FIRST TIME WATCHING | Once Upon A Time... In Hollywood (2019) | Movie Reaction | Spaghetti Western?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Thanks to Grandaddy Bret, both of us check out Quinton Tarantino's Ninth Film, Once Upon A Time... In Hollywood (2019) for the first time. Here's our reaction.
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Комментарии • 674

  • @Serenity113
    @Serenity113 3 года назад +546

    The ending with Rick Dalton meeting Sharon and the others made me emotional. Like, "If only this happened instead."

    • @MrHartApart
      @MrHartApart 3 года назад +43

      Thank you, Quentin - sincerely from, pretty much everybody.

    • @brandoncollins1225
      @brandoncollins1225 3 года назад +23

      It was definitely his most emotional ending since Jackie Brown. I had a tear in my eye for sure.

    • @17thknight
      @17thknight 3 года назад +44

      Same here. Knowing what actually happened, how she begged for her baby's life. I get really really choked up, wishing this could have been.

    • @finishin.my.coffee8780
      @finishin.my.coffee8780 3 года назад +42

      Steve McQueen was supposed to be there that night, visiting with Sharon and her friends. He always carried a piece. Who knows? If he'd been there, they all might have lived.

    • @damonmcfarland9364
      @damonmcfarland9364 3 года назад +23

      @@finishin.my.coffee8780 Quincy Jones also said that he got an invitation to have dinner there that night. and Debra Tate as well. in one docu, Debra said "maybe if they had one wild child there that night...." I really dig the ending. the ultimate What If...

  • @greyinvader
    @greyinvader 3 года назад +57

    The scene with Sharon Tate watching her movie with the audience and enjoying them laughing at her scenes...it makes me cry every time. And the alternate universe ending is pure joy. This movie is Tarantino's love letter to old Hollywood and I LOVE it!

  • @kellywiggle1
    @kellywiggle1 3 года назад +249

    i love this movie, it's one of those that you can just kinda sit back and enjoy the ride. i saw this in the cinema and everyone died laughing at the ''well...the fucking hippies aren't''. the ending was joyous as i remember feeling anxious about the fact that i knew what was gonna happen, but loved that it turned out i didn't have any clue what the ending would actually be and it was one of the most satisfying endings ever.

    • @Kayoss13212
      @Kayoss13212 3 года назад +10

      Agreed. Same thing happened in my theater. In a movie with a lot of talking, the build up to the final fight scene was totally worth it.

    • @jainelson8840
      @jainelson8840 3 года назад +15

      That is a hilarious line. The second one has to be Cliff saying “He said ‘I’m the devil, and Im here to…do some devil shit’”

    • @scotthill1600
      @scotthill1600 2 года назад +3

      Watched it w my ex & her grandparents in the cinema, grandparents left halfway thru bc they thought it was boring. I loved it & knew by the end they had no taste

    • @jimherbert007
      @jimherbert007 2 года назад +3

      Same. The tension of thinking we were going to see the Manson killings was brilliantly released so the whole cinema was on a massive high

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 3 года назад +408

    One of the best ever "time and place" movies. Tarantino killed it. And his alternate-history ending is hilarious.

    • @mikemath9508
      @mikemath9508 3 года назад +2

      I guess that means I won't get it, because I think it looks flat. I watch every other decades films, but I've seen so few 60s

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 3 года назад +6

      @@mikemath9508 Only some of it is about 60s films. Some of it is about 60s reality.

    • @notimportant3686
      @notimportant3686 3 года назад +1

      it's his least compelling movie

    • @luciferluci4570
      @luciferluci4570 3 года назад +1

      he always does

    • @mr.smithgnrsmith7808
      @mr.smithgnrsmith7808 2 года назад +1

      Time and place….called a period piece….smfh

  • @slothkng
    @slothkng 3 года назад +144

    I went to see this in theaters with my dad. He was so confused because he’d never seen a QT movie. But was interested in the whole Tate Manson story. The look on his face was hilarious as we were leaving

    • @pistonburner6448
      @pistonburner6448 Год назад +1

      Maybe you shouldn’t have done the ol’ hole-in-the-popcorn-bucket trick to him.

