RAMBO FIRST BLOOD (1982) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 7 бер 2024
  • RAMBO FIRST BLOOD (1982) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION
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  • @jimtatro6550
    @jimtatro6550 2 місяці тому +1138

    The monologue Stallone gives at the end is the best acting he has ever done. This is the best of the Rambo films and it’s not even close.

    • @brandonlamb9067
      @brandonlamb9067 2 місяці тому +48

      I thought his speech in Rocky Balboa was his best acting but the ending of Rambo was good too

    • @gurulimbo
      @gurulimbo 2 місяці тому +6

      👍💯

    • @NelsonRoss
      @NelsonRoss 2 місяці тому +16

      Cool, someone already said this. Saves me time.

    • @scottlaughlin9897
      @scottlaughlin9897 2 місяці тому +16

      Agent orange was the name of it.

    • @user-qv2ur2bw3z
      @user-qv2ur2bw3z 2 місяці тому +21

      @@scottlaughlin9897 That stuff gave my Father-In-Law Cancer and we lost him in 2009 I Miss you Dad He was one of the lucky ones who never faced any protestors in his home town he was welcomed home and treated well thank god, His Dad was a fighter pilot in WWII and helped him so much when he came home.

  • @OcotilloTom
    @OcotilloTom 2 місяці тому +404

    I served 20 years in the Marine Corps and two combat tours in Vietnam 1965-66/1970-71 as a Infantry machine gunner (0331). Many of us came back...but like Rambo, some of us never came "Home".
    Tom Boyte,
    GySgt. USMC, retired

    • @margiegarcia9553
      @margiegarcia9553 2 місяці тому +16

      💜❤‍🩹 TYFYS

    • @HVACMarine
      @HVACMarine 2 місяці тому +22

      Semper Fi Gunny. Fellow 0331 here. 3 tours to Iraq. Appreciate you paving the way before us.
      Reply back if you ever need brother.

    • @OcotilloTom
      @OcotilloTom 2 місяці тому +16

      @@HVACMarine Thanks Marine! "Once a Marine, always a Marine". "Gunny" Tom

    • @JamesASharp
      @JamesASharp 2 місяці тому +13

      Thank you for your service.

    • @rayvanhorn1534
      @rayvanhorn1534 2 місяці тому +14

      From a retired USAF SNCO, I hold deep respect for the Vietnam veterans. My father was Marine Corp & fought in Korea. He went through some serious stuff. Much respect to you Gunny, I appreciate you brother...God bless.

  • @danaberman6929
    @danaberman6929 2 місяці тому +96

    My dad did 2 tours in Vietnam. He went a over a second time when his brother had to go. My dad was a Special Forces Airborne Medic... Still with us thankfully. He is a real life Hero. They all were..

    • @harrisonsaynor8568
      @harrisonsaynor8568 Місяць тому +1

      Did his brother make it?, hope so

    • @tomasznidaric3370
      @tomasznidaric3370 Місяць тому +1

      And whay go in war?! Not winer America, not vinter Vietnam.People daying for nothing, for stupid president.

  • @joecarr5412
    @joecarr5412 2 місяці тому +51

    The red- haired guard who wasnt feeling it,is a young David Caruso - CSI Miami tv show

    • @psalmsurfer1
      @psalmsurfer1 Місяць тому +1

      Didnt even make the connection wow

    • @ducksoff7236
      @ducksoff7236 Місяць тому +1

      The red- haired guard who wasnt feeling it,is a young David Caruso - NYPD Blue tv show

    • @michaelmurray3800
      @michaelmurray3800 27 днів тому

      I don't think I ever saw him play anything unrelated to being a cop.

    • @nigelpreddie6936
      @nigelpreddie6936 11 днів тому +1

      The red-haired guard who wasn't feeling it,is a young David Caruso - Hill Street Blues TV show

    • @michaelvaughn8864
      @michaelvaughn8864 4 дні тому

      Yeah, I noticed him😂 He must've been all of 25??

  • @johnmonk66
    @johnmonk66 2 місяці тому +508

    People forget Stallone started with movies that had heart.
    Rocky was a love story, this is a moral tale of how bad our own soldiers were treated by us.

    • @happyapple4269
      @happyapple4269 2 місяці тому +16

      He started off in porn. That's were he came up with the name 'Italian stallion'

    • @styles9956
      @styles9956 2 місяці тому +9

      @@happyapple4269yeah man he was a real up and comer back then.

    • @largecarr6185
      @largecarr6185 2 місяці тому +7

      Speak for yourself I've treated every veteran that I've ever seen or met with dignity and respect I have paid for a lot of Veterans for food homeless veterans hand them a 50 and a $20 bill and $100 bill went out to eat and solve military man coming in what is camels on with his wife and kids I talked to the waitress I said let me know what he's ordered so I can pay his bill for him and don't tell him I did it and not all of us are like what you're saying

    • @styles9956
      @styles9956 2 місяці тому +2

      @@largecarr6185lol why are you talking to.

    • @kiki_yagelovskaya
      @kiki_yagelovskaya 2 місяці тому

      Actually Stallone started with movies that were... different. 😄

  • @jasonavery
    @jasonavery 2 місяці тому +336

    My uncle was a Vietnam veteran. When we were kids we would ask him about the war. He’d get mad, slam his hand on the table and tell us to shut up. We finally got too afraid to ask him. One night, he was really drunk. He told us his platoon was surrounded on a hill and couldn’t get down. One of their men died, and they had to eat parts of him to survive. He also said one of his buddies had to shoot a kid who had a bomb attached to his chest because he was going to die anyway, but he didn’t want his men to die too. He cried and begged the kid to stop, he didn’t want to kill him. He had nightmares about shooting him and finally ended his life. He called him on the phone and did it while he was talking to my uncle. That final speech in this film haunts me. I’ve seen a Vietnam vet break down like that in real life, and it’s heartbreaking. Stallone really nailed it.

    • @andresramirezmolina
      @andresramirezmolina 2 місяці тому +31

      Hard to read, thank you for sharing! May they all rest in peace.

    • @HappyOne3
      @HappyOne3 2 місяці тому +18

      Yes and Jane Fonda would have applauded that. Very sad to read your uncle’s experience.

    • @AniwayasSong
      @AniwayasSong 2 місяці тому +23

      Papa had a 'Look.' Call it whatever ('Thousand yard stare'/etc.), when any of us would ask him about his experiences in 'Nam (Two tours). We quickly learned to not pry open those memories, but he never took it out on us/Momma. He'd leave home, sometimes for many days. He'd camp, meet-up with fellow Vets, and they'd share their trials and through that, manage to stay sane.
      When I signed up to become a Marine, following in his footsteps (And two of my three older brothers), he wept. I thought he was mad/disappointed with me, but he knew my heart, and all he said was to follow mine-own, Serve honorably, and never let anyone/anything take my heart/soul.
      I didn't understand some of that, till I Served.
      Now, it makes perfect sense.
      Horrible, what your Uncle and his fellows had to endure, just to survive.
      That you're here, and know about them?
      Never forget history.
      It is the most valuable of Teachers!

    • @jackgilchrist
      @jackgilchrist 2 місяці тому +12

      One of my uncles never talked about it period, but the other did once or twice when drunk.
      Like when his unit had been drinking in their camp, and my uncle got really drunk and passed out early, apparently in a mkre or less hidden place. Because when the Viet Cong came in later that night and murdered everyone in their sleep, they missed my Uncle. He woke up to find their body parts hanging around the camp.

    • @deborahdanhauer8525
      @deborahdanhauer8525 2 місяці тому +7

      Geeez…. That’s hard to read. I can’t imagine living through it.😔

  • @stuartj1234
    @stuartj1234 Місяць тому +19

    I have always said this was Stalones finest role. Its a great movie and it did alot to raise awareness of PTSD which really wasnt being done at the time.

  • @stephengartland2773
    @stephengartland2773 Місяць тому +5

    To all Vets who have commented- Welcome Home. We love you. My old man started his time in Vietnam in '67. He loved this movie, not for being realistic, but because of the feeling in it. He had a hard time when he came back. Even his family was afraid of him and, yes, he fought cops and went to jail. He eventually found Jesus and worked with the homeless for 35 years. He was a good man. We enjoyed the Rambo movies because it was always "Over the Top", but the feeling was right. My sister and I are neurologically affected by the chemicals that killed my dad, but we're very proud of him. That's the feeling behind Rambo. I tried putting his uniform together after he died, but the name bar was broken. I found it was broken because a bunch of hippies attacked him as he got off the plane, just wanting to go home. Apparently, he beat somewhere between 5 and 10 of them pretty badly and was sent to jail. The cops let him go because they understood. That's what Rambo is about. Sua Sponte!

