30 Facts You Didn't Know About Inglourious Basterds

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  • Опубликовано: 14 авг 2022
  • Inglourious Basterds is Tarantino's 6th film and probably the only movie he'll ever make that's going to be classified in the war genre. So it's only fitting that the story centered on World War 2 and in classic Tarantino style, a rewriting of history to a much more suitable end!
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @John.McMillan
    @John.McMillan Год назад +2152

    I always loved how hard Landa laughed at the "mountain climbing" story. On re watching it is clear he laughs so hard simply because it is such a horrible excuse and obvious lie.

    • @jeffreywilliamson4863
      @jeffreywilliamson4863 Год назад +144

      He's toying with them making them uncomfortable.

    • @hegemonycricket2182
      @hegemonycricket2182 Год назад +68

      Yes, he already knew how she was actually injured, so the story they came up with to explain it made him laugh extremely hard given how ridiculous it sounded.

    • @KryydsTV
      @KryydsTV Год назад +27

      He can't believe she went for that excuse, even Von Hammershmark didn't want to use it originally

    • @hegemonycricket2182
      @hegemonycricket2182 Год назад

      @@KryydsTV lol exactly

    • @hegemonycricket2182
      @hegemonycricket2182 Год назад +2

      @@la-li-lu-le-lo9444 re-watching the movie is probably what they mean. I've seen in many times myself.

  • @Eralen00
    @Eralen00 Год назад +1885

    Hans Landa was really a terrifying villain. He's so polite and cultured, intelligent, etc. but in fact he's a terrible monster hunting people down. he's just so good at it that he seems like he will never lose. Incredible performance by christoph waltz

    • @xmisterblackhatx
      @xmisterblackhatx Год назад +41

      Imagine my surprise when I realized he played bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz in Django Unchained

    • @dominicksignoretti315
      @dominicksignoretti315 Год назад +9

      Yeah I agree ☝🏼 he is def In my top 10 villains list, the way he goes about getting his answers he wants …. But in reality he already knows but he just wants to toy with them a little bit and torture them mentally

    • @cydeffect22
      @cydeffect22 Год назад +9

      Christoph Waltz is brilliant

    • @nepntzerZer
      @nepntzerZer Год назад +2

      He isn't a monster at all. Where do you get your information?

    • @Eralen00
      @Eralen00 Год назад +13

      @@nepntzerZer Do you know what metaphor is? He's not a literal monster like a werewolf or godzilla. He hunts people down and has them executed as though he were exterminating rats, he even compares them to rats. And he takes pleasure in it too

  • @DasUhMAZIN
    @DasUhMAZIN Год назад +275

    Fun fact; Brad Pitt worked with a dialogue coach to speak Italian with perfection. “Bon Jorno”

  • @biblesnbarcodes
    @biblesnbarcodes Год назад +159

    Hans Landa actually made me fearful, anxious, uncomfortable and unsettled. The last time I had that feeling was as a kid, Alan Rickman playing Hans Gruber, genuinely made me frightened of him. You could see the absolute evil radiating from them. As if it was a static presence in the room that you could touch, feel or cut with a knife...

    • @timreding4364
      @timreding4364 8 месяцев назад +4

      Linda Blair....The Exorcist.....end of story.

    • @cz2165
      @cz2165 3 месяца назад

      Good writing yourself!

  • @DynaMike101
    @DynaMike101 Год назад +604

    Christoph Waltz was the greatest. This man deserved his Oscar.

    • @burtonkephart6239
      @burtonkephart6239 Год назад +33

      Became an instant fan !! He did great in Django also.

    • @enriquemedina1727
      @enriquemedina1727 Год назад +18

      He has 2, one for this movie and one for Django, pretty well deserved

    • @0p4l_3y3z_XD
      @0p4l_3y3z_XD Год назад

      Did he die?

    • @burtonkephart6239
      @burtonkephart6239 Год назад +15

      @@0p4l_3y3z_XD no . He lives. But he is Austrian so you don’t hear about him much and maybe never would have if you were American . Thankfully Tarantino stumbled onto him.

    • @TheCyberMantis
      @TheCyberMantis Год назад +5

      @@burtonkephart6239 He was Blofeld in the last James Bond film.

  • @Keyser___Soze
    @Keyser___Soze Год назад +337

    That opening scene is one of my favorite scenes in film history if not my all time my favorite scene. The acting, writing, intricacies, details, pace, emotion, etc. etc. etc.

    • @easttennstudent
      @easttennstudent Год назад +1

      I agree 110%. But that opening scene is so great completely because of Christoph Waltz.

    • @wyattmaness1151
      @wyattmaness1151 Год назад +8

      I will never forget seeing this movie in theatre opening day and being jaw drop for 15 minutes straight. I had never seen anything like it before and I still won’t see anything like it again. Unforgettable and magical performance.

    • @senorpepper3405
      @senorpepper3405 Год назад +8

      So good. Even the French father. The tension, the dread in the father's eyes of what he has to do.

    • @memeperor_
      @memeperor_ Год назад +6

      the closeup of landa's face when he switches from being "unaware" to making it obvious he already knows he's hiding jews is the scariest fucking thing i've ever seen in my life

    • @hegemonycricket2182
      @hegemonycricket2182 Год назад +2

      As perfect as a scene can get.

  • @brian6391
    @brian6391 Год назад +621

    I've seen all of Tarantinos movies an unhealthy amount of times but inglorious bastards and Django are truly masterpieces. I feel like tarantino has one last final masterpiece up his sleeve and I'm so ready for it because I don't really get excited about most new movies but if it's a tarantino film i have to see it.(edit) I forgot about this comment until a notification but feel like Tarantinos last movie should be a cinematic translation of the book "Blood meridian". Many people have said it can't be made into a movie because it's too violent but if anyone could do it justice it's Quentin and it would be a hell of a sending off point for his career.

    • @black4277
      @black4277 Год назад +6

      Deathpoof was good so many references from old car movies and metal gear games as Pliskin. Kurt Russel is a legend. And a couple of thing ref.

    • @watchusayin4084
      @watchusayin4084 Год назад +12

      @@black4277 yeah its good once. Maybe twice. But django i can watch many times and basterds too

    • @docE3885
      @docE3885 Год назад +7

      Boy I wish they had left in the deleted scenes I would watch it if it was 4 hours.