    • @trevorjameson3213
      @trevorjameson3213 3 месяца назад

      A lot of people who have never seen a Tarantino movie don't understand it, that's normal. But if you've seen all of his movies from day one, then you'll get it, and really enjoy it. My wife never saw Pulp Fiction, and I told her it's a great movie, I've seen it several times over the years. So we watched it together, and she: 1) didn't understand it, 2) was confused by it, and 3) didn't like it one bit. Oh well, her loss I guess. I have always liked Tarantino movies and really enjoyed them, very entertaining for sure, and tons of great dialogue.

  • @ainsleyperry5192
    @ainsleyperry5192 3 года назад +107

    A lot of the words spoken by the Manson Family in the film are taken straight from the court trial. People have complained about the ending being too violent. But some would say that what happened to Sharon Tate and her friends that night, the killers got off very lightly. The film has the most satisfying ending,by, after all these years laying an open sore to rest. Cheers, Chris Perry.

    • @fynnthefox9078
      @fynnthefox9078 2 года назад +6

      And like with Joker, they ignore other violent movies like John Wick and Rambo.

  • @slimbrady6691
    @slimbrady6691 3 года назад +219

    This movie has one of the most satisfying endings of all time.

    • @timdaugherty4014
      @timdaugherty4014 3 года назад +22

      Makes us wish that's how it happened in real life.

    • @pulkmees
      @pulkmees 3 года назад +3

      Completely the opposite for me. I was liking the laidback mood of the whole movie(even though the first time I wasn't) but then it has to do this pointless cartoon violence bit. Whole movie builds to a joke. And it wasn't even surprising. He already did in Inglourious Basterds. He makes Cliff have superhero strength and makes the Manson members be completely incompetent which takes away any tension. Even if he was high AND blindfolded he would have taken them all out. Also I'm tired of seeing Tarantino doing only revenge stories.
      Also I really don't like the direction he went with the brutality of the executions. In previous movies they had a completely different vibe to all of them. Here I can't stomach any of it, there's no weight to them, just indulgence. I get that it suppose to be as harsh as what they did to Sharon Tate and others, but why show someone getting slammed into a wall that much. And then I look around and everyone is laughing at that. What ?

    • @davidpalmer7175
      @davidpalmer7175 3 года назад +3

      Fucking-A Bubba!!! I was cheering in the theater.

    • @LeMansionnaire
      @LeMansionnaire 3 года назад +2

      @Slim Brady
      really why?
      I like the movie and hate the ending. I bought the movie and cutted the end out.

    • @LeMansionnaire
      @LeMansionnaire 3 года назад +1

      @@timdaugherty4014 the difference is the people in real life did something, while here innocents were killed.

  • @tonygriffin_
    @tonygriffin_ 3 года назад +139

    Like all stories that start with "Once upon a time..." this film ended with "...and they all lived happily ever after." Sharon Tate's sister was bringing a case against Tarantino because, like the rest of us, all she'd heard was that Tarantino was making a movie about the murder of Sharon Tate, her unborn baby and others, and she quite rightly thought that was gross. Tarantino showed her the script and explained what he was going to do and she gave the film her support after that. That last scene, with Sharon and her friends all alive at their home, laughing and smiling, makes me cry every time. I'm 60 and feel that this film is for the over 50's - or 60's LA/Hollywood enthusiasts - because there are so many cultural references to the time that would be missed otherwise. The fashions, the cars, the sets, the buildings especially, are as accurate as possible to the time and the radio station that is always playing and provides most of the music in the film along with DJ chat was put together when Tarantino put out a call for anyone who had recordings of the station to come forward and he compiled the soundtrack from their tapes as the station had closed and there were no recordings left.

    • @tonygriffin_
      @tonygriffin_ 3 года назад +5

      @Keki Stani They'd advertised the film as being based around Sharon Tate's murder for about 2 years before the film came out. Tarantino even held back its release date until the anniversary of her death.

    • @slimbrady6691
      @slimbrady6691 3 года назад +2

      Well, it wasn't happily ever after for the fucking hippies. 😂

    • @porflepopnecker4376
      @porflepopnecker4376 3 года назад +11

      I cringed when I heard Tarantino's next film would be yet another turgid yarn about the Manson family, and hated this movie in advance. Little did I know that it would become my favorite of his films. I absolutely love this movie.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben 3 года назад +154

    This movie is such a blast. It is long, and has a somewhat uneventful plot in the traditional sense, but man is it a thrill to watch. And Cliff Booth as portrayed by Brad Pitt is definitely one of Tarantino’s great characters.

