Sylvester Stallone’s Divisive $91.5M Rambo Sequel Enjoying Streaming Resurgence As Wait For Tulsa King Season 3 Continues

A Rambo sequel starring Sylvester Stallone is succeeding on streaming during the wait for season 3 of his Paramount+ crime drama Tulsa King, which is still in early development. Stallone is a three-time Oscar nominee who is best known for action movies and dramas, especially those that kickstarted franchises including the Rocky movies, in which he plays underdog boxer Rocky Balboa, and the Expendables franchise, in which he has co-written three installments, directed one, and starred in all four as mercenary Barney Ross.

One of the most prominent Sylvester Stallone movie franchises is Rambo, which has provided the star with one of his longest-running signature roles. The series kicked off in 1982 with the movie First Blood, which introduced his character John Rambo, a battle-hardened Vietnam veteran. The movie was a smash hit, grossing $125.2 million against its $15 million budget and spawning four sequels featuring increasingly high-octane adventures. The franchise also provided the inspiration for the 2007 indie comedy Son of Rambow, which follows British schoolchildren attempting to create their own Rambo movie.

Rambo: Last Blood Has Found New Life On Streaming

The Action Movie Is Charting On Netflix

Rambo: Last Blood is now finding streaming success more than half a decade after its 2019 release. The movie, which is the most recent installment, follows the character’s peaceful life in Arizona being shattered when his surrogate granddaughter is kidnapped by a cartel, leading him to embark on a bloody revenge mission. The movie came under fire for its deployment of negative Mexican stereotypes, which is one reason it earned a dismal 26% Rotten Tomatoes score. However, it was also criticized for other reasons, as showcased in Sandy Schaefer’s Rambo: Last Blood review for ScreenRant. Read an excerpt below:

Characters like Gabrielle and Maria only really exist as an excuse to justify John going off to slay a whole lot of people once again. Rambo: Last Blood does take some time early on to try and develop Gabrielle and John’s relationship, but their bonding scenes are hampered by wooden dialogue and Monreal and Stallone’s lack of chemistry. The film doesn’t offer much in the way of resolution to John’s arc from the previous Rambo movies either; by the end, it’s not clear what he gained from his journey during Last Blood that he didn’t get from 2008’s Rambo. With no real substance to sink his teeth into as an actor, Stallone’s performance suffers for it, as do those from his castmates.

In spite of its critical reception, after joining the streaming platform on February 10 alongside 2008’s Rambo, Rambo: Last Blood is charting on the daily Top 10 chart of the most-watched movies on Netflix in the United States. At the time of writing, the 2019 sequel is ranked No. 10, finding a place on the chart alongside Netflix originals such as La Dolce Villa (No. 3) and Honeymoon Crasher (No. 8) as well as the box office hits Minions (No. 9) and Sing (No. 6).

What This Means For Rambo: Last Blood

Audiences Have Responded Better To The Movie


Adriana Barraza and Sylvester Stallone standing together in Rambo: Last Blood

This streaming success of Rambo: Last Blood is consistent with the audience response that the Sylvester Stallone action movie has enjoyed. In spite of earning a splat from critics, its Rotten Tomatoes audience score is 81%, and its success at its new streaming home would seem to indicate that general audiences’ interest in the project has not dulled in the intervening years since its theatrical release. However, this renewed interest likely won’t beget a sequel, as it earned just $91.5 million in theaters, when its budget likely would have necessitated a gross of $160 million in order to break even.

Source: Netflix

Related Posts

What A Merger Between Two Centuries-Old Studios Would Mean For Hollywood

What A Merger Between Two Centuries-Old Studios Would Mean For Hollywood

Paramount Pictures and Warner Bros. could end up merging into a single company. The ink has barely dried on the deal that combined Paramount with Skydance Media,…

Robert Redford’s Final Western Trends On Free Streamer Following His Death

Robert Redford’s Final Western Trends On Free Streamer Following His Death

The Horse Whisperer is trending on a free streaming service following Robert Redford’s recent death. Directed by and starring Redford, based on the 1995 novel of the…

This Week’s New Horror Movie Is A Big Test For Jordan Peele (Even Though He Didn’t Direct It)

This Week’s New Horror Movie Is A Big Test For Jordan Peele (Even Though He Didn’t Direct It)

Him poses an interesting test to Jordan Peele as a name in Hollywood. The filmmaker behind hits like Get Out, Us, and Nope didn’t direct the psychological…

10 Action Thrillers That Stay Perfect From Start To Finish (#1 Is 116 Minutes Of Pure Adrenaline)

10 Action Thrillers That Stay Perfect From Start To Finish (#1 Is 116 Minutes Of Pure Adrenaline)

Thriller movies are known for their edge-of-the-seat narratives that keep audiences guessing and in an eternal state of anxious suspense as stakes increase with every pᴀssing moment….

Wicked: For Good Surprising Runtime Revealed

Wicked: For Good Surprising Runtime Revealed

Wicked: For Good‘s runtime has officially been confirmed ahead of its wide theatrical release on November 21. The follow-up to 2024’s smash hit Wicked, the second half…

One Battle After Another Review: Leonardo DiCaprio & Paul Thomas Anderson Unite For A Virtuosic, Prescient Triumph

One Battle After Another Review: Leonardo DiCaprio & Paul Thomas Anderson Unite For A Virtuosic, Prescient Triumph

Back in 1956, when John Ford released The Searchers, the VistaVision format was merely two years old. A fine-grain film stock initially conceived as a counter to…