The script, sources, and research for this video is all here: bit.ly/2mE6BSq. It’s been a journey. Also, I completely revamped my Patreon, check it out! patreon.com/nowyouseeit
Now You See It, This is truly one of the best RUclips videos I have ever watched. I can't thank you enough. It's just given me such confidence and happiness.
Love your work, but I had the volume at 100% and had to strain to hear the dialog, but then I had to back six feet away from the speakers when the music would come on.
They’ve done it, and elevated the video Essay. No narration necessary just great editing and Quentin’s own words from his countless interviews to explain your points. Amazing.
As the credits rolled & the tone shifted into a melancholy mood, I took one last drag on my cigarette & collected my coat & hat & hailed a cab. The streets of L.A. were darker than usual with something more than the night - Once upon a time in Hollywood '
and spicing it up with the most enjoyable, character oriented, keen- and nimble-witted dialogue, aswell as gracefully craft every scene in order to make the movie ENTERTAINING?
I watched this video last night. Since then I've rewatched Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction twice and after watching this a second time now I think I'm going to go rewatch Django and the intro of Pulp Fiction again.
Came down here to say the same thing. It's a master class of letting the subject and the material say what you want to get across, and without twisting any of it or taking it (too far) out of context.
I thought it was obvious from the title, and especially the immediate lack of narration, that the editor intended this video to play out as similarly as a video essay can, to a poem.
Joseph Coggins: Excellent point. I considered it briefly, but attributed it to the statement that Tarantino makes in one of the clips. I didn't give Jack and Andrew enough credit there. More specifically, I don't think it plays out like a poem, but lets the poetry exist "between the lines" here, too. That's why some people are saying they didn't even notice there wasn't narration, because it feels like there is. I didn't notice it until about half way through, myself.
iKNOWiKNOWNOTHING the first time i ever watched pulp fiction i was 2 bowls down and high outta my mind, and i wouldn’t want to change the experience for anything. but i’d love to do it again
Quentin Tarantino is the perfect example of a human being chasing and doing the things he was put on this earth for, true genius filled with pure passion for the art
I think so too. He DID kind of revitalize John Travolta’s career when Pulp Fiction came out. But in my opinion Travolta kinda dig his career into deep shit with Battlefield Earth and a few others.
"That will be, I predict, the ultimate honor for Pulp Fiction: like all great films, it criticizes other movies." That's really a profound thought, imo. I've been thinking about that since I first heard it.
You can feel however you want about Tarantino as a person, but you can’t deny that his ability to collect the most impactful little details in classic films and make them work in the modern age is pretty cool. Learn from the craft, not from his specific words.
Why wouldn't people like him as a person? I don't think I've ever heard a bad word about him, except from that one reporter who said his movies were too violent.
When the sponsorship thing came on at the end I was reminded that I had forgotten that this was a fan-made youtube video and not a pro-made documentary. A+++
I implied this a little in the video, but almost every actor interviewed talks about how much fun they had. Many people refer to it as the most fun they ever had on a movie set (Rod Taylor, Production Designer for Django, Brad Pitt, Tim Roth).
Tarantino is one of the best directors because he doesn't just shout cues like Ian McKellen suffered in The Hobbit, but he provided references and spoke to his actors like humans and not like puppets. THAT'S a director in my book.
In college we knew this dude named Mustard he was like 30 to our 19/20. While watching Jackie Brown during the car remote scene he blurts out, "Fucking Tarantino Man, he always captures the nuance of conversation in every movie" And bam! It hit me
Fuck anyone criticizing your video. They chose to watch long enough to form an opinion...and tbh, critiquing isn’t as much of an original act as it is spiteful, cold and useless. Despite some volume/audio mastering issues...this is edited very well with the narrative and how the content stays perfectly in pace when alluded to...I really enjoyed your video. I’m sure it took a little while to edit, etc....but it is great. Tweak those small things people have you feedback on, and I’ll keep watching.
I am seriously palpitating at the sheer amount of knowledge Tarantino has regarding movies. He has seen so many movies in his lifetime that his mind is an encyclopedia for movies. Awesome director and awesomely crafted video to solidify this fact.
The crazy thing is he's seen most of the ones he likes several times, and a lot of them dozens of times. I watch movies every day and rarely rewatch anything because there's still thousands I need to see.
Love that you’re reinventing the format of what a traditional video essay would look like, thematically fitting in with the ideas that are discussed in the video. Awesome.
When he relates he wanted the dance scene in Pulp Fiction to reflect just the joy and fun they had while dancing, he failed to mention that John Travolta is an incredibly talented and skilled dancer. STILL, THIS IS PROBABLY THE BEST RUclips REVIEW I WATCHED EVER!!! caps and exclamation points intended
I've watched wayyy to much RUclips to be proud of and this is literally one of the best made videos I've ever seen. The visual cuts, the use of music, the choice of dialogue , and the overall sequence really captured Quentin Tarantino's passion for film making. Really well done.
