
DVD - Wide Screen / Stereo Learn more
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $9.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $15.99 |
16:9 widescreen version; 2.0 Dolby Surround; Digitally mastered; Commentary track with director Peter MacDonald; Vocally enhanced motion menus; Trivia game; Featurette: "Rambo III: Full Circle"; Scene access; Theatrical trailer; Production notes; Cast and crew information; Spanish subtitles; Closed captioning
Full Product DetailsScene Index
0. Scene Index
1. Rambo III [2:41]
2. Stick Fighting [5:22]
3. My War Is Over [3:26]
4. Come Full Circle [3:03]
5. No Chance of Escape [3:12]
6. I'm No Tourist [4:30]
7. Interrogation [8:00]
8. Glimpse of Destruction [2:08]
9. Holy Warriors [4:12]
10. Friendly Game [5:14]
11. Aerial Assault [4:23]
12. This Is Not Your War [2:34]
13. Minefield [3:21]
14. Bombs Placed [4:04]
15. Inside the Fortress [2:58]
16. Battle Begins [2:55]
17. Sewage Ducts [3:20]
18. No Mercy [:56]
19. Heal the Wounds [3:26]
20. Search for Rambo [2:29]
21. Saving Trautman [3:22]
22. Going Down [1:19]
23. Wreckage [2:05]
24. Taking Cover [1:46]
25. Your Worst Nightmare [3:09]
26. Hand to Hand [2:20]
27. Surrender Now! [2:38]
28. Cavalry Arrives [2:42]
29. Final Confrontation [4:30]
30. End Credits [5:17]
The third entry in the ultra-macho Rambo action movie series finds muscle-bound warrior John Rambo (co-writer and star Sylvester Stallone) refusing a request from his former Vietnam superior, Green Beret Colonel Trautman (Richard Crenna). Trautman is to lead a mission to aid the mujahedeen rebels fighting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, but the Buddhist Rambo turns his friend down. When the mission goes awry and Trautman is subsequently captured and tortured within a prison fortress, Rambo launches a rescue effort of his own, armed with his trademark bow and exploding arrows. Along the way, he allies himself with the freedom fighters and runs afoul of the villainous Russian commander Zaysen (Marc de Jonge). At the time of its release, Rambo III -- released in the same month in 1988 that Russian troops began withdrawing from Afghanistan -- was the most expensive film ever made, at 63 million dollars. Karl Williams, All Movie Guide