RAMBO: First Blood (1982) is a bazooka to the heart

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Hold Down A

Hold Down A

2 ай бұрын

Hey Everyone!!!
I went into this movie blind thinking it was all action and my heart had no idea what was coming!!!! What a performance by Stalone!
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Original Movie: Rambo First Blood (1982)
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. No Copyright infringement intended. All rights belong to their respective owners.!
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@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Hey Everyone! Thanks so much for watching! Can't wait to read all your comments! We watch a lot of movies on Patreon if you wanna Level UP and come watch with us! Thanks for all or any support you show on the channel! It means a lot to me!!!!! patreon.com/HoldDownA
@tkurz3071
@tkurz3071 2 ай бұрын
My father took me to go watch this in theaters, he was a Vietnam vet. He watched this movie stoically like he usually would, but when Rambo gave his monologue he put his head down and wept silent tears. After the movie I asked if it was true, he just wept and nodded. That was the day I stopped asking him about his "adventures" in 'nam.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
I cry at that spot too. It’s all too real. I probably shouldn’t watch this because I get triggered but its so beautifully done. I can’t believe they turned Rambo into a cartoon action hero in the next two when this is so deep.
@stanzaloan3454
@stanzaloan3454 2 ай бұрын
​@@jacobkubacki27192 and 3 were kinda ridiculous and over the top, they cashed in for sure.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
@@stanzaloan3454 2 was ok. 3 was just stupid! They took a heart felt character & turned it into a farce & why none expects the powerful ending of First Blood.
@Revetus915
@Revetus915 2 ай бұрын
I know what you mean. My uncle was a tunnel rat due to his 5’2 height. We lived above him in a duplex. He would sleep with the lights on. Would wake up screaming in terror. Had to sleep in a separate room from his wife, he attacker her in his sleep. He would sit staring at the blank tv and would wonder around the house at night crying. He died of liver failure, his war is over, I hope he is at peace.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
@@Revetus915 The sleep deprivation that goes with it makes the PTSD worse. God bless your Uncle & he’s at peace. My buddy died last month from s brain hemorrhage & came back. He served 28 years, SF & was in the initial invasion of Afghanistan. He swears he went to the otherside & said all his pain & anguish was gone but it wasn’t his time. I believe him! He has drawings he made of the beings he encountered. It gave him me peace of mind knowing there’s peace in the end. Believe it or not, your Uncle was rewarded in the end.
@anotheryoutubeaccount9852
@anotheryoutubeaccount9852 2 ай бұрын
"First Blood", is definitely the best Rambo film - by Far.
@DarylHandsome
@DarylHandsome 2 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't know that the Rambo movies started with a profound and deeply artful dower peice with a ton of really good social/political commentary. Glad you picked this one!
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Had ZERO IDEA
@kristhomas4039
@kristhomas4039 2 ай бұрын
@@holddowna yayy thank you so much for reacting to this, I had recommended this a few days back actually. I'm glad you liked the movie. Please react to part 2 and 3
@gavinsheridan4680
@gavinsheridan4680 2 ай бұрын
I can’t think of a movie franchise that drifted further from its origin. Those later movies were just gore-p*rn.
@BouillaBased
@BouillaBased 2 ай бұрын
I disliked that the anti-war message was lost on the sequels, at least until the final one.
@DarylHandsome
@DarylHandsome 2 ай бұрын
@@gavinsheridan4680 probably Rocky
@Mister_Samsonite
@Mister_Samsonite 2 ай бұрын
You can't miss the cruel irony of a veteran being turned away from a town called Hope. As the son of a Vietnam veteran, this movie hits really hard for me. It explains to me all the things my dad would never talk about.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
Welcome home to your dad. I don’t know if he’s around still but that’s one thing this Iraq vet likes to tell them. They never got that.
@Mister_Samsonite
@Mister_Samsonite 2 ай бұрын
@@jacobkubacki2719 Sadly my dad passed a little over 4 years ago - the day after Veterans Day. If I've learned anything, we've come a long way in showing more respect to our veterans, but we still don't do enough to help readjust to civilian life (I can't even begin to fathom how). When my dad came home, we have not yet learned to "hate the war, but respect the warrior". I never knew the boy that went to Vietnam, only the wounded & tormented man who came back. Thank you and all who have served for a greater good most of us don't understand.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
@@Mister_Samsonite Its the politicians & oligarchs of the world that fight wars for profit. We’re on the verge of a really bog one. Trust me, I have friends still in and in high ranking places. But it’s those people that fan the flames of fear, hatred & division. I saw first hand what we went to Iraq for & it wasn’t for freedom & democracy. I wish the people of our country would wake up & realize what they’re voting for & that goes for both sides of the isle. How many generations of traumatized citizens are we going to produce? We live in the best most advanced time in this current history of mankind & yet we still haven’t figured out how to take care of each other. We should be living well, everyone. Yet the majority puts all if our lives in the hands of people who lie, cheat & steal their way to the top only to turn around & tell us they have the key to a fair & just society! It blows my mind & makes me & a lot of other vets feel like we fought & got hurt & killed for nothing. So yes, be kind to people. It goes a long way. You don’t know what they live with just as they don’t know how it is to walk in your shoes. Our whole world just came out of a 2-3 year pandemic(Ill hold my thoughts in that bullshit) so is it best for humanity to jump into WW3? Or to send billions of dollars to Ukraine while neglecting us broke people that are suffering from losing their livelihoods?! Thank you for the thanks & be an ambassador for peace. War is Hell & we don’t need one.
@Enthymene
@Enthymene 2 ай бұрын
And he’s getting turned away by another veteran. You can see Teasle’s decorations in his office. Also, he seems to organize his men with Korean War-era tactics when he pursues Rambo into the woods.
@Mister_Samsonite
@Mister_Samsonite 2 ай бұрын
@@Enthymene Oh, using the National Guard was a GREAT idea!
@joeblankenship377
@joeblankenship377 2 ай бұрын
"Don't look at me, look at the road, that's how accidents happen." I love that line. Safety first for Rambo.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Soo good!!!!
@Rowlandi11
@Rowlandi11 2 ай бұрын
"I was in charge of million dollar equipment! Now I can't even get a job parking cars!" That line always stuck with through the years. To have sacrificed so much, and come back home to find not only are you not appreciated, you aren't valued at all. Great perspective.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
That line hits deep
@NeverGiddy
@NeverGiddy 2 ай бұрын
@Rowlandi11 - You've stated the line wrong. Rambo said he couldn't even "hold" a job parking cars. There's a big difference between "get" and "hold". You can't "hold" a job that you never had. Rambo was hired to do it but there were things about him that prevented him from being successful, even at parking cars, so he lost that job, he couldn't "hold" it. We see these things about him in this movie. Even before that terrible, "Oh, woe as me," speech at the end of this movie, if you can't see why Rambo couldn't hold a job parking cars then I hope you don't have a job that relies on critical thinking skills that impacts the lives of others. Apparently the only thing Rambo was ever good at was killing people. Not a lot of jobs like that in the private sector. I can see why he struggled.
