My dad was in Vietnam. When he came home was never the same. The term First Blood was drawn by the enemy. My dad never talked about what he saw there. He passed away in 2014. To me my dad was a hero.
My Grandfather was in Vietnam too Sergeant Roy Letta I’m proud of him and thank him for his service, as a matter of fact I got him his Honor flight coming up in a few months
My dad and three brothers were in Vietnam. Two of those brothers were wounded and came home junkies because of it. Cousin died there from friendly fire when a mortar round fell short. It was a messed up war, to be sure.
Vietnam had a devastating effect on the psyche of Americans for 30 years or so. It was a disaster that pretty much every family at the time had some sense of in terms of veterans. It was also the "bad war" both in it's cause and effect as a conflict and because we lost. Vietnam vets got very little respect in the immediate aftermath through the 70s and early 80s most especially. I had 2 uncles and a cousin that fought there and their experience versus my own service during Iraqi Freedom and coming home are very different, but the after effects for many modern veterans were not dissimilar in terms of a VA system that was not equipped to help the number of physically and emotionally damaged vets.
Apparently we owe a lot to the editor of this film because Stallone says the version he filmed Rambo didn't stop talking or cracking weird jokes. It was unwatchable. They took all that out (thank God).
@@commsense1979Sly said, originally the movie was 3 hours long. The scene where he’s hunting cops in the woods was 90 minutes long. And yes it was full of stupid quotes. Sly and his manager wanted to buy the movie from the studio just to destroy it, because they were afraid it will kill his carreer. Lucky for all of us, they finally decided to go to editing room and save the movie. And they did a great job.
I'm a disabled Vietnam veteran. I served "in country" during the Tet Offensive (1968). I had an appointment today at the V.A.M.C. in Boise, Id. About 25 yrs. ago, the V.A. told me that my Type II Diabetes, Ischemic Heart Disease, & other problems were a result of exposure to "Agent Orange" in Vietnam. Upon returning from Vietnam in 1969, we were told NOT to wear our uniforms in public to avoid being confronted, spit upon, & called "baby killer". Viet. vets were portrayed as psycho killers in many prime time T.V. shows at that time. I'm always curious to see young people's reaction to "Rambo: First Blood". I always cry at the end.
First of all, thank you for your service! My dad was also a Vietnam veteran. During my lifetime, I only knew him as a broken man who couldn't talk about it, tried to drink away the pain and memories. Oddly enough, the man could sleep thru fireworks, but if you waved a hand over his face he'd wake up and toss you across the room (learned that one the hard way). I just wish I could have known the boy who went over, not only the shell of a man who came back.
i always thought its crazy how americans treated their vietnam vets. many of them were drafted to my knowledge, most of them were just normal guys and didnt do anything crazy during the war, just tried to survive and get back home.
@@johnnymclaneutah It wasn't all Americans to be fair. It was those on the political left at the time. The "Peace loving" crowd. The ones that grew up and started numerous wars worse then vietnam.
Imagine trying to fight a seasoned special forces veteran with PTSD in the woods, just because he wanted to grab some food as he passed through your little town
@@OneEyedJack1970 It's cool that you've read the book. Not many people who have commented on these videos have. I've read it like 8 times. Completely different than the movie.
@@YouDontKnowMe2011.9 I was halfway through the book when I saw the movie. I was a bit surprised by the differences in direction they went. I did a book report for it in school.
Well it is still hard to get veterans to get help for psychiatric trauma. It's world's better than it was, but the climate among veterans is not always open to admitting you cant hump it. At least in my experience as veteran of Iraq.
@@flobp2381 Correct! Even after WW2 they knew our heroes weren't coming back the same as they went over. They just didn't give it a name until many years after Vietnam. After WW2 they called it "shell shock".
Murica conservative values : if we dont talk about the bad things, they dont exist... a lot of americans are just like islamists, repressed AF and trying to ignore all the problems of society while saying we'll pray for ya.... yeah cause praying ever fixed anything....
17:52 "Can you be trained to ignore pain? I would like to know more about that." Since you asked, Yes. I've been doing it for 25 years, ever since I got an incurable and unbelievably painful disease. Every day, everything hurts. I hurt right now. I feel almost like I'm breaking my fingers typing this. All true. I used to teach Karate. Now I can barely lift a glass of water without dropping or spilling it, and it hurts to pick it up. If you asked me back when I used to spar for a living "What is the worst pain you can imagine?" I would never have guessed anything like my life now. But, i still type, I still drink, I still manage to get through life. No karate any more - that's way behind me. I'd shatter my wrist the first time I punched a heavy bag today. How do I do things that cause me that much pain? When you do it every day, all day, all the time, you get so used to it, that you just deal with the pain and do what you have to do. I still feel it. It still hurts like hell. But I ignore it and carry on. All true. Or, as Patrick Swayze said in Roadhouse: "Pain don't hurt." He wasn't as verbose as I am.
This town Hope (where this was filmed, which is actually in Canada....i live about 45 minutes drive from there) IS actually a very beautiful mountain town in real life (and doesn't look much different today than it did back in the 80s).
this production also kicked off the Vancouver film industry. The local people who worked on the movie eventually started all the schools that exist today to build the industry.
Stallone stole the show especially with his final breakdown at the end, you can literally feel the trauma and pain. Both Brian Dennehy and Jack Starrett also delivered in their roles as the overzealous and corrupt small town policemen.
"Asshole Face" dude is named Brian Dennehy. He's gone now, but was considered a great Character actor for his ability to be just what you said. He did a lot of Broadway plays in addition to movies. If you wanna see him play a more entertaining bad guy, then you might check out the western, Silverado. Anyway, thank you for the fun reaction. It's actually fun to see YOU growing in the emotional range you're willing to show over the years. Be well.
That "asshole face" smirk was a trademark. My brother-in-law had a little smile on his face just naturally, even while half-asleep, only changing if he was snoring, angry, or tearing up. I always figured Dennehy had that kind of face.
When this first came out, some people loved it just for the action, but many people, including actual Vietnam veterans, believed that in perpetuated the stereotype of the violent, mentally ill 'Nam vet as a danger to society. However, the movie came out at a time when the United States was coming out of its post Vietnam guilt and shame and the American public was reevaluating its how it had treated returning veterans, and PTSD was starting to make its way into the nations collective consciousness. Because of that, people who watch the movie today immediately seize upon its deeper message.
10:50 "He didn't even aim for the water?" The water is about 2 feet deep and full of rocks. Guaranteed death. This way he uses tree branches to break his fall. Probably death. So he went for his best chance.
When people say that Silvestre Stallone is a bad actor, I always tell them to watch the final 15 minutes of the "First Blood" movie. They will definitely change their minds
I remember watching Cop Land. Cast loaded with acting heavyweights. But I felt Stallone actually did the best acting of the whole bunch. Just my opinion but there it is...
