Banned ‘Rambo’ a hot sell in Burma
YANGON - Police in military-run Myanmar have banned DVD vendors
from selling the new “Rambo” film about a Vietnam war veteran
fighting the junta’s soldiers, but that hasn’t stopped people from
trying to buy it.
“Many customers keep asking about ‘Rambo 4’ but I dare not to sell
it. Police have warned me I could go to jail for up to seven years
if I sell the latest Rambo film,” said one vendor, who declined to
be named.
Another seller said at least 20 customers asked him each day whether
he had a copy of “Rambo."
“I don’t even know what kind of movie it is. I too want to see it
but even among sellers it is very difficult to get copies,” he said.
Starring Sylvester Stallone, the blood-splattering follow-up to the
classic 1980s film trilogy sees war veteran John Rambo fighting
Myanmar forces to rescue captured Christian missionaries helping
ethnic Karen villagers.
The film, which portrays Myanmar’s military as sadistic and
depraved, opened recently in the United States and Singapore against
a backdrop of the junta’s ongoing persecution of Karen minorities.
Just on Thursday, a top leader of Myanmar’s largest Karen rebel
group was assassinated at his exile home in Thailand by two gunmen,
fuelling speculation among Myanmar exiles that Pado Manh Sha could
have been killed by the junta.
In Yangon, the banned Rambo film has become one of the most
sought-after DVDs, creating underground buzz among movie fans.
“Many people are talking about this movie, but I cannot buy it
anywhere,” complained a 30-year-old business man, who declined to be
identified. He said he also tried several times to download the film
from the Internet.
“I have asked a DVD seller where I can buy the movie, but he told me
I can buy anything — including banned porn videos from India, China,
Japan and South Korea — but not ‘Rambo 4’,” he shrugged.
One 45-year-old pro-democracy activist was among a lucky few to
watch it.
“I watched the movie at home with my family, and gave it to my
friends because I wanted them to see it,” he said.
“I like the movie very much because Rambo fought against Myanmar
soldiers,” said the activist, who declined to be named. He refused
to say how he had obtained the copy.
In Myanmar, sales of pirated DVDs, mostly from neighbouring China,
are illegal, but police rarely crack down on the thriving street
business.
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