@Rowlandi11
@Rowlandi11 2 ай бұрын
@@NeverGiddy okay. I stated the line wrong. Rambos problems holding a job and the message at the end of the movie are not mutually exclusive. Rambo can't work. We treat our veterans like inhuman pieces of shit. Both things can be true. "if you can't see why Rambo couldn't hold a job parking cars then I hope you don't have a job that relies on critical thinking skills that impacts the lives of others." What are you rambling about? I never said I couldn't see the difference, you ASSumed I can't see the difference and then went on some tangent about impacting peoples lives. Just a weird, projecting comment. "Apparently the only thing Rambo was ever good at was killing people" You can't make this claim of "ever" as we don't know Rambo before the war. It's also objectively untrue. Unless you're implying Green Berets have absolutely zero translatable skills to the private sector and are only killing machines. It's strangely dehumanizing and lacking in compassion. You're also now saying it's his lack of skills stopping him from holding a job and not his PTSD. "We see these things throughout the movie" See what things? His trauma flashbacks? His PTSD? So which is it? Is he too stupid to park cars or not? Is he a mindless killing machine or somebody capable with severe trauma? Make up your mind. I guess Rambo is kinda poignant even now, huh
@donnaralph4413
@donnaralph4413 2 ай бұрын
​@@NeverGiddywow! I take it you didn't like Rambo🤔. Every Veterans experience in Nam was different I'm sure, maybe, just maybe loud backfires of cars would have a post traumatic effect, or some tough guy like the cop who just wants to be a jerk! You have no idea why can't, won't couldn't hold a job! Point is the men of Vietnam weren't treated right
@NeverGiddy
@NeverGiddy 2 ай бұрын
​@@donnaralph4413 - Rambo, the movie, had some entertainment value, until the end. Rambo, the character, was a societal threat and needed to be killed at the end of the movie, either by his own hand, Trautman, or all of the law enforcement officers waiting outside. Though not perfect, Sheriff Will Teasle was the hero of this movie. He was hired/elected to protect the town by its people and he saw that as his duty. Let one person live and shit on your sidewalks and soon you'll have a hundred more just like them. You always get more of what you tolerate. He instantly saw Rambo as a threat to the good order of the town he served and as the film progressed Rambo proved him right. When I read comments posted, there seems to be way to much misdirected compassion towards Rambo in this movie. Rambo violently attacked police officers, pushed one through a glass window, pulled a kid off a moving motorcycle and stole it, created the circumstance that led to the death of Art Gault, shot an old man, killed his dogs, stabbed a young police officer, set a spiked booby trap for another, broke an officer's arm, fired at national guardsmen, threw a soldier from a moving truck, destroyed city property, seriously wounded, possibly fatally wounded the Sheriff, and Rambo's the guy we're supposed to feel sorry for. When you turn your trauma inward, we need to be helping you with those emotional difficulties. As soon as you turn your trauma outward, we need to punch your ticket. I'll start feeling sorry for Rambo right after I start feeling sorry for Charles Whitman.
@SunderShould-Be-King
@SunderShould-Be-King 2 ай бұрын
My uncle was a Green Beret. Did 3 tours until he died in Vietnam, Christmas Day of '68, 5 months before I was born. My mother, his sister-in-law, was a teacher. She mostly taught 3rd grade. She was a great patriot. Ray, my uncle, told her stories of how when he was on leave in California he would be spat at, have rocks thrown at him, & called terrible slurs, though he said it wasn't as much an issue here in the Mountain West. When First Blood came out she saw it. It so moved her that when it came out on VHS she bought a copy, & then asked the district office if she could show it to her students. They agreed, as long as she got the parents permission. This became a part of her history curriculum everafter. She did this, along with telling my uncle Ray's story, to teach children young the sacrifices paid by our veterens & the horrors of war. After the viewing the class would have a discussion why Rambo did what he did, why the Sheriff did what he did, & especially about Rambo's breakdown at the end. My sweet mother thought it was important that veterans were to be treated better all the way around, & never to be treated as the vets of Vietnam were.
@IHeartShenanigans
@IHeartShenanigans 2 ай бұрын
I'm a member of the Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association, and I know a couple of old Viet Nam vets. One was a grunt, the other a brown water (river) Navy man. Neither talks much about their experiences, but the Navy guy won't eat rice. He was a POW for a time, and that is all they were fed. Sometimes it had maggots in it. He won't touch the stuff now. I hug them both a little extra every time I see them. Do you want to make a Viet Nam Vet happy? Tell him "Welcome home!" That's something they never got when they came back from that place.
@blakebufford6239
@blakebufford6239 2 ай бұрын
​@@IHeartShenanigans 🙏🇺🇲👍
@iaincowell9747
@iaincowell9747 2 ай бұрын
@@IHeartShenanigans When I was in South Africa about 15 years ago for a year, I met a Vietnam vet. Guy had a wife and kid when he got sent to Vietnam, he never returned to the US after his tour was over.
@user-jm7jp3nq8c
@user-jm7jp3nq8c 19 күн бұрын
Great story Sunder. Speaking as a UK vet', I think times seemed to have changed in the US now, your vet's are appreciated more now. Possibly, in part, due to movies such as Rambo, Private Ryan, etc. I never got why the youth of the day, were so against the average GI Joe. It's not like they chose to go & fight.
@jameshansen1903
@jameshansen1903 2 ай бұрын
When this movie was released, nobody had ever heard of PTSD and Vietnam vets were still being treated like second class citizens. Other movies get a lot of credit for elevating the public image of vets but Stallone started it all. What a guy.
@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344
@jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344 2 ай бұрын
True.
@tinocontreras5105
@tinocontreras5105 Ай бұрын
veterans are still being treated like second class citizens. while this shit run country sends money and support to other countries and brings in immigrants to support it forgets the people who fight these wars. and its not even americas wars, it hasnt been for decades. usa is not the greatest country anymore and hasnt been to its citizens in a long time. this corporation run country is selling OUR land to china, other countries are buying buildings to rent to u.s citizens while the money is going to probably fund terrorists or launder drug money. my apartment building was owned by a place in italy. its time for u.s citizens to stand up and get these relics that sit in congress and the white house out, stop worrying about trump and biden and all these money hungry corporations starving us and raising rents, mortgages, and property taxes to give our homes to foreign citizens and eventually it will happen. they are taking our rights to bare arms so we cant fight back and they can take as they will which is our right to fight off a tyrannical government. time to wake up before the second coming, at least we can say i fought back
@Fatherofheroesandheroines
@Fatherofheroesandheroines 2 ай бұрын
My father was a Vietnam Vet. When he was alive, he could watch all of this movie until the monologue. He would shake and I could see tears in his eyes as he got up and quietly walked away. I never understood I too was a veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan. now, I see it. Rest in peace Pops.
@shane8915
@shane8915 2 ай бұрын
My father was a Nam Vet too. He too would get very quiet during the last scene. He wouldn't shake or cry at all. What he got was very, VERY angry. But that anger paled in comparison to the anger he unleashed on me the day I told him I wanted to follow in his footsteps. I'm the first born son. I was essentially raised as if I were in basic training. So, I figured that he would be proud of me for wanting to be a Marine like him. That was a HUGE miscalculation on my part. But, I didn't have to go to war to understand the horrors and atrocities committed by him and to him. I was the only person that he EVER opened up to. I've heard some shit. I find it funny that you called your dad Pops. I called my dad Pops too.
