his hands would shake sometimes due to agent orange, Cat-Burglar because of his style of cap he wore, and there was a few others. I always liked their sense of humor as nothing seems to offend them. Great movie reaction here.

  • @jcat3409
    @jcat3409 Před 5 měsíci +11

    This movie still holds up today! ..it's a classic! 😊

    • @jcat3409
      @jcat3409 Před 5 měsíci

      @TE.LEGRA.M_YTPopcorninBed ???

  • @randybrandon2071
    @randybrandon2071 Před 5 měsíci +107

    The monologue at the end shows how many Vietnam vets were treated when they came home. It also shows what PTSD really is before anyone knew anything about it. If you pay attention Rambo did not kill a single person. All the deputies were only wounded in the woods. The death from the helicopter was only caused because the guy took his seatbelt off. Even Teasle lived at the end. Not a single death can be attributed to Rambo. This movie is actually based off a book by David Morell. He was a college professor who had returning vets in his classes and he saw the effects PTSD had on these men. The original book was actually a bloodfest of killing with Rambo dying in the end. Stallone didn't want to shed a bad light on vets and wrote the script intentionally with no deaths. That last monologue was one of the best in cinematic history in my opinion. Going forward the sequels were just your basic 80s/90s action movie cash grabs.

    • @ZwiekszoneRyzyko
      @ZwiekszoneRyzyko Před 5 měsíci +2

      Yeah, read the book... it was almost a horror story. And the sheriff was much nicer in it, they just wanted to cut Rambo's hair but that triggered his memories and he started killing.

    • @malibuconv1968
      @malibuconv1968 Před 5 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/hSp8IyaKCs0/video.htmlsi=lGGjzFC9nsd37Gy9

    • @Mcvthree3
      @Mcvthree3 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The sequels were cartoonist except for "John Rambo," which I ADORED.

    • @jiayi2650
      @jiayi2650 Před 5 měsíci

      I think It is also a war strategy because if one is wounded your enemy will have to use at least 1 person to take care of him.

  • @kurtgriffin8365
    @kurtgriffin8365 Před 5 měsíci +118

    Whenever people say Sly can’t act, I point them towards him confronting Mick at the apartment in the first Rocky and the speech at the end of this movie.

    • @charlesmaurer6214
      @charlesmaurer6214 Před 5 měsíci +4

      I always liked Oscar and the shell game with the rollercoaster ride with more twist and turns you are lost in a 5 min. break to get a drink or go to the restroom.

    • @stanleydavidlepretre4241
      @stanleydavidlepretre4241 Před 5 měsíci +8

      One Stallone movie I highly recommend is Copland. As an actor Sly holds his own opposite Harvey Keitel, Robert DeNiro, etc. Also to anyone who says that Stallone can't act my response is... *Jeously is never a good look.*
      Edit: Fixed a typo.

    • @floppyblanket2587
      @floppyblanket2587 Před 5 měsíci +1

      'Fist' is a great Stallone movie, and a really good book.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +3

      "I can't hear you, Ray."

    • @wadethegreat22
      @wadethegreat22 Před 5 měsíci +2

      after he vents, he goes down the stairs and gets Mick who's surprised down the street. Love it.

  • @isaytheenay5961
    @isaytheenay5961 Před 4 měsíci +58

    First Blood: Home Alone in the Woods.
    Hahahahahahahaha

  • @MegaBriarpatch
    @MegaBriarpatch Před 4 měsíci +7

    The colonel Troutman speech is legendary. I've had it memorized since I was 9.

  • @JeffOfTheMountains
    @JeffOfTheMountains Před 5 měsíci +166

    Rambo's final monologue... just wow. Should have won Stallone at least one award.

    • @Archie2c
      @Archie2c Před 5 měsíci +8

      It should have.

    • @CaptainRC1
      @CaptainRC1 Před 5 měsíci +12

      He should have gotten a freaking Oscar.

    • @kentonkruger8333
      @kentonkruger8333 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@CaptainRC1 As good as it was you can't give him a lead actor award for one speech at the end.

    • @joekane622
      @joekane622 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Can you imagine if they had kept the original ending after that speech?

    • @ringokageyama6439
      @ringokageyama6439 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Nothing is Over!~ Nothing!!

  • @nwslimbubba
    @nwslimbubba Před 5 měsíci +135

    First Blood is filmed in my home town of Hope British Columbia Canada 🇨🇦. I was in Grade 3 I think when this was being filmed the school took us on field trips to watch the filming. I watched them film when Rambo runs out of the sheriff's office and takes the guy off of the motorcycle. He actually slides under a logging truck at the Traffic lights but that wasn't put in the movie. When he blows the Gas Station up across the street you see the Shell Station. My family owns that station I am the manager there. Canyon Shell First Blood is a big thing here in Hope. In Oct they usually have a weekend long Rambo days people come from All over the world to be here for it. I could go on and on but I don't want to bore you. Lol😂.

    • @tomtom34b
      @tomtom34b Před 5 měsíci +10

      I hope they didn´t blow up your family´s gas station for realzies, lol.
      Amazing insight!

    • @DomeDweller
      @DomeDweller Před 4 měsíci +9

      That was definitely not boring. What a cool perspective from someone actually there. Pretty cool for me to read.

    • @anonymousf454
      @anonymousf454 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Please, go on

    • @BerraLJ
      @BerraLJ Před 4 měsíci +2

      I see hope and think Highway thru hell :) i like this movie and i guess he came for them cause they did not leave him alone.

    • @leapinglouie5908
      @leapinglouie5908 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Bore me? I could listen for hours! I lived that movie I was 13 when I watched it with dad on HBO

  • @johnsorrow1987
    @johnsorrow1987 Před 4 měsíci +10

    I first seen this movie over 20 years ago. Still love it. A timeless classic that never gets old. First Blood is the best of all the Rambo movies.

  • @BryGoose
    @BryGoose Před 4 měsíci +7

    I didn't see this movie until after my military deployment and ets from the army. That ending hit so hard my first time.
    And still does.

