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Rambo First Blood Part II Movie Download In Hd

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  4. Rambo: First Blood Part II Movie Download In Hd
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  49. Former Green Beret John Rambo is serving time in a federal prison. When the US military hears of American soldiers missing in action from the Vietnam war possibly still being alive and held captive, Colonel Trautman is authorized to send Rambo in to rescue them. For Rambo, this is what he would do best. If only the pencil-pushers would stop getting in his way.
  50. John Rambo is released from prison by the government for a top-secret covert mission to the last place on Earth he'd want to return - the jungles of Vietnam.
  51. This movie is very underrated and offers much more to the viewer then what appears. While Stallone was not a great actor at this point in his career, he fit the Rambo character perfectly, and few men in Hollywood could have defined the character better. The movie offers an insight into the Vietnam veteran that most other films dare not project. The action sequences are outstanding and the story interesting and fast paced. Recommended for all Action Fans. I rated this a 7.
  52. Yes! Now this is more like it. Guns, knives, bombs, chases, beatings, this is why films were invented! Jim Rambo returns again in this first sequel to the first film First Blood. Rambo has been sent to prison after his escapades in the previous film, but he is happy there as no-one annoys him. When General Kirby (based on the &#39;popular&#39; Nintendy character) comes a knockin, we know Rambo will help and the fun will begin. This film has many much more excitement sections than the first film, tones more fights, loads more action, and proves that sequels can be better than prequels.<br/><br/>A bunch of soldiers are believed to be still held captive in the woods of Vietnam. Charles has them. There is no proof however, so Brian Dennhardy and the guy from Karate Kid decide to get the proof. They don&#39;t want to dirty their own clothes though, so they tell Kirby to send in Rambo. Rambo believes he is going in to save his fellow psychos, but really he is a guinea hamster and the bosses have no intention of saving the men. Rambo is dropped in front of enemy lines with his trusty knife and has to find the men in 2 days or be left behind. Joining him is a pretty local woman who he falls in love with. This twist makes Rambo one of the most romantic films ever, as well as one of the most action packed. Of course their relationship is tragic, and when something bad happens I wanted to jump into the TV and scream &#39;NOOO!&#39; and start shooting all the bad guys, including the good guys. The film also shows that you can never trust your bosses because they just want to leave you in the jungle. The main bad guy is so evil that it really feels great when Rambo gets him. Yeah, take that you scumbag! There are lots of good one liners in this film, like when the bad guy is going to poke Rambo&#39;s eye out he says &#39;I must break you&#39; and Rambo simply says &#39;Go For It!&#39; before snapping his neck. &#39;What mean expendable?&#39; the girl asks. &#39;It like when I is invited to a party, and there is beer and I drink some beer, and then I drink another beer, and then I drink lots of beers and make a silly of myself but no-one cares. That mean expendable.&#39; That one line pretty much sums up America&#39;s involvement in Vietnam for me.<br/><br/>All the clever college stuff aside, what we really care is the action. How about these? Rambo infiltrates the bad guys&#39; hideout, and slices 10 guards&#39; necks. He is captured and electrocuted, but still manages to destroy everyone and escape with his bare hands. His canoe is attacked with machine guns and rocket launchers and he has to kill all the bad guys and jump out before it explodes. He steals a Helichopter and blows away hundreds of bad guys! He chases the main bad guy around the forest with a bow and arrow while nukes are dropped around him! Yes, this is a truly awesome film which all true movie fans need to see.<br/><br/>Best Scene: When Rambo returns to his base and searches for the bad American guys. He shoots all the computers and screams and says a big speech like the first film. Stallion&#39;s acting here is superb as you don&#39;t know what he is saying and should have won an Oscar.
  53. Rambo is an inane sequel to a fairly good melodrama; another example of an attempt to repeat an earlier success that goes wildly out of scale.