It's because Stallone was largely typecast as a action movie star that doesn't require much thinking. I'm not saying he's a terrible actor but telling people they should only watch a small excerpt from a film and ignore everything else isn't the strong argument for Stallone you think it is.
Fun Fact, Sly tried if the wound was realistic enough by entering a Hospital with the Fake wound and did the same stitching thing in front of everyone..the nurses said he's the toughest man they've ever seen
Great Reaction..... This was one of the First Post-Vietnam movies that addressed PTSD.... This is from a Novel/Book, They Changed the ending for the movie.... Will Teasale, the Sheriff, is a Decorated Korea Conflict Veteran, which is considered America's forgotten war, So there is some animosity between Veterans of different wars. Rambo didn't kill, till he had no choice.... Experts have been surveyed and verified that all the things in this movie is possible and realistic. In the mine, Rambo knew that the first thing that would be done was an airshaft, and escape exit in case of cave-in...... Reason he blew up the Gas Station and the Gun Store was to draw the police away from the station, where Rambo knew the Sheriff would stay...... Rambo's Speech at the end is so elequently worded and performed..... Anyone who says Stallone can't act has not see this or the First Rocky.... In my Opinion, Parts 2 & 3 have some unbelievable parts, Rambo (4) and Last Blood (5) are back the the believable action......
1:30 just started watching and I can already tell you will enjoy this movie and will cheer for Rambo towards the end ❤ I cry almost every time when he is giving his speaxh
Stallone gave an amazing performance particularly in that last scene. In a recent interview he said he wasn't the first choice for John Rambo, there were several other actors, I think 8 asked before he was asked, and he read the script and said, This doesn't work. Rambo is just a mean guy and the script has no heart. So he asked the script be rewritten in a much more realistic way, which for the most part, at least as far as Rambo's character is concerned, it was. I don't care for the sequels much, but Stallone makes this film.
Yeah. We don't cry. If you believe that, you're an idiot. 22 a day was the number of veteran suicides for a while. Celebration when it dropped to 21. I was a failed attempt and my buddies still check on me. In fact, my first combat loss, I was more concerned with keeping morale up. But when the official announcement came he was KIA I cried and my First Sergeant looked rattled to see the guy who doesn't seem to care cry.
"At least he didn't drop that fire thing" ...too funny, it's called a torch. Love your reactions and that line cracked me up for some reason. Fire thing.
The book took place in the coal country of Eastern Kentucky. and Troutman put Rambo down with a 12 gauge to the head. The book was written by Robin Moore, the same one that wrote the book that the John Wayne Movie, The Green Beret came from.
He wrote a number of books and it's pretty common for his main characters to have PTSD. My favorite is actually about an ex cop trying to find his wife(who had been abducted and killed by a serial killer). It's set in asberry park back before they tried to redevelop it and it was mostly an abandoned city.
Brian Dennehy was a great actor to play a villain that was so easy to despise. I'm pretty sure there's a statue of him and a statue of Stallone in the town where they filmed the movie.
Thanks for a great video! The speech at the end is always so meaningful to hear, that is unfortunately how the vets were treated in a lot of areas when they came back home from the Vietnam war.
These veterans never got the welcome like other veterans WW l, WW ll, Korea and veterans who fought the war on terror. Veterans form Vietnam would throw their uniforms in the trash at the airport. These men are finally getting the recognition they sorely deserve.
Well, while they weren't harrased by people on both the left and the right like Vietnam vets, Korean War vets NEVER got any parades either. Not even 20 years later like the Vietnam vets in the 80's! I know this because not only do I have Korean War vets in my family, but I grew up knowing several more!
Think there was a typo man. Korean War is called The Forgotten War for a reason. There was no welcome home ticker tape parades for them either and were viewed as if they lost the Korean Conflict. Still not treated as crappy as the Nam Vets, but weren't celebrated either.
Because of the Limited Time of the Movies, they have to clearly define the Heroes from the Villains, but the Novel shows us more about Teasle and Rambo that Blurs the lines between their roles as well as separating them even more. Chuck Norris dissed on the Movie because He was a vet, but Stallone never served in the Military and was disqualified from the draft through Medical Issues he received during Birth. Many don't notice, but half of Stallone's face is partially Paralysed and his speech was affected as well. While some currently try say it's because of Botox injections, Stallone's had these issues all his life,
Partially through reading your comment I had a feeling you were going to say it was something about his face, his eyes always looked strangely droopy. Gave him those "sad puppy eyes", I'm guessing. Don't know the details of this paralysis, but does it involve his vision? The possibility of his eyes literally coming out of their sockets too easily? If not, that is an actual congenital defect, believe it or not.
It was a different era in the 1960s during the Vietnam War, and many people tried many ways to avoid getting drafted. My dad’s younger brother (my uncle) was one such character. He was kicked out of high school, was in trouble with the law, and appeared before judges several times. Finally, he was given an ultimatum: go to jail two years or join the army. He joined and served 4 years, was wounded three times, then honorably discharged. When he came back, he picked up where he left off: more trouble. Couldn’t function in regular society. He then enlisted in the USN, and went back to Vietnam. He served 20 years before retiring. He passed away in 2021 due to Covid.
Decades ago, my then landlord was a Vietnam Vet. One afternoon, after I had lived their for years, he told me about some of the things that happened there. I can't tell you what he said, but it was some unbelievable stuff. Not war crimes or anything like that, just the job he had, what he had to do to get it done and how dangerous it all was. As a young man it really blew my mind. This was one of the first movies I ever saw that really showed that. I still think this is one of the best "action" movies of all time because it's really more than just an action movie.
Great job as usual. And as usual you got a laugh out of me when at the beginning of the movie you said what you thought the movie title made you think of. LOL!
I laughed out loud at the first blood comment at the very beginning. I’ve never thought of that but it was so funny and true when you said it. This is one of my all time favourite movies, and you watching was very cute and entertaining. Thanks for the content! I look forward to more. Let me know if you ever need some help that back of yours😉
Yes Rambo is his Surname in the movie, but it has become a nickname. The movie was filmed about 100km out of Vancouver, Canada in and around the town of Hope.
@@amandamiquilena The area around Hope is a nice place to visit for a 2-3 days. The whole Columbia district is nice, both Canada and USA. A very diverse area with rain forest, desert, mountains, vinyards, lava scablands carved by giant floods, a canyon deeper than the grand canyon, fiords, remote small towns and scuzzy sprawling cities. June-September is dry and sunny, October-April is wet and cloudy. Two places in Washington have had the world records for total snow in one winter, 29meters. Only 50km away they get less than 1m of snow. Northwest Canada and south Alaska are also very nice, but now I am including far too much area for one vacation.
I joined the Army in the early '80s. I served with several Viet Nam veterans. Most of them hid really well the pain and suffering that they were going through. My platoon sergeant (a Viet Nam vet) got "popped" on a urinalysis for cocaine. NOONE ever suspected. Thankfully, they began treating them better by that time. The Army didn't kick him out of the service like they would have done most people. They got him treatment and let him ride out his time until retirement. That's good! Because you don't kick someone out of the military that earned 2 SILVER STARS IN VIET NAM! Those guys hold a special place in my heart as it was an honor to know and serve with them!