    • @fredwerza3478
      @fredwerza3478 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I remember my parents renting this movie in summer '84 right after they bought a VCR --- my Dad is a Vietnam Vet and he was pretty emotional at Rambo's cry for help at the end --- really brought up a lot of repressed memories for my Dad that he was trying to forget

  • @mgaamerica9185
    @mgaamerica9185 Před 5 měsíci +58

    Our town lost 37 boys in Vietnam, and a lot of dads high school friends served in Vietnam, dad got out of the Army before the war. So when First Blood came out it was differently a big deal in our community, one it gave the vets a lot of much needed attention.

  • @andrewsawyer1375
    @andrewsawyer1375 Před 5 měsíci +141

    One of the best ending monologs & acting you will see. The pain portrayed is so real & you feel it.

    • @hughjorg4008
      @hughjorg4008 Před 5 měsíci +2

      In the 1972 novel that inspired the film, FIRST BLOOD by David Morrell, a lot of people die, and the ending is different too. Plese read the novel. No spoilers, please. 👍

    • @timhonigs6859
      @timhonigs6859 Před 5 měsíci +2

      In the end, you saw the pain, the misery, the feelings of helplessness, loneliness, survivor's guilt, that tons of wartime soldiers deal with. Vietnam was the worst, but for a lot of the vets from the Iraq/Afghanistan war, it's very similar.
      Semper Fi, and Absent Companions.

    • @anthonybeal9069
      @anthonybeal9069 Před 5 měsíci +1

      he really broke his ribs hitting that tree. him screaming in pain was real.

    • @matts1166
      @matts1166 Před 5 měsíci +2

      There was an alternate ending filmed (I have the DVD special edition). After the "legs blown off" monolog he got into a tussle with Trotman. Trotman pulls a pistol, but can't fire. Rambo pulls the gun to his own head, and forces Trotman's finger back, self-terminating.

    • @user-ih5jr8rt5q
      @user-ih5jr8rt5q Před 5 měsíci

      no

  • @cullertransportation
    @cullertransportation Před 4 měsíci +8

    You need to see all the Rambo movies. the story of this man and what all he went through is more than epic, it's also heartbreaking at times

  • @jonathonhumes449
    @jonathonhumes449 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I’m not a combat veteran but tbh Rambo’s speech to Troutman hits home
    You do all this training, all these customs courtesies traditions, wear a certain way, talk a certain way day in and day out and you come home to find out home isn’t home anymore
    And for the first few years you come home for Christmas or something and your family still welcomes you home with open arms, they call and text on a regular basis asking how you are before one day?
    You wake up and realize “oh God! I’m a stranger in a place I called home!”
    Nothing is familiar and the welcoming you had isn’t there anymore
    It’s not really that you’re a stranger, it’s just they learned to live without you
    The longer you stay in the military the worse it gets
    Honestly if family is important to you, either do one contract and get out or don’t do it at all
    It sure as hell doesn’t pay enough to isolate yourself from your family on the enlisted side

  • @shooterdownunder
    @shooterdownunder Před 5 měsíci +125

    The last part didn’t just apply to the American veterans as Australia and New Zealand also sent troops to Vietnam. They were also drafted into the war and when they returned home they were also treated horribly. We lost more troops to suicide than we did in combat in all the years of the war.
    The famous song “I was only 19” really outlines the experience.
    There was a movie that came out years ago called danger close: the battle of long tan which shows one of the largest battles fought by the Australian forces in the Vietnam war which you could react to.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 5 měsíci +10

      Had no idea Australia had a draft for Vietnam.

    • @peterbates9841
      @peterbates9841 Před 5 měsíci +6

      ​@@ct6852 The draft was your date of birth everyone over 18 could be drafted two of my cousins were drafted, one came back fuc#€d up the other was ok.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@peterbates9841 Must've been a stressed out nightmare over there. Such a clusterf**k.

    • @heffatheanimal2200
      @heffatheanimal2200 Před 5 měsíci +8

      A good mate of mine at the local Men's Shed was stationed at Nui Dat, the fire base near Long Tan. His twin brother got drafted, so he volunteered to go too. His brother died on patrol.
      We talk a lot, both having PTSD. He reckons a good part of his mental illness was from the way he was treated by the public, doctors, and even some family after he returned.

    • @mestupkid211986
      @mestupkid211986 Před 5 měsíci +9

      South Korea also sent troops. They were the troops the NVA actually, legit FEARED.

  • @Metamorfeus
    @Metamorfeus Před 5 měsíci +119

    There's a reason that the Vietnam War and it's returning vets were so unpopular. It was the first instance where unfiltered images of war were beamed directly to every living room in America. This is in stark contrast to WWII where the War Department ensured that only stories of heroism made it to America's newspapers, radio and news reels.

    • @chemquests
      @chemquests Před 5 měsíci +11

      & it’s healthy that the public knows what we’re putting people into when we support certain actions. They have more skin in the game & should accept more responsibility for outcomes

    • @seraphinaaizen6278
      @seraphinaaizen6278 Před 5 měsíci +9

      It also doesn't help that the US was carrying out widespread war crimes, and literally had the attitude of "better dead than red" when it came to Vietnamese civilians.

    • @Millicente
      @Millicente Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@chemquests it is, until you have people reacting this way and being negative as a blanket statement to war vets

    • @chemquests
      @chemquests Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Millicente of course

    • @roughmanready
      @roughmanready Před 5 měsíci +5

      My grandfather who was a WWII Army Vet told me while watching coverage of the war in Iraq & Afghanistan that we would never finish another war because of the coverage. He said civilians can never truly understand what is necessary.

  • @machugh792
    @machugh792 Před 5 měsíci +4

    When I came home, there was no one there to greet me. No handshakes, no “well done”, nothing but silence as I went to my barracks. Until my grandfather (a Vietnam Vet) called me and told me he was proud of me. I still have nightmares to this day about what we had to do.

    • @DaNinja60
      @DaNinja60 Před 5 měsíci

      Those of us who were just growing up at that time have no idea what you had to go through. Thanks for enduring what you went through. 😢

    • @ThunderPuppy11
      @ThunderPuppy11 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Welcome home.

