Commando is a 1985 American action film directed by Mark L. Lester and produced by Joel Silver. It stars Arnold Schwarzenegger in the lead role, alongside Rae Dawn Chong, Alyssa Milano, Vernon Wells, Bill Duke and Dan Hedaya.
In the film, Schwarzenegger starred as Colonel John Matrix, a retired Special Forces operative living a quiet life in the mountains with his daughter Jenny, played by a then 12-year-old Milano. The film’s emotional core hinges on their relationship: Jenny is kidnapped by mercenaries trying to force Matrix into carrying out an assassination. Instead, Matrix launches a one-man war to rescue her, unleashing the kind of explosive, over-the-top action that made Commando a cult classic.
Milano had just started her career when she took the role. She was simultaneously starring on the hit sitcom Who’s the Boss? (1984–1992), which helped make her one of the decade’s most recognizable child actors. In Commando, she balanced vulnerability and spirit—her character outsmarts her captors a few times, which added suspense and gave her more agency than many child roles in action films of the era.
For Schwarzenegger, Commando was part of his rapid rise after The Terminator (1984). The film cemented his reputation as the quintessential 1980s action hero: muscular, witty, and unstoppable.
Behind the scenes, he reportedly had a warm and protective rapport with Milano, treating her like a real daughter on set. Milano later reflected fondly on the experience, saying she felt safe working with him even in such an intense and violent movie.
Commando was released in the United States on October 4, 1985, where it received praise for the action sequences and humor. The film became a commercial success at the box office and was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects, but lost to Back to the Future.