    • @TheBruceKeller
      @TheBruceKeller Год назад +2

      Hope he does since his next is supposed to be his final.

    • @bostonbangouts
      @bostonbangouts Год назад +3

      @@watchusayin4084 Death Proof to me is amazing in its own right though. When compared to his other films you could say that it's lacking, but to me it's an incredible twist on the Slasher subgenre, and drive in movies of the 60s and 70s.. It was genius to substitute the stunt car for a blade as his weapon to kill women.. The metaphor that it's like a sexual climax when he crashes the car and takes all their lives simultaneously was perfect.. And the ending is just so satisfying when they jump Kurt Russell to death lmaoo I can watch it over and over just as I can with Django or Inglourious Basterds

  • @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
    @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 Год назад +42

    In the basement scene, the SS officer says “ I wasn’t talking to you, Lt. Munich…Or you, Lt. Frankfurt.” Indicating he can tell where the other two are from by their accents. So even if Hickox hadn’t given himself away with the hand gesture, they were already screwed.

    • @diogeneslantern18
      @diogeneslantern18 Год назад +1

      Amazing catch!

    • @darko-man8549
      @darko-man8549 Год назад +12

      I think he was doing a "I'm 99% sure you are bullshitting, let's wait for you to fuck it up completely"

    • @butters4596
      @butters4596 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@darko-man8549that's how I felt about it. He had to know where he was from and went in with superior and righteous confidence.

    • @devanman7920
      @devanman7920 3 месяца назад

      Ohh great catch

    • @hildahilpert5018
      @hildahilpert5018 2 месяца назад +1

      That,s true.My late dad was German. He spoke German with a Berliner accent.Learned it from grandma because grandpa would never teach daddy and Uncle Tom .Grandpa said we aren't in the old country anymore, we are in America and we speak English.

  • @johnstanley7442
    @johnstanley7442 Год назад +534

    The uniforms were well-researched, like Landa's SD uniforms, Hickoc's Commando uniform, complete with RAF eagle/RN anchor/Tommy Gun motifs (symbolizing the concept of Combined Operations), correctly embroidered onto his shoulder patch, and Aldo's woolen Canadian-pattern jacket, with its red arrowhead USA CANADA patch of the 1st Special Services Force, a sort of mountaineering special operations unit comprised of both Canadian and American troops, depicted in "The Devil's Brigade." Since they did fight in Italy, and were elite, this worked-for Aldo's back-story.
    The funny "pistol gloves" worn by the Basterds pretending to be waiters, upstairs, at the Cinema were very realistic examples of an actual OSS weapon. When you wore one of these gloves, and punched an enemy, the pistol mechanism attached to the back of the glove fired a bullet into the enemy. This was actually "a thing," used by the OSS, during World War Two. It was a single-shot .38, known as the Sedgley Fist Gun, and was also used by the Marines and the US Navy, by whom it was called the Hand Firing Mechanism, Mk 2. Very unusual, but it really did exist, and it "made sense," as an OSS gun prop for the Basterds to wield.

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад +10

      BROFIST...but with added 'bonus'

    • @trump45and2zig-zags
      @trump45and2zig-zags Год назад +6

      Nice additional info!

    • @someguy7629
      @someguy7629 Год назад +1

      They also could have offered Landa OSS chocolate and explode it into his mouth.

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад

      @@someguy7629 new nazi grade choclate
      With swiss cocoa made with pure French milk
      Landa
      Also for children
      Lander
      Comes with a gift that you can assemble
      Get your very own Lair the fuhreres personal hideout
      Or the atomic bomb
      A new gift every time
      Made by SS industries

    • @j.m.5744
      @j.m.5744 Год назад

      Jesus Christ pal, it was only world War 2, people remember what they wore wtf.

  • @bryanrussell6679
    @bryanrussell6679 Год назад +917

    Christoph Waltz stole every scene he was in. He was phenomenal. I had a very hard time appreciating this because I had just been fired and my boss looked exactly like him. I'm over it now, lol.

    • @chrisS19019
      @chrisS19019 Год назад +8

      LOL

    • @dspsblyuth
      @dspsblyuth Год назад +13

      He does that in every movie

    • @FinalBossWTMN
      @FinalBossWTMN Год назад +14

      He instantly became my favorite actor for this performance. An absolute masterclass.

    • @burtonkephart6239
      @burtonkephart6239 Год назад +9

      @@FinalBossWTMN he was great in django unchained also

    • @mbryson2899
      @mbryson2899 Год назад +1

      Did he dance to "The Blue Danube," too?

  • @billthecat666
    @billthecat666 Год назад +65

    I'm always in awe of the hard work Tarantino puts into making the films with no compromise.

  • @likydsplit8483
    @likydsplit8483 Год назад +79

    Having Waltz not rehearse his lines with the other actors is brilliant. I have often wondered if that tactic would be useful with many other classic villains (like Hannibal Lector or Heath Leger’s Joker).

    • @ethangarrett8128
      @ethangarrett8128 Год назад +11

      Interesting u say that. The first scene the heath ledger joker filmed with the rest of the cast was the ballroom scene where he burst in to look for batman and the look on maggies face was truly her being uncomfortable

    • @wulf67
      @wulf67 10 месяцев назад +5

      1. It only works on the first take.
      2. The only reason to do it would be because you have no confidence in the other actors' ability and skill to perform in the scene.

    • @michaelolin2219
      @michaelolin2219 9 месяцев назад

      Would’ve been great with Norman Stansfield

  • @ellis_lfc767
    @ellis_lfc767 Год назад +87

    This is such an incredible movie, Christoph Waltz stole the show in every scene he was in

  • @mimizetulfifi
    @mimizetulfifi Год назад +489

    Am I the only one that wants to scream at the screen: "it's pronounced SHO-SHA-NAH!''' ? :)))

    • @patrickmorgan4006
      @patrickmorgan4006 Год назад +37

      Absolutely not!!! I was doing the same thing. That was so annoying!! And he also mispronounces Goebbels.

    • @jin6000
      @jin6000 Год назад +10

      Thank god! Same!!