  • @darkchiron
    @darkchiron Před 5 měsíci +6

    Interesting(?) fact on this: Stallone gave an interview on this movie not that long ago. The movie was based on a book, and the ending for the book was that Rambo was too dangerous to be alive and was killed. Stallone didn't like that ending and wanted to change the tone to show that men who suffer from PTSD are not beyond help and that there is hope they can live the civilian life.

    • @johnsmith-jk9ol
      @johnsmith-jk9ol Před 4 měsíci

      I remember hearing that was the reason.
      Completely valid reason.
      But the book ending is fantastic as well.
      With veteran suicide rates so high that would also be an appropriate ending.

  • @SpideySensei72
    @SpideySensei72 Před 5 měsíci +40

    In the Netflix documentary on Stallone, he recounts how he interviewed a bunch of veterans while they were working on the outline for this film. And that story about the guy getting his friend's lower body blown up was real and as soon as he heard it they knew they had to keep it for the script.

  • @helmedon
    @helmedon Před 5 měsíci +87

    This was one of the first movies to highlight how poorly our Vietnam vets were treated when they came home. Also one of the first to highlight PTSD and police brutality. It also made the "Rambo knife" popular. Big with simple tools in the hilt. Also started the "don't mess with the crazy Vietnam vet" narrative.

    • @dongilleo9743
      @dongilleo9743 Před 5 měsíci +13

      The "crazy Vietnam veteran" trope was a staple of TV and movies from the mid to late 60s and to the 70s, well before First Blood. They were usually portrayed in the most unsympathetic way.
      First Blood seemed to be one of the first to offer up a sympathetic view of Vietnam veterans. The neglect, abuse, distain, and hatred our veterans were subjected to at that time was cruel and disgusting; and something for which the political and social elements of our society were never fully held to account for, and for which they never fully apologized or repented of.

    • @p.bckman2997
      @p.bckman2997 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I was a teenager in the 80's, I got myself one of those knives. It was a horrible knife. the hollow grip meant the junction between grip and blade was too weak for bush use (I was an avid boy-scout).

    • @boboboy8189
      @boboboy8189 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@p.bckman2997those rambo knife Its actually originate from Malaysia when British Learned it from us. We called it as golok. Its shorter than machete but longer and sturdier than knife. Its used for People Who want to search rattan in jungle. British copy that and used it in British army fo jungle warfare.
      My dad did teach me how to proper hold it but i didn't pay any attention because i won't enter any jungle or forest. My dad is Villager but i'm City boy. If you not holding correctly it won't do any damage. Most people Who use it learned basic silat which is why non martial artist didn't know how to use it properly

    • @p.bckman2997
      @p.bckman2997 Před 5 měsíci

      @@boboboy8189 , I'm a Norwegian, and I used it a bit like you would do a Lappish knife (as a sort alternative to an axe for cutting down small trees to build stuff). My survival knife has a small threaded thang fastened to the bottom of the hollow handle with a nut. It didn't hold up long the way I was using it.
      What is the name of the proper Malaysian type, not the ratty Western copies?

    • @redmictian
      @redmictian Před 5 měsíci

      blame the government and the war, it’s all their fault

  • @coregonusfishing
    @coregonusfishing Před 3 měsíci +4

    Just a masterpiece. I remember as i was a kid everyone wanted a Rambo Knife lol

  • @jg51ogg
    @jg51ogg Před měsícem +1

    In the end of the book Rambo, John Rambo gave his speach to Troutman about the Vietnam War Troutman put his arms around Rambo and then apologized for what had happened to Rambo because of what was expected by the Army, then shot him in the head. Stallone changed the end of the movie from the book so if there was interest he could write more Rambo Sagas.
    When this movie was made the Vietman war was only 7 years behind the calendar and there were still protestor from the war that would chastise veterans. After this movie there was an outpouring of support for Veterans.
    One of the biggest differences of PTSD from WW2 and Korean war vets compared to Vietman vets was the time from the battlefield to the streets. After WW2 and Korea the soldiers were kept in-country for 6 months and then returned to the States by way of ships. They had time to work out the psycological trauma and what they had done and had done to them. My Grandfather who was involved with clearing obstacles during D-day didn't get home until April of 1946. My Uncle who served in a combat unit in Vietman was on the battlefield on day 335 of his deployment and was given a transport plane home on Day 337. He spent years with a psycologist to work out his mental issues caused by what had happened to him.
    God Bless the American (and Canadian) Soldiers.
    As for more Rambo movies 2 and 3 were more shoot-em' ups. #2 was about returning to Vietman to find Vets that were MIA and 3 was to help the Afghani Rebels fight the Russians who had captured Troutman and were holding him prisoner. The 4th on is Burma same thing different people, the 5th is a story of Rambo after he has returned to the United States, in Arizona I think, to take care of his deceased father's ranch with a woman friend and her daughter. Mexican cartel tries to kill him but he smokes them.

  • @darthmatt4120
    @darthmatt4120 Před 5 měsíci +76

    Cassie said, "It's like Home Alone, but in the woods." LOL, that should have been on the movie poster!

    • @RABartlett
      @RABartlett Před 5 měsíci

      That poster wouldn't sell the movie but the graphic designer might be approached to bet on horse races.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Před 5 měsíci +14

      Or Home Alone could've been called 'Rambo...for kids.'

    • @andrewjohnson6907
      @andrewjohnson6907 Před 5 měsíci +15

      First Blood came out in 1982. Home Alone wasn't until 1990.

    • @joshr8666
      @joshr8666 Před 5 měsíci +4

      This time he's out for blood

    • @randellosburn5105
      @randellosburn5105 Před 5 měsíci

      ROFL!!!!!!!
      ...
      *Movie announcer voice*
      In a world,... where a (crap how did his commanding officer say it?... Nevermind) gross ditchwater town's, head up his rear end, sheriff treats a Vietnam veteran, who is going through the worse ptsd episode in his life after finding out his last surviving brother in arms has died,.. Like month old diaper rash.
      Rambo...
      "Its like Home Alone, but in the woods."

  • @seraphinaaizen6278
    @seraphinaaizen6278 Před 5 měsíci +157

    Stallone often gets really underestimated as an actor. It's true he doesn't have a lot of range, but when he hits a role he can do, he always nails it. The end scene in Rambo is some of the best acting he's ever done. The way he underplays the character through the whole movie until that final snap when it all comes out makes it even more effective.