    • @Joker_JAK
      @Joker_JAK 3 года назад +1

      My favorite scenes are actually the ones with Rick filming the episode of that series where he's "Dakota". Lol

    • @stevenjohnvasquez9112
      @stevenjohnvasquez9112 3 года назад +3

      Yeah it’s a hangout movie much akin to Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction, George Lucas’ American Graffiti, or Richard Linklater’s Dazed & Confused-Not so much of an overall central plot to the entire film itself. More like a bunch of character driven subplots within the film (Rick as a formerly popular tv cowboy noticing that his star isn’t shining as brightly as it once did, Cliff a stuntman with an ambiguous past that prevents him from getting work in his chosen field, Sharon an actress who is on top of the world and her profession enjoying the life that everyone else begs for and looking forward toward her future).

    • @Michael-hc2vs
      @Michael-hc2vs 2 года назад +1

      @@stevenjohnvasquez9112 also somewhat similar to Big Lebowski

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад

      Someone in some reaction video complained about all the driving around scenes. But that’s just L.A. There was a lot less traffic in the 60s and 70s, but people still spend a great deal of time in their cars.

    • @B0R0M1R
      @B0R0M1R Год назад

      exactly. Many people just dont get the movie. It doesn't have to meet any expectations or be realistic. It only needs to be entertaining and boy oh boy this movie is sure as hell that

  • @brandoncollins1225
    @brandoncollins1225 3 года назад +29

    There are several things that are happening in this film. One, is that Tarantino is nostalgic for the Los Angeles he grew up in. He was around 7 in 1969 when this is set.
    The movie is basically about the time period in which the old Hollywood studio system died out and was replaced by auteurs. That also coincided with the end of the love and peace generation that died with the Manson murders.
    Those events happened to also parallel Tarantino's discovery of film as an art form and made him want to be a writer and actor. If you look at everything Tarantino loves it is from this time period.
    He's also doing just what he did in Inglourious Basterds by rewriting history and giving it a satisfying conclusion, knowing that only exists in the movies. He's giving you what you want but also showing you how artificial it all is. That's why his stuntman does all the hard, gritty work for him at the end of the movie, and Cliff gets to come in with the flamethrower and do the flashy part.

  • @MrHartApart
    @MrHartApart 3 года назад +68

    watching this movie the first time all I could think was, what are we building up to? 'Cause, we all know what actually happened. That ending was basically Mad Max Fury Road packed into 5 minutes and it was worth it. The second time watching it I learned to simply enjoy the entire ride; An aging actor and stuntmen nearing the conclusion of their friendship. Tarantino nailed this slow burn and it's a full-on A for me.

    • @markmac2206
      @markmac2206 3 года назад +5

      i was unaware of the twist, i hadnt seen the other movies where he rewrote history so i thought it would end with the gore of the actual story. thankfully not because we already know that story and it would be tasteless.

    • @granthoover9045
      @granthoover9045 3 года назад +4

      @@markmac2206 yeah I actually think this was an incredible strategy. We all know Tarantino and we all know the story of the Manson murders and when you hear Quentin is doing this story we all immediately imagined his gory style and what that murder scene would look like in the style of Tarantino. It was smart subversion then to completely redirect the violence next door and rewrite history. We get the catharsis like Hitler dying in Basterds. He played us like a symphony with what our expectations were. I’ve never really heard of a director doing that before.

  • @XXdocdropXX
    @XXdocdropXX 3 года назад +14

    “So Tarantino just leaves in everything everyone else would just edit out?” 😂😂😂

    • @manfrominnerspace
      @manfrominnerspace 3 года назад +2

      Loved that extra ten seconds of silence

    • @Destino2493
      @Destino2493 3 года назад

      Haha clearly you haven’t watched Zack Snyder’s justice league 😂 2 extra hours of bullshit unnecessary fluff and slow mo and the plot is complete dogshit

  • @theviciouschickenofbristol4779
    @theviciouschickenofbristol4779 3 года назад +28

    One of my favorite things about the ending is that Rick had no real idea what was happening when that chick came flying through the glass door. But he figured the best course of action was to go get the flame thrower anyway.