    • @1974djin
      @1974djin Год назад +1

      Me too

    • @blackbirb814
      @blackbirb814 Год назад +21

      He mispronounced a lot of stuff, but you shouldn't let it bother you. You knew what he meant, so his message was communicated effectively, and ultimately that is the main thing that matters in a video such as this.

    • @patrickmorgan4006
      @patrickmorgan4006 Год назад +18

      @@blackbirb814 It doesn't bother me but he was not communicating effectively if he was pronouncing words incorrectly. Attention to detail is important.

  • @shuroom57
    @shuroom57 10 месяцев назад +19

    I don't hear anybody ever discuss the tremendous skill Tarantino exhibits in selecting music for all his films. He's a master at it. He'll have a scene and go to his extensive library of recordings to pick just the right track for the background. For instance, in Basterds, the guitar/symphonic swell during the scene where Shoshana shoots Frederick Zoller, and he shoots her back, in the projection room. It's so elegant, yet so gory. Anybody else would have picked loud-@ssed boilerplate UH-OH music.

    • @timreding4364
      @timreding4364 8 месяцев назад +1

      Cat People...David Bowie.....when she was putting on her make-up......PERFECT!!!!!

  • @kimackerman2183
    @kimackerman2183 Год назад +136

    I actually had watched many of Tarantino's film but never this one until the pandemic hit. Needless to say it's now my official favorite film from his with Django probably 2nd. I never get tired of watching this film and actually stayed up late last night watching it again👏🏻 I can't get enough of the acting and cinematography.

    • @panchemist
      @panchemist Год назад +3

      I have watched this movie about 10-20 times since it's release... and still don't get tired :)

    • @burtonkephart6239
      @burtonkephart6239 Год назад +5

      Tanatino created a good role for Waltz as a good guy in django which was nice as he did phenomenal in inglorious and at least this time he was playing a ‘ good German ‘!!

    • @panchemist
      @panchemist Год назад +4

      @@burtonkephart6239 Wasn't it the thing with Waltz that he was mainly known for his roles on theatre stages in Austria? That might be the reason why he's capbable of holding up a scene and just "go onwards"
      I have not checked but the opening scene with monseigneur LaPadite was, allegedly, shot in one go - and it is intense, by gods! :)

    • @mikeholland1031
      @mikeholland1031 Год назад +1

      So you're not bothered by the crappy storyline?

    • @joonpak
      @joonpak Год назад +3

      Pulp Fiction says hi

  • @pab1381
    @pab1381 Год назад +304

    I’m glad they were able to find an actor to bring Landa to life. I know Quentin thought he was never going to be able to find the right person. Then Christoph came and it was history.

    • @nepntzerZer
      @nepntzerZer Год назад +6

      Oh yeah? I know Christoph. we play tennis every Monday. Afterwards we go get tacos and talk about people who know other people. He's never once mentioned you.

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Год назад

      @@nepntzerZer Any other famous names you'd like to drop? You know, casually, merely in passing?

    • @fuuuuuuuuuckyouprerna
      @fuuuuuuuuuckyouprerna Год назад

      What's the song in the video

    • @senorpepper3405
      @senorpepper3405 Год назад

      The opening scene with the French father, so good. Yeah, he was awesome.

    • @davewalters6214
      @davewalters6214 Год назад +1

      and then he co-starred in django unchained and then he was the history

  • @Somegoy
    @Somegoy Год назад +7

    After seeing Waltz speak fluent English, German, and French, when Von Hammersmark introduces Aldo and his men to him in the theater claiming them Italian. Waltz busts into perfect fluent Italian and I laughed out loud in the theater like Jesus this man will not have the wool pulled over him no matter what you do.

  • @Velthric
    @Velthric 8 месяцев назад +16

    I think the actors condition for play Hugo was a massive contribution to his character. You could feel the hatred radiating from him. It also is fantastic that he is the spitting image of the main character of the Wolfenstein games, also slaughtering nazis.

  • @triforcewielder8500
    @triforcewielder8500 Год назад +44

    Love this underated classic! Hans Landa is so scary without even saying anything... Great performance!!!!

  • @mikeg3439
    @mikeg3439 Год назад +45

    Quintin is beyond the ultimate nerd, one has to admire how deep he goes in this craft, it's amazing.

    • @haleydoe644
      @haleydoe644 10 месяцев назад

      We're generally just seen as autistic.

    • @mikeg3439
      @mikeg3439 10 месяцев назад

      @@haleydoe644 Genuine question, not being snarky: who are you referring to when you say we in your sentence? Very curious as I have been told I am probably autistic, but when I briefly looked into it, I matched more up with being very slightly Aspergers.

    • @haleydoe644
      @haleydoe644 10 месяцев назад

      @@mikeg3439 oh, I meant Quentin Tarantino. He is definitely on the spectrum. It's no longer diagnosed as aspbergers, which I appreciate.

    • @mikeg3439
      @mikeg3439 10 месяцев назад

      @@haleydoe644 that makes sense to me, thank you.

  • @Ihad9eyes
    @Ihad9eyes Год назад +8

    Another bit of foreshadowing is Lanza says "Au Revoir Shoshanna " which directly translates to " until we meet again"

  • @hollyawoods
    @hollyawoods Год назад +20

    One of my all time favorite movies. That whole first scene with Hans Landa is so stressful and gives me anxiety. You know some shits about to go down but the buildup is agonizingly long. I’m pretty sure I didn’t breath through that whole scene the first time I saw the movie.

  • @stephenhill1716
    @stephenhill1716 Год назад +61

    Hanz Landa hs to be the most terrifying person I’ve ever seen in my life. He’s so calm, calculated and cold. He’s intelligent and brutal. Truly scary. Best written character I’ve ever seen.

    • @TheCyberMantis
      @TheCyberMantis Год назад

      Kinda like Hannibal Lecter.

    • @kiraxxxxxxxxx
      @kiraxxxxxxxxx Год назад

      @@TheCyberMantis at least, Hannibal consumes the victims.

    • @TheCyberMantis
      @TheCyberMantis Год назад

      @@kiraxxxxxxxxx With some fava beans, and a nice chianti.

    • @davefloyd9443
      @davefloyd9443 Год назад

      Anton Chigur with culture and wit.

  • @LeeorEngelstein
    @LeeorEngelstein Год назад +16

    Christopher Waltz is now an actor I seek out and watch his movies because of inglorious bastards.
    SO GOOD!