  • @jameslawson2663
    @jameslawson2663 2 місяці тому +89

    This is NOT an exaggeration of how horrible Vietnam vets were treated all over our entire country. After being forced to go and fight.

    • @eastbayforever6970
      @eastbayforever6970 Місяць тому

      Why do you think that was ?

    • @alexanderdgray
      @alexanderdgray Місяць тому

      Serious questions. I heard Snopes and others investigate the "returning Viet Nam vets being spit on" legend and coming up empty. I don't need much convincing to believe that benefits promised by the government may not have been forthcoming, or that traumatic injuries may have been minimized or dismissed by the VA--but the Rambo's "who are they to protest me?" seems apocryphal. In at least some cases, those protesting were Viet Nam vets themselves---see John Kerry.

    • @TyTimeIsAwesome
      @TyTimeIsAwesome Місяць тому

      @@eastbayforever6970Because it was a war that the U.S. Government shouldn't have ever gotten into.

    • @angelgutierrez7341
      @angelgutierrez7341 Місяць тому

      Because of white liberals!​@@eastbayforever6970

    • @brentschmoeckel1420
      @brentschmoeckel1420 Місяць тому +5

      It was a shame how our Vietnam vets got treated. My dad was a Vietnam pet.

  • @merchillio
    @merchillio 2 місяці тому +197

    No one is ever ready for Stalone’s masterful performance at the end. He’s known for a lot of muscle-head roles, but he’s really a skilled actor

    • @BigBoss-zi5ss
      @BigBoss-zi5ss 2 місяці тому +9

      Copland also was such a great role he did..and the weight he gained to play the Sherrif and he took a huge pay cut just to show that he can act with Deniro and Liotta etc etc ...

    • @blackblake3658
      @blackblake3658 2 місяці тому +1

      He decided to go for the money. Liam Neeson did the same. But that's a personal choice. You can pursue better roles or more money. Rarely do you get both. Some great actors will do a franchise here and there and then go back to theater or indie films. Ralph Fiennes, Anthony Hopkins, and Kenneth Branagh went that route. Did they make as much as Sly or Liam? Nope. But those guys seem content with net worths of $50 million, $60 million to $100 million. They live modest lives and none of them have jacked up their face to appear younger because they aren't trying to get roles played by younger men.

    • @MitchClement-il6iq
      @MitchClement-il6iq 2 місяці тому

      Liam did the same 4 what? What are u rambling about???

    • @dnish6673
      @dnish6673 2 місяці тому +2

      @@MitchClement-il6iq He was an acclaimed serious actor and then started doing action roles for money. He pretty much does derivatives off of Taken now.

    • @phillipmorgan4627
      @phillipmorgan4627 2 місяці тому +3

      Every once in awhile Stallone shows off those chops. He's a severely underrated actor and writer

  • @the1317
    @the1317 2 місяці тому +3

    The Dirt Bike & Cop Car Chasse At The Beginning Is The Most Underrated Movie Chase Ever

  • @heidichristensen7919
    @heidichristensen7919 2 місяці тому +28

    One of my favorite movies. I was 12 when our soldiers were pulled out of Saigon in 1975. Watching it now, 50 years later, it still makes me cry. And makes me outraged.

    • @Brian_Patrick
      @Brian_Patrick 28 днів тому

      And then we did it again in Afghanistan.

  • @-blythe2986
    @-blythe2986 2 місяці тому +236

    My Dad is disabled Vietnam Vet and was a helicopter pilot who got shot down 5xs during the war.
    Agent Orange has been ravaging his body slowly since the war. Now late 70's it is really taking a toll on him in so many ways. Cancer multiple times, hearing loss, early onset dementia, diabetes, heart condition, etc. 🤬

    • @PaulaPates-ce1jd
      @PaulaPates-ce1jd 2 місяці тому +22

      Thanks for your father's sacrifice. He is in my prayers

    • @micpar2
      @micpar2 2 місяці тому +13

      Sorry to hear of your father's condition. I'm a veteran too but was lucky. I never had to fight in a war. Almost all my drill instructions were Vietnam veterans. Those men were hardcore, but were tough on us all for a reason. USMC 1982-88 Semper FI.

    • @kennyhuskisson2684
      @kennyhuskisson2684 2 місяці тому +10

      Your dad is a true hero! God Bless him, Thank You for your service Sir!🙏👍✌️

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 2 місяці тому +10

      Prayers for your dad, and our thanks, and a big thanks to your dad on behalf of my own dad. My father was a 2LT in the Mobile Riverine Force in 1968 - arrived shortly after that big "New Year's party" they threw, and stayed through 1968, meaning he rode in a lot of helicopters. He was actually shot down twice in a helicopter, and walked away both times without a scratch. He credits highly skilled helicopter pilots for saving his life both times, as well as countless other times.
      I want you to tell your dad something for me. I want you to tell him that my dad typically treats all veterans he meets with equal respect regardless of branch, rank, or age, and counts them as peers and equals, but there are only two types of veterans he immediately defers to when he meets them. One is Army Rangers - tell my dad that you were a Ranger, and he will give a nod of respect and say, "Rangers lead the way." The other is combat helicopter pilots. There is no form of military service that my father has a deeper and more abiding respect for than combat helicopter pilots, because they are the only reason that he still walks the Earth today. And by extension, they are the only reason that I exist to have this conversation with you. Will you tell your dad that for me, and give him my very deepest thanks for his service?

    • @Uriahjw
      @Uriahjw 2 місяці тому +5

      My uncle was a helicopter mechanic in Vietnam. He never talked about what he had to deal with over there, but I'm sure it was not good. I have been looking for the reel to reel tapes he made for my mom to listen to and try to capture his thoughts then.

  • @paulcollinsyoga
    @paulcollinsyoga 2 місяці тому +159

    This is a classic. The subsequent Rambo films are just action movies. First Blood is different. It has depth. And it has that unbelievable final dialogue by Stallone.

    • @trevoncarter4861
      @trevoncarter4861 2 місяці тому +8

      The subsequent films are fantastic !!!

    • @lldrax2
      @lldrax2 2 місяці тому

      They all have depth. The sequels let it be overshadowed by either frequently cheesy or extremely graphic (or both at the same time) action.

    • @MarkMonyhan1
      @MarkMonyhan1 2 місяці тому

      I agree 100%

    • @ange1098
      @ange1098 2 місяці тому +5

      The 4th Rambo is awesome

    • @antoinettelopes
      @antoinettelopes 2 місяці тому +4

      I'm not sure if I ever watched 2 & 3 but the later ones where he's older are really good.

  • @PrinceMagnum
    @PrinceMagnum Місяць тому +9

    Thank you to all of our veterans, especially our Vietnam Veterans... You all help me when I was diagnosed with PTSD from years of child abuse... You guys saved me....

    • @billyjoemacallister9524
      @billyjoemacallister9524 Місяць тому +2

      Desert Storm vet in a group therapy setting saved me in much the same manner. The compassion and shared pain, his empathy helped me on the road to recovery.

  • @ken_9359
    @ken_9359 18 днів тому +4

    I've met a handful of Vietnam Vets and they are the coolest people I ever met. Very down to Earth and a wicked sense of humor that I love. Much respect to the Vietnam Vets. The ones I knew in locksmith class was Jetski, Earthquake, Cat Burglar, 2 Fives & an Ace, and more that I forgot. Wish you all well and it was a pleasure meeting all you guys with so many different personalities. God bless our military and military veterans.

  • @Lovejazz01
    @Lovejazz01 2 місяці тому +47

    “ You don’t understand , I didn’t come here to save him from you , I came here to save you from him” always gave been my favorite line from a movie …

    • @poopsebeb
      @poopsebeb 2 місяці тому +6

      “To eat things that would make a Billy goat puke” was always my favourite

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi 2 місяці тому +5

      Troutman to Russian general in part 3 "God would have mercy. He won't."

    • @jasonkiefer1894
      @jasonkiefer1894 2 місяці тому +5

      @@poopsebeb Mine is, "To dispose of enemy personnel. To KILL! PERIOD!!" Conveys the brutality and FINALITY of want Rambo is capable of. He is a force you cannot stop.

