
In Vietnam his job was to dispose of enemy personnel. A man who's been trained to ignore pain, ignore weather, to live off the land, to eat things that would make a billy goat puke. Trautman gave the best description of Rambo himself: ‘…you're dealing with an expert in guerrilla warfare, with a man who's the best, with guns, with knives, with his bare hands. Rambo was a member of Baker Team and the star trainee of Col. Rambo is a special forces war hero that won a Congressional Medal of Honour in the Vietnam War. A low point for the series, arguably even the lowest, but it was a franchise that has always been at least a little enjoyable, so that's not too harsh a burn.The Games on Demand version supports English, French, Italian, German, Spanish John J. Stallone seems to think he'll be getting a Rambo 6 where he's on a Rez, if that's the plan, why bother calling this one "Last Blood", and if it's not the case, why make this movie that starts and ends like it's supposed to slot in between other pieces of a story we haven't gotten yet?Įnd of the day, Last Blood was okay. It kind of feels like an episode of a long-running show I haven't watched the last 10+ seasons of. Last Blood doesn't really feel like it re-opened or closed any circle. It's not that it doesn't make sense, because it does, just personally I preferred when Rambo was surviving the bad world that was happening to him, not creating it.Ģ008's Rambo was over the top and its very existence seemed bizarre, but it also felt like John Rambo "came full circle" as it were, which sort of justified that existence. It's something I'd never really considered before, but I actually don't like this direction for the character. In Last Blood however, Rambo's actions are calculated, and personal. But even all the way back in First Blood, John Rambo's actions seemed to have always been fuelled by desperation.

The Rambo franchise underwent a massive change after the first movie, and that new direction has stuck with the series ever since they put Rambo in the title.
