Stallone later told the LA Times it had to do with people not thinking ahead: The canvas of this movie is so large you have to constantly think 10 scenes ahead. You can’t wing it. They didn’t go into the Battle of Waterloo not knowing what their strategy would be. Well, this movie is kind of like a cinematic warfare. We have a huge cast and crew (more than 250 people) and tough locations to deal with. Everyone and everything has to coordinate.
We had shots fired above our heads. We were told we could get seriously hurt if we went on… We hear about Vietnam and Cambodia but the results of this conflict are more horrific. This is a hellhole beyond your wildest dreams.
‘When you think that the President has mentioned him, the symbol of Rambo transcends the film,’ said Amy Kastens, a spokesman for Anabasis Investments NV, producers of the television series. ‘That symbol is a symbol of good. He’s very patriotic. He stands for strength, he only does good, and he undoes evil.’ She added that the lead character of the children’s shows will not be a Sylvester Stallone look-alike. ‘It’ll be a total departure from the film,’ she said of the television show. ‘There won’t be any [aggression]. He will have giant muscles and all of that. But he will be a guy who loves nature and won’t look for trouble.’
I think that James Cameron is a brilliant talent, but I thought the politics were important, such as a right-wing stance coming from Trautman and his nemesis, Murdock, contrasted by Rambo’s obvious neutrality, which I believe is explained in Rambo’s final speech. I realize his speech at the end may have caused millions of viewers to burst veins in their eyeballs by rolling them excessively, but the sentiment stated was conveyed to me by many veterans.
I didn’t want to do the sequels. They offered me the first sequel and after I read the script I said, ‘In the first film he doesn’t [eliminate] anybody. In this film he [wipes out] seventy-four people.’ It seemed to be celebrating the Vietnam War, which I thought was one of the stupidest wars in history. 55,000 young Americans [perished] and so many veterans committed suicide. I couldn’t turn myself inside out like that and make that kind of picture. Of course, I could have been a rich man today – that sequel made $300 million.
In the original ending, Rambo says to his colonel ‘You made me. Now you should [end] me.’ The colonel has his [piece] out and thinks about putting Rambo out of his misery, but he can’t do it. Rambo reaches up and blows himself away, commits hari-kari. Well, we [filmed] the scene and Sylvester gave a spectacular performance. Everyone was thrilled with it – except Sylvester. He took me aside and said, ‘Ted, we’ve put Rambo through so much…the audience has suffered with him through all of this, and now we’re going to [take him out]? They are going to hate this, I’m telling you.’Kotcheff filmed the alternate and, after test audiences absolutely hated seeing the hero take himself out, the alternate ending became the actual ending.
I just was thinking that the title John Rambo was derivative of Rocky Balboa and might give people the idea that this is the last Rambo film, and I don’t necessarily feel that it will be. He’s definitely a superb athlete, there’s no reason he can’t continue onto another adventure. Like John Wayne with The Searchers.
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