    • @carig121
      @carig121 Před 5 měsíci +9

      He 's a good actor, sad he later got caught by the "winning 80's" and its Reaganism that pushed his career to more action oriented roles, First Blood and Rocky will always be his best ones.

    • @zeusimback9503
      @zeusimback9503 Před 5 měsíci +10

      Stallone has range, you just see him as an action hero. But he got acting chops, just watch Cop Land you already scene First Blood the ending of it or Rocky 3 with Mick passing showcases acting chops. Very underrated actor

    •  Před 5 měsíci +4

      I agree. The end of the movie Creed. When he goes visit his son and his grand son. I feel like… yeah, it looks real. Very emotional.

    • @AliceBowie
      @AliceBowie Před 5 měsíci +4

      He's a good actor, I think a lot of people thought he was dumb because of his voice, which is from partial deafness. He's in that show Tulsa King now, which is well regarded. And he's like 78.

    • @jamesfrench7299
      @jamesfrench7299 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Night Hawks from 81 was great he showed he could do thrillers and Tango and Cash be plays a suited white collar detective.

  • @ANRO7524
    @ANRO7524 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I'm glad that you've picked this movie to watch. Rambo First Blood is a great movie. The music, the acting, the theme, (especially the disrespected Vietnam vet theme), were all brilliant. I love this movie. Only Stallone could do this just right. He's intense. 🍿🍿🎞🎞🙂

  • @Zekerose
    @Zekerose Před 4 měsíci +4

    1st time watcher, if that’s right, lol. I’m 60 and a friend of mine flew home from the Vietnam war and when he was at the carousel to get his backpack, a guy in a suit spit on him and he floored him. Got 30 days in jail before he could hug his family after serving in Vietnam. This movie nailed it!! I’d love to see you 2 react to “Paul Harvey, If I Was The Devil” broadcast. It’s only 3-4 minutes short. Take care I enjoyed it!!!

  • @tbmike23
    @tbmike23 Před 5 měsíci +78

    In the book, he snaps and goes on a rampage killing spree. The movie took the story and made it into sometging so much more. A brilliant performance by Sly.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Před 5 měsíci +5

      With a much different ending.

    • @osmanyousif7849
      @osmanyousif7849 Před 5 měsíci +2

      In hindsight, though, the novel made it established that there is no good guy or bad guy as we later see why Rambo is the way he is. And Teasle is way less of a villain in the novel. Sure, his actions were wrong, but you do understand where he was coming from.

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@osmanyousif7849 in the book the sheriff wife had just filed for divorce, so he was having a bad day.

    • @sonofkarma5461
      @sonofkarma5461 Před 5 měsíci +2

      The Writer of the book even said He Preferred the Movie over his Writing

  • @jasonavery
    @jasonavery Před 5 měsíci +54

    Anyone who says Stallone can’t act needs to see the final monologue at the end of this film. That is some of the greatest acting I’ve ever seen. I saw this movie as a kid, and that scene never left me.

  • @ShawNshawN
    @ShawNshawN Před 4 měsíci +2

    Every kid wanted the Rambo knife to do survival stuff. We did snow camping training in boy scouts, built fires from scratch on abandoned property and cooked steak of cement blocks. We also got BB guns and hunted each other down in the woods. Boys were all inspired by the crazy Rambo movie in the 80s.

  • @dudeminny6167
    @dudeminny6167 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I was young when I watched for the first time and him talking about 7 years ago was forever to me. I am a veteran now. I can name every guy I served with in the Gulf 30 years ago. This movie only touched the surface of how Vietnam vets were treated. It took 15 years after 1977 for them to get there respect of what 19 year olds went through.

  • @Optimus_Prime.
    @Optimus_Prime. Před 3 měsíci +3

    This was the birth of the genre "ACTION MOVIES". As an 11 year old Australian kid who snuck into the cinema to see this R-Rated cassic in 1982, it changed my life forever. 99% of my channel's inspriration is credited to this movie. First Blood for #life ♥

  • @petert834
    @petert834 Před 5 měsíci +71

    I'm old enough to remember when this movie was new. This was one of the influential movies (along with films like The Deer Hunter) that really helped to start changing the way America felt about Vietnam vets and how they were perceived and treated in American culture.

    • @michaelmiller378
      @michaelmiller378 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Deer Hunter is a great movie

    • @spaceace4387
      @spaceace4387 Před 5 měsíci

      @@michaelmiller378 Yes it is and it explored very similar themes that First Blood did (what its like for returning vets to attempt to readapt to society).

    • @nickh5937
      @nickh5937 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Thank you for your comment. I feel like a lot of people don’t understand the sentiment that Americans had towards Vietnam vets returning home.

    • @K1ng1995
      @K1ng1995 Před 5 měsíci

      I'm actually from BC where this movie was filmed if you go there on July 1st they celebrate Rambo day it's really fun put it on your Bucket list.

  • @billwoods9302
    @billwoods9302 Před 5 měsíci +35

    Though it was marketed as an action thriller, in many ways it holds a place among other films like Coming Home and The Deer Hunter in the way it sheds light on the PTSD that haunts so many of our military veterans. John Rambo's emotional breakdown in front of his commanding officer carries far more weight than any of the explosions or gun fights that led up to it.