@cass4114
@cass4114 2 ай бұрын
god bless your dad I,m sorry man! steve c. usn ret.
@wegotlumpsofitroundtheback5065
@wegotlumpsofitroundtheback5065 Ай бұрын
My grandfather had a similar reaction when I took him to see "Saving Private Ryan." He turned to me during the Normandy beach scene in the beginning and said "I can't stay."
@cass4114
@cass4114 Ай бұрын
god bless tell him thanks s usn ret.
@DamonCarter84
@DamonCarter84 Ай бұрын
You and your father deserve more respect than the gov't will ever give you. Rest assured there are people that hold you and your dearly departed father in the highest respect and admiration possible. YOU AND YOUR FATHER are what makes this country great and you are always honored. God bless you and your family for protecting us and those who dont who are ignorant and still live, not knowing the sacrafices made. You are owed so much, you will unfortunately get very little. MY RESPECT.
@oldgeezer3324
@oldgeezer3324 2 ай бұрын
Rambo was written by a Canuck, David Morrell, it was his first book published. The Sherriff Teasle was acted by Brian Dennehy. Dennehy was a Korean war veteran. he coached Stallone on PTSD and other things veterans feel. Dennehy and Stallone were good friends until Dennehy's death
@NeverGiddy
@NeverGiddy 2 ай бұрын
@oldgeezer3324 - If you can believe the internet, Brian Dennehy was born in July of 1938. The Korean War started in 1950 when he was just twelve years old. When it ended in 1953 he was fifteen years old, so he's not a Korean War veteran. He served in the U.S., Japan, and Korea, just not during the Korean War. Dennehy enlisted in the United States Marine Corps serving from 1958 to 1963, including playing football on Okinawa. In several interviews, he described being wounded in combat and repeatedly claimed to have served in Vietnam. In 1999, he apologized for misrepresenting his military record, stating: "I lied about serving in Vietnam, and I'm sorry. I did not mean to take away from the actions and the sacrifices of the ones who did really serve there... I did steal valor. That was very wrong of me. There is no real excuse for that. He was coaching Stallone on PTSD during a time when he was still misrepresenting his stolen valor.
@rollomaughfling380
@rollomaughfling380 2 ай бұрын
@@NeverGiddy Thank you.
@oldgeezer3324
@oldgeezer3324 2 ай бұрын
@@NeverGiddyOk, What I read was wrong, thanks for the correction
@crypticjim
@crypticjim 2 ай бұрын
Brian Dennehy was such a good actor. He was really great at playing a believable asshole.
@cutekittens228
@cutekittens228 2 ай бұрын
@@NeverGiddy His character was a Korean war vet, that's what the medals behind his desk represent.
@user-gt7vn9lz2m
@user-gt7vn9lz2m 2 ай бұрын
One of those rare movies where Sly actually acted, rather than just being an action hero. Superb performance.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
He was amazing!
@jh1618
@jh1618 2 ай бұрын
"Not my favorite town, but it has a great diner" - exactly how Rambo felt!
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
I laughed at that too.
@jodynelson2055
@jodynelson2055 2 ай бұрын
I know the exact diner she’s talking about. 👍🏼 It’s a must when you’re passing through.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
@@jodynelson2055 I gotta go there dressed like Rambo, lol
@user-fk2dm5oy9f
@user-fk2dm5oy9f 2 ай бұрын
What's the name of the diner that people talk so much about? The Old Home, fill 'er up, keep on trucking café. 😊
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
@@user-fk2dm5oy9f Gonna stop at this local choke n’ puke & throw some groceries down my throat. Lol Jerry Reed Smokey & the Bandit
@Zallerquad
@Zallerquad 2 ай бұрын
In the book after Trautman gets John calmed down, he realizes that Rambo is too far gone and is going to have to pay hell for all that he had done. In the book Rambo killed all of the deputies and the young boy and his father that was hunting. So to "save" John from all that was to come and save him from his life, Trautman shoots Rambo in the head. Its a way grimmer ending but I think punctuates the theme of the book far better. We treated those Viet Nam vets disgracefully, and this story sent home the message very clearly.
@GLYDR
@GLYDR 2 ай бұрын
Yeah the Rambo in the book bears more resemblance to Jason Vorhees, by the time he gets back to town he's killed 18 people already.
@mohammedashian8094
@mohammedashian8094 2 ай бұрын
I watched a documentary about Stallone and he said that he did NOT want Vietnam vets to get the impression that all hope is lost for them and he was adamant that it would be changed to something a bit more hopeful for them and ended the movie the way it did. I’d go as far as saying that the ending MADE the movie what it is (the original ending had trautman shoot Rambo dead like the book but Stallone like I said again hated it and didn’t want Vietnam vets to get the wrong idea) by making what would’ve been a typical action movie to a heartfelt character study of a veteran
@brettmuir5679
@brettmuir5679 2 ай бұрын
Spoiler.... Just like the ending in, "Of Mice and Men"...poetic tragedy is a theme in art that is really misunderstood and incomprehensible to most people today. Most people who react to Return of the King always say, "why does Frodo have to go away?"
@awesomefanger
@awesomefanger Ай бұрын
All of Trautmans scenes were re-shot with Richard Crenna, because Kirk Douglas was originally cast. He walked away from the film when he didn’t get to kill Rambo. The studio still wanted Rambo to die, and they actually shot the ending with Rambo killing himself and test audiences were extremely angry. Stallone knows his audience, he was right with Rocky, and he was right with this film.
@rickastley2308
@rickastley2308 27 күн бұрын
And sheriff was a Korean vet, sad they didn't put this on the movie.
@pablozee6359
@pablozee6359 2 ай бұрын
It’s always interesting to see someone react to this film for the first time going into it with the notion that it’s a good time action flick, only to get the emotional gut punch at the end and realize you’ve just watched a moving piece on the effects of PTSD. That scene is certainly one of Stallone’s best performances, maybe the top. Great reaction, you definitely felt it!
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Totally! I was hyper always wanted to watch this because of the close home town reference and then gut punched
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
The wars change venues but the trauma stays the same.
@CatotheE
@CatotheE 2 ай бұрын
That ending monologue with Rambo always gets me.
@kenkonwick6660
@kenkonwick6660 2 ай бұрын
This was really the first depiction of PTSD. No one really understood the trauma of these guys returning to a country that protested and didn't support the troops in a war that was much more political than anything else. No real rally cry, no freeing people, just trying to prevent a different government philosophy from spreading. While I didn't serve, I have an uncle who did 3 tours in special ops there. He still won't talk about it, but I can see the look in his eyes when shit comes back to him. He's had a pretty successful life, but there's a bitterness and sadness that he can't quite shake. He's 76 yrs old and been carrying this burden fir 55 years. This is a very important movie that kick started a lot if programs fir returning vets that now are readily available to them. Hats off to the creators of this movie, they did a helluva lot of good for our guys.
