Stallone on violence in Myanmar and Rambo IV

Stallone on violence in Myanmar and Rambo IV


I have no idea how seriously I want to take this — it is about a Rambo movie, after all — but for what it’s worth, the Associated Press recently spoke to Sylvester Stallone about recent events in Myanmar and Stallone’s experiences shooting John Rambo there:

Sylvester Stallone said he and his “Rambo” sequel movie crew recently witnessed the human toll of unspeakable atrocities while filming along the Myanmar border.

“I witnessed the aftermath – survivors with legs cut off and all kinds of land mine injuries, maggot-infested wounds and ears cut off. We saw many elephants with blown off legs. We hear about Vietnam and Cambodia and this was more horrific,” Stallone told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Monday.

Stallone returned eight days ago from shooting “John Rambo,” the fourth movie in the action series, on the Salween River separating Thailand and Myanmar, formerly known as Burma.

“This is a hellhole beyond your wildest dreams,” Stallone said. “All the trails are mined. The only way into Burma is up the river.”

And this was before the crackdown last week against the largest pro-democracy protests in Myanmar in two decades. After the government increased fuel prices in August, public anger turned to mass protest against 45 years of military dictatorship. Last week, soldiers responded by opening fire with automatic weapons on unarmed demonstrators. . . .

The “Rambo” script, written long before the current Myanmar uprising, features boatman John Rambo – the Vietnam War-era Green Beret who specializes in violent rescues and revenge – taking a group of mercenaries up the Salween River in search of missing Christian aid workers in Myanmar. The character “realizes man is just a few paces away from savagery when pushed.”

“I called Soldier of Fortune magazine and they said Burma was the foremost area of human abuse on the planet,” Stallone said.

Stallone is now editing “John Rambo,” which will be released in January, and said he Is trying to strike a balance and grapple with the question, “Are you making a documentary or a ‘Rambo’ movie?”

Shots were fired over the film crew’s heads and there were threats, he said.

“We were told we could get seriously hurt if we went on,” Stallone said, adding the families of Burmese extras in the movie were imprisoned.

“I was being accused, once again, of using the Third World as a ‘Rambo’ victim. The Burmese are beautiful people. It’s the military I am portraying as cruel,” he said. . . .

Stallone also remarks that the violence in his film will be pretty intense, but he hopes it gets an R rating anyway because he doesn’t want to “whitewash” “reality”. But, um, in the footage that has already been released, most of the violence is perpetrated by Rambo himself — and isn’t violence in the service of a revenge fantasy, violence designed to rouse an audience rather than expose a horror, a form of “whitewashing”, arguably?


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