Sylvester Stallone on First Blood's Ending


At the recent press conference for the forthcoming Rambo, multi-hyphenate Sylvester Stallone was asked if he ever imagined having shot the original ending of the book First Blood, which would have robbed him of one of his career franchise cornerstones. Says Stallone: "Yeah, I think about it all the time. I had that debate with Quentin Tarantino, who thought I made a mistake. I said, 'You know, on an artistic level, you're probably right.' But at the time, I had spent a lot of time doing research with veterans and it seemed like this terrible, nihilistic ending that just reveled in complete despair. At that time, we had almost a quarter of a million Vietnam suicides. So I thought, do I want to just end it on that note? Or make him more of a victim who has been created to do a job, does the job, comes home, and gets [told], 'You know what? You no longer fit in.' It's like you train a pit bull, take this dog, turn him into a killer — now what do you do? You've got to put him down. What happens if that pit bull gets loose? And you realize it's not as bad as you think. You can somehow redeem him. I thought that was more of an interesting story. Again, as Kirk Douglas says, 'Not artistic, but commercial.'" For another blurb on Stallone and Rambo, which opens nationwide on January 25, click here.

 

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