  • @JacobC479
    @JacobC479 11 месяцев назад +46

    I still go back and forth on whether Landa knew who Shoshanna was during the strudel scene since he ordered milk for her, kind of a call back to him asking for milk in the opening scene.

    • @thewolf5444
      @thewolf5444 9 месяцев назад +14

      100% he knew her. He was always one step ahead of everyone else.
      That's why is so hilarious the ending when he finally gets outdone

    • @kelsulls
      @kelsulls 7 месяцев назад +11

      I believe he didn’t know it was her, more so suspected, hence ordering the milk and cream to see if he could make her crack, plus Landa never got a clear view of Shoshanna’s face as she was sprinting away from him in the opening scene.

    • @ZakPorterBridges0451
      @ZakPorterBridges0451 3 месяца назад +4

      Of course he did. Strudels back then were usually baked with lard, a pork product. Shoshanna being Jewish, this was Landa's attempt at making her break.

    • @sethgyellins
      @sethgyellins Месяц назад

      ​@@thewolf5444all he got is a scar that he can hide with a hat or even by styling hir hair to cover it. Compared to what would happen to SS officers after the war, it's a slap on the wrist

    • @cleverusername9369
      @cleverusername9369 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@ZakPorterBridges0451how could he have known it was her? He'd never even seen her face, just her back as she sprinted away. He may have had a suspicion but he couldn't have known for absolutely certain.

  • @thestreetpharmacist2685
    @thestreetpharmacist2685 Год назад +34

    Thought you were gonna mention his bowie knife
    It's a shining mountain bowie made by bark river knives and it is a beautiful handmade work of art

  • @GregMcGregsen
    @GregMcGregsen Год назад +117

    as a german i never realised that the scenes with the Nazis and german actors are actually spoken in german with english subtitles, i just took it for granted since everything gets dubbed here.
    What do u guys think of the german actors in smaller roles like August Diehl?

    • @georgeedward1226
      @georgeedward1226 Год назад +40

      The German and French actors were fantastic in this film. I respect Tarantino for having them speak in their native languages. It gave the movie added authenticity.

    • @DamienDarkside
      @DamienDarkside Год назад +8

      As a Canadian, I pop off whenever I see Canadians in films. I can only imagine how seeing someone German be in the film might be cool for you. I would genuinely like to see more actors in films cast this way, or even basic voice acting for shows and video games. I get that a lot of movies need a "star actor" for advertising purposes and the like, but come on. I find it incredibly hard to believe that gaming companies can't find naturally speaking actors for video games and just have Americans put on stereotypical accents. I think the "Bonjourno" scene really is a partial criticism to that aspect of Hollywood.
      I would adore for more films to have natural speaking actors as their characters. It isn't like Europe is lacking in actors, or any other country for that matter. I think it is a genuine mark of quality on a film when you can speak both languages, and you don't need subtitles for either because they are just speaking two languages like two people do.

    • @DiegoBenavidesGT
      @DiegoBenavidesGT Год назад +8

      Diehl was fantastic, and so was practically everyone in this movie 🎥

    • @nemousin7320
      @nemousin7320 Год назад +1

      @@DamienDarkside you know that germany has twice the population of Canada? it seems like you implied that it would be hard to find a german actor in a movie

    • @burtonkephart6239
      @burtonkephart6239 Год назад

      @@nemousin7320 ihre punkt??

  • @horrgakx
    @horrgakx Год назад +24

    Waltz's performance was outstanding in this film.

  • @OhhGeee
    @OhhGeee 11 месяцев назад +33

    It's truly a shame that Tarantino is done making movies as he has stated many times that he doesn't want them to appear to get worse as he gets older or "lose his edge" so to say. He is hands down the best director to ever make a movie.

    • @justaguy7590
      @justaguy7590 8 месяцев назад

      No he's not lol!😂

    • @Kieran.Net_
      @Kieran.Net_ 8 месяцев назад

      Kubrick, Scorcese, Fincher, and Aranofsky are all just as good if not better

    • @OhhGeee
      @OhhGeee 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@Kieran.Net_ I mean if you like old movies from the 70's with sub-par special effects then I guess so lol.

    • @chuckv321
      @chuckv321 6 месяцев назад

      he wont stop hes full of shit

  • @ChrisValera
    @ChrisValera Год назад +6

    Antonio Margeriti was mentioned in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood as a director of one of the spaghetti westerns Rick Dalton starred in.

  • @dedeerhan
    @dedeerhan Год назад +29

    Shoshanna its Shoshanna not Shozanna. I got goosebumps every time he said it.At the end of the interrogation scene at the beginning of the movie, Colonel Hans Landa shouted loudly behind her Or did you not watch the movie, you prepared this video.

    • @reuvencocos9573
      @reuvencocos9573 Год назад +4

      Seriously doesn't anyone proofread these before they get published?

    • @shaychromoy
      @shaychromoy Год назад +2

      Thank you! Exactly what I was thinking

    • @aryfrenkiel8641
      @aryfrenkiel8641 Год назад +1

      Pronunciation is horrendous

  • @glendasmilesalot2959
    @glendasmilesalot2959 Год назад +7

    OMG! Thank you so much for posting this. "Inglorious Basterds" is bar none my favorite Tarantino film. Sheer brilliance! Enjoyed fun facts! I could write a thesis on how much I love this film!

  • @robertmoon6156
    @robertmoon6156 Год назад +24

    You forgot to mention Antonio Margheriti the fictional director played by Eli Roth's character in the Basterds. Margheriti is also the name of a director Decaprio's character is directed by In Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

    • @jmpsthrufyre
      @jmpsthrufyre Год назад +2

      The Italian speaking scene was hilarious and tense. So good.

    • @soundped
      @soundped Год назад +3

      MAGA-Rhet-ti

    • @senorpepper3405
      @senorpepper3405 Год назад +1

      @@soundped when Landa keeps asking him to repeat it with a smirk. Like you can do better.😂

  • @rolfagten857
    @rolfagten857 Год назад +42

    Tarantino should actually make a prequel to this movie so we can see what happened between 1941 and 1944. And so that Pitt gets more screen time of course.

