Rambo



Surely 9/11 would have aroused Rambo's righteous wrath and sent him back to Afghanistan, where we last saw Big Bad John in 1988's "Rambo III" fighting the Soviets alongside Islamic insurgents who later ... oh, right. Never mind.
Anyway, "Rambo" begins with its eponymous hero sullenly driving a long boat up and down the Salween River when a group of Christian missionaries led by Sarah (Julie Benz) and Michael Bennett (Paul Schulze) ask him for a ride into the strife-torn jungles of Burma (now called Myanmar), where they can provide aid and comfort to victims of the ongoing civil war between Burmese troops and rebels of the Karen tribe. Rambo grunts "Go home" to these dogged do-gooders, and, given the near-bestial behavior exhibited by the Burmese army toward civilians, he may have a point.
Nevertheless, he ferries these folks where they want to go. Of course, the missionaries are there only a week before they're seized by Burmese soldiers and held hostage. One of them is even (shudder) "fed to the pigs."
Having revived his Rocky Balboa persona two years ago (to middling effect at the box office), Stallone's attempt to jump-start the only other movie franchise that's worked for him may emit a whiff of desperation. This "Rambo" redux at least recognizes that something subtler than the "do-we-get-to-win-this-time" clamor of its predecessors is needed here and, for a while, the layered moodiness applied by Stallone as director and actor works in his movie's favor.
But Stallone's still too much of a showman to resist pushing the audience's buttons. Thus he builds up the Burmese army's wanton butchery to such sadistic levels that by the time Rambo's ready to meet the enemy head-on, we're stoked to see them as savagely mutilated as their victims.
Indeed, the battle sequences are so muddled in execution that we can't tell who's killing whom. Which may have been the point, but knowing Stallone and Rambo one doubts that very much.
"Rambo" is rated R for graphic violence, vulgarities, sexual assaults and gruesome images. Running time: 93 minutes.