  • @jamesa4793
    @jamesa4793 2 місяці тому +60

    55:40 “Where is everybody?”
    That’s the line that hits me the most. All the worst memories and no one left who can talk to him and relate. An isolation no one deserves.

  • @absolutely5376
    @absolutely5376 2 місяці тому +22

    Hey Jay and Amber. I volunteered in 78 and there was a still a bad attitude towards vets after Vietnam. I was fortunate enough to have served in peacetime at Ft. Bragg from 78 to 81. Still some, not all, nearby businesses would treat soldiers as if they were diseased even though they were making their money from the servicemen's dollars. You wouldn't think that so many americans (lower case a) would have have treated us so badly. I was fortunate compared to most of my Army brothers. Things changed in the early nineties for the veterans and I'm so glad they did. But I know how fast they can be turned on by their (supposed) own. I know y'all have alot of content and may not see this but the attitude was like this for vets after Vietnam. It's been a little hard for many of us that served in that time period to get over what some flag waving americans will really do. Bless both of you and bless your beautiful children. My wife and I sure do love y'all and your content. God bless!

  • @KarenLWhiting
    @KarenLWhiting 2 місяці тому +11

    Thank you, for giving respect to Vietnam Vets! My brother didn't make it home. I was 13. His brothers suffered. I am still in touch with them some over 50 odd years later. They are truly a great group of guys, who got a bad rep. They suffered as a result of agent orange. Wives who lost children, birth defects and cancer. They have endured a lot. Never got the respect they deserved. Spit on and called baby killers. Thank you so much Jay (sp?) and Amber! ❤️🥰

  • @61051208
    @61051208 2 місяці тому +112

    When my dad got back from Vietnam, after being drafted and being there for a little over a year, he was treated with disgust and backlash. In addition to that, my dad started fighting the government as our land was being taken away from us and we were being forced to move (We're Native American, Navajo, and were part of the land disputes without knowing what was going on). Every day the white government vehicles would destroy our crops and take our livestock. My dad was constantly being taken to jail as he fought to get our cattle back. It was awful. We were eventually forced off and had to relocate to other relatives homes, until we found a place to live. My dad was angry for a very long time and had terrible PTSD. It was challenging for him, and for us kids and my mom. My dad connects to this film and is always quiet by the end. He doesnt watch it all the time, but when he does, you can tell he is reflecting back on the hardships he endured and the terrible losses he encountered. Over the years my dad has learned to work through his PTSD, to which it will always be there, he's just learned to channel it differently. He goes to therapy, which has helped a ton. Unfortunately my dad is 100% disabled and fought many health issues due to his exposure to agent orange. For a time he was able to keep fighting, but now his body is breaking down and has cancer. This time, he feels the health "scare" more than he did before. I asked him a while ago how he was able to get through much of the challenges he endured. He said part of it was because he lived through the war when those he knew and his best friend didn't. He was part of the 101st Airborne unit, the Screaming Eagles and lived through his successful jumps. He was part of the 101st Airborne that fought in Shau Valley, essentially fighting at Hamburger Hill. He made it home unscathed, and he continued to live each day for those he lost there and the land that was taken from him. Eventually, he started living for us too, his family. I have never seen the other Rambo films, but I truly appreciate this film and what it captures, especially with how our troops were treated during that time. I'm glad you are watching this, especially the monologue at the end, and I hope you can read up more on this era. Its very eye opening.

    • @bethcushway458
      @bethcushway458 2 місяці тому +10

      Oh my god. I am so sorry for everything your Dad and your family have been through. The injustices of the US government against the native people is disgusting and to add the vile treatment Vietnam vets received, PTSD and illness on top of all that is just unimaginable. Sending love and strength to all of you ❤

    • @antoinettelopes
      @antoinettelopes 2 місяці тому +2

      🙏🏼

    • @colinweir3203
      @colinweir3203 2 місяці тому +5

      Support from Australia 🇦🇺 mate.

    • @annephillips8494
      @annephillips8494 2 місяці тому +2

      Native Americans always hev my Heart.I had a Book of NA Literature, you Poems and pieces of writing.Heartbreakingly beautiful..How the White Man hurts the Earth She is sore, from quarrying etc.I get it.🥲🙏. Some of us are waking up.💌🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @christophermorales2445
      @christophermorales2445 2 місяці тому +1

      I hope your dad is good & you as well.

  • @jamiemacdonald436
    @jamiemacdonald436 2 місяці тому +104

    Brian Dennehy did an amazing job in his role as the antagonist. I genuinely thought I didn't like him for years after this movie came out, but he's a really great actor and person.

    • @sdenison3463
      @sdenison3463 2 місяці тому +11

      You act opposite Brian Dennehy and he makes you better.

    • @eddyhernandez5869
      @eddyhernandez5869 2 місяці тому +9

      He also played John Wayne Gacy, in a movie called To catch a killer, true story about a serial killer in the Chicago area, check it out.

    • @3912James
      @3912James 2 місяці тому +9

      RIP.

    • @Sledg0matic
      @Sledg0matic 2 місяці тому +3

      The best people play the best villains, just like Mr. T in Rocky III.

    • @baird5776mullet
      @baird5776mullet 2 місяці тому +8

      Same thing happened to Andy Robinson in "DIRTY HARRY" he played such a good villain that he had a had time finding work afterword, he deserved an Academy Award for that role as Scorpio.

  • @brianvernon249
    @brianvernon249 2 місяці тому +9

    My parents, age 29, went to see this in an empty theater, except for 2 people. One of the two was a Stallone family member and thanked my parents for showing up. Like shook their hands and gave thanks. They described it over the years as: Honorable, humble and surreal.
    Edit: side note. John Ritter was in a made-for-tv movie about Agent Orange. It thrusted me into questioning my gov’t at an impressionable age.

  • @RCShadow
    @RCShadow 2 місяці тому +13

    "You'd walk by the ketchup in the fridge" is priceless lol.

  • @bazzer124
    @bazzer124 2 місяці тому +111

    As a vet with PTSD I would like to note that not all wounds are visible. I cannot speak for others, but the VA helped me adjust and adapt and does a great job for vets seeking help. Cheers....

    • @punkem733
      @punkem733 2 місяці тому +2

      Does a great job? LOL The horror stories that come out from MANY vets with that system. So they do help some vets, interesting...

    • @flaysol7719
      @flaysol7719 2 місяці тому

      Veterinarian with PTSD 😂😂😂jk

    • @bazzer124
      @bazzer124 2 місяці тому +2

      @@punkem733I've heard stories, too, hence the I cannot speak for others part. Remember that there are over 16 million veterans in the US so the system can sometimes be overburdened. Cheers....

    • @user-ol4dn4re3w
      @user-ol4dn4re3w 2 місяці тому +1

      @@punkem733 You've got to have the right people running it. When the welfare of the Vets is made a priority, then the VA is a wonderful resource for us (I'm a Retired Vet of 20 years), and have had some good experiences with them. However, when politicians have a different agenda and their Party a different set of priorities, and other interests groups placed ahead of the Vets, then it's a whole different story. So whose in charge of our nation makes a big difference. I don't want to get political and won't tell someone who to Vote for. All I'll say is everyone should do their own research, see which Party or candidates priotize the Vets more, and put their needs, those who've served over those who haven't, or aren't even American at all. That's who I vote for and recommend other Americans to Vote for also.

    • @bazzer124
      @bazzer124 2 місяці тому +4

      @@user-ol4dn4re3wthank you both for your sacrifices and insight. Throughout my military career and as a silly-vilian I have kept my eye on those who choose to help, not hinder. I'm not a sucker. I'm not a loser. Thanks for some sound advice, sir. Cheers....

  • @fernandocuriel124
    @fernandocuriel124 2 місяці тому +106

    ABOUT TIME!! Rambo is one of the best action movies from the 1980s. LOVE THE 80s!!

    • @skullberry9000
      @skullberry9000 2 місяці тому +5

      Yup, the 80's were the best of times. Half way through the 90's things started falling apart. It's just been picking up speed ever since.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi 2 місяці тому +1

      One of the best, period. And I'd give Commando a .000001% edge in action. Nowhere near as good, but probably a more "fun" movie (If that makes sense lol).

  • @JamesASharp
    @JamesASharp 2 місяці тому +8

    This film has aged very well. Great reaction! 👍🏿

  • @brucekastel707
    @brucekastel707 2 місяці тому +7

    Jimmy Lyle from Russellville Arkansas made that knife. He since passed away but was will always be remembered as a master in his craft.