  • @TheRequiemOfficialReal
    @TheRequiemOfficialReal 3 года назад +67

    The "Spahn Ranch" scene was filmed in the back of Chatsworth Park and every shot had to be super tight due to Topanga, Santa Susanna Pass and the 118fwy. Spahn Ranch became part of Chatsworth Park in 1992 and the original spot where the Manson clan resided has been a baseball field since 96-97. I live a stone's throw away the Park. They did build a legit set to resemble and replicate the Ranch. Spahn Movie Ranch got renamed to Dream Quest Studios and located on the other side of the hill in Simi Valley next to Corrigan Park. A lot of film and tv has been filmed there. Dream Quest is responsible for the Poltergeist movie and that house is 3 blocks from my old high school.

    • @maxtew6521
      @maxtew6521 3 года назад +3

      That's crazy you live so close to a place with both so much movie and TV history and so much true crime/pure evil history. I'm a southerner, and the closest thing we have is Civil War sites and Indian mounds, but so much time divorces most of us from feeling the weight of them. Glad they made something useful of that space. That's just wild, though.

    • @SalGomez
      @SalGomez 2 года назад

      The Spahn Ranch was recreated at the former Corriganville Ranch which is now part of Chatsworth Park.

  • @NeelTheSphynx
    @NeelTheSphynx 3 года назад +59

    Damon Herriman played Charles Manson both here and in Netflix's Mindhunter and the Mindhunter performance is stunning. The incredible makeup done for the show makes it all the more uncanny.

    • @blueeyedcowboy8291
      @blueeyedcowboy8291 2 года назад +4

      That was immediately what I thought as well. His performance as Manson in Mindhunter was phenomenal.

    • @LumpyAdams
      @LumpyAdams 2 года назад

      @@blueeyedcowboy8291 Phenomenal is a stretch. He has the mannerisms down but that's it. Jeremy Davies was better.

    • @rafac7384
      @rafac7384 Год назад +1

      And his was in one of my fav movies: House of Wax (2005)!

    • @rafac7384
      @rafac7384 Год назад +2

      And his was in one of my fav movies: House of Wax (2005)!

  • @davidpalmer7175
    @davidpalmer7175 3 года назад +22

    Sharon Tate's sister was a consultant on this movie and she LOVED the ending. She said it was the "what if scenario" concerning her sister.

  • @twoheart7813
    @twoheart7813 3 года назад +34

    Definitely my fav T movie. Love the way history comes to life in a Tarantino kind of way. You really need to know the history around that time, the events, the characters before you can truly appreciate this movie.

    • @aaronlane1391
      @aaronlane1391 3 года назад +10

      It definitely deserves repeated viewings. So many details and references gives it a very rich texture with terrific character building- it think it is Tarantino's most thoughtful, nuanced film.

    • @kdizzle901
      @kdizzle901 3 года назад

      Django unchained

  • @SilviaVanThreepwood
    @SilviaVanThreepwood 3 года назад +26

    I absolutely LOVE this movie. I'm all here for the "slice of life" part of it, it's basically Tarantino's love letter to 60's Hollywood culture. It's not so much all a build up to the Manson murders, this is 2 movies in one, 2 storylines that just happen to kiss. Plus I feel the ending is so satisfying, because you can see that Tarantino wants to right this colossal, horrible wrong that happened to Sharon Tate and her baby.

  • @StreetHierarchy
    @StreetHierarchy 3 года назад +29

    18:20 "So, Tarantino just leaves in all the stuff that everyone else would just edit out, then."
    Actually, yes. That is a well-documented feature of his aesthetic.

  • @porflepopnecker4376
    @porflepopnecker4376 3 года назад +27

    The actress playing Squeaky is former child star Dakota Fanning. The real Squeaky Fromme gained even more notoriety later on by attempting to assassinate President Gerald Ford. The real Clem Grogan (the creep who punctures Cliff's tire) was once described as "barely human."

    • @youtmeme
      @youtmeme 2 года назад +3

      the real clem was described as such bc he was high on drugs all the time, a lot of drugs!

    • @melissawinn3295
      @melissawinn3295 2 года назад

      Who's the actress that plays Susan A in once upon a time in Hollywood cuz she looks soo fuckin familiar

    • @JayM409
      @JayM409 2 года назад

      She is out of prison now.