Not the same in any sense. Sampling is using the original in something else. Tarantino uses techniques from old movies. Your comparison doesn't make sense.
Gothic,"purse" "no repeats forever,in front of zip code",so what did I do smoke an electric air cigarette "smoke",let's talk about JT and Gerard "goodbye! goodbye! goodbye!",mmm.
I wholeheartedly believe this is one of your best videos and definitely on of the best film video essays I've seen on RUclips. Your thesis, points, and conclusion were all so clear and ALL without even speaking. This was just awesome. Thank you!
That shot of Django in the blue outfit riding on horseback through the cottonfield was such a powerful image. Quentin should have held on it much longer than he did.
Pazuzu,"Baghdad zip code Death forever",purse avoiding dart-E.*. "ok!",there was some notes I mean don't forget the beganing,the black Coffee with no poppers! was the sweetest drown-oh it's LA sometimes and traveling "C. on the Bells",its was notes and sssssshhhhhhhhhh drowning "it was Drag Queen careers alright mmmmm . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . oh what drowning moments,these cheese fries are good . "holes in motel Europe" there was no talking heads "that one in the room "that is not the Devil "painting",sex.said 1 piece 666 each-smoke "eternal life,everlasting",Vampires read it with the beganing here m.Did sxu see the Gothic girls m,milk-this what it was in the movie-and Bulie not Katie Speilberg,that Vampire clip "the what if "hole in Europe-metal",the black not Gil. it was verx good Coffee "the right private-lamp our parents met,sex.Bulie is 44 now I am 42 "xh" that the whole time on a 18-26 crack "don't miss the beganing for Jesus Christ and his people,Junior is lxxking",realsx that C. "ses!",I have the music "priceless",616. "ahh."
That’s what I really felt when I watched the movie. Tarantino created for himself a fantasy of hollywood like he knew and loved it but took out the thing that ruined it. So many reviews saying the movie was lacking plot and I can only think that they missed the whole point of the movie.
@@synlion Yeah he was a fan of Burt Reynolds. That is the idea behind Rick Dalton. It makes sense. Maybe that means Rick will be a big star in the years after 1969. Maybe Smokey, Deliverance or Mean Machine will make him a huge star.
Great Video! In filmschool they basically just showed us films and we examined every aspect of any given film. I felt this is all things you could do on your own without having to allocate tons of money and time to a school. I feel Quinton just reinforces this belief. If you want to be a filmmaker, start watching movies, not only things you like but things you that might not really be your demographic. These frames you see will stick with you and help you when it comes time to make your movie you will have a vast library of shots in your head to choose from.
well that the thing innit, rubbish is subjective, what is rubbish to you might be gold to somebody else. In fact there is a whole genre of film that are proud of how bad they are (birdemic, sharknado, troma films, ect). But the fact that you have seen so many films and have a general interest in cinema is a great start. When I went to filmschool I was blown away at how little my class had seen. If you ever attend you will most likely hear a phrase like this "you need to know the rules before you can break them" .. that's filmschool; the basic concepts of framing/lighting/shot composition/audio recording and releasing(try to find somebody to buy your film, spoiler alert nobody will buy it). All that stuff can be learned fairly quickly, what cannot be learned quickly is a vast knowledge of great shots. Er sorry for rambling …
Well for one thing I am one of the least creative people on the planet so I couldn't even make a crappy movie, I have a hard time writing 200 words. The only thing I can do is occasionally when listening to a music in a situation I feel like "Whoa, you could make a good shot out of this".
ahhhhh see you got it!! that's half the battle right there putting sound to moving pictures. Well I encourage you to just try shooting some stuff. Or at very least just start editing, hitfilm is a free comprehensive video editing software. You can do anything you can imagine with it. Why not just start making videos,, I mean you are on youtube :P.... edit: I mean more cinema like videos as opposed to whatever the racing stuff is you have going on lol. Or you could be like me (and many others) that find it nearly impossible to direct a legit production so am forced into animation. There is tons of free animating software, or I used GTA 5 director mode to just practice filmmaking. This is the most popular video on my channel ruclips.net/video/btwX3u1FO_A/видео.html&t theres nothing to it, but as you can see I was really trying to practice interesting camera angles.
I had the exact same experience, except I was lucky enough that my course was focused on practical learning opposed to theoretical. I remember having a lecturer ask who had seen Vertigo in a room of probably 30 people and I put my hand up and look around the room to not a single hand. And i just burst out "what is wrong with you people?!" I honestly found the best students in the course were always the ones that watched and loved movies. I couldn't believe how few did though.
