Sylvester Stallone says he pitched a Rambo prequel that would have used AI to de-age him into an 18-year-old John Rambo, an idea he described as ahead of its time and met with skepticism. In a recent podcast conversation, he recalled being told “everyone thought I was crazy,” arguing the technology was “sophisticated enough” to place a younger version of himself in Saigon before the events of the 1982 original.
While that concept is no longer on the table, a separate prequel is moving forward without Stallone’s involvement. The project, titled John Rambo, has Noah Centineo attached to play the character under director Jalmari Helander, with a script by Rory Haines and Sohrab Noshirvani. Production is being targeted for January 2026 and will chart the character’s Vietnam War origins as an elite Green Beret.
Stallone also floated a markedly different backstory than fans know, imagining a bright, popular teenager—valedictorian and prom king—whose combat experience reshapes him into the hardened survivor introduced in First Blood. The reimagining, he suggested, could have been executed with contemporary AI tools to recreate his youthful likeness and performance.
His remarks land amid ongoing industry debate over synthetic performances and digital replicas. Performer contracts finalized after the 2023 labor stoppage include detailed consent requirements and usage limits for AI-created replicas, with union guidance emphasizing project-by-project permission and compensation. Directors’ agreements also frame generative AI as unable to replace members’ duties. These provisions set guardrails for any future attempt to build an AI-assisted prequel around a legacy star.
Stallone, who originated Rambo across five films, expressed support for the new movie while acknowledging the challenge of recasting an icon. His abandoned AI pitch underscores how franchises are now weighing technological possibilities against creative aims and evolving labor rules, even as the next chapter of Rambo proceeds with a traditional approach to casting and production.





















