    • @zelmo73
      @zelmo73 Год назад +7

      I remember when they were talking about a rumor that Aldo Rain was getting his own movie after Inglorious Basterds. Of course, it never happened…but then Fury came out years later where Brad Pitt is almost a carbon copy of Aldo Rain’s character; almost as an homage to the character he played in Inglorious Basterds.

    • @eatfugu
      @eatfugu Год назад +2

      He is going on 60

    • @stomper5432
      @stomper5432 Год назад +1

      Dude that be dope

    • @stomper5432
      @stomper5432 Год назад +1

      @@zelmo73 true

    • @marduke45
      @marduke45 Год назад +1

      he probably got chewed out. hes been chewed out before.

  • @maxgoodwin4933
    @maxgoodwin4933 7 месяцев назад +2

    There’s a massive oversight in the video.
    The film IS a remake of the 1979 film. Tarantino met with Enzo Girolami (the last name should sound familiar as is referenced by Aldo’s false identity in the film) the original director was also invited for a cameo and the scene is amongst the deleted scenes. He shouts fire when the theater catches fire, a reference to his cameo in the original film where he played the commander of an anti tank gun giving the order to fire. The famous 3 finger scene was also written by Enzo’s son, an avid WWII history buff.

  • @aaaht3810
    @aaaht3810 Год назад +73

    I don't know about No. 11. I think checking Suzanne's pulse would not give him much intel. I think any Frenchman who had the SS come suddenly into their home would have a pulse rate that was off the chart, whether they were doing anything anti-German or not. In any event, Landa knew they were there.

    • @Peanutdenver
      @Peanutdenver Год назад +11

      100%...People's pulse rate can jump for many reasons. Meeting someone important the first time, someone you dislike, someone you like, eating, walking across the room and hundreds of other reasons.

    • @stellarwind1946
      @stellarwind1946 Год назад +9

      Hell being pulled over by police will raise your pulse rate.

    • @Peanutdenver
      @Peanutdenver Год назад

      @@stellarwind1946 100%

    • @chriswaters2327
      @chriswaters2327 Год назад

      @@stellarwind1946 Then they say why are you nervous? Because a Nazi Jew is shaking me down?

    • @zenmanokfine
      @zenmanokfine Год назад

      @@stellarwind1946 Not if you're innocent - unless the cops in question are known to be bent.

  • @nem447
    @nem447 Год назад +8

    How could you forget the Austin Powers cameo! 😁

  • @Seanmmvi
    @Seanmmvi Год назад +5

    Well done! This movie is in my top 3 movies of all time, accompanied with Django and The Priness Bride. As someone who adores this movie, when I read the title I thought, "pft - I probably know all these facts, but I'll give it a whirl ". I actually knew very few of these facts, most of them were new to me! Good job researching and making this video!

  • @Mike-eo5jk
    @Mike-eo5jk Год назад +9

    There was a group of German American Jews who fled Germany but came back to Germany as American soldiers. Collectively they were called The Ritchie Boys from their training in Camp Ritchie (sp?). A movie was made about them with that title. They were instrumental in the war effort because of their intimate knowledge of Germany and Germans. I would love to think they had some retribution by killing some Nazis as well.

  • @Giarcnek
    @Giarcnek Год назад +7

    Freaking Love Waltz...I'm surprised that there aren't Memes for his work in Inglourious Bastards and Django Unchained.
    "Calm yourselves gentlemen, I mean you no harm. I'm Dr. King Schultz and this is my horse Fritz"

  • @1337PeeZy
    @1337PeeZy Год назад +15

    Loved the breakdown. One thing that I was hoping to see was the scene at the bakery. Where Hans Landa orders Shoshana a glass of milk.
    That scene was Brilliant. I know he recognized her!
    The tension building between the director and actors was fantastic on this film.

  • @harrisonmccoy5589
    @harrisonmccoy5589 Год назад +2

    This video was incredibly entertaining and well executed! Thank you so much

  • @lexx5313
    @lexx5313 9 месяцев назад +1

    That opening scene with the farmer. Both actors did a phenomenal job. Also Sandler as the Bear Jew would've been awesome!

  • @thomaslieven8447
    @thomaslieven8447 Год назад +12

    Tarantino is a legend. The movies that he made were so original and had so many twists and turns. Absolutely amazing. The GOAT

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879
    @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 Год назад +8

    I grew up in and have never left the USA (crossed into Cananda once).....and when I first saw this movie, the finger counting thing hit me differently than most. I, too, never really thought about how I counted with my fingers (even though, I still do it and I'm almost 40)..... I realized that I count with my thumb first and I thought "....did....I always do that?"
    ....nope. I realized, then, for the first time... I changed how I counted because my right hand has been pretty much devastated by working and life in general. I have osteoarthritis, but it's real bad in my hands. so, when I don't think about it, I start counting with my thumb because it doesn't hurt. when I do think about it, my mind wants to start with my index finger, my hand tries and it is painful. 🤷‍♂️
    .... I never noticed I had switched how I finger counted ....

    • @butters4596
      @butters4596 6 месяцев назад +2

      I too never realized the fingers we count on until that scene. I tried using different fingers and people kept misunderstanding how many. It is truly amazing.

  • @thejuhlerofdk
    @thejuhlerofdk Год назад +1

    It really is a master piece.. I never get tired of watching it. Always something new to notice.

  • @chrisphipps7965
    @chrisphipps7965 Год назад

    Thank you for these insights. I really enjoyed it. Of course, great subject matter too 👍

  • @carpeimodiem
    @carpeimodiem Год назад +35

    One of the most underrated films of all time. One of the greatest screenplays ever written.

    • @crazycocopuff5307
      @crazycocopuff5307 Год назад +5

      I wouldn't call it underrated i think it has a great rating for what it's worth

    • @carpeimodiem
      @carpeimodiem Год назад +2

      @@crazycocopuff5307 it was by far the best picture of the year and wasn't even nominated. Many film critics had stupid takes on it. It was as close to perfect as a film gets. 10/10. Not 9.9. Rating it a 6 or a 7 is an abomination.

    • @PeterParker-vq2cz
      @PeterParker-vq2cz Год назад +4

      how is it underrated when everyone knows about it and its on tv all the time????