The film world that Quentin introduced me to changed all my preconceptions of what a great movie truly was. Just watching his work makes me want to dig deeper into film, its like trying to find that next high. Thanks Q
I'd say Quentin Tarantino and Edgar Wright are my favourite directors; if you like them both as well I'd highly advise you to check out the Hot Fuzz commentary - it's absolutely amazing.
There's no doubt that Tarantino is the best at what he does. There are many great directors and most of them can do things that Tarantino can't, but none of them can do what Tarantino can do.
I really love it when artists use everything in life as a sample / inspiration for their work. Makes me realize how great this world around us is, if we just pay attention, connect the dots and read between the lines
He has made some of my favorite films. I have watched his movies over and over and over. Pulp FIction is top shelf entertainment. The Kill Bills are very good too. Anything with a light haired and tan Uma is high on my list.
What I love most about this video is the ending. You always see people, especially film snobs, say they hate Tarantino because he does copies of other movies. But Jean- Luc Godard has done the same thing, yet film snobs hold him to a higher standard. Tarantino is no different from other filmmakers. They all are doing the things they love because of their love for movies when they were kids.
The thing i love most about tarantino ia he makes hia characters human, the guys at the restraunt in the opening to resivoir dogs, the germans playing the "who am i" game in inglorious bastards, the dance scene from pulp fiction. If you can do that right it makes them more relatable, make you think "this is a possibility, this can actually happen" because you see yourself in the human aspect of the scenes as to say you could be a part of it and nobody would bat an eye
I always have a feeling it’s gonna be an insightful video when the researcher considered there work an essay, in which I must say this was very elaborate and overall what I was hoping for....
I don't really get moved by documentaries yet Tarantino's passion and enthusiasm is very endearing. He is like a kid in class during a show-and-tell with a bunch of action figures. Instead of just mindlessly babbling Tarantino really expresses his knowledge and not only does he demonstrate what each figure can do he allows each toy to perform.
What an absolutely brilliant video. You showed us the clips, and let us read the poetry between the lines. I didn't even notice what you were doing until the line about Godard and breaking the rules!
Tarantino's story telling is like listening to the guy in the corner who nobody noticed, but he was the one who knew everything that was going to happen 10 seconds before it did. He's a clairvoyant eye witness to reality.
My parents saw pulp fiction on their second date together and walked away from that movie thinking "what the hell did we watch... I loved it" and when I saw it for the first time I was so mesmerized
One of the great gifts of cinema - One the greatest things an artist can do is to take what it is that moves and inspires them, and give it it their own personal, authentic twist. A legend for sure
and controlling what the audience knows vs what the characters know. mr. pinks identity, the poisoned coffee, shoshannas theatre plan, plan to free hildy, etc etc etc
Maurice Ravel i believe he does, but i think he thinks django was just inglorious bastards again, no idea how he feel about h8ful. i like it all except maybe deathproof, but jackie brown more so. once upon a time in hollywood looks f**king great.
Not to mention the opening scene of Inglorious Bastards. That suspense is amazing. He puts Alfred Hitchcock's bomb under the table to extreme heights. Even later in the movie where Shoshanna is in the restaurant, the pub scene when do it the scene backwards, and the theatre scene when your antagonist basically knows everything. Tarantino is my favorite director. The king of suspense and dialogue
Every now and then I'll come back to this video and watch it all over again. It's one of the most fulfilling things, seeing Quentin talk about films, his films, and hearing his collaborators talk about him. Completely restores my passion for the artform. Thank you for making this.
I grew up having the same name as Quentin Tarantino. I never really liked him because people kept mentioning him every time I introduced myself. That got really tiring, really quickly. I started to enjoy his movies with Inglorious Basterds but still had trouble with the man himself. This video changed my opinion of him to an extent. I feel like I have a better understanding where he's coming from at least. Thanks, Now You See It! Always excited when you post.
I dont think Blow Out is that great of a movie but the fact that Tarantino was so profoundly inspired by Travolta's performance in it made Pulp a masterpiece. Art is subjective and what you see isn't what I see.
Tarantino is one of our favorite directors, this is extremely thorough and well done. Loved showing the specific scenes that inspired him, he truly has his own unique perspective as a visual style. Thanks for the entertainment and insight!
The script, sources, and research for this video is all here: bit.ly/2mE6BSq. It’s been a journey.
Also, I completely revamped my Patreon, check it out! patreon.com/nowyouseeit
I like watching your videos. Can you upload more often?
This was hands down your best video yet man. Keep it up bud
Now You See It, This is truly one of the best RUclips videos I have ever watched. I can't thank you enough. It's just given me such confidence and happiness.
Love your work, but I had the volume at 100% and had to strain to hear the dialog, but then I had to back six feet away from the speakers when the music would come on.
Now You See It You were influenced by Nerdwriter's Lauryn Hill video, weren't you?
