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Directed by:
Ted Kotcheff Premise:
Disillusioned Vietnam veteran John Rambo (Sylvester Stallone) is unjustly
harassed and arrested by the sheriff (Brian Dennehy) of a small town police
department. Rambo breaks out of jail and hides in a nearby wilderness, where he
begins waging guerilla warfare on the town. What Works:
Although the Rambo character is often associated with over the top violence and
large action set pieces rife with explosions, First
Blood is a very lean thriller that has surprising energy and intelligence
and notable restraint it its violence (especially compared to later films like Lethal
Weapon or Braveheart).
Some of the action set pieces of the film, such as Rambo’s escape from jail
and his stalking of the police officers, are shot and edited together very
tightly. Director Ted Kotcheff uses the natural settings very effectively and
the pacing of First Blood is also
impressive. Acting performances in action films are not generally celebrated but
there are a few notable roles here that are worth mentioning because of the way
they fly in the face of the machismo of First
Blood’s contemporaries and imitators. Sylvester Stallone plays Rambo but
in this first film he is quite different from the super soldier he would become
in the sequels. The Rambo of First Blood
is a survivor who does not know how to do anything except fight and at some
level he is aware of that and unhappy about it, and this gives the character a
tragic dimension that is different from the roles that Stallone played in other
action films. As Sheriff Teasle, Brian Dennehy is also interesting to watch, as
the actor inserts moments of vulnerability that keep his character from becoming
a cliché villain and makes Teasle a sort of father figure to Rambo, although an
antagonistic one. A third notable role is Richard Crenna as Colonel Trautman,
Rambo’s former commander. Trautman is also a father figure and Crenna veers
away from the abrasive R. Lee Ermy-like military presence with a much more nuanced
approach. Between these three men, First Blood captures a crisis in manhood and in America’s self
image from the post-Vietnam era as Rambo acts out in exactly the way he was
trained by Trautman but is punished for it by Teasle. The growing conflict
spirals toward a violent climax that ends up destroying the town and,
symbolically, the very institution that spawned Rambo. First Blood’s themes and agendas are furthered by its adoption and
redressing of the Western, with Rambo as the lone gunslinger with a frontier
ethos who restores justice to the town. But this film does not follow through
with the traditional politics of the Western and First Blood suggests that some of the traditional expressions and
rituals of masculinity might actually cause problems for men and for the culture
further down the line. What Doesn’t:
Years after its release, First Blood
almost plays like a straight drama rather than an action film. The comparatively
small scale of the set pieces may bore viewers accustomed to the large scale
action sequences of a Michael Bay film. DVD Extras:
There have been several releases of First Blood on DVD. The Artisan
release has a commentary track by David Morrell, the author of the novel, and
trailers. The Lions Gate DVD has a commentary track by Sylvester Stallone,
deleted scenes, and other extras embedded in the film as a type of Easter Egg. Bottom Line:
First Blood is a high watermark for
the action genre because of its tight pacing and fun action sequences combined
with compelling characters. What gives the film its lasting power is its ability
to address issues about war and its strong dramatic center. |
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