  • @Deadwood1919
    @Deadwood1919 2 місяці тому +96

    The Vietnam soldiers were treated like dirt in the US when they returned. So that sheriff attitude was commonplace. And the chemical was known as Agent Orange, meant to kill the vegetation so the military could see where they were fighting. Highly poisonous.
    This was an awesome movie for that topic, even with the over-the-top elements.

    • @williamswiniuch7527
      @williamswiniuch7527 2 місяці тому +8

      It explains it a little better in the book too. He was a Korean War veteran who was jealous that they were overshadowed by the Vietnam veterans

    • @blgeiger71
      @blgeiger71 2 місяці тому +18

      Let us not forget that the primary reason for the despicable treatment of Vietnam Vets who made it home was due in large part to the ways that the US media reported on the war, with "celebrity" endorsements and involvement from the likes of Senator John "F'n" Kerry and "Hanoi Jane" Fonda...some things never change, it seems! Ughhh

    • @wallyboy6666
      @wallyboy6666 2 місяці тому +12

      ​@@blgeiger71
      I wish I could upvote this many times.
      Jane Fonda still makes my skin crawl!

    • @HappyOne3
      @HappyOne3 2 місяці тому

      Yes because they fought against the communists In Viet Nam. So the communists in America desecrated them when they returned, and no fault of their own as majority were drafted. Thanks to scum like Jane Fonda and other ilk they were spit on among other travesties.

    • @snwlcke3
      @snwlcke3 2 місяці тому +3

      @@blgeiger71 Dont forget either that it was also a war where the draft was used and not all that were sent to go wanted to go. And unless you want to kid yourself about all of the around 1.9 million that were sent over ten years being ready and willing. Then you need to accept and understand the protests against it.
      And I hope you arent just blaming "leftists" for how Vietnam Vets were treated. Because if you are, you werent paying attention to the film, where it was a down home by the book law and order small town sheriff, who in the book, who was a Korean war vet that started this all. Vietnam vets were treated horrible across the board. I can remember my own father who was a navy WW2 vet in the Pacific saying the reason we lost was because they lacked commitment and were just using drugs over there and back in his day they would have just leveled the country.

  • @sodoffbaldrick3038
    @sodoffbaldrick3038 2 місяці тому +109

    My husband was 5th group Special Forces (Green Berets) in Vietnam for three tours of duty, where his being sprayed with Agent Orange several times was the least of his worries. When he returned to the United States the first thing he and one of his flight companions did was get a drink at the airport bar. Sure enough, he was sitting there minding his own business, happy to be alive, happy to be back in the United States, when somebody came up and called him a baby killer. Yeah, welcome back to the United States.. we're so proud of you... thanks for your service. When we watched this movie he kept pointing out all the flaws in the way Rambo constructed traps,etcetera, etcetera, to the point where I finally had to say to him this is supposed to be entertainment, not a training film. I think, in a way, pointing out all the Hollywood stuff helped him get through this film.

    • @terryv2006
      @terryv2006 2 місяці тому +10

      And thank for your service as well. Spouses of veterans gave their all too.

    • @silverbane1977
      @silverbane1977 2 місяці тому +6

      Thank Your Husband for His service, please.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 2 місяці тому

      @@silverbane1977 Why, was the US under attack?

    • @ronweber1402
      @ronweber1402 2 місяці тому +5

      @@bwana-ma-coo-bah425 No but most weren't there by choice, they were drafted. The Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts were soldiered by a volunteer army but Vietnam and Korea were different they were mostly conscripts who had no choice or be jailed. Mohammad Ali famously went to jail rather than fight a "white man's war".
      I just checked he was sentenced to five years but on appeal ended up paying a $10,000 fine and he was stripped of his titles and prohibited from boxing for five years.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 2 місяці тому

      @@ronweber1402 Then if the US was not under attack, why did the US go there? Is it because the US is just a war mongering nation?

  • @ken_9359
    @ken_9359 18 днів тому +2

    Funniest statement, "You pass the ketchup in the fridge when you're looking for it." LOL!

  • @walterf5502
    @walterf5502 2 місяці тому +4

    Been a minute since I saw Rambo movie. I remember when it came out at the theatre. I was in my 4th year in the Marines and was about to start my reserve time. Viet Nam was still fresh in our country minds. My Uncle was a Viet Nam Vet and my other Uncles, and my father were Korean and WW2 vets. All had stories to tell. My father was a WW2 POW. He told me stories as my Uncles about all the wars. It doesn`t matter, War is War. I have my inner demons to this day I cannot hide. I still have troubles that I keep to myself. It hurts in so many ways. Images I ask God to help me understand. In my 60`s now and it something we vets deal with. Back in the day Viet Nam vets really got a bad rap. I remember in the 70`s I just arrived at the Grey Hound Bus Station and I was taking the local bus to go home. I remember how people stared at me in my uniform and gear bag. I wasn`t a hero to them. Couldn`t wait to go home to my Veteran Dad and lay in my bed. Asking myself "Why?"

  • @thomashorton5715
    @thomashorton5715 2 місяці тому +132

    The chemical was called agent orange

    • @sleven8730
      @sleven8730 2 місяці тому +3

      It's still around today, because of the extremely bad press it was renamed to ROUND UP.

    • @blueblood76
      @blueblood76 2 місяці тому +1

      That is true and they had many different colors of it.

    • @stevencosta2432
      @stevencosta2432 2 місяці тому +2

      Agent orange was named after the orange barrels it was stored in. It was a defoliant herbicide used to kill jungle foliage and expose the enemy combatants

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 2 місяці тому +8

      The chemical was called Agent Orange but what Amber is referring to is the REM song "Orange Crush," which they listened to on their music reaction channel. She was on the right track, because the song is about Vietnam vets and Agent Orange. According to Mike Mills, bassist for REM: "Like most of our stuff it’s definitely an anti-war song, but it’s a subtle one. There was no real sign that it was a big protest song, so most people listened to it and didn’t realize. It’s most directly related to the indiscriminate use of Agent Orange in the deforestation of Vietnam and the horrible effect it had on everyone, from soldiers to civilians. It was just a terrible poison that was so widely used it caused a lot of pain and misery. Yes, there was some irony in the sweet deliciousness of the pop drink versus the horrible effects of this chemical. The ironic juxtaposition of those two terms was no accident.”

    • @jeffreysmith236
      @jeffreysmith236 2 місяці тому

      @@sleven8730 Agent Orange was constitued of 2 organic chemicals, I knew what they were 30 years ago, not anymore, but neither was glyphosate, which is RoundUp. RoundUp is so far noncarcinogenic, but still very bad to be all in our enviroment.

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 2 місяці тому +115

    Agent Orange was the chemical defoliant we sprayed on the jungle in Vietnam.
    The Sheriff wasn't part of the anti-war/ veteran hate common at the time, he was a veteran himself (you can see the Distinguished Service Cross, the Purple Heart, and the Silver Star in his office). He was bitter that his own war, the Korean War, was forgotten and ignored.
    The redhead deputy was David Caruso.
    The onscreen body count of this movie was only 1 (though the car crashes could easily have been fatal).
    It's hard to hear, but the sobbing monologue at the end was about Rambo's friend being blown up by a kid with a shoe shine box bomb in Vietnam, that he can't go driving with him after the war because he can't find his legs.
    Instead of receiving treatment, Rambo is imprisoned for this incident.
    In future movies, the colonel exploits Rambo, an emotionally and mentally scarred veteran and convict, for his own private, illegal wars. In the end, nothing was learned from this movie, and the next ones were strictly about body count as opposed to the more realistic action in this movie.
    Speaking as a veteran myself, I find this movie to be an incredibly important statement on both the treatment of Vietnam veterans and the problems you can see to this day about the identification and treatment of PTSD. I have my own thoughts about how to solve some of these problems, but no one will listen.

    • @bmriverrat11
      @bmriverrat11 2 місяці тому +11

      In reality there shouldn't be a Rambo part two and three because of the book......no spoilers but there's only one book for a reason....

    • @ChicagoTRS
      @ChicagoTRS 2 місяці тому +5

      Thank you for your service brother

    • @strangebiped
      @strangebiped 2 місяці тому

      Thanks for explaining those "photos & things" in the Sheriff's office. No one talked about them in the movie, but I just knew there was 'info' there that was the motivation for the Sheriff's hatred. Yeah, Korea. As a school student I watched all those Black & White movies about the Horrible COLD CONDITIONS, The BLARING HORNS just before MASS ATTACKS by the COMMIE BASTARDS, and the TOTAL INSANITY of that WAR.

