The case for Captain Rhodes (he wasn't the bad guy.)
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shipwreckdelgado — 16 years ago(September 23, 2009 12:36 AM)
This is funny. I was just answering the same question in another forum. This was my last reply to the question of Rhodes as a bad Guy
Another thing about the character of Rhodes that I noticed is that he is more concerned about his command than anything else. When we first see him in the movie, he starts off by pacing around stating that he is in command. Also when he finds that Logan is feeding Bub the dead soldiers he doesn't state "That's Johnson in there!" Instead he goes into hysterics, screaming "Those are MY Men in there!" He won't salute Bub because it is demeaning to his command. We he talks about "giving some of us a chance at some loving" it is clearly directed at himself. He even forces Steel to shoot Sarah because he commanded it. It's funny in a way, but rewatch the movie. Every speech he gives and all of his actions are about one thing only Himself.
To sum up the theme of this topic Yes, Rhodes was a bad guy. He was self centered, narcissistic, a murderer, a coward and selfish.
And if that doesn't clear it up, even Joseph Pilato states in the dvd extras that Rhodes was a very bad man. -
McQualude — 16 years ago(October 23, 2009 06:30 AM)
This is funny, because I was in the army, and NO ONE ever behaved the way any of these guys do. Not that you couldn't have fun, but if Rhodes or the Major had run a tight ship, there wouldn't be anyone growing pot, having unshaved faces, having long hair, or being so out of shape as some of them were.
Historical context is important, Army discipline was much more relaxed following the Vietnam war. In the early 80's it wasn't uncommon (in my unit and probably others) for soldiers to smoke pot in their barracks during the day. Reagan changed all that very quickly.
|Statistics show that 100% of people bitten by a snake were close to it.| -
livid_86 — 16 years ago(September 27, 2009 07:08 PM)
I think he deserved everything he got.
"he was facing what amounted to a rebellion of support staff" By that point there wasn't any government in my mind, so him seeing this as a "rebellion" is crap. He was pissed that he was losing control and Sarah didn't want to sleep with him.
Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion. -
livid_86 — 16 years ago(September 27, 2009 08:20 PM)
But there was no more "job"! It was over man!
And as for "And if he wanted Sarah to sleep with him, he would have made her." we don't really need any more proof of him being a bad guy, do we?
Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion. -
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livid_86 — 16 years ago(September 28, 2009 08:21 AM)
Oh please DC was gone and they all knew it. And even though he didn't make her, he would have if he had had the inclination like you said, and any man who would do that is not a good guy.
Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion. -
user-769 — 16 years ago(September 28, 2009 12:49 PM)
He could have made her, and didn't. I could throw my cat out the third story window of my house, but I don't. Does that mean I'm a bad guy? You could shoot up a shopping mall. But you haven't. Are you a bad guy?
And you have no idea if DC is gone. When your cell phone has no signal, do you assume there was a nuclear war and give up on humanity? -
xenodrone — 16 years ago(October 06, 2009 04:10 AM)
Intersting post I was with the army guys through the whole movie, it would have been good if they had showed more time with them as I didnt see them so bad especially what dangers they were having to put themseleves into by capture zombies all time. If I was in Rhodes postion I probley would have blown Logan away too I can understand where he was coming from when he was shouting at Logan early on about teaching a zombie trikes.
I was a bit dissapointed that the army soldiers all died at the end and didnt put up much of a fight. -
user-769 — 16 years ago(October 06, 2009 09:43 PM)
Yea, it really seemed like the end came and Romero just said "Ok, lets find a way to kill off all the soldiers."
They really went out of character. Rhodes became a coward, and Steele abandoned his friend, Rickles.
I would have ended the movie with the extra soldier getting gored by zombies, Steele/Rhodes/Rickles all get top-side and engage Sarah/John/McDermott. McDermott dies (or is mortally wounded,) and someone shoots Rhodes and he falls down the elevator and gets crippled, and zombies rip him to shreds. Steel/Rickles surrender, the helicopter crew let them drive off in a truck, Sarah and crew fly off in the chopper.
This would keep with the story and movie cliches, and be a bit more of a realistic ending in my view. Maybe the ending is John burying McDermott on a beach somewhere. This would have allowed for gore/action and just a generally more acceptable ending. -
SleepKills — 16 years ago(October 08, 2009 08:21 AM)
I would say I liked the way Rhodes acted at the end of the movie. He wanted to show he was way better than 'those useless scientists' and told them he would do anything for his men. But at the end he just left them to save his own life. Some leader
For those of you who are interessted, a little video featuring Rhodes the man:
THIS AINT A GODDAMN FIELDTRIP, PEOPLE
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user-769 — 16 years ago(October 15, 2009 04:41 PM)
When I was in the military, people (officers in particular) yell (or at least are generally disagreeable) all the time. If you take away all the yelling, it just seemed to me Rhodes really wasn't doing anything particularly bad up until the beep hit the fan. He was trying to maintain control of a really beep situation and the science team was making that task very difficult for him. They wouldn't compromise at all, even though Rhodes compromised with them (giving them more time, for example.)
I won't argue Rhodes was a particularly strong leader, but I think he was trying to work out a solution that worked out for everyone. Keep in mind, Rhodes and his men could have done whatever they wanted. There were more of them, and they had better fire-power. Yet, they kept helping the science team, they allowed the science team to work unsupervised and even let them keep their own weapons (until Rhodes discovered they had been feeding his men to zombies. He had no way to know it was just Logan and had to assume the entire science team was behind it.)
The one "out of line" thing he did was shoot the other scientist. But at that point, it was a full-fledged insurrection and Rhodes had no reason to believe that the support staff hadn't been murdering his men all that time.