    • @yvonnesanders4308
      @yvonnesanders4308 Před 5 měsíci

      I forgot coming home. Great movie.
      They should watch both of these.
      If they want something that feels flashier then born in the 4th of July should be on the list, it doesn't feel as dark

  • @kymmoore853
    @kymmoore853 Před 5 měsíci +2

    There’s so much being missed here due to passing years and a lack of understanding of the context.
    Rambo, the character, was based on real people who returned from Vietnam and couldn’t integrate back into society.
    He was looking for his friend at the beginning because, having been rejected by the very society that he fought for, he was looking for someone who would understand.
    If you look at his jacket carefully you’ll notice that it wasn’t the American flag that was the problem but the fact it was a U.S. Army jacket and, as Rambo stated, the veterans weren’t well received and were protested by the peace and free love movement; hence, just by wearing that jacket you could end up being hassled.
    Teasal himself was also a veteran, but of the Korean War, which is made obvious in the book but in the film it’s only a nod given in his office after they think Rambo’s dead when you can see his medals in the background. That’s why he honed in on Rambo as the Korean veterans didn’t like the fact that their sacrifice was forgotten and Vietnam was getting all the coverage.
    The Green Beret’s at that time were basically one man destruction teams sent in to cause as much chaos as possible, but Rambo was also a ‘tunnel rat’ (someone sent into the Viet Cong tunnels to ‘rat’ them out - an incredibly dangerous job).
    When this book was originally picked up to be made into a film it was felt ‘too raw’ still to be able to make it due to many of the tensions still being present - in all, it took them about ten years before they felt they could make it without opening any ‘old wounds’.

    • @do0ranfrump260
      @do0ranfrump260 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yep, that was my uncle who wound up living in a shack in the mountains in Montana by himself.

  • @ominusspiritus4574
    @ominusspiritus4574 Před 5 měsíci +2

    This was filmed in a town called "Hope"...
    an hour away from my home in Beautiful British Columbia,Canada
    Everytime I drive through " Hope"...I think of Sly Stallone...
    I still think this is one of his best roles...

    • @ryansoprovich2258
      @ryansoprovich2258 Před 5 měsíci +1

      There was a large chainsaw carving of Rambo in a park the last time I was in Hope. The town's surroundings are beautiful but also rugged and unforgiving. I don't think they could have found a more perfect location for this movie.

  • @Penlager
    @Penlager Před 5 měsíci +50

    Such a great movie. Rambo was just a veteran trying to confirm to life back home and he was pushed to far. He reverted back to the killing machine he was trained to be... And you actually feel for Rambo. You wind up rooting for him. His speech at the end was heartbreaking

  • @alshabib5849
    @alshabib5849 Před 5 měsíci +22

    That breakdown at the end is arguably one of the best performances of Stallone's career and takes everyone completly by surprise, especially if they are going into it with the background knowledge of Rambo being just a run of the mill action movie. The reputation around Rambo being a big dumb action movie comes from the sequels which lean way more into the action and turns away from police corruption and abuse of power and instead heads more into cold war era drama, this first movie is the one with the most emotional substance.

  • @jontuell5338
    @jontuell5338 Před 4 měsíci +2

    31:02
    "I thought he was just looking for food." LOL
    "I feel bad for that business owner"

  • @Edwardianschool
    @Edwardianschool Před 6 dny

    When you’re on foot, hungry, and the next town’s 30 miles up the road! Next up, Rambo 2! Must watch!!

  • @AndrewKendall71
    @AndrewKendall71 Před 5 měsíci +19

    My dad is a retired Army Aviator who flew helicopters in Vietnam. He is considered 100% disabled (was diagnosed with and then beat cancer 20 years ago) because of exposure to Agent Orange which was a defoliant to remove thick vegetation so the enemy couldn't hide as easily. Yeah, it was used kinda a lot. By the way, look up Richard Crenna for what else he's been in.

  • @johnallen4030
    @johnallen4030 Před 5 měsíci +123

    They sold Rambo knives at flea markets. It had a wire saw, compass, waterproof matches, sewing kit. All us guys had them

    • @wheelmanstan
      @wheelmanstan Před 5 měsíci +11

      yeah most of us kids had that knife, all metal, not the best blade but it was really neat, even had a honing stone in the sheath

    • @chongsfury4358
      @chongsfury4358 Před 5 měsíci +7

      We use to call them survival knives

    • @danielcurtis1434
      @danielcurtis1434 Před 5 měsíci +2

      “Guys” or “kids”???

    • @SENILE_TYRANT
      @SENILE_TYRANT Před 5 měsíci +8

      ​@@danielcurtis1434I was a kid when I had those junk knives. We all thought they were awesome. 😂

    • @Mickr4
      @Mickr4 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Ironically, the empty handle make the tang super short, which make the knife not only fragile, but dangerous.

  • @mikeokeefe2014
    @mikeokeefe2014 Před 4 měsíci +2

    This was like watching a movie with my girlfriend with all the dumb questions ..it felt like being at home 😂

  • @LN-Lifer
    @LN-Lifer Před 4 měsíci +3

    "Why do I feel so tense right now?"
    Because you are supposed to!

  • @PatrolOfficer161
    @PatrolOfficer161 Před 5 měsíci +62

    Stalone was asked if he wanted some more resonable costuming considering the weather and decided the tee shirt look was best until the production dragged on and he was exposed to the extreme cold day after day. Thought better of it after a while but was locked into the shirt. Crenna's first scene was at the tent and he was wearing five layers of coats, sweaters, and socks and marveled at Stalone's dedication to his craft. Trivia note. Kirk Douglas was originally cast to play Troutman and left the production the day before shooting began. Crenna had 24 hours to accept, arrive on set, and be cameras ready for the shoot.

    • @technofilejr3401
      @technofilejr3401 Před 5 měsíci +16

      Crenna nailed it

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi Před 5 měsíci +3

      Great info!!! Didn't know any of this.

    • @derekwischmann6123
      @derekwischmann6123 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Why did Kirk Douglas drop out? Creative differences?

    • @PatrolOfficer161
      @PatrolOfficer161 Před 5 měsíci

      Exactly. Constantly reworked the script and was finally told, "we shoot as it's written". it's reported he got in his limo and left without notice. @@derekwischmann6123

    • @PatrolOfficer161
      @PatrolOfficer161 Před 5 měsíci

      If you check out some background material on the "making of" you will see the poster prepared with Douglas the only character visible. Apparently, Douglas was the draw that could get the foriegn investment to make the movie. @@clevelandcbi

  • @bryanwheaton3866
    @bryanwheaton3866 Před 5 měsíci +23

    This movie did a great service to veterans. Vietnam vets were treated terribly after that war, and the popularity of this movie sort of rubbed that in the face of people, while also addressing the long-ignored problems of PTSD. Instant classic for all the right reasons.

