Amazing Behind the Scenes Facts About Rambo – From Stallone Himself

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John Rambo was almost any other throwaway movie veteran. But luckily for the character – and fans of the Rambo series – the script for "First Blood" was in the hands of Sylvester Stallone. For Sly, something felt a little off about the story. So he asked real Vietnam veterans what was missing.

And movie history was made.

Sly gets input from veterans when it comes to writing "Rambo"

Given John Rambo's place in the action movie pantheon, "First Blood" isn't the shoot-em-up action movie someone might expect. In between the fight scenes, it's a poignant remark on the treatment of Vietnam veterans, a wound that was still fresh when the movie was released in 1982. It started life as a book, but John Rambo's speech at the end – the words that bring the entire story and its message together – wasn't in the book. Stallone added it with the input from Vietnam veterans. It was a message that resonated with Vietnam vets in their own words.

Sly didn't stop there. For the sequel, where Rambo is sent to Vietnam to rescue POW/MIA still in captivity, Stallone reached out to vets at Soldier of Fortune Magazine to talk about Vietnam War prisoners that might be held over. For the third, he tapped troops with experience in Afghanistan. He did the same to learn more about the decades-long civil war in Burma.

Stallone's favorite 'Rambo' weapon isn't the trademark knife

Stallone reprising his iconic role a John Rambo in "Rambo: Last Blood."

There are a lot of now-iconic action scenes where John Rambo is using weapons to great effect. The large survival knife from First Blood is legendary, but Rambo has a whole cache of other tools. He uses the compound bow in every Rambo movie to come after, an M60E3 with one hand in "First Blood Part II," and who could forget the time he uses a Browning M2 to first obliterate a Jeep driver at close range before taking out half of Burma's army in 2008's "Rambo."

For Stallone, the latest weapon resonated most with him. Rambo is short on time in "Last Blood" and has to fashion a few weapons for himself. Among those is a "vicious" weapon crafted from a spring on a car for use in close combat. Stallone calls it a "war club" with the emphasis on war.

"That thing talks to me," the actor tells We Are The Mighty.

Imagine all the places this pitchfork is gonna go.

John Rambo enlisted in the Air Force first

Sorry, Big Army. Before Rambo joined the U.S. Army's most elite Special Forces unit, he crossed into the blue. It wasn't just something he did for a few minutes before realizing he wanted to be in the Army, either. John Rambo did two tours in Vietnam as a combat helicopter pilot and even received the Medal of Honor before he ever thought about being in the Army.

According to the man who plays Rambo himself, John Rambo got into a fight in Saigon with a bunch of Special Forces guys who told him that anyone could fight in the sky. So Rambo went to Fort Bragg as soon as he could, reenlisting so he could join the Army's Special Force. In the film, you'll see John Rambo in Air Force blue.

Catch "Rambo: Last Blood" in theaters starting Friday, Sep. 20, 2019.


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We Are The Mighty (WATM) celebrates service with stories that inspire. WATM is made in Hollywood by veterans. It's military life presented like never before. Check it out at We Are the Mighty.

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