  • @stevenspringer1599
    @stevenspringer1599 3 года назад +21

    Cliff was experiencing 'trails', an effect that happens during acid trips when movement leaves a hallucinatory trail of images in the air.
    I got nervous when Cliff went onto the ranch because as I remember reading that Tex beheaded a stuntman and buried him out there.
    I think you two should check out Robert Redford's "Jeremiah Johnson".

  • @rainydaydreamawy
    @rainydaydreamawy 2 года назад +3

    Any film reactor who says a film is "a little long" maybe should consider reacting to TikTok videos or some such tripe. Sorry, the artist's vision inconvenienced you. But at least your Lean Cuisine is ready.

  • @monsterkhan3414
    @monsterkhan3414 3 года назад +14

    "Once upon a time in Hollywood" is a great movie but it's one of those movies that gets better with additional viewing because you see new things with each new viewing. I rank it high on the list of Tarantino's best movies. My personal favorite is "The Hateful Eight". However I do believe that Tarantino's best has been and always will be "Pulp Fiction".

    • @norwegianblue2017
      @norwegianblue2017 3 года назад +1

      Hateful Eight is probably my least favorite of his films. But we agree on Once Upon a Time.

    • @moodfm5673
      @moodfm5673 3 года назад

      @@norwegianblue2017 easily his worst film.

  • @MC-vw7gp
    @MC-vw7gp 3 года назад +14

    I absolutely love this movie. I think at its core it is about the friendship between Rick and Cliff enduring. At the beginning of the film when Rick is so down about his career he talks about being one pool party away from being back in Hollywood's good graces because he lives next to Roman Polanski. Movie ends with Rick complete on the outs and then while sitting in his pool having an incredibly sad party with his last Hollywood friend, Cliff, a wild event happens that ends up being his introduction to Sharon Tate, and probably down the road Polanski. I think that probably got him a part in a Polanski movie, revitalized his career and he and Cliff get to keep on keeping on. Fantastic movie.

  • @porksausagelicencetothrill4380
    @porksausagelicencetothrill4380 3 года назад +4

    Should watch the movie Kalifornia from 1993 with Brad Pitt in and also stars Juliette Lewis, that's a good one and Brad Pitt loves his Chilli and Lucky Lager in that movie

  • @sdaniels160
    @sdaniels160 2 года назад +4

    The movie is not about the Manson murders. The movie is about the end of an era in Hollywood. Cliff represents the last real cowboy confronting the fact that his kind are no longer needed. The movie is about the character, not the murders. The parts that you think should have been edited out are the very point of the movie. It's about the end of the old Hollywood. It was very much necessary.

  • @porflepopnecker4376
    @porflepopnecker4376 3 года назад +25

    This movie is a spectacularly delightful and cathartic experience for those of us who lived during that time and get all of the many references, both the major ones and all the wonderful little throwaways that Tarantino packed in. For those who don't get any of that stuff, this film will just sail right over their heads and leave them utterly lost. One of its main joys is that it gives us a happy ending to one of the most disheartening and deeply troubling events that we ever lived through, something so bad that it has stayed with us ever since. Another thing about this movie is that it's a Christmas present for anyone who grew up watching the old TV westerns and reveled in the exploitation and genre cinema of the time. But as I said, in order to appreciate it at all, one must recognize such references as Eddie O'Brien, Andy McLaglen, Spahn Ranch, the dumpster-diving Manson girls, Lancer, James Stacy, Joanna Pettit, Paul Revere and the Raiders, the guests at Playboy Mansion, Matt Helm movies, 50s and 60s TV westerns and television in general, and everything regarding that awful night including Sharon's guests Abigail Folger, Voytek Frykowsi, and Jay Sebring as well as the killers themselves--not just recognizing the names but the feelings that they evoke. Considering all this, I think this tale was conceived by Tarantino to appeal to the most narrow range of audience for any of his films. As for me, I watch it at least once a month and it has become my favorite of his films.

  • @nicholaslindsey7087
    @nicholaslindsey7087 3 года назад +21

    Absolutely incredible film. The ending is definitely bittersweet. We all wish Sharon Tate and her friends were still alive, and this movie gives us that.

    • @migalorsdarwin1930
      @migalorsdarwin1930 3 года назад +1

      When i read comments like that, i allways ask myself why do people even care so much about Sharon Tate etc. especialy when those people where not even born back then when she and the others were killed.
      Do not get me wrong, sure i hoped all that stuff did never happen to her, but murders happen every day.