    • @jimiewilliams7623
      @jimiewilliams7623 Před 5 měsíci +1

      We had no business being in Vietnam. Civilian protests helped to end the war and save lives on both sides. If you go around bombing villages that have stood for decades and centuries, you deserve to catch some flack when you get back home. Some of us actually thought we were supposed to be the good guys. Then came the images from the war, and the tragedy of the My Lai massacre. That kind of stuff put a bad taste in the mouths of those with insight and empathy. Not to mention all the fathers, sons and brothers, who came back with missing limbs and PTSD. For What? All I learned from First Blood, is that war sucks, and the country you fought for, may discard you like a broken rubber band. Oh, and don't mess with John Rambo. Yeah, those were the lessons of this film.

    • @keithgunvordahl
      @keithgunvordahl Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@jimiewilliams7623 You watch to much television.

    • @philwill0123
      @philwill0123 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@keithgunvordahlno , he's entirely right. Same thing with the Iraq wars. We learned nothing when governments manipulate war. Many soldiers went into murder mode and just went to kill, rape and torture people themselves.

    • @jimiewilliams7623
      @jimiewilliams7623 Před 5 měsíci

      Said my mom, back in 1975. The same year that I watched the fall of Saigon on ABC news. That was also the year that "Fame" came blaring out of the radio, and made me a David Bowie fan for life. Thanks for triggering those cool memories. @@keithgunvordahl

  • @Starry_Night_Sky7455
    @Starry_Night_Sky7455 Před 16 dny

    33:20 omg that's just nailing what PTSD is like, as well as this whole movie with Rambo's fight/flight reaction from the moment that corrupt cop messed with him.
    I think people need to see this movie. It is NOTHING like what the fun memes portray. Nothing at all.
    If I were making movies required for viewing and discussion in school, this one is going on that list.

  • @_Cleck_
    @_Cleck_ Před 5 měsíci +1

    There's a few thoughts on why Teasle treats Rambo the way he does w/ the flag on his jacket. 1) He thinks he's a hippie, wearing the flag as a statement, 2) Teasle was in Korea before Vietnam, and completely forgotten about compared to those who fought in Vietnam

  • @Xehanort117
    @Xehanort117 Před 5 měsíci +51

    I don't talk about this much, but I worked in a state mental hospital when I was younger. For the most part, most people that came to that place had less extreme, and I use that term very carefully, conditions like manic depression, dissociative personality disorder, and severe mood swings. I happened to work on the all-male ward, and I can say without a doubt that of all the human beings I ever encountered, it was the military vets that intrigued/worried me the most. There were several Vietnam vets who were long-timers that had either wound up homeless or incarcerated after literally never re-adjusting to post-war civilian life. Believe me when I say that if I ever had to try to describe what a broken human being is like, those vets are the first people that come to mind. The things those guys saw and/or did affected them in ways that never could be fixed. The biggest indicator of this was the eyes. They all had the same 1000 mile stare that seemed to always linger as if they were stuck in the past and truly left the best of themselves behind in the jungle. I'll never forget them as long as I live, knowing that whatever it is they experienced was enough to tear the soul straight in half and leave a person truly broken forever.

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I once saw a documentary about VietNam veterans living in the hills of Washington. They chose to live in solitary because life and other people was just too much to deal with. One of the veterans were close to killing his own grandmother, because she would try to wake him up bu pinching a toe on him, and he just got up and grapped her by the throat and started stranguling her. He did however came to his senses and stopped it. After that he went into the woods in the hills.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 5 měsíci

      *Thousand-yard stare*

  • @logankerlee1988
    @logankerlee1988 Před 5 měsíci +85

    This movie is incredible! I was shocked when I first watched this as an adult. It's a film that opens your eyes to the pain and struggle of a soldier. Stallone played this role phenomenally well!

    • @zeusimback9503
      @zeusimback9503 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Classic film and these people couldn't even appreciate the film, they lose points more and more every time I see a reaction

  • @leespiderpod
    @leespiderpod Před 5 měsíci +2

    the sound effect when Rambo lets Galt’s head hit the rock is classic 😂

  • @pplrstrange
    @pplrstrange Před 4 měsíci +2

    "What do you hunt with a knife?" - cop
    "Name it" - John Rambo.
    Some of us just want to be left alone. Welcome to our world ladies.

  • @patticriss2238
    @patticriss2238 Před 5 měsíci +36

    I was born and raised in Texas. Now I live in a rural
    Oklahoma town. I’ve never, in my life, known a sheriff that wasn’t this guy. That’s a fact. And I’m old.

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Bullies allways search for positions of power, where they can bully and boss people around

  • @michaeltabor4176
    @michaeltabor4176 Před 5 měsíci +48

    There is quite a difference in the novel regarding Sheriff Teasle. The movie glances over it, but he is a Korean War vet who is going through his own issues. If you look in his office you can see that he has a Silver Star on display, which is the third-highest military decoration for valor in combat. The Korean war is also known as the “Forgotten War” because it was largely overshadowed by WWII and Vietnam. So, in addition to how controversial the Vietnam war was, the perception of being "forgotten" further enhanced Teasle's resentment of Rambo.

    • @matthew55793
      @matthew55793 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Teasle's motivation makes so much more sense in the book than it did in the movie.

    • @spaceace4387
      @spaceace4387 Před 5 měsíci

      @@matthew55793 Yes, the characters in the novel are very different even though the events that happen are pretty similar.

    • @doobleludo3589
      @doobleludo3589 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Merci a Mr Trump de ne pas avoir fait de guerre ... votre pays est tellement criminelle !

    • @SciFiCatGuy
      @SciFiCatGuy Před 5 měsíci

      One of the first books & films about PTSD.

  • @thatnobodyguy1535
    @thatnobodyguy1535 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The original idea was to have Trautman kill Rambo, but it was rightly pooly recieved. The concept of PTSD barely even existed at the time. It was called shellshock & was broadly disregarded. Veterans were treated horribly because Vietnam was a very unpopular war. To this day veterans are under-treated & under-served in both their psychological & physical rehabilitation.

  • @JC-bh8qx
    @JC-bh8qx Před 3 měsíci

    This movie is so deeper than people think. The PTSD, especially for Vietnam vets, and the hatred and lack of support they faced when they got home was brutal. Stallone was great in this role.

