The Welland Tribune

Last Blood should be the end of the line for Rambo

- KATIE WALSH

Can someone please put John Rambo out of his misery? The ’80s franchise has long-since grown cold, but in an era of reboots and sequels, it’s no surprise that some might try to squeeze one last money drop out of this title. But in this haggard, sorry state, here’s hoping “Rambo: Last Blood,” lethargica­lly directed by Adrian Grunberg, is the end of the line for Sylvester Stallone’s once-iconic character. Rambo lumbers to the finish line in the flaccid fifth instalment, which is a Frankenste­in’s monster of badly photocopie­d references to the previous movies, limply strung together with the laziest of screenplay­s.

This time, it’s not Vietnam, Burma, Afghanista­n or even the U.S. that has drawn John Rambo’s ire, but Mexico. John’s living a quiet life on an Arizona ranch, keeping a protective eye on young Gabrielle (Yvette Monreal), an adopted niece of sorts. When Gabby runs away across the border to find her birth father and ends up trafficked into sexual exploitati­on (a turn one can see coming from a mile away), woe upon the gangsters who kidnapped her. Rambo’s gonna rip their collarbone­s out one by one.

“Last Blood” is deeply, topically xenophobic. And while, obviously, the Rambo films aren’t exactly known for their internatio­nal diplomacy, the hackneyed, poorly executed racial stereotype­s and sexual violence to which Gabriella is subjected is just offensivel­y lazy screenwrit­ing. The whole script is lazy. It’s barely a script at all. Writers Stallone, Matthew Cirulnick and Dan Gordon trade on charged imagery rather than, you know, actually writing characters that fully express the spectrum of human morality. “Good vs. evil” is an idea John, who articulate­s himself like he’s endured one too many traumatic brain injuries, is obsessivel­y hung up on, in that sometimes he monosyllab­ically grunts about “bad guys.”

You have to feel for him. And we might be able to, if the film at all explored the PTSD he tries to treat with fistfuls of mystery pills, obsessive horse training and wholly unnecessar­y blacksmith­ing. Rather than exploring the interior world of an aging Rambo, “Last Blood” is preoccupie­d with the “Home Alone”-style traps John sets up in the tunnels underneath his farm in an extended montage that becomes ludicrousl­y outlandish as it progresses. A spike! More spikes! Lots of shotguns! And knives. A rake! Hay bales rigged to explode! Even more spikes, if you can believe it. There’s a glimmer of hope that maybe, just maybe, the leaden affair will lighten up with some lightheart­ed bloodshed, but no. As soon as Rambo lures the Mexican sex trafficker­s into his undergroun­d lair, the traps merely slice and dice bodies grimly, joylessly, splatterin­g the saddest pixels of digital blood. Everything about “Last Blood” is so perfunctor­y, it makes the film something to be slogged through rather than enjoyed. It’s right there on Stallone’s face, rendered uncannily unexpressi­ve. He seems the most tired of anyone, going through the motions, trudging through what might hopefully be this character’s last ride. If only anyone involved had made a modicum of effort to make it memorable.

 ?? LIONSGATE TNS ?? Sylvester Stallone reprises his role as ex-Special Forces soldier John Rambo in “Rambo: Last Blood.”
LIONSGATE TNS Sylvester Stallone reprises his role as ex-Special Forces soldier John Rambo in “Rambo: Last Blood.”

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