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Download Rambo movie

2008, USA, Germany

Rambo (2008)
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Genres: Action | Drama | Thriller
Actors:
Sylvester Stallone John Rambo
Julie Benz Sarah
Matthew Marsden Schoolboy
Graham McTavish Lewis
Reynaldo Gallegos Diaz
Jake La Botz Reese
Tim Kang En-Joo
Maung Maung Khin Tint
Ken Howard Arthur Marsh
Linden Ashby Col. Dwyer
Sai Mawng Burmese Commander
Paul Schulze Burnett
Directors: Sylvester Stallone | 
Certification:
IMDB Rating: 7.50 out of 10 (41179 votes)

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Storyline

Taglines: 1: Heroes never die.... They just reload.
Plot Summary: Vietnam veteran John Rambo has survived many harrowing ordeals in his lifetime and has since withdrawn into a simple and secluded existence in Thailand, where he spends his time capturing snakes for local entertainers, and chauffeuring locals in his old PT boat. Even though he is looking to avoid trouble, trouble has a way of finding him: a group of Christian human rights missionaries, led by Michael Burnett and Sarah Miller, approach Rambo with the desire to rent his boat to travel up the river to Burma. For over fifty years, Burma has been a war zone. The Karen people of the region, who consist of peasants and farmers, have endured brutally oppressive rule from the murderous Burmese military and have been struggling for survival every single day. After some inner contemplation, Rambo accepts the offer and takes Michael, Sarah, and the rest of the missionaries up the river. When the missionaries finally arrive at the Karen village, they find themselves part of a raid by the sadistic Major Pa Tee Tint and a slew of Burmese army men. A portion of the villagers and missionaries are tortured and viciously murdered, while Tint and his men hold the remainder captive. Concerned by their disappearance, the minister in charge of the mission gathers a group of mercenaries and pleas Rambo transport them with his boat, since he knows their last exact location. But Rambo can't stay behind: he joins the team where he belongs, to liberate the survivors from the clutches of Major Tint in what may be one of his deadliest missions ever
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Rambo 4 movie review

posted on 24 April 2008

It’s easy to forget that the story of John Rambo began 36 years ago with a novel by Canadian author David Morrell, whose distaste for the Vietnam War fueled his vision of a shell-shocked veteran on a murderous rampage in the Kentucky backwoods. Morrell painted Rambo as a merciless killer whose harrowing tours of duty had left him despairing and emotionally comatose. He was a menace, a savage unleashed on a hostile society, and in the end he took his own life.

Sylvester Stallone, who used Morrell’s novel as the inspiration for 1982’s “First Blood,” chose to spare Rambo the indignity of suicide, but cast him as a pariah in his homeland, spurned by the government that trained him to kill. As a commercial gambit, it paid off brilliantly: Rambo became an American icon whose righteous indignation and stern sense of justice guided his famously lethal fists.

Whether as a reflection of Stallone’s resurgence or of America’s ongoing military campaign in the Middle East, Rambo has awakened from his 20-year slumber, and though the political landscape around him has changed, the grizzled vet remains defiantly the same. He is a man of few words, and what little he does say is notable for its comic simplicity. His dialogue is a heady mix of the profane and the unintelligible, and when he tells us that “killing’s as easy as breathing,” it’s a sure sign that someone is due for a bone-crushing comeuppance.

Here, his target is an ultra-violent faction of Burma’s ruling military junta, which has been accused of burning as many as 3,000 villages to the ground and slaughtering the inhabitants. “Rambo” depicts the junta’s genocidal fury with an unflinching eye, as peasants are seized and summarily tortured. Though the Guinness Book of World Records credits “Rambo III” as the most violent film ever made, this latest installment seems intent on raising (or lowering) the bar.

It should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with Stallone’s musclebound avenger, whose sullen posturing gives way to manic bravado as soon as he finds a cause worthy of his biceps, that Rambo annihilates his enemies with no regrets. He is still the killing machine Morrell envisioned, only charged with a nobler task — in this case, rescuing a group of Christian missionaries (led by Julie Benz, of “Dexter”) from a vicious gang of soldiers.

There is an audience for the cartoonish mayhem “Rambo” is selling, and you know who you are. Those with an aversion to severed limbs and punctured torsos would be wise to keep their distance. But give Stallone credit for resurrecting a franchise whose demise seemed foretold by the end of the Cold War. “Rambo” is pure adrenaline, a frenzied rush into the heart of a jungle where the prevailing darkness is far more horrific than anything Kurtz could have imagined. Exhilarating from the start, its sensibilities are unapologetically primitive — Wild West in the Far East — and it is Rambo’s most riveting adventure since “First Blood.”


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