BANGKOK, Thailand — A retired rebel soldier
from the jungles of eastern Myanmar has been plucked from
obscurity to play a brutal Burmese officer opposite Hollywood
star Sylvester Stallone in his latest "Rambo" movie.
Sai Mawng, 40, an ex-guerrilla from the Shan
State Army, which has been fighting for independence in the
former Burma since 1948, was picked from nearly 300 applicants
for the part, the Shan Herald Agency for News reported.
"He speaks Burmese fluently and looks nasty
enough," one of Sai Mawn’s close friends was quoted as saying.
"He’ll be shot in the head toward the end of the movie."
According to agency, the directors of "Rambo
IV: In the Serpent’s Eye," as the film was initially titled, had
been looking for a "Burmese male, 32-40, military-looking man,
character face, unlikeable."
Other Shan refugees and migrants in northern
Thailand are being paid 300 baht ($8.50) a day plus meals to
play Burmese soldiers in the movie, which is being filmed in a
village near the city of Chiang Mai, local newspapers said.
In the movie, renegade Vietnam War veteran
John Rambo comes out of retirement as a boat repairman in
Bangkok to track down missionary aid workers who have
disappeared in the jungles of impoverished Myanmar.
The former British colony has been under
military rule since 1962 and is regarded as an international
pariah.
It has also been riven by decades of ethnic civil war, much
of financed by the Golden Triangle opium trade. The junta and
rebels are frequently accused of using child soldiers. –
Reuters