The kids’ television cartoon
Cast your mind back to the very first Rambo adventure, First Blood. A tonally dark, serious and introspective look at the damage of conflict on a human being.
Many looked at it and were moved. Ruby-Spears Enterprises looked at that and its sequel, and figured that’s perfect fodder for a Saturday morning kids’ cartoon series.
It debuted on US TV shows the year after First Blood: Part II became the commercial highpoint of the franchise. Subtitled The Force Of Freedom, it saw Rambo sent on a special mission by Colonel Trautman – you can’t say it wasn’t loyal to the source material – to combat a paramilitary terrorist organisation (S.A.V.A.G.E., a name such a sod to type it’s going to be its last mention in this article) around the globe.
On the other channel: Care Bears.
Five initial episodes were produced, and that was enough to secure a full season order. 65 episodes later though, the plug was pulled and a second season renewal was rejected. The show, by November 1987, was ranked 56th out of 58 cartoon shows running on American television. The kids, for some reason, just weren’t getting it.
Joseph Ruby of Ruby-Spears was certainly disappointed. “He was more rounded as a character”, he insisted of the show’s take on Rambo at the time. “We gave him more of a sense of humour, feelings, sociability with other people. He wasn’t just a steely-eyed loner doing his mission”.
Because that just wouldn’t suit Rambo at all.
“We know parents everywhere will be disappointed”, said Ruby of the show’s demise.
Whoever wrote the Wikipedia entry did a pretty decent job of summarising the problem: “The cartoon generated a mild controversy at the production studio, with writers wondering how they could present a child-friendly main character who was created as a troubled Vietnam War veteran suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)”.
You never got that problem with the Ewoks, did you?
The associated action figures
To tie into the family friendly Rambo cartoon, designed to introduce anklebiters to sweaty action cinema (never too early etc), Coleco Industries took out a licence for tie-in Rambo dolls.
The special action figure, I stress again aimed at the family market, came with its own rocket launcher, machine gun, ammo belt, movable arms and – yes! – battle scars on its chest. Look at ’em!
However, by the time Rambo III arrived in cinemas, Coleco had opted to cut its losses. As it told Premiere magazine back in July 1988, “last year there were so many action figures out there that no one, with the exception of G.I. Joe, really emerged as the leader”.
The statement from the company’s vice president of corporate communications added, mournfully, that “the kids weren’t in tune with [Rambo] in the way we thought they would be”.
Moving on.
The annual
No self-respecting action franchise dealing with bloodshed and issues of PTSD would have been seen dead in the 1980s without (checks notes) a children’s annual. In this case, not just one either. The Rambo annual popped up twice: in 1987 and 1988.
Back at my former home, the splendid Wil Jones dissected the storylines presented to the babs in the 1988 tome here.
Highlights? A weapons file explaining to kids the difference between a machete, a Beretta pistol and an AK-47 assault rifle (with child-friendly line drawings to illustrate them). Then there were several comic strips, and a board game to play too.
Christmas Day entertainment, crammed into one book.
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