Also I love that you left all the iconic lines intact.even if they take 20 seconds to get through like Rambo holding Teasle at knife point you left every line in. The only reactor that has played the full speech. That’s great✊👏
When they used to duel on olden times the winner was the person who drew first blood or if it was not to the death they would mark each other with cuts
FOR YOUR BACK: Heating pads and vibrating Massage Pads help. A hot Shower/Bath before taping might also help or perhaps you can position your seat and Monitor so you can recline with your legs raised while watching. If you "Partake", it can help.
Arriving in town, Rambo thought as in wartime behind enemy lines. He started by blowing up the enemy fuel reserve (the gas station) then the enemy ammunition depot (the hunting store) then continued to weaken the enemy camp by cutting off the power as he went along. He no longer reasoned like a civilian fleeing the police but like a soldier on a mission and it took the presence of his colonel for him to stop him from regaining his senses (we rarely find our colonel in flesh and blood in the middle of a battlefield rather than on his radio).
Its not really training to ignore pain, but to acknowledge it and bear it. To endure it so as to become somewhat used to it in order to accomplish the mission.
Next to nothing was known about PTSD in the early 80's,,,This film single handedly brought it into the light and began people and Dr.'s into looking into it Seriously as a mental illness and led us to where we are today with our better understanding of it's debilitating and crippling effects
I have seen First Blood many times, but I have NEVER seen a more adorable host than Amanda! She is also very funny. If she were commenting on a documentary about the life span of a May Fly, I would watch it. Go, Amanda!
PTSD is such a hard road. i have many friends that have needed intense help for years from the things they had to do, and i have my share too. no one told us our minds would shatter when we put the uniform on.
The movie was based on a book. In the book it explains that the sheriff was a veteran of the Korean war, and he had recently gotten divorced (or his wife had died, I can't remember which). Here the Korean war is sometime referred to as the Forgotten War. Between his resentment of how veterans of his war were ignored and his marriage problems, the character has a lot of resentment and anger bottled up in him, and he ends up taking it out on Rambo.
Stallone did a great job calling attention to PTSD afflicted vets which is something very few movies had addressed up till that point. I personally think the sequels are not really worth the watch and they just get worse as time goes by. I would like to address a few things. I am one of the minority of people who read the book before seeing the film. There are some notable differences and of course, a book can shed insight into a character in ways that no film really can. I don't know if you noticed or not, but there is a case with military medals in it on Teasle's desk at the police station. He is, in fact, a Korean war veteran and part of the reason he disliked Rambo from the get-go is because he feels that his service in the early 1950's to the country was largely ignored. Another reason is because he genuinely thinks that men like rambo will come in droves to his small town and bring drugs and crime with them. (By the way, in the book, the town is a fictional town in Kentucky. Why they chose to move the location to Oregon is beyond me) In the film, Rambo is indirectly responsible for just one death, which was Galt falling from the helicopter (to be fair, in the film, he WAS an asshole and helped cause the awful situation. In the book Galt was an inexperienced officer just trying to do his job when Rambo's PTSD kicked into overdrive). In the book, Rambo was way more bloodthirsty. In fact, when the sheriff and his posse were hunting him in the forest, Rambo actually kills all of the deputies and seriously injures Teasle. That is 13 men dead in the book before Trautman arrives on the scene. Also, in the book, Trautman and Rambo had never actually met each other. Trautman had been involved in the training program that produced the Green Berets in Rambo's A team. In the novel, Rambo has been run out of 15 different towns before the one where he and Teasle cross paths, and Rambo is just sick to death of being judged so unfairly based on pretty much nothing but his appearance. One of the biggest differences between novel and film is the ending. In the book, Teasle succumbs to his wounds shortly after Trautman shoots a dying Rambo in the head with a shotgun. I guess they decided that was just too dark for the movie. PTSD is a very real and very serious consequence of the sort of things that military combat vets experience and I'm glad that some films willing to address it.
The first movie is so different in tone from every Rambo movie that follows it almost doesn't feel like the same movie series. He goes from extremely reluctant to kill, just trying to escape police persecution to willingly going back into warzones.
When they were spraying Rambo w/water hose - that was a 3” hose. It puts out 1200 psi (pounds per square inch). A Rottweiler’s bite is around 300 psi. Put simply, if u were sprayed w/this, it would hurt.
This movie started the action movie craze of the 80s. You had movies with fighting and shooting before this of coarse, but movies with nonstop action started here.
Apparently the yell of pain after he falls through the tree branches is real - when he did a final take and hit the last branch again he broke several ribs.
@Amanda Miquilena Please go ahead and watch the other 4 Rambo movies also! Regarding his back stories because you asked for it: Rambo came from Vietnam and is the best of the best special elite and this is kinda normal behavior back in the day for cops and also normal citizens - Vietnam veterans were treated like shit / hated / spit on / didn’t get jobs and everything - most couldn’t find a home they could rent and all bad stuff you can imagine… also the hippie-movement back in the day on top of all that hated war all over and also increased pressure on the veterans… this movie here alone did more for the veterans than decades of government agenda did for them… Regarding your statement at 09:47 no in real life he wouldn’t die - that’s a kinda nice to know background story: Stallone was the 11th person to be cast as Rambo and nobody wanted the role because the stunts had to be made by the actors themselves and back in the day there was no good cgi and nothing - so Stallone actually jumped of that cliff in real life (nowadays this would be illegal but back in the days Hollywood and the whole world was another place and the rules weren’t as strict obviously) so yeah he did this stunt himself and broke multiple ribs and got a quite good spine injury and also got some major cuts and bruises (also the stitching later in the movie is actually not make up but Stallone really stitching his wound from filming) also nice to know: he didn’t stayed in hospital or something, after breaking those ribs and everything he went on filming…. Just a different breed of people back in the days…
Many reactors see no rationale to the way the Sheriff's department is acting. It's a matter of historical context. In the early 1970s (when the novel came out and when the Vietnam War was still going on), there was a rationale. Maybe not a justifiable one. The 1960s were a time of upheaval. The Kennedy/King assassinations, the civil rights and antiwar movements. The existing power structure saw any man with long hair as being subversive. If the guy was also wearing military garb, that was even worse. It was interpreted to mean that the person was either mocking the military, or else (worst of all) he might be a member of Vietnam Vets Against the War. Sheriff Teasle was a Korean War vet (you can only see that in the film version if you look closely at the stuff on his desk), so he had a grudge about not being honored like WWII vets were, and he partly took out his anger on Vietnam vets. It's hard to explain, but the scenario (this kind of hassling from Law Enforcement) was real.