They’ve done it, and elevated the video Essay. No narration necessary just great editing and Quentin’s own words from his countless interviews to explain your points. Amazing.
Like Quentin did telling his stories with all the other movies he loves
Or being lazy.
As the credits rolled & the tone shifted into a melancholy mood, I took one last drag on my cigarette & collected my coat & hat & hailed a cab. The streets of L.A. were darker than usual with something more than the night - Once upon a time in Hollywood '
They did the same thing for "Why Dave Chappelle Left Hollywood" and "Is Joker Cinema?"
@@canaisyoung3601 Yes but this came first
It's so cool to see that he's just a huge nerd/fanboy who made his dreams come true.
Don’t forget that he’s also a great director…
inspiring
He is also pleasantly charming.
@@toady3794 ask Uma Thurman how she feels about him lol
@@iyankku sounds like she just can’t drive tbh
What an absolute treat.
Like what? Tarantino just reshooting scenes from old movies?
Gus my boy, you're such an unusual person
and spicing it up with the most enjoyable, character oriented, keen- and nimble-witted dialogue, aswell as gracefully craft every scene in order to make the movie ENTERTAINING?
oh hi gus
Gus!?!? Did I just see Gus on my favorite RUclips creators comment section!?!? Omfg Gus you’re like my second favorite RUclipsr.
I loved when Quentin as a child says “so thats whats happens when your an adult, that you become a movie genius”
that was fascinating
I love how passionate he is about literally everything cinema. He lives and breathes cinema.
Watch an interview for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood -- he still does the "Because we love making movies!" thing
@@NowYouSeeIt we NEED more directors like him. Just passionate NERDS out to tell incredible stories!
@@thotslayer9914 100%
You know that a video like this is good, when it makes you want to instantly rewatch 10 movies at the same time
beautiful observation
I watched this video last night. Since then I've rewatched Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction twice and after watching this a second time now I think I'm going to go rewatch Django and the intro of Pulp Fiction again.
This vid made me want to watch those movies he drew inspiration from! He’s really a cinema buff!
Yes
Yup. I'm watching Pulp Fiction again now.
Love how this has no narration but it works so well.
I actually didn't notice it until you said it.
That's the magic of great editing.
Came down here to say the same thing. It's a master class of letting the subject and the material say what you want to get across, and without twisting any of it or taking it (too far) out of context.
I thought it was obvious from the title, and especially the immediate lack of narration, that the editor intended this video to play out as similarly as a video essay can, to a poem.
Joseph Coggins: Excellent point. I considered it briefly, but attributed it to the statement that Tarantino makes in one of the clips. I didn't give Jack and Andrew enough credit there. More specifically, I don't think it plays out like a poem, but lets the poetry exist "between the lines" here, too. That's why some people are saying they didn't even notice there wasn't narration, because it feels like there is. I didn't notice it until about half way through, myself.
Loved the side by side comparisons of Tarantino's scenes and the scenes that influenced them. Very well made video
Yeah that was awesome. I know some but now and again one would come up where I’d think, ahhh that’s why I liked it so much!
I like when he showed the dancing
Nice profile pic
Clint gang
@@GMfish my brother
I wish i could watch Pulp Fiction for the first time again.
iKNOWiKNOWNOTHING the first time i ever watched pulp fiction i was 2 bowls down and high outta my mind, and i wouldn’t want to change the experience for anything. but i’d love to do it again
you can't rewatch if it's the first time
@@drogz yep that's the joke
So, r/woo0OScHt
Temjen Jmr - Wasn’t a joke. You wooshed yourself.
Wish i could watch every Tarantino movie for the First time again
I literally can listen to him talk all day. His enthusiasm is infectious.
As long as he isn't trying to put on a southern, black accent again I can listen to him for ages too.
Christoph Waltzed into the room.
"Now here´s the poetry I was looking for"
underrated lol, the others are too dumb to see your genius
Underrated af comment 😂
And to think how underestimated poetry as a discipline and reading is nowadays...or men read it in secret?
'Waltzed' haha
Quentin Tarantino is the perfect example of a human being chasing and doing the things he was put on this earth for, true genius filled with pure passion for the art
@@TheTillmanSneakerReview art is subjective i guess ;)
And feet
I thought this was just a recording of a professional TV documentary... I didn't realize you made this. Well done.
I feel like Tarantino is the guy that makes famous actors more famous.
I think so too. He DID kind of revitalize John Travolta’s career when Pulp Fiction came out. But in my opinion Travolta kinda dig his career into deep shit with Battlefield Earth and a few others.
And resurrected some of them from the abyss
I feel like Tarantino is the guy that makes famous actors say the N-word.
He did with godamn I forgot his name but the main nazi in inglorious bastards and the doctor in django
@@Catalyst606 Christoph Waltz
"That will be, I predict, the ultimate honor for Pulp Fiction: like all great films, it criticizes other movies."