  • @dmgill83
    @dmgill83 Před 5 měsíci +57

    One of the brief Easter Eggs in this was that Teasel was a Korean War veteran. His medals were displayed behind him when he sat back at his desk after Rambo was "blown up" by the NG. The Korean War is the 20th century's forgotten war and there was little appreciation of the men who served there, thus some animosity for a VN vet from Teasel.

    • @Jokerstylez1995
      @Jokerstylez1995 Před 5 měsíci +8

      I always heard exactly that. Teasel was the town all star. Soldier and man who knew everyone's name so yeah he was elected sheriff. He wanted rambo out because if someone from a "bigger" war came in, he would lose his fan base. He's all ego and he can't stand to be bested at anything. He won't quit to save face and he has to be seen as the hero that stopped the wild man on the loose.

    • @blacksheep_edge1412
      @blacksheep_edge1412 Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@Jokerstylez1995 It also had something to do with "losing" the Vietnam War. At least I heard it was alluded to in the book that was part of the reason.

  • @TheYeti6000
    @TheYeti6000 Před 5 měsíci +53

    The final monologue is absolutely elite.

  • @richpraytor4196
    @richpraytor4196 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Explosions! Gunfire! A town being attacked! "Diary Queen sounds good." You guys are my favorite.

  • @RedEarth20XDX
    @RedEarth20XDX Před 5 měsíci +70

    In school i learned from my science teacher that the way Vietnam vets were treated in certain parts of the country after the war was awful. Media really demonized the troops and government with no tact so people had it in their mind that it was okay to treat those soldiers badly. Imagine coming back home after the worst experience in your life and getting treated like trash by everyone you meet. I couldn't imagine living that.

    • @LetTheWrite1inn
      @LetTheWrite1inn Před 5 měsíci +4

      They got what they deserved

    • @RedEarth20XDX
      @RedEarth20XDX Před 5 měsíci +4

      @@LetTheWrite1inn thats certainly an opinion. Cool name btw.

    • @jamescheddar4896
      @jamescheddar4896 Před 5 měsíci +5

      The other side to it is that vets of tyrannical wars were propagandized into thinking they're fighting for the homelands personal freedoms. Some of them parrot of this rhetoric and it makes them look foolish.
      As a moral stance yes, they're your troops, stand behind them or in front of them. However random civilians deserve to be free of the pressure of feeling beholden to a man with a gun, especially the ones who did everything they could to vote against the war and not send that man to fight in the first place.

    • @philwill0123
      @philwill0123 Před 5 měsíci +2

      You forget, the sheriff here is a vet himself. Of the Korean war. Basically they looked down on Vietnam vets for being in an "unjust" war.

    • @PruneHub
      @PruneHub Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@LetTheWrite1inn Burned any cities recently?

  • @gaylordreese
    @gaylordreese Před 5 měsíci +111

    Upon my return from Vietnam I was walking thru LA airport in uniform and came upon 30 anti--war protesters. Men, women and children. They yelled at me all sorts of vial names, baby killer, murderer, etc. They spit on me and then threw urine and feces on me. Even today, although I'm retired I don't have military stickers on my car or wear any hats or clothing with military indicators. The kind of harassment that Rambo got did happen all over.

    • @johnabbottphotography
      @johnabbottphotography Před 5 měsíci +24

      People on the far left were just completely inhuman to vets.
      To this day, I don't get it.
      They started to do the same thing with Persian Gulf War folks, but the pushback was immediate.

    • @dmonroe20
      @dmonroe20 Před 5 měsíci +12

      Thank you for your service! Welcome home!

    • @johnmagill7714
      @johnmagill7714 Před 5 měsíci +23

      I was living in West Texas back during Vietnam. It wasn't as bad there as what you experienced. But one weekend we took a trip to Dallas, to Pick up my Uncle Wayne from Love Field. I got a firsthand look at how he was treated. Same thing you described. Years later as Desert Storm was going on. He sent me a letter, all upset that would get the same thing coming home. He saw the welcome we got at the Pier. I was told he was crying happy we didn't get the same thing he did. He let it slip he was a Marine Vet from Nam, said how he never got this kind of welcome. Shortly after that people there started coming up to him thanking him saying welcome home. A full bird Colonel heard what he was saying and asked him his rank when he was in, then saluted him and said welcome him. He lost it. Later that night I had a long talk with him, I was the first one he spoke to about his experiences there. I found out due to his smaller sizer. He was a tunnel rat. He told me some horrific stories. It was then I finally understood why he became what he became. Last few years of his life he was actually relaxed, somewhat. He asked me to be a Paul Barer at his funeral. In my Navy Dress Blues with the Marines there. How could I refuse.

    • @user-vl6pk6gy3h
      @user-vl6pk6gy3h Před 5 měsíci +9

      Its disgusting how some people treat other people; especially the democRAT left. Rambos monologue at the end captures the pain of our vets.
      Thank you for your service, and thank you to all the vets of the greatest military on the planet

    • @1badsteed
      @1badsteed Před 5 měsíci +4

      Sir, I am thankful for you. For being willing to put YOUR LIFE on the line to defend others. I don't care if you were front line, a cook, a paper pusher, however you served. You went where they told you and tried to be a good Soldier/Sailor/Marine/Airman. You fought for freedom, against tyranny and you were not appreciated by a lot of people when you came home. My dad went through some of that when he returned from Viet Nam. He served onboard the USS Midway over there. Thank you and God bless you!

  • @AceAcabras
    @AceAcabras Před 4 měsíci +1

    There is an extended scene where after Rambo is buzzed to go downstairs it continues upstairs. On the radio there is a commercial promo for Rocky Balboa defending his title.
    There is an alternate ending where Rambo gets killed at the end.

  • @VladislavBabbitt
    @VladislavBabbitt Před 4 dny

    "Cut him down to nothing."
    That hit Rambo really hard.

  • @jqryan
    @jqryan Před 5 měsíci +13

    Rambo's speech and break-down at the end is an iconic moment in cinema...."It wasn't my war!!".. and he see's his best friend blown to pieces. In the end he is a character he feel sorry for a great deal.