Thank you for putting that in some sort of context. That being said, I'm skeptical of the last part of your post. Korea was still considered a 'good war', and while Korean vets weren't honored nationally like WW2 vets were, they weren't spat on and called baby killers like so infamously happened to some Vietnam vets. There was no shame in being a Korean Vet (unlike in some situations with Vietnam Vets) short of the fact the war ended in a 'draw' there was no reason for Korean vets to feel a grudge, esp against guys who arguably had it worse than them.
@@remo27 My dad was a Korean War Vet. There's a reason why the Korean War is called the "Forgotten War". He served, he came home, and went on with his life. While he was proud of his military service, he didn't talk about it unless he was asked. Vets moved on and the Public forgot about it. BTW approx. 36,000+ KIAs in 3 years in Korea vs approx.58,000+ KIAs in 8 years in Vietnam. Tell me, again, who had it worse.
@@flobp2381 Easy. The Vietnam vets. As I said, the Korean War wasn't a 'loss'. There was a South Korea which still exists today, there was something tangible for their efforts. Vietnam? We lost that war, in part because of lack of support at home and in part because quite frankly the Powers That Be in the US didn't want to risk anything, so they prevented us so many times and ways of striking at the enemy. So you lose your friends for nothing, not one goddam thing, and you come home to find that possibly half the country and often the most vocal part hates your guts, not for losing but for shit you often didn't even do.
@@remo27 You said, "... there was no reason for Korean vets to feel a grudge, esp against guys who arguably had it worse than them." What do you base your opinion on? The Korean War and their Vets are all but forgotten while Vietnam Vets eventually got their deserved recognition. Which is worse being forgotten/unappreciated or eventually getting the deserved recognition? I saw being forgotten and ignored.
I saw this movie when I was 5,I only knew Rocky because Rocky 3 was on cable everyday around 1984(when I was 4) and because I was from Philadelphia I was aware of Rocky as a local fictional folk hero especially in south Philly. First Blood wasn’t released on VHS int late 1984(kids today don’t know the pain🤪😂) . I saw it late one night in early 85 when my uncle who was staying with us put it on and I absolutely loved it,I had no idea about the politics of the Vietnam war or the mood of the country when the novel was released but even as a child I empathized with Rambo and couldn’t wait to see the second one a few months later. To give an idea how young and naive I was,I thought it was called First Blood because Rambo was so tough that him falling through the trees was the first time he was ever cut and bled(hence First Blood🤦🏻♂️😂). Anyway I always appreciate this the most(and might prefer John Rambo to Rocky Balboa “gasp”😅) and though the sequels were all something completely different from this(except for 4) I’ve loved all of them,even Last Blood and I hope there’s one more
In guerilla warfare you want to disrupt supply lines like, fuel, food, ammunition and weapons so the enemy feels the fear of what is soon to come. Then add "shock and aw" of what seems like an unbeatable force with overpowering force and the fear destroys your enemy's will to fight or fight effectively.
In the end of the book Rambo, John Rambo gave his speach to Troutman about the Vietnam War Troutman put his arms around Rambo and then apologized for what had happened to Rambo because of what was expected by the Army, then shot him in the head to release him from his pain. Stallone changed the end of the movie from the book so as not to suggest Vietnam Vets should be dealt with such extreme measures. When this movie was made the Vietman war was only 7 years behind the calendar and there were still protestor from the war that would chastise veterans. After this movie there was an outpouring of support for Veterans. One of the biggest differences of PTSD from WW2 and Korean war vets compared to Vietman vets was the time from the battlefield to the streets. After WW2 and Korea the soldiers were kept in-country for 6 months and then returned to the States by way of ships. They had time to work out the psycological trauma and what they had done and had done to them. My Grandfather who was involved with clearing obstacles during D-day didn't get home until April of 1946. My Uncle who served in a combat unit in Vietman was on the battlefield on day 335 of his deployment, was given a transport plane home on Day 336, and was walking on the streets day 337. He became a recluse from what he saw when he got home. He spent years with a psycologist to work out his mental issues caused by what had happened to him. God Bless the American Soldiers who went through much the same.
My dad was in Vietnam. When he came home was never the same. The term First Blood was drawn by the enemy. My dad never talked about what he saw there. He passed away in 2014. To me my dad was a hero.
To many of us Patriots he was a hero 👍🦅🇺🇲💪
My Grandfather was in Vietnam too Sergeant Roy Letta I’m proud of him and thank him for his service, as a matter of fact I got him his Honor flight coming up in a few months
My dad and three brothers were in Vietnam. Two of those brothers were wounded and came home junkies because of it. Cousin died there from friendly fire when a mortar round fell short.
It was a messed up war, to be sure.
Vietnam had a devastating effect on the psyche of Americans for 30 years or so. It was a disaster that pretty much every family at the time had some sense of in terms of veterans. It was also the "bad war" both in it's cause and effect as a conflict and because we lost. Vietnam vets got very little respect in the immediate aftermath through the 70s and early 80s most especially. I had 2 uncles and a cousin that fought there and their experience versus my own service during Iraqi Freedom and coming home are very different, but the after effects for many modern veterans were not dissimilar in terms of a VA system that was not equipped to help the number of physically and emotionally damaged vets.
We all know Vietnam didn't draw first blood.
Rambo barely says ten words throughout the whole movie, but when he lets go at the end, it's powerful stuff
I had the same thought while re-watching this a few minutes ago. You definitely don't expect the character to open up like that 😮
Apparently we owe a lot to the editor of this film because Stallone says the version he filmed Rambo didn't stop talking or cracking weird jokes. It was unwatchable. They took all that out (thank God).
@@commsense1979 "keep your eyes on the road..... that's how accidents happen."
@@commsense1979Sly said, originally the movie was 3 hours long. The scene where he’s hunting cops in the woods was 90 minutes long. And yes it was full of stupid quotes. Sly and his manager wanted to buy the movie from the studio just to destroy it, because they were afraid it will kill his carreer. Lucky for all of us, they finally decided to go to editing room and save the movie. And they did a great job.
@@amandamiquilenaFilmed in Hope British Columbia Canada 1982😊😅😂🎉
I'm a disabled Vietnam veteran. I served "in country" during the Tet Offensive (1968). I had an appointment today at the V.A.M.C. in Boise, Id. About 25 yrs. ago, the V.A. told me that my Type II Diabetes, Ischemic Heart Disease, & other problems were a result of exposure to "Agent Orange" in Vietnam. Upon returning from Vietnam in 1969, we were told NOT to wear our uniforms in public to avoid being confronted, spit upon, & called "baby killer". Viet. vets were portrayed as psycho killers in many prime time T.V. shows at that time. I'm always curious to see young people's reaction to "Rambo: First Blood". I always cry at the end.
Thank you for your service, Sir.
First of all, thank you for your service! My dad was also a Vietnam veteran. During my lifetime, I only knew him as a broken man who couldn't talk about it, tried to drink away the pain and memories. Oddly enough, the man could sleep thru fireworks, but if you waved a hand over his face he'd wake up and toss you across the room (learned that one the hard way). I just wish I could have known the boy who went over, not only the shell of a man who came back.
i always thought its crazy how americans treated their vietnam vets. many of them were drafted to my knowledge, most of them were just normal guys and didnt do anything crazy during the war, just tried to survive and get back home.
