Showing posts with label Bill McKinney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill McKinney. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

First Blood by David Morrell

(pb; 1972)

From the back cover

“Nobody in the small Kentucky town knew his name was Rambo. All they knew was that he was a stranger. . . and that he looked like trouble. The army had trained him in the art of killing, and now he did not know how to stop.”

 

Review

First is a character-driven actioner about two war veterans─Will Teasle, from the Korean War, and John Rambo, from the Vietnam War─who are too stubborn for their own good. When Teasle, a small-town sheriff, tries to drive Rambo out of his county, he sets off a conflict that neither he nor Rambo expected, one that echoes the fights they abandoned in foreign countries.

Morrell’s writing is vivid and balanced, his characters relatable and sympathetic, and the pacing battle intensive. First’s body count and brutality never dominate the character-centric human elements of the novel, which are, of course, the heart of the work. This is a good, blaze-through read.

Morrell wrote a book sequel, Rambo: First Blood Part II, but don’t be fooled by that. Rambo is a movie tie-in novel, not a sequel to the source novel. (Read First Blood and you’ll understand.)

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First Blood was released stateside on October 22, 1982. Ted Kotcheff directed it, from a screenplay by Michael Kozoll, William Sackheim and Sylvester Stallone.

Sylvester Stallone played John Rambo. Brian Dennehy played Sheriff Will Teasle. Richard Crenna played Col. Samuel Trautman.

Bill McKinney played State Police Capt. Dave Kern. Jack Starrett played Galt. Chris Mulkey played Ward. David Caruso played Deputy Mitch. John McLiam played Orval the Dog man. Bruce Greenwood played Guardsman #5.



Thursday, June 05, 2008

Breakheart Pass, by Alistair MacLean

(hb; 1974)

From the inside flap:

"... a raging blizzard in the Rocky Mountains... Murder, danger, vengeful Indians, the lust for gold, and a Federal agent pitted against as villainous a set of thieves as ever came out of the Old West -- these are the elements Mr. MacLean has woven into [this] exciting and fast-moving [novel]..."

Review:

What can I write that the above blurb didn't already cover? Breakheart Pass has all the necessary elements of an excellent action novel: plenty of twists (rooted in the characters' personalities, ably mapped by MacLean), lots of clever action, and even a hint of romance -- not enough to slow down the violence and drama, of course, but there nevertheless.

Check it out: a great, fun read for action and Old West aficionados.

The resulting film was released stateside on May 5, 1976.

Charles Bronson played Deakin. Ben Johnson played Pearce. Richard Crenna played Governor Fairchild. Jill Ireland played Marica. Charles Durning played O'Brien. Ed Lauter played Major Claremont. Bill McKinney played Reverend Peabody. Robert Tessier played Levi Calhoun.

Tom Gries directed the film, from a screenplay by source-novel author Alistair MacLean.