  • @CsikiAttila
    @CsikiAttila Год назад +1

    "Tarantino just leaves in all the stuff everyone else would edit out" - not only that, this movie is in fact a brilliant negative of what really happened. If what happened was a cast bronze statue, this movie would be the cast. It is a whole new concept of storytelling, when you don't say the story, but everything around it.

  • @EACru2002
    @EACru2002 3 года назад +17

    This isn't my personal favorite of QT's movies, but it's easy to see why he made it. 60's film making is Tarantino's favorite era, especially the era pre Manson Murders where the general mood was free and happy (in no small part due to the infusion of drug and sex culture). Then the Manson Murders hit and it was like a giant sobering wake up call. The happy, fun attitude in Hollywood disappeared. Cinema started becoming very cynical and dark after that. This is QT's alternate wish fulfillment reality where he wishes he could stop that terrible awful real life event from ever occurring. That's why Brad Pitt's character goes so hard on them at the end, killing them in super brutal ways, but it's not played as horrifying. Knowing that these people on screen are representative of real life, super evil people (just reading about what they did will give you chills), it's instead incredibly cathartic. If anyone in real life deserved something like that, it was those people.
    I believe Tarantino even reached out to the family of Sharon Tate and told them about wanting to make this film and they were supportive of it. That's why there's that scene where Margot Robbie/Sharon Tate goes to the theater to watch her film. At first, it seems weird to be spending so much time with her doing something that's not critical to the plot. But he wanted to show she was a real person. Not just someone you read about in the newspaper (or wikipedia now). That she did the very human thing of going to a theater and watching a movie she's in. Just letting her exist. Letting her get her fairy tale ending (which is part of the reason why the film is named Once Upon a Time In Hollywood, it's a fairy tale).
    Also interesting that the vehicles he used to be the catalyst for this change was Leo and Brad Pitt's characters. They're actually more representative of "old" Hollywood. It's not a coincidence that they made their living off of 50's/early 60's Western TV shows. And through Leo, you kinda see a reflection of the evolution of acting, and just filmmaking as a whole was going through at the time. He actually manages to adapt, going from uncomfortable with being a hippy/Hell's Angel cowboy to nailing the scene with the kid, in a bout of more "real" style acting that was becoming more popular than the more staged style of the 50's. Still, at the end of the film, him and Pitt are being set up as knowing that their time is coming to an end. There's a new Hollywood that they're not a part of.... Until the Manson family come knocking at the wrong door. So this isn't just a fairy tale ending to Sharon Tate, this is a fairy tale ending to stars of the early Hollywood, where maybe they didn't get pushed out but instead embraced.
    All in all, the film is a love letter to Hollywood. Even literally, which is why there's a ton of just long driving shots. That's kinda part of the reason it's not my favorite, because I'm not from that area. so a lot of those shots, I'm sure for people from there, it's a great nostalgia trip, for me though it just seemed like long driving shots. But I still enjoyed the movie more than I didn't, and I can appreciate where Tarantino is coming from with it.

    • @SubZeroCommander
      @SubZeroCommander 3 года назад +2

      Well said !

    • @paulhewes7333
      @paulhewes7333 3 года назад +3

      Plus, those Manson Family member BUTCHERED Tate and the rest for REAL. So a little fake brutality on them was the least he could do for them.

  • @johnt84
    @johnt84 2 года назад +5

    I know way too much Sharon Tate so I appreciated Tarantino's alternate universe. Definitely a love letter to that era and how age can catch up to us. Pitt and Dicaprio's characters managed to stay relevant and became heroes in the process (that's probably the point of the movie for those saying it's aimless). I also hear Tarantino adored the fuck out of Sharon Tate (me too) she actually represents "purity" in this movie. The way she carries herself is real innocent and sweet compared to other characters. We don't see her a lot but she is the centerpiece in a way. I loved it.🥃🍻

  • @inthebiscuits
    @inthebiscuits 3 года назад +7

    I really love this movie, it's one of my favorite Tarantino films. I heard it's an homage, or like Brad Pitt called it, Quentin's love letter to Los Angeles when he was growing up there in the Sixties and Seventies. And I hate to say, but I loved them destroying those Manson assholes lol. I don't normally advocate violence on that level but f*ck them for what they did, especially to pregnant Sharon Tate.