    • @1977rw
      @1977rw 2 місяці тому +7

      The one death wasn't even really Rambo's fault.

    • @davidsavage5630
      @davidsavage5630 2 місяці тому +6

      I don't agree that he exploits him. He's in prison at the start of the second one and Trautman gives Rambo a choice that will get him out of prison if he chooses. He doesn't lie to him about what the mission entails. And Rambo himself chose to go help in the third one. I dunno....I just don't see it as Trautman exploiting him..

  • @themostunknown2293
    @themostunknown2293 Місяць тому +3

    There are 5 Rambo films and all are worth watching!!!!!! Even the final one in 2019 was worth watching!

  • @jonw8694
    @jonw8694 Місяць тому +1

    This was the first movie I remember watching that actually demonstrated PTSD and how it affected returning veterans. I was too young to really appreciate that aspect of the movie at the time, but in the decades since then I appreciate First Blood more and more.

  • @JuanNunez2023
    @JuanNunez2023 2 місяці тому +90

    People forget that Stallone is a great screenwriter. The first two Rocky movies and First Blood are some of the best screenplays of their era.

    • @cshubs
      @cshubs 2 місяці тому +2

      It's a shame he was in some real stinkers after that.

    • @user-mg5mv2tn8q
      @user-mg5mv2tn8q 2 місяці тому +4

      To his credit, Stallone has said he regrets many of the career decisions he made at the peak of his success.

    • @LeviBoldock
      @LeviBoldock 2 місяці тому +2

      There were two other writers for First Blood. Don't give him all the credit.

    • @cshubs
      @cshubs 2 місяці тому +4

      @@LeviBoldock Plus it was based on an existing book.

    • @TheJoshuaPimentel
      @TheJoshuaPimentel 2 місяці тому

      He was also an og pr0n star

  • @johnnielson4341
    @johnnielson4341 2 місяці тому +72

    10:40 The "redheaded guy" is David Caruso who starred CSI: Miami for a number of seasons.

    • @fernandocuriel124
      @fernandocuriel124 2 місяці тому +7

      Yep. You noticed, WOW!!

    • @kevinmclaughlin1092
      @kevinmclaughlin1092 2 місяці тому +13

      Also, he was in the first season of NYPD Blue.

    • @mostmost1
      @mostmost1 2 місяці тому +2

      Wow, I didn't recognize him and I saw this movie many times.

    • @Kathe255
      @Kathe255 2 місяці тому +2

      Also in An Officer and a Gentleman.

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 2 місяці тому +6

      Yeah, when I first watched CSI: Miami, I remember thinking, "Hey! It's that guy from First Blood!"

  • @bobbyscarfo2544
    @bobbyscarfo2544 2 місяці тому +2

    Stallones acting at the end of this film is his BEST EVER. 5 Minutes of pure gold. The sad fact is this is how our Vietnam Vets were treated. Not me.... no way... you Vets are true Heros in my eyes! Thank you from this 57 year old man.

  • @watchmanonthewall14
    @watchmanonthewall14 Місяць тому +2

    RIP Richard Crena. He played a masterful part in this movie series.

  • @RyneMurray23
    @RyneMurray23 2 місяці тому +35

    All of these movies are worth watching. I especially like the scene where Troutman tells the Sheriff "Strictly he slipped up, you're lucky to be breathing" 😂

  • @andrewpetik2034
    @andrewpetik2034 2 місяці тому +50

    Rambo is reaching three main objectives...
    Destroy fuel supply
    Destroy ammo depots
    Cut power supplies

    • @johnrule1607
      @johnrule1607 2 місяці тому +4

      I've seen this movie many times and never thought of it that way. Very observant!

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 2 місяці тому +6

      It was what he was trained to do, it is the way you incapacitate your enemy

    • @lazykbys
      @lazykbys 2 місяці тому +5

      IIRC, when captured his goals were survival, escape, and sabotage. The last one includes making the enemy use as much resources on you (including manpower) as possible, hence his extreme noncooperation with the police.

    • @Grimlock1975
      @Grimlock1975 2 місяці тому +5

      Love how he wasn't killing people but wounding them. You kill one person that's just one person taken out, you injure them and it takes them and another person to care for them out of the game.

    • @clevelandcbi
      @clevelandcbi 2 місяці тому +3

      That's where Japan failed in Pearl Harbor. Picked a weekend so most soldiers had weekend leave from the base. Didn't destroy the vitals that would have crippled our fleet. They went for the ships and nothing else.

  • @phildureau1279
    @phildureau1279 2 місяці тому +2

    This was filmed in and around Hope, British Columbia, Canada. It's about 100 miles outside Vancouver.

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 2 місяці тому +47

    Brian Dennehy was such a good actor. In all the movies I saw with him in it, he had a presence on the screen.

    • @johnrule1607
      @johnrule1607 2 місяці тому +12

      Certainly the sign of a good actor must be when you forget that he's acting and end up hating him because of the character he plays.

    • @JohnWelsh-oz3jz
      @JohnWelsh-oz3jz 2 місяці тому

      @@johnrule1607 Jack Gleeson a.k.a. Joffrey anyone?

    • @johnrule1607
      @johnrule1607 2 місяці тому +1

      @@JohnWelsh-oz3jz I never watched Game of Thrones.

    • @DayTrooperGW
      @DayTrooperGW Місяць тому +1

      Brian Dennehy can definitely pull off the intimidating character-type no doubt!

  • @oneisnone7350
    @oneisnone7350 2 місяці тому +70

    The ending changes the movie entirely. A masterpiece.

    • @billyjoemacallister9524
      @billyjoemacallister9524 Місяць тому

      It’s different from the book as well. Much darker on the page than as shot.

  • @victormagana7940
    @victormagana7940 Місяць тому +1

    I was a physical therapy aide and worked with many Veterans. I really enjoyed working with them and i really wished the best in life and find the strength to overcome their demons. One veteran asked me to do him a favor. He asked if i ever happen to meet a vietnam vet, to tell them 'welcome home' because some never received a warm welcome.
    One day i met a vietnam vet in the facility and i said 'welcome home.' This man looked like he was born with nothing but testosterone. He looked at me, hugged me and cried a bit.
    They dont just sacrafice their lives but their souls. I will always pay my respect and gratitude for their service.

  • @sharonellis8776
    @sharonellis8776 Місяць тому +1

    Sylvester should have won an Oscar for this performance xx

    • @Mickey-kh9hb
      @Mickey-kh9hb 7 днів тому

      I have to agree wholeheartedly

  • @JohnWelsh-oz3jz
    @JohnWelsh-oz3jz 2 місяці тому +48

    Sheriff Will Teasle: “It’s a quiet little town. In fact, you might say it’s boring. But that’s the way we like it. And I get paid to keep it that way.”
    Has anyone in the history of the world so thoroughly, completely, and absolutely failed at their job as this guy?

    • @richardgazinia5482
      @richardgazinia5482 2 місяці тому +2

      All the Sherriff had to do was give him a meal and then he'd probably have left town on his own. 40+ years later and the Sherriff's reaction when first meeting Rambo still puzzles me.

    • @thumper7047
      @thumper7047 2 місяці тому +2

      @@richardgazinia5482 I would not have only shown him a place to eat, I would have bought him a damn sandwich, then drove him to the edge of town (if that is what he wanted) or shown him a warm place to rest for the night. A damn veteran deserves a little more respect than that Sherrif was willing to give for sure.

    • @Mr.Ekshin
      @Mr.Ekshin 2 місяці тому +6

      Has anyone in the history of the world so thoroughly, completely, and absolutely failed at their job as this guy?
      - Ummmm ..... Biden?

    • @buckbuchanan4902
      @buckbuchanan4902 2 місяці тому +2

      @@Mr.Ekshin You beat me by 14 minutes! I was going to say the same thing!

    • @TriarchVisgroup
      @TriarchVisgroup 2 місяці тому

      @@richardgazinia5482 Yeah, it's because the backstory of some of the sheriffs was basically left out entirely. Teasle was a Korean War vet. Those guys basically got completely forgotten, and apparently there was some animosity between some Korean War vets and the Vietnam Vets who they thought were being babies. This was a small minority of soldiers, of course, but Teasle is one of them. Which is why he refers to Rambo as "your type."

