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Rambo: First Blood Part II opened in the United States on May 22, 1985, in a then-record 2,074 theaters, becoming the first film to be released to over 2,000 theaters in the United States, and was the number one film that weekend, grossing $20.2 million.
Sylvester Stallone as John Rambo in 'Rambo: First Blood Part II' (1985). The Rambo franchise is a work of fiction, but was somewhat inspired by true events.
Rambo: First Blood Part II debuted on May 22, 1985, and the film finds John Rambo in jail.That is until his former boss, Col. Trautman (Richard Crenna), offers him a deal: return to Vietnam and ...
The movie novelizations of Rambo: First Blood Part II and Rambo III were both also written by David Morrell, who insisted on ownership of the characters as part of the negotiations for the sale of the film rights to the first book, [3] and was given more leeway than is typically provided to writers creating novelizations. [10]
Rambo: First Blood Part II (stylized on-screen as Rambo) is an overhead run and gun video game loosely based on the 1985 film of the same name that was published in North America by Sega for the Master System in 1986 and then re-released as a budget title in 1990.
James Cameron wrote the original screenplay, John Travolta played a "Star Wars" obsessed soldier and other things you didn't know about one of the defining action movies of the 1980s.
In Rambo: First Blood Part II, he tells Rambo that the demand by the American public for knowledge about the POWs will be found by a trained commando under certain conditions. Rambo is briefed that rescue is not the aim of the mission, only photographs of the POWs.
Rambo (stylized on-screen as Rambo: First Blood Part II) is a 1985 video game based on the film Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985). The game was designed by David Collier and Tony Pomfret with the ZX Spectrum version converted by Platinum Productions.