@tommywalker3746
@tommywalker3746 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching this with us old veterans. These movies follow one veterans life as he tries to put his life back together
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Thank u for ur service❤️
@dax977
@dax977 2 ай бұрын
I remember watching something on KZfaq with some veterans about Rambos final monologue and they all said that is the most realistic anyone has ever done to show how they feel they've been treated 😢😢 my heart breaks for anyone who's went to a war and came back and just can't get the support they deserve, financially,physically and emotionally ❤ Sly says as well he spoke to a bunch of them and poured his heart into that to ensure he captured everything for them. Great reaction ❤
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Wow!! I would love to watch that
@TheParagade
@TheParagade 2 ай бұрын
Stallone has a reputation as the stereotypical muscle-bound 80s action star, but his breakout roles were some of the healthiest takes on masculinity. Both Rambo and Rocky show the value of being emotionally vulnerable.
@biffmarcum5014
@biffmarcum5014 2 ай бұрын
First thing I remember him in was a guest role in Kojak.
@ramonacosta2647
@ramonacosta2647 14 күн бұрын
Real men have only one emotion: Bacon.
@DT_Michael
@DT_Michael 2 ай бұрын
When this film was released in 1982, many veterans went to see it. During the final scene, many of them had to leave the theater, because Sylvester Stallone's performance mirrored their own experiences so closely, they were unable to watch it. It is a testimony to Stallone's skill as an actor, as well as a validation of what many of those service people suffered, not only, the traumas of conflict, but also the neglect and isolation when they returned home. Many of the veterans of the Vietnam Conflict didn't receive the help and support they needed until decades after returning home, and many of the people who protested the war have since recognized and admitted that they were wrong in their treatment of these brave men and women. Thank you for recognizing this fact in your review. So many young people reviewing films like this on KZfaq go in without doing any research and completely miss the importance of what the film is truly presenting - which can be frustrating for people, like me, who know about the Vietnam Conflict.
@EponymousRex
@EponymousRex 2 ай бұрын
"Not the hunting shop it's probably family owned" omg I love you!
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
🤣🤣❤️❤️❤️
@jamesdesanders5618
@jamesdesanders5618 2 ай бұрын
I can watch this movie a thousand times and will always cry at the end! Sylvester Stallone's performance is perfect! He actually makes you believe that he's a Vietnam veteran and went through the war. Outstanding performance by him at the end!
@michaelwatson266
@michaelwatson266 2 ай бұрын
Sly's monolog at the end is one of his best acting moments IMO.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Unreal!
@michaelwatson266
@michaelwatson266 2 ай бұрын
​@holddowna better than the monolog he has with his son in Rocky Balboa. But that one was pretty good too
@sean_b_drummer
@sean_b_drummer 2 ай бұрын
One of the things I find interesting about this is, Sheriff Teasle is a Korean War Vet. But their mindsets are so completely different because of how each was treated so differently by society upon their return.
@davidanderson1639
@davidanderson1639 2 ай бұрын
There’s a myth that the actor who portrayed Teasle was a Korean War Veteran. However, Brian Dennehy was born in July 1938; but the Korean War started in 1950, making Dennehy only 12 when it started. Dennehy enlisted in the USMC from 1958 to 1963. In multiple interviews he described being wounded in combat & repeatedly claimed he served in Vietnam. In 1999 he apologised for misrepresenting his military record, stating “I lied about serving in Vietnam & I am sorry. I didn’t mean to take it away from the actions & sacrifices of the ones who really did serve there….i did steal valour. That was very wrong of me. There was no real excuse for that”.
@countprophet5881
@countprophet5881 2 ай бұрын
I think OP meant the character was a Korean Vet. Not the actor.
@frontprochproduction
@frontprochproduction 2 ай бұрын
Still one of the best movies ever.
@Shelbyj13
@Shelbyj13 2 ай бұрын
When Rambo jumped off the cliff, Stallone did the stunt and when lands in the trees and screams in pain it was legit because he actually broke some ribs.
@LordEriolTolkien
@LordEriolTolkien 2 ай бұрын
That single stunt cemented Stallone and Rambo as Rock Hard Epic Men forever
@docsavage8640
@docsavage8640 2 ай бұрын
We watches this in our civics class in the late 1980s and the teacher pointed out all the times Rambo's civil rights were violated. Good movie and good lesson.
@JakkFrost1
@JakkFrost1 2 ай бұрын
Couldn't see if anyone already mentioned this, but when Rambo attacked the town, he was using standard guerrilla warfare tactics; take out fuel, munitions, communications, supplies, and finally command.
@larrypope5142
@larrypope5142 2 ай бұрын
After this movie, I did research on Sheriff Teasle’s character based on his comment “Do you think Rambo is the only one who had a difficult time during the war?” and the military shadow box on his desk with the Purple Heart. It’s crazy how much stuff on this character I found. What I found was there was a different Teasle in the book than in the movie. That Teasle served in the Korean War and that he didn’t like Rambo for specific reasons. When men came back from World War II, they were lauded as hero’s because they won. Korea was considered a stalemate and that’s why Korean vets were considered members of the “forgotten war.” Teasle did not like all of the press Vietnam Vets were getting and that he felt like his service was forgotten. Plus in the novel, Teasel’s wife just divorced him, hence his bad attitude. Teasel took pride in what he accomplished after the war and looked down on Rambo as a drifter, so it was a class thing. In the novel, Teasel considered Rambo his equal and this was a test to himself to see who was better. He was willing to use whatever power and resources he had to prove he was better than Rambo. Also you should research the movie. Stallone did his own stunts. Stallone actually broke his ribs on the tree branches performing the cliff jumping scene on the second take.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for this! I know they made it so easy to hate teasel but there is more to him! Especially after editing this u see more! Thanks for all the extra tidbits!
@larrypope5142
@larrypope5142 2 ай бұрын
No problem. Also, because Teasel was told he wasn’t allowed to win the war in Korea by his superiors, this was why Colonel Trouts warning “Do you want a war you can’t win?” Teasel was finally in charge and nobody was going to tell him he couldn’t win this time. This also explains why he gets upset when they tell Teasel on the radio that Rambo is a war hero, it upsets him more. Because in his mind “where is my recognition?” I never got any and I’m not going to show him any.
@Praetorian8814
@Praetorian8814 2 ай бұрын
Very true about Teasle and his Korean War service. But even in the book he definitely didn't consider Rambo his 'equal', especially in the beginning. In his mind, all the WWII or Korean War vets (like himself) who came home were 'clean cut', hard-working, law-abiding Americans. The image Teasle, and a lot of people had back then about Vietnam veterans was: Scruffy, hippie-like vagrants, drug-addicts, crazy, etc. which is definitely an unfair representation, but looking back it's definitely appalling how bad they were treated when coming home...
@larrypope5142
@larrypope5142 2 ай бұрын
When I said he considered him his equal, I meant it as someone who served only, but he looked at him as lower class. He also had this mentality, that nobody cared about me after my war so I don’t care about you, especially a “drifter.” Because he was Sheriff he placed himself on a pedestal while looking down on Rambo as a street bum based on his appearance. He even said “we don’t want your type around here.”