@@johnnymclaneutah It wasn't all Americans to be fair. It was those on the political left at the time. The "Peace loving" crowd. The ones that grew up and started numerous wars worse then vietnam.
Thank you for your service. You didn't deserve the unwelcoming committee. I hope people treat you with much more respect now.
Imagine trying to fight a seasoned special forces veteran with PTSD in the woods, just because he wanted to grab some food as he passed through your little town
I wonder if the sheriff ever came to grips with himself setting the whole thing in motion.
@@infiad1275the way he gets shot he's probably paralyzed for the rest of life, plenty of time to think about it
It's called keeping the town boring.
When you said "I hope he didn't break a rib" .... Well, the character didn't, but Sylvester Stallone did doing the stunt.
Yes sir he did. Even with a net to catch him. Broke a rib doing his own stunts & filming was briefly postponed.
The character did too. The injury kept griping him for the rest of the book.
@@OneEyedJack1970 It's cool that you've read the book. Not many people who have commented on these videos have. I've read it like 8 times. Completely different than the movie.
@@YouDontKnowMe2011.9 I was halfway through the book when I saw the movie. I was a bit surprised by the differences in direction they went. I did a book report for it in school.
Breaking, or even cracking ribs F-ING hurts, every time you draw breath it feels like someone twisting a knife between them.
"I don't like summer" - Norway welcomes you with open arms :p
Hahaha here I go then! :D Hey thank you for the generous Super Thanks! I apologize for the late reply.
This movie really brought the epidemic of ptsd among vietnam veterans to the publics consciousness. Nobody talked about it until this came out
It wasn't just Vietnam Veterans. WW!, WW2 and Korean War Vets, like my dad, suffered and dealt with it in silence, too.
Well it is still hard to get veterans to get help for psychiatric trauma. It's world's better than it was, but the climate among veterans is not always open to admitting you cant hump it. At least in my experience as veteran of Iraq.
@@flobp2381 Correct! Even after WW2 they knew our heroes weren't coming back the same as they went over. They just didn't give it a name until many years after Vietnam. After WW2 they called it "shell shock".
Murica conservative values : if we dont talk about the bad things, they dont exist... a lot of americans are just like islamists, repressed AF and trying to ignore all the problems of society while saying we'll pray for ya.... yeah cause praying ever fixed anything....
17:52 "Can you be trained to ignore pain? I would like to know more about that."
Since you asked, Yes.
I've been doing it for 25 years, ever since I got an incurable and unbelievably painful disease.
Every day, everything hurts. I hurt right now. I feel almost like I'm breaking my fingers typing this.
All true.
I used to teach Karate.
Now I can barely lift a glass of water without dropping or spilling it, and it hurts to pick it up.
If you asked me back when I used to spar for a living "What is the worst pain you can imagine?" I would never have guessed anything like my life now.
But, i still type, I still drink, I still manage to get through life.
No karate any more - that's way behind me. I'd shatter my wrist the first time I punched a heavy bag today.
How do I do things that cause me that much pain?
When you do it every day, all day, all the time, you get so used to it, that you just deal with the pain and do what you have to do.
I still feel it. It still hurts like hell.
But I ignore it and carry on.
All true.
Or, as Patrick Swayze said in Roadhouse: "Pain don't hurt." He wasn't as verbose as I am.
This town Hope (where this was filmed, which is actually in Canada....i live about 45 minutes drive from there) IS actually a very beautiful mountain town in real life (and doesn't look much different today than it did back in the 80s).
My aunt lived there for a long time.
Came here to say pretty much all of this. Howdy, neighbour!🤣
this production also kicked off the Vancouver film industry. The local people who worked on the movie eventually started all the schools that exist today to build the industry.
Stallone stole the show especially with his final breakdown at the end, you can literally feel the trauma and pain. Both Brian Dennehy and Jack Starrett also delivered in their roles as the overzealous and corrupt small town policemen.
Your comedy bits that you throw in are absolutely awesome!!! Love them, too funny!
"Asshole Face" dude is named Brian Dennehy. He's gone now, but was considered a great Character actor for his ability to be just what you said. He did a lot of Broadway plays in addition to movies. If you wanna see him play a more entertaining bad guy, then you might check out the western, Silverado.
Anyway, thank you for the fun reaction. It's actually fun to see YOU growing in the emotional range you're willing to show over the years. Be well.
And a good guy in F/X
Good, solid character actor, he's all over US TV and film like a rash in the 70's
That "asshole face" smirk was a trademark. My brother-in-law had a little smile on his face just naturally, even while half-asleep, only changing if he was snoring, angry, or tearing up. I always figured Dennehy had that kind of face.
Great actor!
When this first came out, some people loved it just for the action, but many people, including actual Vietnam veterans, believed that in perpetuated the stereotype of the violent, mentally ill 'Nam vet as a danger to society. However, the movie came out at a time when the United States was coming out of its post Vietnam guilt and shame and the American public was reevaluating its how it had treated returning veterans, and PTSD was starting to make its way into the nations collective consciousness. Because of that, people who watch the movie today immediately seize upon its deeper message.
10:50 "He didn't even aim for the water?"
The water is about 2 feet deep and full of rocks. Guaranteed death.
This way he uses tree branches to break his fall. Probably death.
So he went for his best chance.
I could see this 100 times and I still cry at the end. His performance makes me believe he was a vet!!! Stallone is great.
When people say that Silvestre Stallone is a bad actor, I always tell them to watch the final 15 minutes of the "First Blood" movie. They will definitely change their minds
I remember watching Cop Land. Cast loaded with acting heavyweights. But I felt Stallone actually did the best acting of the whole bunch. Just my opinion but there it is...
It's because Stallone was largely typecast as a action movie star that doesn't require much thinking. I'm not saying he's a terrible actor but telling people they should only watch a small excerpt from a film and ignore everything else isn't the strong argument for Stallone you think it is.
Fun Fact, Sly tried if the wound was realistic enough by entering a Hospital with the Fake wound and did the same stitching thing in front of everyone..the nurses said he's the toughest man they've ever seen
Great Reaction.....
This was one of the First Post-Vietnam movies that addressed PTSD....
This is from a Novel/Book, They Changed the ending for the movie....
Will Teasale, the Sheriff, is a Decorated Korea Conflict Veteran, which is considered America's forgotten war, So there is some animosity between Veterans of different wars.
Rambo didn't kill, till he had no choice....
Experts have been surveyed and verified that all the things in this movie is possible and realistic.
In the mine, Rambo knew that the first thing that would be done was an airshaft, and escape exit in case of cave-in......
Reason he blew up the Gas Station and the Gun Store was to draw the police away from the station, where Rambo knew the Sheriff would stay......
Rambo's Speech at the end is so elequently worded and performed..... Anyone who says Stallone can't act has not see this or the First Rocky....