That's really a profound thought, imo. I've been thinking about that since I first heard it.
You can feel however you want about Tarantino as a person, but you can’t deny that his ability to collect the most impactful little details in classic films and make them work in the modern age is pretty cool. Learn from the craft, not from his specific words.
JediAnn Solo Very good attitude towards the dude, tbh. I am taking notes.
I thank thee.
Why wouldn't people like him as a person? I don't think I've ever heard a bad word about him, except from that one reporter who said his movies were too violent.
He seems like a good lad.
Maurice Ravel people often find reasons to hate famous people, especially for personal opinions that have nothing to do with their profession.
Having worked with Weinstein for many years comes to mind.
When the sponsorship thing came on at the end I was reminded that I had forgotten that this was a fan-made youtube video and not a pro-made documentary. A+++
Main thing I love about Quentin is that he is having fun, and his movie usually have a fun vibe to them.
I implied this a little in the video, but almost every actor interviewed talks about how much fun they had. Many people refer to it as the most fun they ever had on a movie set (Rod Taylor, Production Designer for Django, Brad Pitt, Tim Roth).
Tarantino is one of the best directors because he doesn't just shout cues like Ian McKellen suffered in The Hobbit, but he provided references and spoke to his actors like humans and not like puppets. THAT'S a director in my book.
In college we knew this dude named Mustard he was like 30 to our 19/20. While watching Jackie Brown during the car remote scene he blurts out, "Fucking Tarantino Man, he always captures the nuance of conversation in every movie"
And bam! It hit me
Hit it to me too pls...
If we are as passionate about what we do as Tarantino is about films , we can all do great things in life !!
Mukund Krishnan underrated comment
... as long as you have the talent, discipline and vision to go along with that passion.
Now you just need a strong support to chase those passions
Can't wait for ''Once Upon a Time in Hollywood".
larry caverga
Dude nice. Same
I have set aside a premium bottle of lotion and a fine linen rag for that movie's release day.
then u should watch the trailer for now
#MeToo
INdie Channel don’t watch the trailer. Go into it completely blind
You should win oscar for editing this video . Brilliant video i hve seen in a year .
rebel guy 👍👍👍
If you don't take the volume inconsistency into consideration, sure. :')
Yeah too bad he wrote Quentin's name wrong.
Fuck anyone criticizing your video. They chose to watch long enough to form an opinion...and tbh, critiquing isn’t as much of an original act as it is spiteful, cold and useless. Despite some volume/audio mastering issues...this is edited very well with the narrative and how the content stays perfectly in pace when alluded to...I really enjoyed your video. I’m sure it took a little while to edit, etc....but it is great. Tweak those small things people have you feedback on, and I’ll keep watching.
I just gave you your 1.000th like. Congrats.
Man, Travolta was so cool in Pulp Fiction. I'm happy to know that Quentin fought for him so much or it probably wouldn't have even been made.
I am seriously palpitating at the sheer amount of knowledge Tarantino has regarding movies. He has seen so many movies in his lifetime that his mind is an encyclopedia for movies.
Awesome director and awesomely crafted video to solidify this fact.
The crazy thing is he's seen most of the ones he likes several times, and a lot of them dozens of times. I watch movies every day and rarely rewatch anything because there's still thousands I need to see.
Brad Pitt voice: *BONJOURNO*
Patrick Hogan BONEGIOORNOE
*ARIVERDERCHEE*
gorlami
Patrick Hogan BAWN JAWR NO!
When I visited Italy a few years ago my Italian accent was nearly that bad. People were laughing every time I tried to say something.
Love that you’re reinventing the format of what a traditional video essay would look like, thematically fitting in with the ideas that are discussed in the video.
Awesome.
When he relates he wanted the dance scene in Pulp Fiction to reflect just the joy and fun they had while dancing, he failed to mention that John Travolta is an incredibly talented and skilled dancer.
STILL, THIS IS PROBABLY THE BEST RUclips REVIEW I WATCHED EVER!!!
caps and exclamation points intended
I've watched wayyy to much RUclips to be proud of and this is literally one of the best made videos I've ever seen. The visual cuts, the use of music, the choice of dialogue , and the overall sequence really captured Quentin Tarantino's passion for film making. Really well done.
Take a standing ovation for the effort you put into this video. It's pure gold. Subscribed!
The way that Tarantino uses shots almost exactly from older movies reminds me of how Kendrick weaves oldschool rap lyrics into his songs
EXACTLY. Tarantino samples. Just like in hip hop.
@T toxic
T you’re a real loser buddy
Not the same in any sense. Sampling is using the original in something else. Tarantino uses techniques from old movies. Your comparison doesn't make sense.
Matt Parks his comparison makes total sense, you’re just being a douche
Damn it, now I have to watch "Blow Out"
Defo Travolta very good in it.