@davidanderson1639
@davidanderson1639 2 ай бұрын
There’s a myth that the actor who played Teasle was an actual Korean War Veteran. However, actor Brian Dennehy was only born in July 1938; with the Korean War started in 1950, making Dennehy only 12 when it started. Dennehy enlisted in the USMC from 1958 to 1963. In multiple interviews he described being wounded in combat & repeatedly claimed he served in Vietnam. In 1999 he apologised for misrepresenting his military record, stating “I lied about serving in Vietnam & I am sorry. I didn’t mean to take it away from the actions & sacrifices of the ones who really did serve there….i did steal valour. That was very wrong of me. There was no real excuse for that”.
@waltw9818
@waltw9818 2 ай бұрын
For the Sherriff it's all about power tripping and ego does go with that. "I kick the deputy's ass! Me! The law!" What's seldom seen or talked about is the fact that if you look behind the sherriff when he's at his desk - he was in the Army too. From left to right: Army Distinguished Service Cross, Purple Heart and Silver Star. You're thee only one that I've seen that's at least noted it; back in 82 when I saw it - I saw those medals. My brother returned from Vietnam with severe PTSD; he wasn't the same, but at least he came home! It wasn't till about 77 when 'they' finally recognized PTSD! He past a few years ago - from cancer by Agent Orange as most if not all his company did. Thank you for sharing with us!
@stephentaylor9630
@stephentaylor9630 2 ай бұрын
I saw the medals too. One would think that the Sheriff with those awards would empathize with Rambo's situation. Kinda hard to believe that he wasn't at least sympathetic.
@aussiefarmer4955
@aussiefarmer4955 2 ай бұрын
@@stephentaylor9630 He was Korean war veteran. In Australia the Vietnam veterans were even frowned upon by some of the WW1 and WW2 and Korean war veterans, thanks to stigmas like baby killers and murderers from the media.
@davidanderson1639
@davidanderson1639 2 ай бұрын
There’s a myth that the actor who played Teasle was a Korean War veteran. However actor Brian Dennehy wasn’t born until July 1938; with the Korean War starting in 1950, making Dennehy only 12 when it started. Dennehy enlisted in the USMC from 1958 to 1963. In multiple interviews he described being wounded in combat & repeatedly claimed he served in Vietnam. In 1999 he apologised for misrepresenting his military record, stating “I lied about serving in Vietnam & I am sorry. I didn’t mean to take it away from the actions & sacrifices of the ones who really did serve there….i did steal valour. That was very wrong of me. There was no real excuse for that”.
@aussiefarmer4955
@aussiefarmer4955 2 ай бұрын
@@davidanderson1639 Yeah I knew that about Brian, but the character Teasle is a Korean war veteran.
@merchillio
@merchillio 12 күн бұрын
No one is ever ready for Stallone’s heartbreaking and masterful performance at the end.
@SPEEDPAINTER1
@SPEEDPAINTER1 2 ай бұрын
I get chills when Rambo tells Teasle, "don't push it, or I'll give you a war you won't believe." It's the first time the audience sees genuine fear in Teasle's face. It's a real cinematic moment!
@ChrisReise
@ChrisReise 2 ай бұрын
The novel by David Morell had written that Troutman (with Rambo's help) killed Rambo at the end, shortly after the monologue, but Stallone was hell bent on NOT killing Rambo. He basically said "If we kill Rambo, what kind of message are we sending out to Vets? That death is the only solution? No, we need to show the Vets that are suffering from PTSD that there is Hope."
@DarkMatter2525
@DarkMatter2525 2 ай бұрын
This is going to sound dumb, but this movie inspired me to join the Army. I was an idiot kid and paid no attention to what the movie was really about. I just wanted to do what Rambo could do, and I liked the idea of using those skills to defend my country. I was even an M60 gunner. Not until after I was in the Army did I truly finally realize what the movie was about. And it's right. You become the pawn of politicians. You can be put in places where your life is on the line and where you might have to take life when it's just not justifiable to do so. It was the greatest disillusionment I ever had. I couldn't wait to get out.
@AnimeAftermath
@AnimeAftermath 2 ай бұрын
My stepdad is a Vietnam vet. I've never once asked him about his experiences, but one time we were watching the news together and, unprompted, he told me a story about his time in the war and it was enough to give me recurring nightmares. The scariest thing is that First Blood is actually LESS dark than the novel it's based on.
@martinboyle9163
@martinboyle9163 2 ай бұрын
I really love this movie! By the time I went to war, civilians looked at vets differently. We had feared that we'd be treated like John Rambo because there were some Vietnam vets in our company with many stories to tell, but that wasn't the case at all after Desert Storm. We were warned before we got off the plane that there were some people who wanted to see us. I pictured about a dozen people when actually I met two thousand flag-waving strangers. It was as if Sylvester Stallone's end monologue in this movie had actually hit home. I loved the end of this flick. He message was clear: Hate the game, not the player. War totally sucks. You will never find someone who is a bigger pacifist than a war vet or someone who has lost a loved one to war. Sure, I'm all for fighting for this country and am very pro-military, but I don't think it contradicts my being against warfare one bit. I'm really glad that you saw this movie and enjoyed it! Best to you! ❤
@MrGruffteddybear
@MrGruffteddybear 2 ай бұрын
There was a movie that came out in 1968 called The Green Berets. John Wayne starred in it. You might like it. 😁
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Ya heard about it will watch for sure
@ButteredToast32
@ButteredToast32 2 ай бұрын
As someone who used to suffer from PTSD, I'll give this film props, they portray it pretty accurately.
@coyotefever105
@coyotefever105 2 ай бұрын
Oh definitely.
@fatkart7641
@fatkart7641 2 ай бұрын
29:35 - The colonel said it earlier: "He wins by attrition.". That means crippling the enemy's main resources first by blowing up: *fuel* (gas station), *power* (electric transformers) and *ammunition* (weapon store). That's what he was trained for during war; and in his mind he's still at war.
@MyBlackandRedCZ
@MyBlackandRedCZ 2 ай бұрын
Now I understand why he did what he did when going back to town instead of just escaping.
@watchreadplayretro
@watchreadplayretro 2 ай бұрын
Don't look at me. Look at the road. That's how accidents happen. Brilliant, thank you, it's always great to see reactions to this (esp at the end)
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Totally 180 had no idea what was gunna happen in this movie
@watchreadplayretro
@watchreadplayretro 2 ай бұрын
@@holddowna Yep, some wonderful acting, easily matches his Rocky 1 acting, This was one of my late father's first laserdisc purchases and I grew up to see why. Thanks again for a wonderful reaction!
@SenorGato237
@SenorGato237 2 ай бұрын
I grew up in a small town in Oregon. The way the police act, down to having some rando with dogs helping out, is spot on. Also, this move hits different after my time in the Army.
@jeffburnham6611
@jeffburnham6611 Ай бұрын
The M60 was the main automatic weapon for small units like squads, in Vietnam and the early 80's. It still saw use into the 90's, but it's iconic look has made it popular for many movies and video games.