In my Opinion, Parts 2 & 3 have some unbelievable parts, Rambo (4) and Last Blood (5) are back the the believable action......
1:30 just started watching and I can already tell you will enjoy this movie and will cheer for Rambo towards the end ❤
I cry almost every time when he is giving his speaxh
Stallone gave an amazing performance particularly in that last scene. In a recent interview he said he wasn't the first choice for John Rambo, there were several other actors, I think 8 asked before he was asked, and he read the script and said, This doesn't work. Rambo is just a mean guy and the script has no heart. So he asked the script be rewritten in a much more realistic way, which for the most part, at least as far as Rambo's character is concerned, it was. I don't care for the sequels much, but Stallone makes this film.
Yeah. We don't cry. If you believe that, you're an idiot. 22 a day was the number of veteran suicides for a while. Celebration when it dropped to 21. I was a failed attempt and my buddies still check on me.
In fact, my first combat loss, I was more concerned with keeping morale up. But when the official announcement came he was KIA I cried and my First Sergeant looked rattled to see the guy who doesn't seem to care cry.
"At least he didn't drop that fire thing" ...too funny, it's called a torch. Love your reactions and that line cracked me up for some reason. Fire thing.
"That guy has an asshole face ... he looks like an asshole" got me
You have a great sense of humor . I love the memes you inlay . This is what I consider the perfect reaction style . 😅👏
Australian comedian Rodney Rude did that joke in the 80’s. Went to the movies to see first blood, story bout a 12 year old girl
The vid of Homer falling. I f'n lost it. 😅🤣
This is Stallone’s best acting performance, and the only one of his movies I own.
The book took place in the coal country of Eastern Kentucky. and Troutman put Rambo down with a 12 gauge to the head. The book was written by Robin Moore, the same one that wrote the book that the John Wayne Movie, The Green Beret came from.
He wrote a number of books and it's pretty common for his main characters to have PTSD. My favorite is actually about an ex cop trying to find his wife(who had been abducted and killed by a serial killer). It's set in asberry park back before they tried to redevelop it and it was mostly an abandoned city.
Ya this movie is pretty deep and meaningful. This is why people say they don't support wars, but they may support the soldiers that have to fight it.
Brian Dennehy was a great actor to play a villain that was so easy to despise.
I'm pretty sure there's a statue of him and a statue of Stallone in the town where they filmed the movie.
Thanks for a great video! The speech at the end is always so meaningful to hear, that is unfortunately how the vets were treated in a lot of areas when they came back home from the Vietnam war.
These veterans never got the welcome like other veterans WW l, WW ll, Korea and veterans who fought the war on terror. Veterans form Vietnam would throw their uniforms in the trash at the airport. These men are finally getting the recognition they sorely deserve.
Well, while they weren't harrased by people on both the left and the right like Vietnam vets, Korean War vets NEVER got any parades either. Not even 20 years later like the Vietnam vets in the 80's! I know this because not only do I have Korean War vets in my family, but I grew up knowing several more!
US is the bad guy in Vietnam, same goes to aghan waran Iraq war
Think there was a typo man. Korean War is called The Forgotten War for a reason. There was no welcome home ticker tape parades for them either and were viewed as if they lost the Korean Conflict. Still not treated as crappy as the Nam Vets, but weren't celebrated either.
Because of the Limited Time of the Movies, they have to clearly define the Heroes from the Villains, but the Novel shows us more about Teasle and Rambo that Blurs the lines between their roles as well as separating them even more.
Chuck Norris dissed on the Movie because He was a vet, but Stallone never served in the Military and was disqualified from the draft through Medical Issues he received during Birth.
Many don't notice, but half of Stallone's face is partially Paralysed and his speech was affected as well. While some currently try say it's because of Botox injections, Stallone's had these issues all his life,
Partially through reading your comment I had a feeling you were going to say it was something about his face, his eyes always looked strangely droopy. Gave him those "sad puppy eyes", I'm guessing. Don't know the details of this paralysis, but does it involve his vision? The possibility of his eyes literally coming out of their sockets too easily? If not, that is an actual congenital defect, believe it or not.
Brian Dennehy, the actor who played the sheriff, was often cast in roles like this. He was very good at playing these types of characters
It was a different era in the 1960s during the Vietnam War, and many people tried many ways to avoid getting drafted. My dad’s younger brother (my uncle) was one such character. He was kicked out of high school, was in trouble with the law, and appeared before judges several times. Finally, he was given an ultimatum: go to jail two years or join the army. He joined and served 4 years, was wounded three times, then honorably discharged. When he came back, he picked up where he left off: more trouble. Couldn’t function in regular society. He then enlisted in the USN, and went back to Vietnam. He served 20 years before retiring. He passed away in 2021 due to Covid.
Decades ago, my then landlord was a Vietnam Vet. One afternoon, after I had lived their for years, he told me about some of the things that happened there. I can't tell you what he said, but it was some unbelievable stuff. Not war crimes or anything like that, just the job he had, what he had to do to get it done and how dangerous it all was. As a young man it really blew my mind. This was one of the first movies I ever saw that really showed that. I still think this is one of the best "action" movies of all time because it's really more than just an action movie.
Thanks for reaction, i always enjoy your thoughts and commentary, just continue being yourself.✌
Great job as usual. And as usual you got a laugh out of me when at the beginning of the movie you said what you thought the movie title made you think of. LOL!
I laughed out loud at the first blood comment at the very beginning. I’ve never thought of that but it was so funny and true when you said it. This is one of my all time favourite movies, and you watching was very cute and entertaining. Thanks for the content! I look forward to more. Let me know if you ever need some help that back of yours😉
That "Shave" Edit, was hilarious.(Don't blink during this re-act)😄
The parking cars part is so... it just hits
One of my uncles who served in nam lived under a bridge for around 6 months when he first came home. People didn't make it easy for them
@@markcarpenter6020 ppl are so ignorant of... so much. I am too on certain things no doubt but freedom? Shouldnt be one of them
Yes Rambo is his Surname in the movie, but it has become a nickname. The movie was filmed about 100km out of Vancouver, Canada in and around the town of Hope.
Wow, I have to go to Canada. It's so beautiful!
@@amandamiquilenaYes. Hope, British Columbia. Presented as the (nonexistent) town of Hope, Washington.
@@amandamiquilena The area around Hope is a nice place to visit for a 2-3 days. The whole Columbia district is nice, both Canada and USA. A very diverse area with rain forest, desert, mountains, vinyards, lava scablands carved by giant floods, a canyon deeper than the grand canyon, fiords, remote small towns and scuzzy sprawling cities. June-September is dry and sunny, October-April is wet and cloudy.
Two places in Washington have had the world records for total snow in one winter, 29meters. Only 50km away they get less than 1m of snow.
Northwest Canada and south Alaska are also very nice, but now I am including far too much area for one vacation.