  • @badgersgetabadname
    @badgersgetabadname 3 года назад +12

    I enjoyed this film so much when it was released and I still do. The alt universe Tarantino provides even goes as far as branding. Brad Pitt fecking Bruce Lee into a car is just wonderful. Tripping your balls off with a dog is pretty amazing. Its nice to see you two watching something new together. Is the original Martyrs too messed up for YT?

  • @matthewcorya7514
    @matthewcorya7514 3 года назад +8

    This is my favorite of QT ‘s films basically a love letter to the Hollywood that he grew up in. I love his alternative history ending!

  • @thefeedman
    @thefeedman 2 года назад +1

    To give some additional context "Once upon a time in the west" 1968 and "Once upon a time in America" 1984 both directed by Sergio Leone are worth a watch.

  • @slimbrady6691
    @slimbrady6691 3 года назад +7

    15:00 She was wearing those glasses because the character she played in the movie wore them and she wanted to be recognized.

  • @DESTRUCTIONKATCHUP
    @DESTRUCTIONKATCHUP 3 года назад +7

    Imagine being high on acid with someone pointing a gun at you who says “I’m as real as a donut mother****” 🤣 Brad did a great job of reacting 😂

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад

      I imagine acid is a lot less common nowadays so fewer people have any experience with it, but I thought Pitt’s portrayal was pretty good, from his seeing trails when moving his hand to the laughing at Tex and pointing a finger gun at him. In my personal experience, one can get pretty deep into hallucinations and weirdness and then snap out of it when reality impinges and you need to interact with it. You feel crazy, the normal world feels crazy, but you don’t forget how to behave. In a way you’re better equipped to deal with bizarre but real situations.

    • @DESTRUCTIONKATCHUP
      @DESTRUCTIONKATCHUP Год назад

      @@MarcosElMalo2 truth. But it would be mind blowing! 😂

  • @bekind3931
    @bekind3931 3 года назад +2

    Maybe not best to start w/this film if not familiar w/his work. The movie felt long to you bc you thought it was about the Manson family when it was really about a Hollywood star coming to grips w/the twilight of his career. Thinking the western set was not part of the plot was funny: Messing up his lines and then recovering from it w/the child actor telling him it was the best acting she’d ever seen was a HUGE plot point. Made him realize he had to do the spaghetti westerns so he could come back on top, playing the hero again. (A lot of parallels to Clint Eastwood who was also in a TV western but fired from films bc they said he couldn’t act, so he starred in hit spaghetti westerns and came back as Dirty Harry.) Along w/being a love letter to Hollywood, the film is prob personal for QT. He’s said he’ll only do 10 films, and this was his 9th, so he’s prob feeling nostalgic about the end of his career.

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 3 года назад +8

    This is Tarantino's wish fulfillment fantasy in which the art and era of filmmaking that Sharon Tate represented, gets to live on, while its destructors were themselves destroyed instead.

  • @charleslee8313
    @charleslee8313 3 года назад +2

    "Cliff is in no state to fight back." Let's test that hypothesis.
    The hippie girl who sold Cliff the acid-dipped cigarette played B.B. in Kill Bill. The Manson Family member who got cold feet was Maya Hawke, Uma Thurman's daughter.

  • @adams8135
    @adams8135 10 месяцев назад +4

    What is up with her criticisms over the littlest things in the movie?? Things that are in every movie but she feels the need to point them out every time in this. Cuz she thinks it’s a Tarantino thing, when it’s just a basic ass editing choice

  • @kp22kc
    @kp22kc 3 года назад +5

    This is a nice leisurely stroll of a movie that ends with an incredible bang. The look is amazing. I saw it once in the theater and had to see it again just to see the end again. Seeing it the second time there was so much more to take in. When Sharon is watching herself on the big screen and it is actually the real Sharon Tate instead of Margot Robbie was a bit odd to me...until I saw it the second time. The sheer joy on her face as she leaves the theater is a wonder of acting on Robbie's part. Although my favorite part is the end section, but I absolutely love the scene when all the signs of the restaurants are lighting up one at a time. It just looks like the 60's and the soundtrack is just spot on. A wonderful movie that I think is misunderstood. I've read online many many times how people think this movie is boring, but I find it fascinating. Tarantino is supposed to release a 4 hour version sometime and I can't wait. Love this movie!