@hawkmaster381
@hawkmaster381 2 ай бұрын
As a vet, this stood out to me - At the end of the movie, you’ll notice John walking to the right of his colonel. Normally, that is a breach of military courtesy. According to rank, your superior always walks to your right. But this was a display of respect from the colonel.
@gill5453
@gill5453 2 ай бұрын
Maybe because Rambo has the MoH?
@hawkmaster381
@hawkmaster381 2 ай бұрын
@@gill5453 Exactly. The MoH is another reason. But I think he would have allowed that even if he didn’t have the MoH.
@DoerOfThings8
@DoerOfThings8 2 ай бұрын
One of the first movies to deal with soldiers reintegrating after war was 1946's picture of the year, "The Best Years of Our Lives". It's a favorite of Steven Spielberg's and is well worth a watch for anyone who has a serious interest in film.
@leosarmiento4823
@leosarmiento4823 2 ай бұрын
This is one of those films that wasn't initially seen for its message. Over the years, this film has found its proper place of importance. A great reaction to a film that is more than it's sum.
@Brianscoronet
@Brianscoronet 4 сағат бұрын
My favorite Rambo film, i was shocked how good it was when i saw it the first time.
@Thekhajjah
@Thekhajjah 43 минут бұрын
Rambo: Last Blood was a great finale to this series as well. Worth a watch
@adamwhite767
@adamwhite767 2 ай бұрын
This is my favorite movie of the franchise, such a powerful message and amazing performance by Sylvester Stallone. My father was a Marine in Vietnam during Tet, I've had many talks with him trying to support him exorcise some demons, every November 10th and every Memorial Day. Numbers 2 and 3 are okay, straight up Cold War action movies, it was strange time in American cinema during the early to mid 80's because there was a lot of speculation that N. Vietnam still had American P.O.W.s 10 years after the war had ended so there were a lot of movies that came out about rescuing them. The fourth one is really good but incredibly violent, it takes place in modern times, definitely worth a watch. The fifth one is also especially brutal like four but not as good in my opinion, it's almost a direct copy of a movie called "Revenge" starring Kevin Costner and Madeline Stowe. The movie "The Green Berets" isn't bad but just remember it's a straight up propaganda flick trying to drum up support for an unpopular war, you'll get the idea when you see it. The song was super popular tho, I think it was a Top 40 hit! Thanks for your reactions, they're always fun to watch!
@Raven5150
@Raven5150 2 ай бұрын
That monologue did more for vets than any goverment program
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
It was so powerful i was in shock I never saw that coming but very very well done and very important
@trentthehehim3936
@trentthehehim3936 2 ай бұрын
The whole Rambo SERIES is about John dealing with his undiagnosed PTSD. It’s just we only remember the goofy action and big explosions etc. But the character study goes throughout the entire series.
@ProfessorMurf
@ProfessorMurf 10 күн бұрын
The comic book feel of the sequels makes people forget how grounded this franchise started. Was always my favorite Rambo film by far.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd 2 ай бұрын
Vietnam veterans were not treated kindly upon their return. My dad was in Vietnam and I served for 20 years later. I had to see his eyes over and over as people thanked me for my service. No one thanked him. He has since passed away.
@Zach-ju5vi
@Zach-ju5vi 13 күн бұрын
💔
@frontprochproduction
@frontprochproduction 14 күн бұрын
First Blood, still one one of the best action movies even after all these years. So glad you enjoyed it.
@user-mn8xf7rq8x
@user-mn8xf7rq8x 2 ай бұрын
All the Rambo movies are very good.
@George-kv6gm
@George-kv6gm 2 ай бұрын
I never went to Vietnam, but I had several friends who did. They weren't treated badly in the small town we grew up in, but they also weren't held in the high esteem you see for veterans these days. Thank God that people have come to their senses where veterans are concerned. Back then the media seemed to go out of their way to make everything that happened seem horrible for the Vietnamese at the hands of our troops. They were called murderers, and baby killers, and monsters...booed in public, and even had people spit on them at times. It was really bad. PTSD wasn't treated back then the way it is now. There weren't large, organized groups for aid and treatment, like there are now. A lot of celebrities were making fun of our military, and belittling those who fought over there, not asking people to join groups to help veterans, like now. Things still aren't perfect for vets, but they're tons better than back during and after the Vietnam war. And in Vietnam our government had "rules of engagement" that were really ignorant. From what I was told, some of those rules made it seem like their own government was trying to get them killed. There was some really ridiculous stuff, almost as if we didn't even want to win the war. I think there were those in government who didn't. Thanks for a great reaction, and God bless you.
@OmegaSoypreme
@OmegaSoypreme 2 ай бұрын
I went to Hope back in 2011. Our tour bus stopped there briefly. I had a grilled cheese sandwich with that weird orange cheese. Lovely place.
@rubenlopez3364
@rubenlopez3364 2 ай бұрын
NOTHING IS OVER!!
@chriszero5209
@chriszero5209 2 ай бұрын
Try 13hrs in Benghazi that’s got a number of special operators in it including one green beret I believe anyway well worth a watch and a true story as well.
@davidbennett1357
@davidbennett1357 2 ай бұрын
I would like to add MY voice to this request. It is a very good movie that I think you will appreciate, Ames.
@chriszero5209
@chriszero5209 2 ай бұрын
@@davidbennett1357 I made my best mate watch this film an she doesn’t normally find these films interesting, but she keeps telling me she needs to watch it again as she can’t get her head around it being something that really happened to these people.
@WritingOnCDs
@WritingOnCDs 2 ай бұрын
“I eat Green Berets for breakfast.” - John Matrix, a Green Beret (Commando, 1985)
@v33punk
@v33punk 2 ай бұрын
You actually know the town wow!
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Oh ya!
@Kasino80
@Kasino80 2 ай бұрын
What's so heart breaking, is the genuine joy in Rambo's voice and on his face when he reaches Delmar's place. That was his last tether to some semblance of sanity. After that he's completely left alone to fight his demons.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Right!!! He was so excited to see his friend!
@mrchi3f1179
@mrchi3f1179 Ай бұрын
I'm from Vancouver BC. Every time we would drive past Hope, my dad would make the same comment asking us if we were aware that First Blood was filmed in hope. This went on for about 10 years until we had to ask him to stop 😆
@V0ltron
@V0ltron 2 ай бұрын
Rambo did more for Vets than the U.S. Government.
@ronniecoleman2342
@ronniecoleman2342 2 ай бұрын
Ain't it the truth.
@TrashPandaActual
@TrashPandaActual 2 ай бұрын
Amen
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
his monologue 💔
@V0ltron
@V0ltron 2 ай бұрын
@@holddowna I noticed your entire demeanor changed during that scene. We can all tell you really did feel what Stallone was portraying. Thank you for reacting to this.
@jacobkubacki2719
@jacobkubacki2719 2 ай бұрын
I breakdown all the time like Rambo. The VA fucked me over really good too so I agree. Some days I can’t wait for the pain to be over. Today is one of those days. Nobody gives a fuck.