  • @LordEriolTolkien
    @LordEriolTolkien 2 місяці тому +52

    The Cliff Dive/self repair sequence forever cemented Rambo and Stallone as bad ass hero. And every boy of that era wanted a Rambo knife. The knife had a hollow handle topped with a little compass, able to hold some matches, fishing line/hooks, and maybe some other small things

    • @waynelowe3329
      @waynelowe3329 2 місяці тому +4

      You could buy them back then for around £15 here in the uk i had 1 they weren't very good knives but it was the fact it was a Rambo knife that mattered.

    • @LordEriolTolkien
      @LordEriolTolkien 2 місяці тому +4

      @@waynelowe3329 Yah, they were weak and rusted easily, but they had a hollow handle with a Compass, and Matches, man!

    • @LordEriolTolkien
      @LordEriolTolkien 2 місяці тому

      @@waynelowe3329 >>In a 2011 article for Blade Magazine, by Mike Carter, credit is given to Morrell and the Rambo franchise for revitalizing the cutlery industry in the 1980s due to the presence of the Jimmy Lile and Gil Hibben knives used in the films
      -wiki

    • @bill45colt
      @bill45colt 2 місяці тому

      @@LordEriolTolkien later versions were stainless,,,i have 3 one in the floor of the front of my truck jeep and car,,,,,i had several friends go and not come back, one was killed on his first day on the front,,,one was never found, blown over the side of an aircraft carrier with jet exhaust, some came home in caskets,, a few wounded, but all scarred by the experience. I got into the coast guard and spent my time in san francisco bay chasing speed boats who were being unsafe or too many on a boat and silly chasing drunks and druggies. Luck was with me and i didnt have to leave america,,,,i have strong feelings for my friends who never came back and for the few left alive now who are deeply scarred on a useless war,,,,,

    • @rmacdougallaliasdogviticus
      @rmacdougallaliasdogviticus 2 місяці тому +4

      Had one, lol.

  • @welrod94
    @welrod94 2 місяці тому +2

    Anyone that grew up watching this movie a million times. I recommend trying to find the guy on tiktok that shows then and now old movie locations. Its cool seeing what it looks like now. When Rambo finds that old abandoned truck and he cuts that tarp or whatever. That abandoned truck is still there. Idk i thought it was cool

  • @Tator-cp2ii
    @Tator-cp2ii 2 місяці тому +47

    My friend that is a genuine Rambo survival knife. As kids we all had them after these movies came out.

    • @wesdoobner7521
      @wesdoobner7521 2 місяці тому +1

      there was some speculation at the time that the movie was just a vehicle to sell Rambo knives.

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 2 місяці тому +8

      As kids, we all had Rambo knives and ninja stars. The 80s were wild, y'all.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 2 місяці тому

      @@wesdoobner7521its called marketing.

    • @jamiedorsey4167
      @jamiedorsey4167 2 місяці тому +1

      I got mine.

    • @scm021374
      @scm021374 2 місяці тому +3

      I still have mine

  • @karlsmith2570
    @karlsmith2570 2 місяці тому +33

    18:36
    In that scene, Sylvester Stallone actually cracked a couple of ribs when he'd landed in those branches, so when he'd yelled out in pain, that was a genuine reaction

    • @Faltor895
      @Faltor895 2 місяці тому +1

      Stallone, man, he's willing to suffer for his art.

    • @stefanstock953
      @stefanstock953 2 місяці тому +1

      and he really stiched the cut himself, cause he not only cracked his rips, he also cut his arm. you can see the scar for a second in few of his Rocky movies

    • @karlsmith2570
      @karlsmith2570 2 місяці тому +2

      @@stefanstock953 I'd forgotten about the cut on his arm being real

    • @stefanstock953
      @stefanstock953 2 місяці тому

      @@karlsmith2570 Sorry, you don't need to explain yourself. I sound like I'm correcting a first grader, that wasn't my intention. Please excuse me

    • @karlsmith2570
      @karlsmith2570 2 місяці тому +1

      @stefanstock953 no need to apologize, I was simply stating that I had forgotten about Sylvester getting that was real and not staged

  • @pressman1788
    @pressman1788 2 місяці тому +2

    The scene where Rambo busts through the police road block is such a well shot scene.

  • @pulsarstargrave256
    @pulsarstargrave256 2 місяці тому +3

    The only Rambo movie I actually enjoy. Great performances all around.

    • @sougetsukazama
      @sougetsukazama 2 місяці тому

      I dunno 2 where he got to fall in love and the fourth where he rescues to volunteers are pretty epic.

  • @daveowens9849
    @daveowens9849 2 місяці тому +35

    Wife and I watched the reaction and she suddenly realized we didn't have Rambo series in our Blu Ray library. So, she ordered them. And yeah, when I served in the Army after Vietnam, I was on a college campus trying to register for one stupid class as a soldier, and a pretty hippy blonde girl spit on me. Turned around and never went back to that college campus. Did eventually graduate from Indiana University as a non-traditional student with three kids, twenty years after I graduated high school! Never let the haters win! Hooah!

    • @willielarimer7170
      @willielarimer7170 2 місяці тому +8

      I'm sorry you had to go through that, I was at a pharmacy and saw a Vietnam vet, he was a helicopter pilot I thanked him for his service and shook his hand, I thought the poor man was going to cry

    • @vicenteluismeninasaldo6945
      @vicenteluismeninasaldo6945 Місяць тому +1

      Hurra!

  • @SuperDeadend13
    @SuperDeadend13 2 місяці тому +60

    "Cop Land" is a underrated masterpiece that you'd like, Amber.

    • @galvestoncandlecompany5696
      @galvestoncandlecompany5696 2 місяці тому +8

      I just watched that again. Still great. RIP Ray Liotta

    • @williamhughes3457
      @williamhughes3457 2 місяці тому +8

      I thought Cop Land was Stallone’s best acting.

    • @scooby1992
      @scooby1992 2 місяці тому +3

      I agree . I think it also had Robert De Niro and Harvey Keitel in it .

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@scooby1992 - it did

    • @walterrutherford8321
      @walterrutherford8321 2 місяці тому

      I’ll have to watch it. I think Daylight as a (claustrophobic) sleeper, too.

  • @elcaminosoldier1
    @elcaminosoldier1 11 днів тому

    In the book First Blood the Sheriiff is a Korean War Veteran in the movie you can see his medals on the wall in his office. He didn't like Rambo because even though he was a Vietnam Vet Korean War Vets weren't as praised compared to WW2 Vets and it wasn't as remembered as Vietnam. The Korean War is also known as "The Forgotten War" because it was so close in proximity to WW2

  • @YouDontKnowMe2011.9
    @YouDontKnowMe2011.9 2 місяці тому +1

    Your reactions to this movie was great. You guys talked about things that most reviewers don't talk about. when the final scene was over, the blank look on your faces was the same look people who haven't seen this movie get. It catches everybody off guard. Now, you both need to read the book. It's completely different, but gets you to understand what the main characters were thinking. It's a must read.

  • @DeltaDragon79
    @DeltaDragon79 2 місяці тому +28

    A lot of reactors who haven't watched the Rambo movies think of Rambo as a light hearted one dimensional 80's type of 'shoot everything' character. It's quite interesting to see reactions to First Blood and how deep and emotional a character John Rambo was.

  • @johnm.3279
    @johnm.3279 2 місяці тому +46

    Fun fact - The actor (Jack Starrett) that played Deputy Art Galt was also the guy that played Gabby Johnson (genuine frontier gibberish) in Blazing Saddles.

    • @andrewpetik2034
      @andrewpetik2034 2 місяці тому +6

      I had no idea!
      That is cool to know.

    • @stevejette2329
      @stevejette2329 2 місяці тому +4

      johnm - OMG I would have never got that !! Thx

    • @stevesheroan4131
      @stevesheroan4131 2 місяці тому +4

      Beat me to it!