    • @carpeimodiem
      @carpeimodiem Год назад

      @@PeterParker-vq2cz underrated doesn't mean not enough people have rated it. It means the general rating it's been given is far lower than it deserves. A bunch of critics didn't like seeing a dude get brain'd with a bat. And gave it a bs score.

    • @CherryJuli
      @CherryJuli Год назад +1

      It’s not that great. It’s actually kind of dull. And as a German I’ve seen an insane amount of Nazi movies,

  • @natfoote4967
    @natfoote4967 Год назад +34

    Christoph Waltz does a hand sign during the milk scene that is a perfect rendition of a very old Gallic gesture that pantomimes running your pinched fingers along a hand-spun thread to check for fineness and a lack of bumps. It means "finest kind" or "top grade". He is showing off by behaving more French than an actual Frenchman.
    The reason his character, Hans Landa, kills von Hammersmark in such a brutal fashion is she did something he didn't predict. His whole self-image and self-worth is wrapped up in being able to read and predict other people. She insulted his superior intellect. This sort of character might tolerate that from another man, for a time, but a being outsmarted by a woman would have been emasculating and enraging. The scene is essentially a commentary on fragile male ego.

    • @Daveshotpocket
      @Daveshotpocket Год назад +7

      It's a commentary on Landa who is a psychotic villain. It has nothing to do with the male "ego."

  • @jenssweeting3915
    @jenssweeting3915 Год назад

    Yo this was so good! I didn't know most of these, and they're all super interesting. Excellent job!

  • @waterbourne9282
    @waterbourne9282 8 месяцев назад +1

    Mate, that was the best 'things you didn't know' I've ever watched. Big thanks.

  • @KP-vy9ro
    @KP-vy9ro Год назад +20

    Tarantino's best work IMO

    • @Baddie011
      @Baddie011 Год назад +1

      what is IMO

    • @Plank911
      @Plank911 Год назад +1

      @@Baddie011 “in my opinion”

    • @KP-vy9ro
      @KP-vy9ro Год назад +3

      @@Baddie011 lol new to this whole internet thing? Haha I get it, as for some reason I didn't know what the hell SMH (shaking my head...or at least the adjective of the phrase) and never asked for years, so I felt stupid for a good long time with that one. Haha but yeah the interwebs loves abbreviations to cut down typing for commonly used phrases. But I regress, still 1 of the tied first place Tarantino movies for me, Pulp Fiction (the first movie of his I ever saw at like 12 years old and tied for first place) is what really started my life of exploring movies as a art form. As Inglorious Basterds is his namesakes crescendo of the career of Quentin's (not to say that the two following films haven't been amazing too) filmography up until now, August 2022. Thoughts? Retorts? Vocal Stone Throwing?

    • @Cuzjudd
      @Cuzjudd Год назад

      agreed

  • @user-mn3ez2kl3v
    @user-mn3ez2kl3v Год назад +22

    It's always great to hear the behind-the-scenes doubts about casting and final scene selection especially when they end up turning out to be what made the film great. Hard to imagine if this movie could have been as great without Kruger, Roth, and Waltz. It's also admirable to hear value judgements made behind the scene cuts. Tarantino gives his audience a kick having his characters perform dramatic and raging outbursts into violence, yet a scene shooting a dog would definitely have upset the audience so he cut it out. Good decision.

  • @cadbane7780
    @cadbane7780 Год назад

    This is the best IG video I’ve seen in years. Good work 👍🏻

  • @Elc0chin0
    @Elc0chin0 4 месяца назад

    I have to say, this is one of my favorite movies I can watch over and over again.

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Год назад +4

    Christoph Waltz: I'm kinda hungry
    Quentin Tarantino: well I cooked you up this delicious script so you can completely devour every scene you're in, you absolute fucking legend.
    Waltz is so goddamn good, I am eternally grateful to Tarantino for opening my eyes to the utter genius that is that small handsome Austrian force of nature.

  • @Ringlord3434
    @Ringlord3434 Год назад +7

    It's theorized that Maj. Hellstrom saw through the Basterds' ruse right away, long before Lt. Hicox's flub. Few pieces of dialogue can support this. When he was being briefed on Operation Kino, Hicox mentions he hasn't seen any new movies from Germany due to embargos. How would he know so much about the Piz Palu movie, was he mostly bluffing? Another detail, Hellstrom says he knows every German in France worth knowing, so is it possible that he could have recognized Stiglitz, an infamous murderer? And, his "ear for accents" was unable to determine Hicox's because it wasn't from a German-speaking region.

    • @bokononistjim
      @bokononistjim Год назад +1

      i agree about stiglitz; he was someone hellstrom would have recognized.
      as for pitz palu, i think that was an older film, sort of a "classic" of the time from how it was being referenced. as the film was from the late 20s, i doubt the embargo affected it

    • @heathercookston4903
      @heathercookston4903 8 месяцев назад

      Hands down..Quentin is one of the BEST OF ALL TIME! I would love to hang out with him and his brilliance!

  • @bobrooney3336
    @bobrooney3336 Год назад +3

    little side note : one of the announcers in the cinema, telling people to take their seats because the film was about to start, is Bela B, the drummer of the famous German punk band "Die Ärzte"... he is only seen in one scene and has only one line.

  • @Daveyjokes
    @Daveyjokes 7 месяцев назад

    Landa saying "THAT'S A BINGO!" So menacingly and then asking if that was the correct way to say it chills my blood everytime. I love this flick

  • @Vinz3ntR
    @Vinz3ntR Год назад +27

    I saw this movie in the cinema back in the day. It still is the best experience I ever had. I never experienced a movie in the cinema where the whole audience were both mouse quiet or screaming with laughter and it wasn't even a comedy.
    Best movie I saw in the cinema

  • @easttennstudent
    @easttennstudent Год назад +4

    Here's another one to add to the list...
    Brad Pitt's character in the movie, Aldo Raine, claims to be from Maynardville Tennessee. Maynardville is the county seat of Union County Tennessee. Union County is the county just north of Knox County Tennessee, which is Quentin Tarantino's birthplace.

  • @jimmerhardy
    @jimmerhardy Год назад +2

    Filled with deep insider stuff that make the film even more arresting. Thanks.

  • @jimsmith9251
    @jimsmith9251 Год назад

    That was amazing thku, really enjoyed the video

  • @ninjanoodle0944
    @ninjanoodle0944 Год назад +4

    Til Schweiger is a badass, really wanted his character to survive.