Gothic,"purse" "no repeats forever,in front of zip code",so what did I do smoke an electric air cigarette "smoke",let's talk about JT and Gerard "goodbye! goodbye! goodbye!",mmm.
Honestly it’s really good especially cause John Lithgow does his serial killer roll like from Dexter
You will not be disappointed.
just watched it. absolute masterpiece.
I wholeheartedly believe this is one of your best videos and definitely on of the best film video essays I've seen on RUclips.
Your thesis, points, and conclusion were all so clear and ALL without even speaking. This was just awesome. Thank you!
Just like I thought I would: I like Quinton‘s films a lot more hearing him explain the creativity behind them.
That shot of Django in the blue outfit riding on horseback through the cottonfield was such a powerful image. Quentin should have held on it much longer than he did.
God Damn this is an in-depth look at Tarantino - thanks for the insight
Man I think my movie knowledge is pretty damn good, but every time I hear Quentin talk, I feel like a Neanderthal lol
We removed the "h" like 60 years ago..
@@adankseasonads935 oh really, just like im about to remove your comment? Lol word prediction, I just clicked on it
@@StuntmanDanHemi
Okay..!? Some people can't handle a little razzing, I guess. Delete all you want man.
@@adankseasonads935 wrong. Still spelled neanderthal
Same lmao
I didn't even notice the time pass...
Pazuzu,"Baghdad zip code Death forever",purse avoiding dart-E.*. "ok!",there was some notes I mean don't forget the beganing,the black Coffee with no poppers! was the sweetest drown-oh it's LA sometimes and traveling "C. on the Bells",its was notes and sssssshhhhhhhhhh drowning "it was Drag Queen careers alright mmmmm . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . oh what drowning moments,these cheese fries are good . "holes in motel Europe" there was no talking heads "that one in the room "that is not the Devil "painting",sex.said 1 piece 666 each-smoke "eternal life,everlasting",Vampires read it with the beganing here m.Did sxu see the Gothic girls m,milk-this what it was in the movie-and Bulie not Katie Speilberg,that Vampire clip "the what if "hole in Europe-metal",the black not Gil. it was verx good Coffee "the right private-lamp our parents met,sex.Bulie is 44 now I am 42 "xh" that the whole time on a 18-26 crack "don't miss the beganing for Jesus Christ and his people,Junior is lxxking",realsx that C. "ses!",I have the music "priceless",616. "ahh."
Im not a filmmaker myself but seeing someone so passionate was very inspiring. Thank you for making this
Jesus Now I see the inspiration for Once Upon A Time in Hollywood. 1969 is the era he was a child in.
That’s what I really felt when I watched the movie. Tarantino created for himself a fantasy of hollywood like he knew and loved it but took out the thing that ruined it. So many reviews saying the movie was lacking plot and I can only think that they missed the whole point of the movie.
@@synlion Yeah he was a fan of Burt Reynolds. That is the idea behind Rick Dalton. It makes sense. Maybe that means Rick will be a big star in the years after 1969. Maybe Smokey, Deliverance or Mean Machine will make him a huge star.
Once Upon A Time is surely Tarantino's own baby. A beautiful love letter to an era that made him who he is today.
Great Video! In filmschool they basically just showed us films and we examined every aspect of any given film. I felt this is all things you could do on your own without having to allocate tons of money and time to a school. I feel Quinton just reinforces this belief. If you want to be a filmmaker, start watching movies, not only things you like but things you that might not really be your demographic. These frames you see will stick with you and help you when it comes time to make your movie you will have a vast library of shots in your head to choose from.
I love movies, I actually keep track and I've seen at least 780 feature length films but still I'd be completely rubbish at filmmaking.
well that the thing innit, rubbish is subjective, what is rubbish to you might be gold to somebody else. In fact there is a whole genre of film that are proud of how bad they are (birdemic, sharknado, troma films, ect). But the fact that you have seen so many films and have a general interest in cinema is a great start. When I went to filmschool I was blown away at how little my class had seen. If you ever attend you will most likely hear a phrase like this "you need to know the rules before you can break them" .. that's filmschool; the basic concepts of framing/lighting/shot composition/audio recording and releasing(try to find somebody to buy your film, spoiler alert nobody will buy it). All that stuff can be learned fairly quickly, what cannot be learned quickly is a vast knowledge of great shots. Er sorry for rambling …
Well for one thing I am one of the least creative people on the planet so I couldn't even make a crappy movie, I have a hard time writing 200 words. The only thing I can do is occasionally when listening to a music in a situation I feel like "Whoa, you could make a good shot out of this".
ahhhhh see you got it!! that's half the battle right there putting sound to moving pictures. Well I encourage you to just try shooting some stuff. Or at very least just start editing, hitfilm is a free comprehensive video editing software. You can do anything you can imagine with it. Why not just start making videos,, I mean you are on youtube :P.... edit: I mean more cinema like videos as opposed to whatever the racing stuff is you have going on lol. Or you could be like me (and many others) that find it nearly impossible to direct a legit production so am forced into animation. There is tons of free animating software, or I used GTA 5 director mode to just practice filmmaking. This is the most popular video on my channel ruclips.net/video/btwX3u1FO_A/видео.html&t theres nothing to it, but as you can see I was really trying to practice interesting camera angles.