    • @andrewpetik2034
      @andrewpetik2034 2 місяці тому +6

      I have that scene going through my head....
      '....and no bushwhackin', sidewindin', hornswagglin', cracker- croaker is gonna rouine me bishencudder!'
      'Now who can argue with that!?'
      🤣

    • @stevejette2329
      @stevejette2329 2 місяці тому +5

      @@andrewpetik2034
      Genuine frontier gibberish

  • @jackskillet
    @jackskillet 2 місяці тому

    A little tribute to Richard Crenna...Richard Donald Crenna (November 30, 1926 - January 17, 2003) was an American actor.In,1949 he started playing Walter "Bronco" Thompson on the radio show The Great Gildersleeve, a role he played until 1954. He also originated the role of geeky Walter Denton on the radio comedy Our Miss Brooks alongside Eve Arden and Gale Gordon in 1948,Crenna starred in such motion pictures as The Sand Pebbles, Wait Until Dark, Un Flic, Body Heat, the first three Rambo films and The Flamingo Kid. His work on radio was fantastic...Radios show from the 40's and 50's were very Important to American History

  • @anthonys.5653
    @anthonys.5653 2 місяці тому

    I'm 51 now, but I was 10 years old when this movie came out. After we saw this movie, me and my friends all got replica Rambo knives. Those who remember, those knifes had a tiny little survival kit in the handle. Anyways, we were in the woods building forts, doing bush craft,( before bush craft got very popular). But we would spend all weekend long in the woods building these forts, non-lethal traps...thinking we were Rambo..lol

  • @trapperjakk
    @trapperjakk 2 місяці тому +40

    This movie was shot in Hope, British Columbia, Canada. Truly amazing, lived in the area for many years.

    • @chrisgobeil4751
      @chrisgobeil4751 2 місяці тому +3

      Came here to say this, NOT N.E. but western Canada.

    • @denisesf5
      @denisesf5 2 місяці тому +1

      Me too...just commented the same!😊

    • @davestang5454
      @davestang5454 2 місяці тому +2

      There actually is a sign that says "HOPE" in the movie.

    • @chrisgobeil4751
      @chrisgobeil4751 2 місяці тому

      @@davestang5454 there are a few if you watch, the Hope Hotel sign is in there too.

  • @tommyrhoads7093
    @tommyrhoads7093 2 місяці тому +13

    I went to see this when it was in theaters. There was a Vietnam war age guy sitting a couple of rows in front of me. I saw him crying during the final scene. I still think about that guy every time I watch this movie. You never know what someone has gone through

  • @raymondrhodes1807
    @raymondrhodes1807 2 місяці тому +1

    My dad and Uncles are Vietnam Vets. They came home from that hell to groups of people spitting and throwing trash at them. Calling them baby killers and other disgusting behaviors... I am an OIF vet myself, and we never had it as terrible as the Vietnam guys. Thank you guys for an honest reaction to this movie. Thank you to all the vets and their families and those who sacrificed it all. God bless you guys! Yeah, Rocky, Rambo, Robocop were the 3 Rs of my childhood! P.s. I'm an Okie too!

  • @stevef2305
    @stevef2305 Місяць тому

    For those interested, this movie was filmed in and around a little town called Hope in British Columbia Canada.
    It's about a 2 hour drive east of Vancouver.
    There's lots of beautiful scenic sights in this area.

  • @johnnielson4341
    @johnnielson4341 2 місяці тому +27

    The closing scene gets to me every time.

  • @raiderray1954
    @raiderray1954 2 місяці тому +22

    The Rambo knife was something we got in the early 80’s. Had a compass and inside there’s a needle and tread and matches for survival. Great movie

    • @gavinyoung7085
      @gavinyoung7085 2 місяці тому +5

      Yep I had one in New Zealand called a Survival Knife. The compass was on the end of the handle and it unscrewed and matches and other stuff was inside the handle

    • @alexandrelachapelle4597
      @alexandrelachapelle4597 2 місяці тому +2

      Bought mine at a flee market, one camo, one black. Was cheap quality but made you feel special.

    • @raiderray1954
      @raiderray1954 2 місяці тому

      @@alexandrelachapelle4597 same here. They were junk but looked cool

    • @user-qj6fk9px8l
      @user-qj6fk9px8l 2 місяці тому +1

      my brother was in Navy from '61-'66, like most other vets, he gave only limited info about his service.... He died in 2012, & all of us brothers were together for about a month while he was still going strong... His survival knife was 1 of the things that he was very proud of still having to give to his son.
      *The only service that he spoke of was as a Gunner's Mate on a ship (possibly the USS Bainbridge), & we had pictures from Subic Bay one Christmas of 64 or 65. The only other time he talked about stuff was after **_Apocolypse Now_** came out, & he talked about short period where he & several dozen others were on short-time transfers to River Boats to help rescue pilots in the Delta area.*
      Regarding his knife, he said (and I do not know at what point in his service) that several of his buddies attempted Seal Team try-outs, and if you gave up & 'rang the bell', your knife was taken & the blade tip broken off in a "dishonoring" ceremony to those sailors.... like back when Dishonorably Discharged cavalry soldiers had their sabers broken in a ceremony kicking them out of Army.

  • @bobbierobinson6269
    @bobbierobinson6269 24 дні тому

    From a small town in north Mississippi. I'm glad to say that our vets are always hailed as heroes. There maybe a few people from "up north" (anyone from a big city😂) who didn't like it, but didn't want hurt so they stayed quiet for the most part.

  • @Vinylrebel72
    @Vinylrebel72 2 місяці тому +1

    Those knives are survival knives….here in Texas we called them Rambo knives….they have a compass, and fishing line and hook, some have whistles….i own one.

  • @rossaldrich6357
    @rossaldrich6357 2 місяці тому +33

    It's filmed in the Northwest, in the town of Hope, British Columbia, Canada

    • @ciaranmeeks9431
      @ciaranmeeks9431 2 місяці тому +6

      Been there many times. They still take a lot of pride in Rambo too. Theres a statue commemorating the film and character, and you can pick up merch at many of the stores. Nice little town!

  • @paulayala6174
    @paulayala6174 2 місяці тому +27

    Most people don't realize how Rambo knew to navigate his way out of the mine. You'll notice that when he lights his make shift torch, and assesses the situation, the flame is indicating there is a slight breeze. That tells him there is an opening, most likely a venting shaft. That tells him which way to go to get to it. And the water stream and rats also indicate there is another exit. Part of survival skills is the simple ability to stay focused, analyze the situation, think of a solution, then calmly execute.

  • @stevenslane3074
    @stevenslane3074 2 місяці тому

    Brian Denehey played a very good part as Sheriff, perfect part for him. R.I.P. Brian

  • @LordEriolTolkien
    @LordEriolTolkien 2 місяці тому +16

    I am at first amazed that Anyone has not seen this movie, and then i remember, i am old..

  • @dustinjones8887
    @dustinjones8887 2 місяці тому +18

    Yes! Looking forward to this. FYI, in 1982 this movie was simply called First Blood. Not until recent years did they add Rambo to the title. I guess so people know it's the first of the Rambo movies. This is my favorite of the Rambo franchise.

  • @tyinyvr
    @tyinyvr 2 місяці тому +1

    The film was mostly shot in Hope BC Canada about 90 minutes east of Vancouver 🙂

  • @OmegaS-117
    @OmegaS-117 2 місяці тому +1

    1 of my all time favorite movies would watch it when it was on tv back in the 90s and 00s with my dad

  • @wompa70
    @wompa70 2 місяці тому +28

    My mother-in-law lost two husbands to agent orange related cancer.
    After Vietnam, the U.S. military got rid of a ton of uniforms. They ended up being given out at shelters and such. Lots of gangs started wearing the uniforms cause they were free and they lasted forever. Having said that, there is never an excuse to treat people the way they treat Rambo.

  • @gen81465
    @gen81465 2 місяці тому +17

    Four important things to think about:
    .
    1. Sylvester Stallone did a lot of his own stunts. When he jumped off the cliff and landed on the tree, he actually broke his ribs. The scream was real.
    2. Sylvester Stallone didn't properly "pull his punch" in the police station escape scene, and actually broke the other actor's nose, hence the bandage on it later.
    3. The first scenes in the police station (with the painter) were done last. They had already shot up the old police station, and part of the agreement to do the film in the town, was that they had to build them a new one.
    4. There was an "alternate" ending where Rambo grabs Trautman's gun, puts it to his chest and begs the Colonel to kill him. When the Colonel won't do it, Rambo pulls the trigger and kills himself.

    • @williamswiniuch7527
      @williamswiniuch7527 2 місяці тому +4

      In the book Troutman puts him down I think

    • @MAOofDC
      @MAOofDC 2 місяці тому +3

      ​@@williamswiniuch7527 Rambo dies in the book.

    • @gen81465
      @gen81465 2 місяці тому +3

      All of the Rambo movies were good, but to really enjoy some blood and guts, go for Rambo: Last Blood next.

    • @williamswiniuch7527
      @williamswiniuch7527 2 місяці тому +1

      @@MAOofDC right by Troutman’s hand

    • @sandman_says_runrunner4701
      @sandman_says_runrunner4701 2 місяці тому

      @@gen81465 "Last Blood" is a terrible movie.