  • @bradleymcavoy3432
    @bradleymcavoy3432 Před 11 hodinami

    RIP Richard Crenna “He can eat things that would make Billy goat puke!” 🤣 Plus RIP 🪦 who played Tommy Boy’s Dad! 🤩

  • @Rob-eo5ql
    @Rob-eo5ql Před 5 měsíci +7

    The last line in the movie:
    “Every day, I have this. And sometimes, I wake up, and I don't know where I am. I don't talk to anybody. Sometimes a day...a week. I can't put it out of my mind….”
    WOW!

    • @djt8518
      @djt8518 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I feel the same way about my wifes death 2 years ago

    • @djt8518
      @djt8518 Před 5 měsíci

      I feel the same way about my wifes death 2 years ago

  • @Fordo007
    @Fordo007 Před 5 měsíci +37

    If I recall the story Rambo told about his friend dying from the bomb was a real story that Stallone heard that he used for the movie. Vietnam veterans were treated horribly. The anti-war crowd treated them like fascists or imperialists or war criminals for fighting in the war, and the 'patriotic' side was still very cold to them for 'losing' America's first war and for how 'political' a lot of the veterans were. And the PTSD the vets experienced was looked down on as the Korean War and WWII and WWI vets didn't 'whine and complain' about 'trauma' like they did and they handled it like men. Nevermind they handled it by bottling it up inside and letting only their wives and kids suffer from it while the Vietnam vets were just trying to get help and make people realize war changes people and breaks people. Vietnam vets were at the wrong point in history where everything was against them. Almost no one in America had their back or thought well of them. The only war vets who had it worst were WWI vets in my opinion.
    People forget that the 'support the troops' mindset we had in America for the War on Terror, where even if you were against the war you still supported the troops, didn't exist in Vietnam. If you were against the war and felt LBJ and Nixon were war criminals... you treated the soldiers the same way. And Vietnam had the draft, people were forced to go over there, only to suffer the horrors of war and come back and be treated like a monster or failure by everyone back home.

    • @joeconcepts5552
      @joeconcepts5552 Před 5 měsíci +10

      And a lot of that modern push to support the veterans was from people remembering how the Vietnam vets were treated.

    • @nemanjap8768
      @nemanjap8768 Před 5 měsíci +2

      You should reverse that one . Vietnam War veterans were forced to go , all the guys after that willingly went to kill innocent people in the middle East and yet you thank them for their service

    • @danerook
      @danerook Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@nemanjap8768NOT, true

    • @nemanjap8768
      @nemanjap8768 Před 5 měsíci

      @@danerook absolutely true

    • @craigcottrell944
      @craigcottrell944 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@nemanjap8768 no one was forced to go people joined up

  • @jonmurphy4889
    @jonmurphy4889 Před 4 měsíci +1

    So glad more people are being exposed to this great film. Especially younger generations. I grew up with this movie. I grew up with this man. My Father's name was even John his nickname was Johnny Rambo and he was a decorated Vietnam Vet. He was even a Green Beret. Entered into the Army with the 1st Infantry Division. Volunteered Special Forces and served with the 6th Group. When they started dissolving SF Groups towards the end of the war he left with the 5th to train troops for cold weather combat in Germany, in anticipation of a war with Russia. He served 2 tours of combat duty 68 and 69, 2 Purple Hearts for being wounded in combat. He was greatly affected by Agent Orange it took away all of his T-cells, in a sense it almost made him like an HIV/AIDS affected person because he lacked most of his immunities. He actually contracted pneumonia in Germany and almost died and it pretty much stayed in his system his whole life he would go through terrible bouts of sickness. He fought for his disability he was 70% for a long time but finally got 100% disability in 1993. He passed away from a heart attack in 2013. He was my hero my best friend and the most badass motherfucker I've ever known. Love you Dad I miss you man. Thank you for everything.

  • @rajahkossuth
    @rajahkossuth Před 3 měsíci

    The "redhead cop" that you and Carly like, is David "CSI: MIAMI" Caruso. It was his first role, I think. When this movie came out in 1982, it was called First Blood. After the other Rambo movies, they added his last name so people could buy it on VHS & DVD.

  • @fjsioewiox
    @fjsioewiox Před 5 měsíci +13

    Rambo is just as famous as Rocky, it was basically the 2 of the most famous franchises of the 80's/90's, I'm shocked they are so familiar with one but not the other.

  • @TheFacelessStoryMaker
    @TheFacelessStoryMaker Před 5 měsíci +66

    I love how Trautman just lets Rambo vent. No interruptions. He was likely a vet himself from WWII just lets him get everything off his chest.

    • @GeorgiaBoy1961
      @GeorgiaBoy1961 Před 5 měsíci +11

      As an ardent fan of Stallone, if there is one thing I wish the "Rambo" series had done better, it is to explore the relationship between Colonel Trautman and john Rambo a bit more. Trautman is, for all intents and purposes, his surrogate father in addition to being his (former) commanding officer. The 3rd film in the series got into it more, which was nice, but still wanted to know more about them. It is such a strong scene at the start of the third film when Trautman comes to visit Rambo in Thailand and they talk man-to-man, Rambo saying that he doesn't want the life of a combat soldier anymore, and Trautman saying that he is stuck with, and so on. Very well done scene, even though fairly brief. Richard Crenna was a highly-underrated actor.

    • @stewartwattson5386
      @stewartwattson5386 Před 5 měsíci +5

      I interpreted Trautman's silent response as he doesn't know what to do. He too is only trained for military efficiency, not emotions

    • @FuckGoogle2
      @FuckGoogle2 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Lulling him into a sense of security before putting a bullet in his head, that's how the book ended anyways.

    • @jamellelangfordiii3586
      @jamellelangfordiii3586 Před 4 měsíci

      Troutman states he was in the shit with him.

    • @TheHiddenHistoryChannel
      @TheHiddenHistoryChannel Před 4 měsíci

      Korean War

  • @rwaa6931
    @rwaa6931 Před měsícem

    The reason Rambo didn't "run away" as you said you wanted him to do is b/c he told Teasle "to let it go or I'll give you a war you won't believe". He was bringing the war to him (in his town).