I had the exact same experience, except I was lucky enough that my course was focused on practical learning opposed to theoretical. I remember having a lecturer ask who had seen Vertigo in a room of probably 30 people and I put my hand up and look around the room to not a single hand. And i just burst out "what is wrong with you people?!"
I honestly found the best students in the course were always the ones that watched and loved movies. I couldn't believe how few did though.
*You have no idea how long I've been waiting for this notification.*
That goofy video of Quentin dancing with Uma and John makes me really happy
I’m so hyped, I’m taking a class about Tarantino in the fall where we will analyze every single movie from Tarantino
Have you started yet? If you are in film school which one do you go to I’m looking into going and am open to all options
How was the class lmao
The film world that Quentin introduced me to changed all my preconceptions of what a great movie truly was. Just watching his work makes me want to dig deeper into film, its like trying to find that next high. Thanks Q
Great Job!! I enjoyed every second! Thanx for this.
Honestly Tarantino has to be my absolute favorite director.
I'd say Quentin Tarantino and Edgar Wright are my favourite directors; if you like them both as well I'd highly advise you to check out the Hot Fuzz commentary - it's absolutely amazing.
It's Tarantino and Kubrick for me. Substance is proved with time.
There's no doubt that Tarantino is the best at what he does. There are many great directors and most of them can do things that Tarantino can't, but none of them can do what Tarantino can do.
His catalog is unmatched but don’t sleep on the Coen Brothers
@@josephdocherty7919 Same two for me but add David Lynch
As an amateur filmmaker, this gives me a bunch of inspiration. Thanks for making this!
His use of music for his soundtracks is genius as well.
I really love it when artists use everything in life as a sample / inspiration for their work. Makes me realize how great this world around us is, if we just pay attention, connect the dots and read between the lines
He has made some of my favorite films. I have watched his movies over and over and over. Pulp FIction is top shelf entertainment. The Kill Bills are very good too. Anything with a light haired and tan Uma is high on my list.
LOVE this narration-less style! Feels very separate from all the other film essays saturating youtube. Feels much more natural as a documentary format
Yeah, it's very cool. Educates without feeling like you're being talked down to. Very "show, don't tell."
makes me want to have a movie theatre of my own in the basement with all the Tarantino, Chris Nolan, Scorsese movies..
Why chris nolan?
@Ryan Jang Because Inception = Paprika.
All three great... But. Add Antwan fuqua!!!
@@gerardbates5412 Who?
@@imkotable lupin paprika and cowboybebop
What I love most about this video is the ending. You always see people, especially film snobs, say they hate Tarantino because he does copies of other movies. But Jean- Luc Godard has done the same thing, yet film snobs hold him to a higher standard. Tarantino is no different from other filmmakers. They all are doing the things they love because of their love for movies when they were kids.
Quentin is such a movie nerd, i love it.
Wow, this had my hypnotized the whole 18 minutes
Quentin Tarantino quoting my favorite Disney movie _Aristocats_ just made my day :D
One of my favorite things about a Tarantino movie: the music. 👌
Quentin dancing while watching Travolta and Uma dance on the sets of Pulp Fiction is so beautiful.
The thing i love most about tarantino ia he makes hia characters human, the guys at the restraunt in the opening to resivoir dogs, the germans playing the "who am i" game in inglorious bastards, the dance scene from pulp fiction. If you can do that right it makes them more relatable, make you think "this is a possibility, this can actually happen" because you see yourself in the human aspect of the scenes as to say you could be a part of it and nobody would bat an eye
damnit i love Christoph Walltz
I missed you
The amount of film and pop culture knowledge he retains is both impressive and inspiring. This is a beautifully crafted video, nice job.
That was 18 and a half minutes of inspirational movie making dreams and highlighting the man, the amazing Tarantino. I’m drooling. Thank you.
i adore tarantino and every moment he's given us
Thank you for reminding me why Quentin is among the three best film directors of all time
Who are the other two?
Mishta Romaniello Kubrick and Kubrick
Nolan and Scorsese
Nolan has potential to be one of the best, I do agree with jimmer vasquez and think Kubrick is among the top 3.
I'd trade Ridley Scott for Nolan but what a top tier selection you have, sir
I am glad I am watching a new video from this channel....and Now you see it...too.