@wyattmann8157
@wyattmann8157 2 ай бұрын
The book that this movie was based on was quite a bit different. In the book Rambo killed a bunch of cops and innocent civilians. Stallone and the producers didn’t think that would go over well with the public and they wrote the screenplay so that Rambo would not kill anyone. In an alternate ending, Rambo has Trautman shoot him with his pistol after his breakdown. Fortunately this was also scrapped.
@theo1216
@theo1216 2 ай бұрын
I watched this when I was about 7 & I think it's the first movie that made me cry, Stallone talking about the war at the end really stuck with me for a long time.
@b.c.2281
@b.c.2281 2 ай бұрын
It makes it so much better that you know Hope, the place really hasn't changed much at all and it's hilarious. Gorgeous area for the scenery though.
@TheAcarch2
@TheAcarch2 2 ай бұрын
Absolutely love your channel Ames. Thanks for keeping all these classic movies relevant. That Sheriff we all hate is no other than the late great Canadian actor Brian Dennehy. He was such a TUFF looking guy, miss him. He was also in another classic movie called ''Walking Tall'' . If you get a chance, another masterpiece you should do a reaction to is ''Jacobs Ladder'' which also dwells in the horrors of the Vietnam war. You WILL NOT REGRET IT.
@wolviespartan
@wolviespartan 2 ай бұрын
"...has a great diner I love to go to..." John never got to see this diner, is literally the reason the whole franchise exists :) Loved it.
@EburksSuperCollector
@EburksSuperCollector 21 күн бұрын
I've watched this movie so many times. One of my favorites. It was an incredible experience to see you react to it and actually being familiar with the area it was filmed in. I really appreciated that. Made it hit even harder. Such a well made movie. Stallone's ending speech was so deep, vulnerable and emotional that i forget he's acting. It's heartbreaking to think that there are so many people that have dealt with this and felt this way.
@philmullineaux5405
@philmullineaux5405 2 ай бұрын
THE biggest stars of the day passed on this role! Now, 40 years of rocky and Rambo. And he wrote and directed most of them! And part 2, I don't know what came out first or what he wrote first, but Cameron cowrote 2 with Stallone!
@samanthafranklyput
@samanthafranklyput 2 ай бұрын
I am a new fan and- may I say- watching movies with you is the perfect solution for my neurodivergent brain. We can get through a whole movie in the course of 1/2 an hour and your commentary is very similar to my thoughts already. It is the perfect way for me to sit and rest my mind for a short period of time, then I can get back to my day. Otherwise, I would never sit down and get through a whole film by myself. Appreciate your work!!!
@slavetometal8529
@slavetometal8529 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the great reactions. At the time 1982 no one knew about PSD syndrome. That's what the movie tried to educate the world. And of course what the Vietnam war truly did to the vets. Having absolutely no respect for them. Such a great movie indeed.
@ACNelson-officialchannel
@ACNelson-officialchannel 8 күн бұрын
This movie was very important in starting to open peoples eyes to PTSD. It's a strong performance from all the actors involved, and by the writer. Wonderful, heartfelt reaction! ❤❤
@holddowna
@holddowna 8 күн бұрын
❤️
@TreyBlythe
@TreyBlythe 2 ай бұрын
I first saw this on TV in like 1990 as a teenager, and I cry at Rambo breaking down every time.
@benpowersguitar
@benpowersguitar 2 ай бұрын
Every Rambo movie deals with an issue of the time. All worth watching. Vietnam vets were treated far worse that other vets in our history.
@MotoNomad350
@MotoNomad350 2 ай бұрын
Trautman had all the great lines: - “I'm just amazed he allowed any of your posse to live… Strictly speaking, he slipped up. You're lucky to be breathing.” - “Don’t forget one thing… A good supply of body bags.” - “Here lies John Rambo, winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor, survivor of countless incursions behind enemy lines. Killed for vagrancy in Jerkwater, USA.” - “You're goddamn lucky he didn't kill all of you.”
@robertlombardo8437
@robertlombardo8437 2 ай бұрын
Right? Richard Crenna is a national treasure. I've loved everything I've seen him in. He played a rather convincing Ronald Reagan in the movie they made about the assassination attempt on him.
@Mr.Glidehook
@Mr.Glidehook Ай бұрын
Being older and coping with severe PTSD, I'm lucky to be getting the help that I am. But... sadly, I know how this ends. I never get through the last scene without crying, but my life ain't no movie. The nightmares are sickening, and they drain me. It's rare for me to sleep peacefully. Every sound in the woods could be a threat. Loud noises like fireworks wreck me. There's no happy ending to my story. I accept that. You did a great video here, and I'm glad. ❤
@ThistleAndSea
@ThistleAndSea 2 ай бұрын
Good one, Ames! Yeah, this movie always catches people by surprise. I was born in '60, so I registered for the draft, but never went. Several of my older cousins did go though, and they all came back changed from the experience. It was brutal, what they went through over seas and what they went through when they came home. So, two more really good Vietnam War films for you to add to your list if you haven't seen them..Platoon (1986) and Thin Red Line (1998). You're a war movie buff, so I know you'll like watching those. Thanks for sharing this one! 🙂
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
Wow! Thanks for sharing thistle! I’m actually not a war movie buff! Only been watching since being on YT so I’m learning!
@damianstarks3338
@damianstarks3338 2 ай бұрын
Great reaction to this Stallone classic
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
I didn’t know what I was walking into glad I watched it
@BM-hb2mr
@BM-hb2mr 2 ай бұрын
My parents bought me a Rambo knife for Christmas right after this movie was made.I still have that knife today.It's very cool, handles had a bunch of stuff in it for survival.Pretty nice knife a begged for that Knife lol
@definitelynotanAIchatbot
@definitelynotanAIchatbot 2 ай бұрын
🏳️‍🌈🗡❔️
@BM-hb2mr
@BM-hb2mr 2 ай бұрын
@@definitelynotanAIchatbot sorry. Lol I just saw that. I apologize. Thank you for letting me know.
@JadeDelphi
@JadeDelphi Ай бұрын
My dad and I saw this movie when it first came out at the Aptos Twin Theater, near Santa Cruz, CA, and we both enjoyed it. My father was a veteran of both WW2 and Korea (I was still too young to sign up at that juncture), so he liked the military aspects of it. I agree that the performance at the end was so moving, and the action throughout was fun and mostly believable (okay, except maybe when he leaps into the tree from the cliff face); so much better than the later sequels. Its fun to see a younger generation watch these old movies (I guess that's why some reaction vids are my guilty pleasure that my son makes fun of me for); Its also a great way to watch a favorite film in a short time. haha
@Mister_Samsonite
@Mister_Samsonite 2 ай бұрын
Moral of the story - good manners and a kind word cost you NOTHING! Traumatized people walk among us every day, and you don't want to trigger the wrong one. Yes sir, no sir, please, thank you - they all go a long way to helping a stranger have a better day. If you want respect, GIVE respect!
