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JOHN RAMBO/RAMBO
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Stallone is rather muscle bound here and takes to the role without really missing a beat but also attempts to personify the role through the vein of the Man with No Name who simply can’t stay out of the way of bloodshed a la “Unforgiven.” Stallone directs the film with enough competence to stay out of the way of the eighties pop kitsch tone and really keeps the story a dramatic and tense little entry into the series. The landscapes are murky and desolate, and the constant battles are kept down into the dirt to exemplify Rambo’s comfort amidst chaos and carnage. While Stallone does play the violence for over the top gore, as is the pre-requisite, it only really helps to identify the character of Rambo who sees murder as a mere bodily function, and one that he feels comfortable doing in spite of his own self-hatred for constantly having to commit it. The 1982 bush whacking beef cake is gone in favor of a more humanistic shell of a man who has admitted that in order to stop the violence, he has to commit violence and may always be an island onto himself. Frankly, Stallone really does sell what could have been a disastrous film, with a tone that’s much more suited to adults rather than pandering to MTV crowds. Though not as good as “Rocky Balboa” you have to appreciate his enthusiasm in sending his career off with a bang.
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