: )
puns, the best
Happy
I always have a feeling it’s gonna be an insightful video when the researcher considered there work an essay, in which I must say this was very elaborate and overall what I was hoping for....
I also enjoyed hearing, “familiar” music thanks for that.. great tribute.
what a great video, thank you. I love the editing, no unnecessary voice over, just quentin expaining the thoughts behind it himself. Great job!
I don't really get moved by documentaries yet Tarantino's passion and enthusiasm is very endearing. He is like a kid in class during a show-and-tell with a bunch of action figures. Instead of just mindlessly babbling Tarantino really expresses his knowledge and not only does he demonstrate what each figure can do he allows each toy to perform.
What an absolutely brilliant video. You showed us the clips, and let us read the poetry between the lines. I didn't even notice what you were doing until the line about Godard and breaking the rules!
Nobody can't explain Tarantino movies exept Tarantini himself
Tarantino's vision and storytelling + Christoph Waltz acting = Gold
Tarantino's story telling is like listening to the guy in the corner who nobody noticed, but he was the one who knew everything that was going to happen 10 seconds before it did. He's a clairvoyant eye witness to reality.
“If you just truly love cinema with enough passion, and you really love it. You can’t help but make a good movie” 😭😭
I saved this in my favourites!
I never do that.
So, essentially that playlist was empty up until today? :P
8:28 I really like the cuts emphasising what Tarantino is saying. Great job by the editor
this gave me the chills as the credits rolled out, damn, well done
It feels so good to see people who have such a passion of film make it in Hollywood
The soundtrack to Pulp Fiction is insane, probably the best soundtrack to any movie ever.
This thing just made me cry a little...
My parents saw pulp fiction on their second date together and walked away from that movie thinking "what the hell did we watch... I loved it" and when I saw it for the first time I was so mesmerized
3:13 sweet Jesus look at Quentin dance
😂 😂
One of the great gifts of cinema - One the greatest things an artist can do is to take what it is that moves and inspires them, and give it it their own personal, authentic twist. A legend for sure
It's one of the best montage about Tarantino I've ever seen, from sequences to music as well as editing, outstanding!
and controlling what the audience knows vs what the characters know.
mr. pinks identity, the poisoned coffee, shoshannas theatre plan, plan to free hildy, etc etc etc
Yep, it's that great form of irony where the audience knows more than the character knows.
Someone should give that form of irony a dramatic name, that'd be so cool and useful!
Fancy seeing you here Jay. I bet Demo loves Tarantino lol.
Maurice Ravel i believe he does, but i think he thinks django was just inglorious bastards again, no idea how he feel about h8ful.
i like it all except maybe deathproof, but jackie brown more so.
once upon a time in hollywood looks f**king great.
Not to mention the opening scene of Inglorious Bastards. That suspense is amazing. He puts Alfred Hitchcock's bomb under the table to extreme heights. Even later in the movie where Shoshanna is in the restaurant, the pub scene when do it the scene backwards, and the theatre scene when your antagonist basically knows everything. Tarantino is my favorite director. The king of suspense and dialogue
*that's my a e s t h e t i c*
that's my a e s t h e t i c
@Timothy Hill That's all you can really do since their is nothing new under the sun.
I love coming back to watch this. THANK YOU for making this, superb editing
Quentin talking about the Laserdisc version of Taxi Driver really shows his fascination , love and knowledge about movies.
Just rewatched this for the 4th time, still so so good!
dude this a badass comback!!! miss your content so much!!
3:02 sub fix "They're not executing a dance perfectly, but for my movie they were the greatest dancers on the world..."
That dance scene is so iconic. It feels totally out of the blue and in its own universe and is just perfect.
Every now and then I'll come back to this video and watch it all over again. It's one of the most fulfilling things, seeing Quentin talk about films, his films, and hearing his collaborators talk about him. Completely restores my passion for the artform. Thank you for making this.
I love u for doing that intro
Whats that song? I can never remember...
I grew up having the same name as Quentin Tarantino. I never really liked him because people kept mentioning him every time I introduced myself. That got really tiring, really quickly. I started to enjoy his movies with Inglorious Basterds but still had trouble with the man himself. This video changed my opinion of him to an extent. I feel like I have a better understanding where he's coming from at least. Thanks, Now You See It! Always excited when you post.
I dont think Blow Out is that great of a movie but the fact that Tarantino was so profoundly inspired by Travolta's performance in it made Pulp a masterpiece. Art is subjective and what you see isn't what I see.
I didnt like it either. However he saw gold where everyone saw rubbish.
Tarantino is one of our favorite directors, this is extremely thorough and well done. Loved showing the specific scenes that inspired him, he truly has his own unique perspective as a visual style. Thanks for the entertainment and insight!
Every time I come back to this video, with intent to watch only a couple clips here and there, I end up watching the whole thing. Bravo, Jack!