    • @johnstanley7442
      @johnstanley7442 Год назад

      The following MUST have been intentional, so see if you noticed it: When the Basterds break-into the Nazi prison to free and recruit Hugo, despite all of the VERY loud gunfire within the hard-walled confines of the cell block, which would've been deafening, Hugo is so-hardened that he doesn't flinch a bit, nor even react, which is hilarious, for some reason. While Archie admonishes him, later, as Hugo sharpens his SS dagger, about losing his temper, and screwing things-up, Hugo looks-up, and says, "I don't look 'calm,' to you?" The warning menace of his "calm" is the greatest.

  • @lionheart6081
    @lionheart6081 Год назад +6

    I think we should all definitely recognize just how talented this man is! Not Quentin, but the guy who made this video!! Great editing, great information, and great voice for this type of work! Love these videos!!

  • @anyal1987
    @anyal1987 Год назад +1

    I often watch these kinds of lists and find I already knew most of it, but this time I was pleasantly surprised. Nice!

  • @nelliescoular5030
    @nelliescoular5030 5 месяцев назад

    This'll be the only time I ever thank anyone for changing the A in a title of anything to an E. Thanks, Quentin.

  • @Hewhoislikegod0
    @Hewhoislikegod0 Год назад +7

    Waltz is one of the greatest actors to ever do it.

  • @markich9510
    @markich9510 Год назад +5

    as a European I am just amazed how you can start counting with index finger instead of thumb...thumb is the first finger xD

    • @aceraspire7456
      @aceraspire7456 Год назад

      On the other hand (hahaha!); in all my many years, I am positive that I have never once, ever started counting with the thumb. Just feels completely unnatural now that I try it. 🙂

  • @everaldodejesus4018
    @everaldodejesus4018 Год назад

    GREAT STUFF! I ENJOYED IT IMMENSELY!

  • @johndufford5561
    @johndufford5561 Год назад +1

    Nice job! Learned many things about a great movie.

  • @DonzeJ
    @DonzeJ Год назад +4

    Mélanie Laurent has a unique sort of beauty that is irresistible.

  • @jacquilucquin8206
    @jacquilucquin8206 Год назад +3

    It is so difficult to name my favourite Tarantino movie... but this is definitely a contender. Masterfully done. I love the back stories... thank you!

  • @briandain8432
    @briandain8432 3 месяца назад

    Dang I gotta rewatch the movie now... And probably Pulp Fiction after cuz I watched Your video on it before this one. Great Job. Definitely Subscribing!!

  • @CoachJT
    @CoachJT 2 месяца назад

    great great great video! thanks man

  • @tc6818
    @tc6818 Год назад +5

    Christoph Waltz's Hans Landa is the equivalent of Heath Ledger's Joker.

  • @jpuentet
    @jpuentet Год назад +5

    Hugo Stilitz's name is based on the name of a Mexican Actor of extremely bad -but very widely viewed, and commercially succesful- Mexican movies of the 1970's (Mexican westerns, Jaws remakes, very low budget horror movies, etc.). I believe that the inclusion of Hugo Stiglitz as a character in the movie is a very personal joke and reference by Tarantino... This was the joke that me laugh the most over the whole movie (me, being Mexican, of course...). I atually cried loughing out loud when the name appeared onscreen.

  • @tsarytsin
    @tsarytsin 24 дня назад

    Excellent. Now I gotta go watch it again

  • @Cloverjay555
    @Cloverjay555 Год назад

    You sir have a new subscriber! Excellent job!

  • @hannibal8637
    @hannibal8637 Год назад +7

    One of my favorite parts of the movie was when the group planned to act Italian, and how they didn't elaborate when two of them mentioned the could speak a little bit of it. I was not expecting Brad Pitt to keep his accent while speaking "Italian", hilarious

  • @titustaddhaustaddltentakel9987
    @titustaddhaustaddltentakel9987 Год назад +7

    I love the fact that Till Schweiger is killing Nazis everytime he wears that uniform. I'm german myself and I actually quite eenjoy his acting through most of his movies. I actually think in todays time he is one of the best german actors that is still in business. Not the best, but up top with them.
    But again, then you have the fact, that there are just noit that many really great actors in germany. Sadly.

  • @TedBronson1918
    @TedBronson1918 7 месяцев назад +1

    Tarantino found the perfect actor in Waltz to play Landa. His character, being so cultured, educated and polite, could also be a vicious, uncaring and heartless person just like Reinhardt Heidrich - look Heidrich up if you don't know who he was. Waltz pulled it off perfectly.

  • @kylerjones4411
    @kylerjones4411 Год назад

    This was excellent. Thanks.

  • @rifles_up2263
    @rifles_up2263 Год назад +5

    Tarantino is a master at world building

  • @seymaster7434
    @seymaster7434 Год назад +18

    After rewatching the movie several times I always aksed myself did Hans Landa knew who Shosanna really was when they met in the Cafe where Zoller introduced her to Goebbels. The reason for this assumption is the way he orders a glas of milk for her like he ordered one in the opening scene of the movie on her familie's farm. And if this should be true, why wouldn't he arrest/kill her in this moment? Did he already see the potential in this situation that she would probably try to do what she then really did in the end at the movie night and this is the moment, when he first thought about his exit plan from the war? What do you think?

    • @P.J.MartyCone
      @P.J.MartyCone Год назад +2

      Maybe Hans did know it was her even at the restaurant. Maybe that's why he was adamant about the "creme"...which would probably be produced from the local dairy farmers in which Shoshana originated.

  • @crankybuzzard6867
    @crankybuzzard6867 Год назад

    Great video... Loved the movie.... and this fills in some great info.

  • @henryw5762
    @henryw5762 Год назад

    Great info. You got another subscriber!

  • @ThePenguin82
    @ThePenguin82 Год назад +5

    I would love to see Daniel Day Lewis’ interpretation of Hans Landa.

    • @patrickmorgan4006
      @patrickmorgan4006 Год назад +1

      I have a hard time seeing him doing it differently, to any great extent. Waltz was perfect and I'm sure Day Lewis would have been great also.