  54. By federal order, John Rambo (<a href="/name/nm0000230/">Sylvester Stallone</a>) is released from prison and sent on a covert mission into the jungles of Vietnam in order to document by photograph whether any POWs are still being held there. Aided by Vietnamese freedom fighter Co Bao (<a href="/name/nm0630100/">Julia Nickson</a>), Rambo turns what is supposed to be a recon mission into a rescue mission. Rambo: First Blood Part II is a sequel to <a href="/title/tt0083944/">First Blood (1982)</a> (1982), which was based on First Blood, a 1972 novel by Canadian-American novelist David Morrell. In the novel, Rambo died at the end of the shoot-out in Hope, Washington. The expanded story and screenplay for Rambo II was written by James Cameron, Sylvester Stallone, and Kevin Jarre. Morrell novelized the movie in 1985. Rambo II was followed by two more sequels, <a href="/title/tt0095956/">Rambo III (1988)</a> (1988) and <a href="/title/tt0462499/">Rambo (2008)</a> (2008). During the mission briefing Murdock (<a href="/name/nm0621008/">Charles Napier</a>) said that he was with 2nd battalion 3rd Marines at Kon Tum in 1966. Just before Rambo boards the plane to Vietnam, he tells Colonel Trautman (<a href="/name/nm0001077/">Richard Crenna</a>) that the 2nd battalion was actually at Kud Sank 1966. Trautman claims he could have mixed it up, but Rambo claims that you couldn&#39;t forget something like that. It was later proven that Rambo was right and that Murdock had never served in the Vietnam War. After blowing up the camp and rescuing the POWs, Rambo heads his helicopter toward the American camp in Thailand but is tailed by Lt Col. Podovsky (<a href="/name/nm0000925/">Steven Berkoff</a>), who fires upon him several times. Faking a hit, Rambo lands his copter on a river and plays dead. Thinking he has the advantage, Podovsky lands near Rambo and prepares to fire. Suddenly, Rambo springs to life and fires on Podovsky, destroying him. He then returns to the &quot;Wolf Den&quot; and shoots up Murdock&#39;s command center. Holding Murdock at arm&#39;s length with his knife, he demands that Murdock locate and rescue any remaining POWs in Vietnam. Assured that the rescued POWs are receiving medical care, Rambo prepares to leave the camp. Trautman informs him that he&#39;s received a second Medal of Honor and asks where he is going now that he is free. Rambo replies that he will be staying in Vietnam where all his friends died. Trautman agrees that the war was wrong but warns Rambo not to hate his country for it. &quot;Hate?&quot;, Rambo replies, &quot;I&#39;d die for it. What I want...and every other guy who came over here and spilled his guts and gave everything he had wants...is for our country to love us as much as we love it.&quot; In the final scene, Trautman asks how he will live, and Rambo replies, &quot;Day by day,&quot; before walking off. First of all Murdock intentionally sent Rambo to a camp that he believed was empty, his ultimate goal was for Rambo to take pictures of an empty camp so that he could have documented proof that there were no POWs left in Vietnam and therefore Congress and the POWs families would back off about having to find them. In the context of the film, there was a secret deal between the United States and the then-North Vietnamese government in 1972 to release their American POWs by ransom. In order to save some money Murdock stopped the ransom payments from being sent to North Vietnam at some point and the payments that were already sent were not enough to pay for the release of all POWs, leaving many American soldiers still held captive in communist controlled Vietnam long after the war&#39;s conclusion. Furthermore if it were discovered that the Vietnamese were still holding POWs, Congress would have immediately resumed the ransom payments to the Vietnamese government in order to release them, possibly costing the United States government millions of dollars in tax payer&#39;s money to finish the 1972 ransom deal. Essentially Murdock wanted to be able to tell Congress that he tried and was unable to find any POWs left in Vietnam in order to save a little money which he believes will be supporting the Cold War enemy if sent to Communist Vietnam. If it turned out that Rambo returned with pictures that showed American POWs at the camp then Murdock more than likely was going to &quot;lose&quot; them or digitally alter them to remove the POWs. It would be his word against Rambo&#39;s word (at the time an ex-con) and people were more likely to believe Murdock over Rambo. However Rambo didn&#39;t take pictures, instead he took one of the POWs with him and Murdock knew there was no way he could ever keep the POW from telling the media that there were still men out there so Murdock therefore had to abandon Rambo and the POW. Ericson was ordered by Murdock to betray Rambo by flying off and leaving Rambo and the POW behind and a reluctant Ericson did as he was told. The pilot&#39;s reluctance didn&#39;t matter to Rambo. • Captain Vinh: Burned alive in the rice field<br/><br/>• Lieutenant Tay: Blown up by explosive arrow<br/><br/>• Sergeant Yushin: Thrown out of helicopter<br/><br/>• Lieutenant Colonel Padovsky: Blown up by RPG<br/><br/>• Ericson: Hit in the groin with M60E machine gun<br/><br/>• Murdoch: Threatened by Rambo with knife<br/><br/>Strangely enough however Lifer (the mercenary who pulled a gun on Trautman preventing him from picking Rambo up) is never brought to justice. By far the biggest red flag in terms of the content is the violence. While there is a very high body count there is very little blood or gore and it seems like this would be standard PG-13 level violence (keep in mind that films like Star Wars also have very high body counts yet are nowhere near R-rated material). However along with the violence the film does contain one usage of the word &quot;fuck&quot; along with other usages of &quot;goddamn&quot; and &quot;bastard&quot;. There is also a shot of Stallone&#39;s rear end along with references to prostitutes but what probably pushes this film into the R-rating is the emotional intensity. At one point in the film Rambo is condemned to spend the rest of his life in the same POW camp he was a prisoner of during the war (he only would have had to serve 5 more years in an American prison had he not accepted the mission), he is submerged up to his chin in a bog of pig feces and is covered by leaches. On top of that the film depicts POWs suffering in deplorable conditions and it is revealed that they have been living there for over a decade. When you add in the torture scene (there is no blood but still disturbing) it produces a very mild R-rated film.<br/><br/>What is very interesting however is that Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom came out the previous year with a PG rating despite being slightly more graphic and violent than Rambo: First Blood Part II. It was also just as emotionally intense as it featured innocent children turned into slaves who were frequently beaten with whips, at one point a young boy begs for death and of course there is the infamous &quot;heart&quot; scene. There was also a torture scene that was considerably more graphic than the &quot;electrocution&quot; scene in Rambo: First Blood Part II (Indy is beaten with his own whip and receives numerous welts on his back with blood oozing out). However Temple of Doom had little to no profanity (one usage of &quot;shit&#39;), no nudity and only very mild sexual references. It is also wildly rumored that if Temple of Doom had been made by anyone other than Spielberg and Lucas it would have been slapped with an R-rating. a5c7b9f00b
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