@captainz9
@captainz9 2 ай бұрын
The "baby killers" thing started as the public backlash to the Mei Lai massacre in 1968, which ultimately was really a failure of command (and the only one convicted was the Lieutenant platoon leader) but shocked the US public to hear about our own military responsible for the literal massacre/rape of 100s of women and children, over 500 Innocent civilians. Of course at the same time as the hippie/counterculture movement in draft-age young adults protesting the war anyways... Returning vets were, sadly, protested against, spit upon, etc.
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
😔
@captainz9
@captainz9 2 ай бұрын
I should add that, at age 60 so too young for that generation, I did in my late teens and as a young adult get to know quite a few Vietnam vets, and while few shared much of their story the impact it had on them was obvious... Several addicts & lots of alcoholism. I remember one guy, Jerry, well known around town as the town drunk - would get his VA check the beginning of the month and go on a two+ week bender, and then be panhandling and angry the last week or two after his money ran out. It was through other people I knew his past, but got to know him a little over a few years and tried to never look down on him - he was in a door alcove to a closed business one day as i was walking by and said hi and was trying to "borrow" $1 from me "for a cup of coffee" - he was obviously shaking and starting to go into the DTs, but I first offered to take him to the diner down the street and buy him coffee and something to eat... Of course he tried the excuse of "I don't like their coffee" (and I offered anywhere else, knowing what he really wanted of course)... And finally told him "look Jerry, quit the BS, I know you want the $1 to go buy a little bottle of alcohol... I can see you shaking in withdrawal, just say so, and if you want I'll go buy a bottle for you". He lit up and was happy, I said "what's your favorite poison?" and walked around the corner and came back with a 250ml bottle for him. I'm betting he's dead by now, he was well known in the AA/recovery community (how I knew some of his past) as someone who would probably never get sober, often wound up in detox at the hospital.. often pushed away even the other vets in recovery who tried to help him. I just felt looking down on him was not going to ever accomplish much - that was the only time I ever bought him alcohol, but I did get him to the diner on occasion and buy him food and talk with him, try to encourage him to want to change. Didn't work, of course...
@LordOfAllusion
@LordOfAllusion 2 ай бұрын
The end monologue is the thing that makes this movie the classic it is, recontextualizing everything you’ve seen up to this point, stripping it of the righteous revenge story and making Rambo almost an antivillain. And as a veteran, this last speech hits incredibly hard. Even though any trauma I had during GWOT was comparably minimal, I know tons of guys who struggle making friends now or relating to normal people or carrying on relationships. They estimate 30 vets a day (most popular theory is 22) kill themselves largely due to society’s inability to integrate these people back into society. Not because they’re violent maniacs who could snap and kill everyone at any moment, but because they can’t relate to the pettiness that most normal people place such high priority on in their daily lives.
@donnaralph4413
@donnaralph4413 2 ай бұрын
I hope you continue on with rest of Rambo's. You will love them
@UnusedIcon
@UnusedIcon 2 ай бұрын
This was a great reaction. I also really want to give you props for 23:00 . I've seen multiple reactions to this movie, but you are the first I've seen who picked up on Rambo not being certain if Colonel Trautman's radio call was real or if he was just imagining it. Also: not sure if you noticed it, but when Rambo came back to Hope with the machine gun, the places he targeted were not random. He waged war on Hope the same way he was taught to attack settlements in the war: cutting off the town's power and destroying its fuel and weapons supply (in this case, the gas station and gun shop). At least he didn't target the town's food supply: in that case, the diner you like might have been added to his list!
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 2 ай бұрын
They messed with the wrong war veteran in this action adventure thriller. Watching this film is very relevant on how Vietnam veterans were mistreated agter they came back home.
@GorgeousRandyFlamethrower-
@GorgeousRandyFlamethrower- Күн бұрын
Everyone is disqualified from having a legitimate opinion about Stallone's acting ability until they've watched First Blood. The ending is such a gut-punch even after all these years since I first watched it
@aaronhenley4741
@aaronhenley4741 2 ай бұрын
It always makes me happy watching first reactions to First Blood. Most people expect the stereotype muscle head action movie and get something totally different.
@bobjohnston1239
@bobjohnston1239 2 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The producers wanted to cut the final scene, but Stallone knew it was the whole point of the movie so he threatened to walk if they did so.
@cleonmagabeefy8500
@cleonmagabeefy8500 2 ай бұрын
This reaction was a grenade to the brain...
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
LOL
@rinus6584
@rinus6584 2 ай бұрын
As a kid i must have watched this movie about 30 times. But when i got older i understand the movie a lot more. I feel so much for american veterans. I cant even imagine something like this happening in the Netherlands. So close to home yet so far
@johncmoore416
@johncmoore416 2 ай бұрын
My dad was in the Marine Corp in Vietnam. As a kid, I didn't know why my dad watched this movie quietly. But years later it makes sense as he lost a few friends over there. Years later, my brother served in Iraq for the Army and he was shot at a lot and had a lot of mortars hit all around him and when he watches this movie he points out the flaws like how long it would take to set up the traps, etc. It's interesting to see it through the eyes of two different veterans from two different wars.
@realBkay
@realBkay 2 ай бұрын
Outstanding Green Beret movies I’ve seen: - 12 STRONG (2018) - first days of the Afghanistan War - THE GREEN BERETS (1968) - John Wayne (don’t think further words r necessary)
@barte3822
@barte3822 2 ай бұрын
Great reaction, Ames. That monolog at the end made the movie. I don't know what restaurant you were referring to, but I like stopping at Home Restaurant near Hope before getting on the Coquihalla. (For a little bit of Canadiana, watch Hard Core Logo, directed by Bruce Mcdonald Or FUBAR. directed by Micheal Dowse) ✌️❤️
@holddowna
@holddowna 2 ай бұрын
That’s the one!!!
@davidkintzer1604
@davidkintzer1604 2 ай бұрын
I love that all these reaction channels are doing first blood. I love the seeing the moment that women find out that their preconceived notions about "Rambo" was wrong and that it's probably the deepest movie that men love to see.
@BM-hb2mr
@BM-hb2mr 2 ай бұрын
14:00 this is who taught me to do that. I use to fall out of trees when I was 10 and 11. Lol after this movie I played Rambo with my friends all the time. This was our internet lol
@blatherama
@blatherama 2 ай бұрын
This is one of those movies that's improved over time. At the time, Stallone's performance at the end wasn't as appreciated as it is now. At the time, it was considered over the top.
@NemeanLion-
@NemeanLion- 2 ай бұрын
I like Stallone and his movies are a lot of fun, but I was not happy with his performance at the end. That’s just my personal preference.
@c1ph3rpunk
@c1ph3rpunk 2 ай бұрын
Saw this in the theater with my dad and one of his friends, both Vietnam vets, first time I can remember seeing either of them cry. It was an awful quiet car ride home, I honestly don’t know what they thought about it, they just didn’t talk about it which didn’t change until the late 90’s. Those vets were treated like absolute trash when they returned. What we now call PTSD simply wasn’t a thing then, and the predominant coping mechanisms prescribed then, that all of us were also told: “Man up” “Deal with it” “Suck it up” “Put on your big girl panties” “If you have nothing good to say, don’t say anything”. And they wonder why we’re emotionally distant and cut-off.
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