    • @jin6000
      @jin6000 Год назад +1

      Wouldn't have been as good

  • @DeckerDown
    @DeckerDown Год назад +10

    Also another tie to another character from a different movie : Cliff Booth is one of the two main protagonists in Quentin Tarantino's ninth film, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood. He is a Hollywood stuntman whose career suffered because of rumors that he killed his wife. Cliff is also Rick Dalton's stunt double, personal assistant and best friend. His father is Aldo Raine, who served a role as one of the protagonists in Tarantino's previous film Inglourious Basterds.

    • @lb2kxx
      @lb2kxx Год назад +2

      Cliff did kill his wife and it has never been confirmed that Aldo is his father as Cliff is a war hero himself

  • @Timosoininveli
    @Timosoininveli 6 месяцев назад

    Absolutely brilliant!

  • @BigRett
    @BigRett Год назад

    Great video...great channel. Subbed!

  • @FantomWireBrian
    @FantomWireBrian Год назад +35

    A bit of realism is when Nazis were captured. My dad was put in charge of a special gun squad under Patton to relieve the 101st in Bastogne. He wasn't trained and his only qualifications were surviving the Hedge row country. Him and his squads took out two SS/ Nazi squads. They were very motivated by pure hatred. Any captured were hung. Dad said they gave themselves away by rate of fire and types of firearms. Dad said when they came up against them dad would order his men to spread out and shoulder up against a tree and shoot random shots and yell "'Im out" . Dad said they came running in and when in range they'd open up . None in his squad carried Thompson's as they were unreliable and would give themselves away. They did have 1911's . My uncle asked him " How did you know they understood English ❓" Dad said all those Nazis understood English" he'd then say " And they thought they were Hitler's best" ❓ Dad one time was very maticulas about showing me how to tie a perfect hangman's noose. Snipers also were never taken alive .

    • @emdee7744
      @emdee7744 Год назад +4

      Wow. What an interesting bit of frontline history. Thank you for sharing this bit of your father's WWII military service.

    • @FantomWireBrian
      @FantomWireBrian Год назад +6

      @@emdee7744 Dad did have respect for the common German soldier. He shot a German soldier and sat down to take care of him, but as he was he felt a gun to the back of his head. The dying soldier pleaded for his life. That was Christmas eve,and Patton made it in the 26 th of December. Dad spent 6 months in a German prison camp. He almost died from starvation. I'm glad Dad never lived long enough to hear what Trump said about POWs being cowards. One of dads comments before he died was that he felt guilty leaving his men behind and thought he should've grabbed his 1911 to see if he could out shoot a gun to his head , even if it meant him dying. He actually thought he should've died trying even though he had no chance. He really never understood how deep he was in , but he never was lost. A German general trying to Joke in front of his men and laughed and told dad he had to be lost. Dad said just the look on his face, he could tell he was scared and lying.

    • @ottomueller4425
      @ottomueller4425 Год назад +5

      Bullshit.

    • @FantomWireBrian
      @FantomWireBrian Год назад +2

      @@ottomueller4425 So we have a Nazi arm band that he took off of one before the little Nazi was hung . I'm sure Dad asked him nicely for it before or maybe after he quit kicking. Not sure 🤔❓ It still has a Hitter medal pinned on . Maybe a different war 🤔❓. Kinda like taking a scalp . It is black and white and red all over.He didn't like the Lugar and shooting them with it drew fire ,but some used their own weapon to kill them. He did like their rifle cleaning kit and their hand grenades . He did return some grenades back to them when he found them . Just the fair thing to do. So where did your dad hide or dodge during the war 😐❗

    • @FantomWireBrian
      @FantomWireBrian Год назад +2

      @@emdee7744 I wish I had asked more questions,and dad when I was little kept many things from me. Most I over heard when my uncle's asked him questions. When I was about 6 I asked " Dad what's it like to kill someone" ❓ Dad said ":You never know if you did . You'd shoot at someone and find them dead , but it could've been any of our guys . You never could tell. He never talked about his 1911 until my uncle asked about clearing buildings when I was there. My uncle said ": How can you clear a building with an M1 ❓Dad just said " Oh it works" . It didn't. I found out later he had a 1911. and when he got back he bought a Smith and Wesson 22 revolver on a K frame and bought a . 357 to match. He squirrel hunted with the 22 and nobody ever saw him miss. He never owned or shot a handgun before the war . Later when the heavy medication broke him down he'd just skip out things that we never heard before. He'd say ":I told you that didn't I ❓No dad you didn't. He was to meet with an Officer from the days before he passed away about the Hedge row country. The Officer walked into his room when I was there and said " When you get out the Army wants to discuss your move through the Hedge row country " . Dad could've talked to him there ,but the meeting was obviously private. Dad just said " I'm not leaving " and the Officer thanked him from the Army for his service and Country and both saluted and he left. I thought going to Bastogne was the worst until that day . He died two days later and I never heard much before that day and no time after unfortunately.

  • @KoriMasho
    @KoriMasho 7 месяцев назад +8

    Hearing you mispronounce Shoshanna over and over again hurt my soul.

  • @steveharmon735
    @steveharmon735 8 месяцев назад

    Great video. I just subscribed. Cheers!

  • @KarleighMiller-wy2su
    @KarleighMiller-wy2su 7 месяцев назад

    This was awesome. Wish you had gotten the restaurant scene swueezed in but still, very well done sir 👏👏

  • @AWGragg007
    @AWGragg007 Год назад +7

    Like many of you have already pretty much said, Mr. Waltz is definitely an amazing person and actor. I mean to be able to fluently speak 2 or 3 languages is impressive but he can speak 4 that we know of! That to me is almost super human...I took Spanish in high school for a few semesters and still never learned to speak it fluently, I didn't practice enough. But I'm betting Mr. Waltz can also speak Spanish...so that'd be 5 languages! Once again he's an amazing person for sure. He did a great job in "Spectre" and Django also...one of my favorite actors.

  • @ThePenguin82
    @ThePenguin82 Год назад +6

    Hey- dude- her name is SHOSHANA. NOT SHOZANA

  • @mebsie3198
    @mebsie3198 Год назад

    Liked the video a lot couldnt stop watching 👍👍

  • @MaxwellBenson80
    @MaxwellBenson80 9 месяцев назад

    Nicely done!