  • @tompugh6917
    @tompugh6917 2 місяці тому

    A bit of background; First Blood was filmed in Hope, British Columbia, Canada, which is about 100 miles east of Vancouver. We live around 40 miles from Hope and every time we drive through there we point out all the locations from the movie. Amazingly enough, Hope is still around and was not blown to bits.

  • @lennygriffin1149
    @lennygriffin1149 2 місяці тому

    There’s a total of 5 Rambo movies. The most recent being Rambo: Last Blood in 2019. The second one Rambo: First Blood Part II was an absolute monster at the box office, setting several records.

  • @FiOSFellow
    @FiOSFellow 2 місяці тому +8

    When Teasle sits down in his chair, you can see military medals behind him in a plaque. Teasle served in the Korean war.

  • @stevejette2329
    @stevejette2329 2 місяці тому +12

    In 1973, I sailed across the Pacific with John Campbell, a Green Beret medic who was shot thru both arms and into the chest and bayonetted twice in the gut. When he came to, patched himself up and crawled back to base. Still had a bullet too near the spine. When he first told me he got messed up in Nam, I thought, "Here we go again." Until he took his shirt off. RIP, JC

  • @haggardheartagram81
    @haggardheartagram81 2 місяці тому

    There is 4 Rambo movies. The final one is like Home Alone for adults. F’n epic!

  • @thebunnisher2533
    @thebunnisher2533 2 місяці тому

    Fort Bragg is in North Carolina, they renamed it Fort Liberty..
    And there are more than three Rambo movies, there are five total..
    1. First Blood - October 22, 1982
    2. Rambo: First Blood Part II - May 22, 1985
    3. Rambo III - May 25, 1988
    4. Rambo - January 25, 2008
    5. Rambo: Last Blood - September 20, 2019

  • @mervinmerencio6861
    @mervinmerencio6861 2 місяці тому +16

    Late 70s and early 80s people had issues with Vietnam veterans, not all people, but many people that were against the war in Vietnam

    • @randykotchon1043
      @randykotchon1043 2 місяці тому +3

      Not just Vietnam vets, in Canada I was in the infantry from 79 till 83 and most civilians treated you like a loser and called you names, wasn’t till stripes and top gun that attitudes changed, now it’s all thank you for your service

    • @LenOliver-yz6os
      @LenOliver-yz6os 2 місяці тому

      Yeah most of them haters were sorry ass clown clueless far left liberals dope head hippies and there still around today.

  • @bobbelleci9995
    @bobbelleci9995 2 місяці тому +18

    The actor who played the VERY convincing sheriff is Brian Dennehy. Hes had some good roles. A couple of his that I like is FX and Cocoon. Brian passed away in 2020. Thanks for the memories. A powerhouse actor.

  • @michaelplowman8674
    @michaelplowman8674 2 місяці тому

    Just a few points of context. As many have pointed out, this movie was a vanguard of illustrating how badly the vets of Vietnam were treated and to a lesser degree how the Vets of Korea were forgotten. The National Guard at the time was nothing like it is now. They were, as my father referred to them, "overgrown Boy Scouts" who weren't the best trained or held to a standard really.

  • @OmegaS-117
    @OmegaS-117 2 місяці тому +1

    Even though I didn’t have any family members that fought in the Vietnam War I had a family member in just about every American War dating back to the Revolutionary War It’s still hard to believe that we treated out Vietnam Vets this way back then

  • @dax977
    @dax977 2 місяці тому +23

    Lots of vets talk about this monologue and say it is so true and real that their country doesn't do enough to support them when they come back from war. Great reaction both ❤ can't wait for the whole series to drop.

  • @Hawk-ODA212
    @Hawk-ODA212 2 місяці тому +22

    He unscrewed the top of his knife which is a compass. Inside the hollow handle are a number of survival tools. I went through Special Forces "Green Beret" training in 1973 and was assigned to an A team shortly afterwards as a light weapons and demolitions sergeant.. Lots of Hollywood interjected into the movie, but one thing rings true. Special Forces soldiers have a way of overcoming overwhelming odds. Great reaction. Thanks.

    • @ryanjacobson2508
      @ryanjacobson2508 2 місяці тому +2

      Based on an early 70's book that had less explosions than the movie but A LOT more killing (Rambo is essentially a spree killer in the book!). It's entertainment, not a documentary anyway (not until some point in the late 90's did people start to be highly critical of movies for "lacking realism".... which often gets on my nerves).

    • @MarkMonyhan1
      @MarkMonyhan1 2 місяці тому +1

      I bought a cheap copy of that knife after that movie came. I wonder what happened to that knife? 🤔

    • @Hawk-ODA212
      @Hawk-ODA212 2 місяці тому

      @@ryanjacobson2508 That's interesting. I never read the book. Only saw the Rambo movie once but enjoy Stalone's acting in most of his movies. You're spot on about it being entertainment and not a documentary.

  • @herminiahernandez1512
    @herminiahernandez1512 2 місяці тому +1

    This movie hit to the core of me. I know it was a movie but it was the reality of what Vets were facing after the war. So very sad and shameful of all who protested their return.

  • @justinecooper9575
    @justinecooper9575 Місяць тому

    1:01:33 - "...or would you have blown his brains out?"
    This is the first time that I realized the significance of that line and Trautman's response.

  • @pnwcruiser
    @pnwcruiser 2 місяці тому +17

    Agent Orange was a defoliant used to clear fields of fire in Vietnam. It was contaminated with dioxins which caused a lot of harm later on for some of those exposed. The compound wasn't orange but the containers it was delivered in were, hence the common name.

  • @buckbuchanan4902
    @buckbuchanan4902 2 місяці тому +24

    This is one of the best movies ever made and Stallone should have won an oscar for his performance!
    I watched this when I was a freshman in High School and went out and bought a "Rambo knife" with the compass that screwed off, revealing fishing line, hooks and matches in the handle. My best friend and I used to go out into the woods on "survival missions" carrying only our knives. With them we had to make shelter, start a fire and procure food. We also used to like to throw snowballs at police cars so they would chase us, but growing up in a mountain town in Colorado, we'd just head for the hills and they could never catch us.
    Sylvestor Stallone is one of the greatest actors in film history, despite what many say. He is a true legend in the world of film!

    • @dnish6673
      @dnish6673 2 місяці тому

      Nah, Henry Fonda was deserving of the Oscar in 1982. Him or Paul Newman in Absence of Malice.

  • @Totally-Not-A-Robot
    @Totally-Not-A-Robot Місяць тому

    This is one of the best action movies ever. Everything is set up so well at the beginning of the movie, the pacing is pretty flawless throughout, and the action is all great. The ending is not at all what you expect from an 80s action film, and I think is what makes First Blood truly special and one of the best in the genre. It's Stallone's best performance, imo, even as good as he was in Rocky.

  • @JamieNeill
    @JamieNeill 2 місяці тому

    I love the Rambo series. The first is the best made, great performance by Stallone. The sequels are action movies, Rambo 4 was released nearly 20 years later & the violence is unreal.
    I always think of Rambo as the top soldier there is :-)
    Trautman’s love and belief in Rambo is unmatched.

  • @chrissamuels3046
    @chrissamuels3046 2 місяці тому +22

    As an Army Vet, after my Father passed, he was a Vietnam Vet. I had that Rambo to Col. moment. As apart of a MEDVAC unit and told what I did,. A Vietnam Vet told his story about a Medic that keep him alive as he was medvac out. He reach out as I held him as he cried. After that, he, at least, found some peace and some way thank that person he never got to thank. A moment at my job working on his car.

  • @JasonCiardullo1
    @JasonCiardullo1 2 місяці тому +1

    He told him over and over that the man he was hunting was a military trained killing machine and still thought he could take him. It’s funny how both in the realms of cinema and real life no one ever listens to reason and logic and wind up paying an enormous price.
    I will never understand the true depth of a soldier’s pain after facing the hells of war but I know after sacrificing so much for god, family and country they deserve peace.
    To all the men and women of the armed forces thank you for your service. Ooh Rah

  • @superdave577
    @superdave577 2 місяці тому

    Everyone thought this was just an action movie, which it was very good at, but in reality, it was one of the first to shine a light on all the lasting effects of the Vietnam war had (and has) on all out Vets that served. The final monologue brings it all into focus and is just a huge gut punch.