I joined the Army in the early '80s. I served with several Viet Nam veterans. Most of them hid really well the pain and suffering that they were going through. My platoon sergeant (a Viet Nam vet) got "popped" on a urinalysis for cocaine. NOONE ever suspected. Thankfully, they began treating them better by that time. The Army didn't kick him out of the service like they would have done most people. They got him treatment and let him ride out his time until retirement. That's good! Because you don't kick someone out of the military that earned 2 SILVER STARS IN VIET NAM! Those guys hold a special place in my heart as it was an honor to know and serve with them!
Thanks for reviewing this film. Good job!
3:52 ...agreed! People look at me like I have an arm growing out of my head when I say that.
Salt, the statement! You know your shit! Brilliant!🌿🌸
No Grey Poupon, either! 🤣
Nice reaction! Sad to hear about your back pain - hopefully you will feel better in the future.
Bella reaction, bellissima Amanda
Loved your Rocky reactions, and I have no doubt I'll love this as well. Thank you😊
My grandfather’s brother was in Vietnam, he never talked about it until a couple years ago.
Also I love that you left all the iconic lines intact.even if they take 20 seconds to get through like Rambo holding Teasle at knife point you left every line in. The only reactor that has played the full speech. That’s great✊👏
When they used to duel on olden times the winner was the person who drew first blood or if it was not to the death they would mark each other with cuts
FOR YOUR BACK: Heating pads and vibrating Massage Pads help. A hot Shower/Bath before taping might also help or perhaps you can position your seat and Monitor so you can recline with your legs raised while watching.
If you "Partake", it can help.
Great Reaction as always
Thank you, Christopher :)
I’ve been recommending everybody to watch this one. Great cinematography.
Nice review Amanda . . this is one of my favourite movies.
Arriving in town, Rambo thought as in wartime behind enemy lines. He started by blowing up the enemy fuel reserve (the gas station) then the enemy ammunition depot (the hunting store) then continued to weaken the enemy camp by cutting off the power as he went along. He no longer reasoned like a civilian fleeing the police but like a soldier on a mission and it took the presence of his colonel for him to stop him from regaining his senses (we rarely find our colonel in flesh and blood in the middle of a battlefield rather than on his radio).
There's 5 Rambo movies. The last one was filmed in 2019. I've seen the first blood and the last blood at the movie theater.
how are you not shedding a tear during his breakdown at the end?
Its not really training to ignore pain, but to acknowledge it and bear it. To endure it so as to become somewhat used to it in order to accomplish the mission.
Crying In The Woods - out now on CD and cassette! haha you're the best
Next to nothing was known about PTSD in the early 80's,,,This film single handedly brought it into the light and began people and Dr.'s into looking into it Seriously as a mental illness and led us to where we are today with our better understanding of it's debilitating and crippling effects
Every time I see Richard Crenna I can't unsee him in Hot Shots! Part Deux. Great actor, sadly missed.
Tak!
Tak til dig! (I hope that is correct, haha)
I have seen First Blood many times, but I have NEVER seen a more adorable host than Amanda! She is also very funny. If she were commenting on a documentary about the life span of a May Fly, I would watch it. Go, Amanda!
PTSD is such a hard road. i have many friends that have needed intense help for years from the things they had to do, and i have my share too. no one told us our minds would shatter when we put the uniform on.
The movie was based on a book. In the book it explains that the sheriff was a veteran of the Korean war, and he had recently gotten divorced (or his wife had died, I can't remember which). Here the Korean war is sometime referred to as the Forgotten War. Between his resentment of how veterans of his war were ignored and his marriage problems, the character has a lot of resentment and anger bottled up in him, and he ends up taking it out on Rambo.
I really enjoyed her remastered reaction video. She should do more of these.
That ending scene shocked me when I first watched it. Like I had no idea Stallone could act 😅
And that shaving edit killed me, I’m a ghost now 😂💀
@5:43 Finally. Someone who notices!! 😂 thought I was alone!
Loved your reaction!
Rambo story is great enough to have 5 movies
Not a big fan of this film but it’s a popular film and you’re reacting to it…so a like and a comment from me
Well, thank you for being here anyway :D I appreciate it.
@@amandamiquilena 🙌
Stallone did a great job calling attention to PTSD afflicted vets which is something very few movies had addressed up till that point.
I personally think the sequels are not really worth the watch and they just get worse as time goes by.
I would like to address a few things. I am one of the minority of people who read the book before seeing the film. There are some notable differences and of course, a book can shed insight into a character in ways that no film really can.
I don't know if you noticed or not, but there is a case with military medals in it on Teasle's desk at the police station. He is, in fact, a Korean war veteran and part of the reason he disliked Rambo from the get-go is because he feels that his service in the early 1950's to the country was largely ignored. Another reason is because he genuinely thinks that men like rambo will come in droves to his small town and bring drugs and crime with them. (By the way, in the book, the town is a fictional town in Kentucky. Why they chose to move the location to Oregon is beyond me)
In the film, Rambo is indirectly responsible for just one death, which was Galt falling from the helicopter (to be fair, in the film, he WAS an asshole and helped cause the awful situation. In the book Galt was an inexperienced officer just trying to do his job when Rambo's PTSD kicked into overdrive). In the book, Rambo was way more bloodthirsty. In fact, when the sheriff and his posse were hunting him in the forest, Rambo actually kills all of the deputies and seriously injures Teasle. That is 13 men dead in the book before Trautman arrives on the scene.
Also, in the book, Trautman and Rambo had never actually met each other. Trautman had been involved in the training program that produced the Green Berets in Rambo's A team.
In the novel, Rambo has been run out of 15 different towns before the one where he and Teasle cross paths, and Rambo is just sick to death of being judged so unfairly based on pretty much nothing but his appearance.
One of the biggest differences between novel and film is the ending. In the book, Teasle succumbs to his wounds shortly after Trautman shoots a dying Rambo in the head with a shotgun. I guess they decided that was just too dark for the movie.
PTSD is a very real and very serious consequence of the sort of things that military combat vets experience and I'm glad that some films willing to address it.
0:52 you had me in splits! 🤣
The first movie is so different in tone from every Rambo movie that follows it almost doesn't feel like the same movie series. He goes from extremely reluctant to kill, just trying to escape police persecution to willingly going back into warzones.
lol that pick of "my mom will stab me" was great! 😆
When they were spraying Rambo w/water hose - that was a 3” hose. It puts out 1200 psi (pounds per square inch). A Rottweiler’s bite is around 300 psi. Put simply, if u were sprayed w/this, it would hurt.
He got with Rock Hudson to do a movie called Rambutt
your mom was john rambo?! holy cow.. great reaction
I think I said Rocky at some point when I meant to say Stallone🤦🏻♂️😂
For me, it was the best film in the series.
This movie started the action movie craze of the 80s. You had movies with fighting and shooting before this of coarse, but movies with nonstop action started here.
I love your shirt! Can I ask where you got it from?
Apparently the yell of pain after he falls through the tree branches is real - when he did a final take and hit the last branch again he broke several ribs.
