RAMBO 4 MOVIE REVIEW FREE
The film won't free The Lady, nor will it make things easier for the Karen. Critics say this film trivializes the plight of the Karen people in Burma, as well as the non-violent struggle by the movement of detained democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi. Some Burmese anti-junta activists have piggybacked on the film's release to highlight their cause, and in the wake of the bloody crackdown of last year's anti-government protests, Stallone seized upon the headlines to comment on the abysmal conditions along the Thai border, and get an early start on promoting the film.
It's the catchphrase that most of the reviews of this film have picked up on, but in the context of the film, it comes at a time that I least expected it, and the only reaction the mercenary could possibly have is "what the heck does that mean?" Though he doesn't say it.Ĭontinuing with the theme of change, or the lack thereof, this film will do little to change what is really going on along the Thai border and inside Burma. "Live for nothing, die for something," he says to a mercenary at one point. Rambo 4 is the right framing for Stallone and his muttering, mumbled delivery. On the big screen, he's kind of scary, even when he's not ripping out a guy's throat with his bare hands.
Not much has changed with Stallone, either, except that he's bigger and more grotesquesly sinewy, with some heaping doses of human growth hormone to add bulk. Little has changed in Burma in decades, so it still seems like the '80s there. The setting is perfect for Rambo, a relic of an old war, for the Karen conflict has been going on for 60 years, which some horrific documentary footage from inside Burma at the beginning of the film explains, is the world's longest-running civil war. Even more retro, it hearkens back to the 1970s Thai action cinema - the raberd poa, khaow pao kratom ("bomb the mountain, burn the huts") films. Chatrichalerm Yukol's 1992 snapshot of the same area where Rambo 4 was shot. It could be Born to Fight, Ong-Bak or even a higher-octane remake of Salween, M.C. There are Thai stunt actors, Thai explosions and Thai people. He heroically gets to roll in the dirt and let loose a rocket from a shoulder-fired launcher, much the same as he did in Tears of the Black Tiger. Thai actor Supakorn Kitsuwon has a prominent role as a Karen rebel fighter who guides the mercenaries. Blood and guts splatter out by the bucketful under the big, sharp knife of Rambo.įilmed in 2006 in Chiang Mai Province, with a Thai crew and cast of extras, Rambo 4 could be a Thai action film if not for the presence of Stallone, who directed, and the rest of foreign cast, with Benz and Paul Schulze among the missionaries, Ken "White Shadow" Howard as a concerned clergyman and Matthew Marsden, Graham McTavish, Reynaldo Gallegos, Jake La Botz and Tim Kang as the mercenaries.īurmese actor Maung Maung Khin portrays an evil, sneering, cigarette-smoking, boy-buggering Burmese junta major, the leader of the bad guys. Heads explode on the impact of a sniper's shell. Men are literally cut in half by a hail of bullets from an extremely large machine gun. About the only thing different in this throwback to 1980's-style mayhem is that the bloodshed is mostly CGI, which if anything means it can be more graphic. And it is glorious, the kind of non-stop, explosive orgy of blasts and gunfire that isn't seen much these days. Their church hires a band of nasty mercenaries, and Rambo feels compelled to once again take up arms and join them in the rescue operation. Sure enough, the missionaries are abducted and taken prisoner in a raid by the Burmese junta's troops. But a woman (Julie Benz) among the group persists, and so Rambo reluctantly agrees. Rambo is unwilling, telling them, if they aren't bringing any weapons, they aren't going to change anything. He's roused from his idyllic life by a group of American missionaries who want him to take them upriver and into Burma, where they hope to bring aid to the Karen people under siege there. Where better than to live out a life of isolation than Thailand? It's along the Thai-Burmese border on the Salween River where the ex-Special Forces soldier is working as a snake hunter, capturing cobras for a tourist-trap snake circus, and practicing his archery skills by bowfishing, and donating the catch to local Buddhist monks. The hero, Sylvester Stallone's Vietnam War veteran John Rambo, is still embittered and cynically stoical. Twenty years since the last Rambo film, not much has changed with the newest installment, Rambo 4.