The sheriff opened an all you can eat restaurant and fed drifters after his stay in hospital.
The sequel is called Rambo: That Time of the Month.
I so enjoyed watching this movie with you girl. Thank you! Thank you very much! You are cool chick!
@Amanda Miquilena
Please go ahead and watch the other 4 Rambo movies also!
Regarding his back stories because you asked for it: Rambo came from Vietnam and is the best of the best special elite and this is kinda normal behavior back in the day for cops and also normal citizens - Vietnam veterans were treated like shit / hated / spit on / didn’t get jobs and everything - most couldn’t find a home they could rent and all bad stuff you can imagine… also the hippie-movement back in the day on top of all that hated war all over and also increased pressure on the veterans… this movie here alone did more for the veterans than decades of government agenda did for them…
Regarding your statement at 09:47 no in real life he wouldn’t die - that’s a kinda nice to know background story: Stallone was the 11th person to be cast as Rambo and nobody wanted the role because the stunts had to be made by the actors themselves and back in the day there was no good cgi and nothing - so Stallone actually jumped of that cliff in real life (nowadays this would be illegal but back in the days Hollywood and the whole world was another place and the rules weren’t as strict obviously) so yeah he did this stunt himself and broke multiple ribs and got a quite good spine injury and also got some major cuts and bruises (also the stitching later in the movie is actually not make up but Stallone really stitching his wound from filming) also nice to know: he didn’t stayed in hospital or something, after breaking those ribs and everything he went on filming…. Just a different breed of people back in the days…
I'm blessed with some magnificent Miquilena content, just as I was about to give up on youtube.
You can always find me here 😊
the homer fall made me laugh so hard🤣
That shaving cream effect was next level.
Many reactors see no rationale to the way the Sheriff's department is acting. It's a matter of historical context. In the early 1970s (when the novel came out and when the Vietnam War was still going on), there was a rationale. Maybe not a justifiable one. The 1960s were a time of upheaval. The Kennedy/King assassinations, the civil rights and antiwar movements. The existing power structure saw any man with long hair as being subversive. If the guy was also wearing military garb, that was even worse. It was interpreted to mean that the person was either mocking the military, or else (worst of all) he might be a member of Vietnam Vets Against the War. Sheriff Teasle was a Korean War vet (you can only see that in the film version if you look closely at the stuff on his desk), so he had a grudge about not being honored like WWII vets were, and he partly took out his anger on Vietnam vets. It's hard to explain, but the scenario (this kind of hassling from Law Enforcement) was real.
Thank you for putting that in some sort of context. That being said, I'm skeptical of the last part of your post. Korea was still considered a 'good war', and while Korean vets weren't honored nationally like WW2 vets were, they weren't spat on and called baby killers like so infamously happened to some Vietnam vets. There was no shame in being a Korean Vet (unlike in some situations with Vietnam Vets) short of the fact the war ended in a 'draw' there was no reason for Korean vets to feel a grudge, esp against guys who arguably had it worse than them.
@@remo27 My dad was a Korean War Vet. There's a reason why the Korean War is called the "Forgotten War". He served, he came home, and went on with his life. While he was proud of his military service, he didn't talk about it unless he was asked. Vets moved on and the Public forgot about it. BTW approx. 36,000+ KIAs in 3 years in Korea vs approx.58,000+ KIAs in 8 years in Vietnam. Tell me, again, who had it worse.
@@flobp2381 Easy. The Vietnam vets. As I said, the Korean War wasn't a 'loss'. There was a South Korea which still exists today, there was something tangible for their efforts. Vietnam? We lost that war, in part because of lack of support at home and in part because quite frankly the Powers That Be in the US didn't want to risk anything, so they prevented us so many times and ways of striking at the enemy. So you lose your friends for nothing, not one goddam thing, and you come home to find that possibly half the country and often the most vocal part hates your guts, not for losing but for shit you often didn't even do.
@@remo27 You said, "... there was no reason for Korean vets to feel a grudge, esp against guys who arguably had it worse than them." What do you base your opinion on? The Korean War and their Vets are all but forgotten while Vietnam Vets eventually got their deserved recognition. Which is worse being forgotten/unappreciated or eventually getting the deserved recognition? I saw being forgotten and ignored.
@@flobp2381 www.nps.gov/kowa/index.htm
Beautiful reaction. ❤
Yes. Hello. It's your viewers. Welcome back to us.
I saw this movie when I was 5,I only knew Rocky because Rocky 3 was on cable everyday around 1984(when I was 4) and because I was from Philadelphia I was aware of Rocky as a local fictional folk hero especially in south Philly. First Blood wasn’t released on VHS int late 1984(kids today don’t know the pain🤪😂) . I saw it late one night in early 85 when my uncle who was staying with us put it on and I absolutely loved it,I had no idea about the politics of the Vietnam war or the mood of the country when the novel was released but even as a child I empathized with Rambo and couldn’t wait to see the second one a few months later. To give an idea how young and naive I was,I thought it was called First Blood because Rambo was so tough that him falling through the trees was the first time he was ever cut and bled(hence First Blood🤦🏻♂️😂). Anyway I always appreciate this the most(and might prefer John Rambo to Rocky Balboa “gasp”😅) and though the sequels were all something completely different from this(except for 4) I’ve loved all of them,even Last Blood and I hope there’s one more
The ending was the first depiction of what we now refer to as PTSD experienced by soldiers in a mainstream Hollywood movie.
In guerilla warfare you want to disrupt supply lines like, fuel, food, ammunition and weapons so the enemy feels the fear of what is soon to come. Then add "shock and aw" of what seems like an unbeatable force with overpowering force and the fear destroys your enemy's will to fight or fight effectively.
You had me at :“There’s no salt there…”
Great reaction girl, greetings from perú
In the end of the book Rambo, John Rambo gave his speach to Troutman about the Vietnam War Troutman put his arms around Rambo and then apologized for what had happened to Rambo because of what was expected by the Army, then shot him in the head to release him from his pain. Stallone changed the end of the movie from the book so as not to suggest Vietnam Vets should be dealt with such extreme measures.
When this movie was made the Vietman war was only 7 years behind the calendar and there were still protestor from the war that would chastise veterans. After this movie there was an outpouring of support for Veterans.
One of the biggest differences of PTSD from WW2 and Korean war vets compared to Vietman vets was the time from the battlefield to the streets. After WW2 and Korea the soldiers were kept in-country for 6 months and then returned to the States by way of ships. They had time to work out the psycological trauma and what they had done and had done to them. My Grandfather who was involved with clearing obstacles during D-day didn't get home until April of 1946. My Uncle who served in a combat unit in Vietman was on the battlefield on day 335 of his deployment, was given a transport plane home on Day 336, and was walking on the streets day 337. He became a recluse from what he saw when he got home. He spent years with a psycologist to work out his mental issues caused by what had happened to him.
God Bless the American Soldiers who went through much the same.
3:40 we've got a psychic on our hands, people...