    • @kp22kc
      @kp22kc 3 года назад

      Kill Bill is my favorite Tarantino movie(s) If I come across it on TV I'm there until the end...either Vol 1 or 2.

    • @JayM409
      @JayM409 2 года назад

      I remember watching that movie in the Theatre. It was one of the Matt Helm movies, a James Bond spoof, like the Flint films.

  • @andrewcharles459
    @andrewcharles459 3 года назад +6

    My viewing of this movie was extra special. I'm old enough to remember the events, but I had no idea what the movie was about. I wasn't tipped off by the date stamp early in the film because it was too early. But when that car turned onto Cielo Drive, I knew exactly where the plot was going. - just not the ending. Brad Pitt earned that Oscar.

  • @laudanum669
    @laudanum669 2 года назад +3

    The girl hitching that Cliff picks up is actress Margaret Qualley daughter of actress Andie MacDowell.

  • @bottlerocket3218
    @bottlerocket3218 3 года назад +7

    I LOVE the rare occasions when you BOTH haven't seen the movie! (Double of the reaction impact)

  • @trouty42
    @trouty42 3 года назад +7

    I really love this movie, Leo's scenes with the young girl were great, she was wonderful in her scenes. The ending is brilliant I laughed all the way through, so Tarantino. QT really likes his anthologies, he does them well.

  • @RunsLikeMays
    @RunsLikeMays 2 года назад +5

    I love this ending. It gives me the feeling that I know The Shape of Water was going for, but wasn't nearly as effective. By throwing "Once Upon a Time..." on the screen as Sharon Tate carries on with her life, you know that this was a fairy tale, with the ending that everyone wants but knows it isn't. There's a certain amount of melancholy that comes with it, which makes it nearly perfect.

  • @EvyDiz17
    @EvyDiz17 2 года назад +6

    This is one of those rare movies that just gets better and better every time you watch it. I had a pretty “meh” feeling after my first viewing, but since then, I’ve probably watched this 5+ times and now I absolutely love it.

  • @Joker_JAK
    @Joker_JAK 3 года назад +5

    I love this film. Saw it twice in theatres. I'm a big Tarantino fan. Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction are my favorites of his. I was fortunate enough to see Reservoir Dogs in theatres a few years ago.
    This film was a love letter to Golden Age Hollywood. Tarantino loved that era and wanted a film to represent it.

  • @alucard624
    @alucard624 3 года назад +5

    Best part about the ending is that it absolutely ridicules the cult members like the pieces of crap they truly are. They all should have been taken care of that way in real life and it's one of the few times I've welcomed revisionist history in a movie considering the real life events were terrible.

  • @michelletrainor7096
    @michelletrainor7096 2 года назад +2

    Sharon Tates sister was against the movie until she watchedd it . When she did she cried as margot robbie was truly amazing capturing sharon it was like seeing her alive again. She wished just like all of us that he had ended the same way. She enjoyed the revenge and said it was perfect.

  • @pistonburner6448
    @pistonburner6448 2 года назад +4

    This is definitely my favourite Tarantino movie. So incredibly beautiful.
    Second is Pulp Fiction. That will always hold a special place in my heart. And thanks to my friend I'd seen all of Tarantino's work.

  • @Rosary716
    @Rosary716 3 года назад +4

    Liked this movie and glad you reviewed it. I was newly pregnant when I heard about the murders. If only this ending was what happened in reality. Sharon Tate just wanted to have her baby. 😢

  • @chuygutz5002
    @chuygutz5002 3 года назад +2

    My favorite movie is True Romance. He didn't direct it, but he did write the screenplay. I believe it was one of the first movies that he wrote. ✌ Chuy

  • @tense99
    @tense99 2 года назад +3

    I teared up when the hippies got slaughtered. I felt like something we lost with the Manson murders
    Something beside Sharon and everyone was saved that we never were meant to lose. Also it was badass.

  • @countgeekula9143
    @countgeekula9143 3 года назад +6

    Love it. It's a fairytale with a happy ending. QT gives this awful story the ending we all wish it really had ie Sharon, her baby and her friends live happily ever after. If only.

  • @SalGomez
    @SalGomez 2 года назад +1

    I'm sorry , but Damon Harrimon was an excellent Charlie Manson. There's more of him in the deleted scenes. He was so good in fact that he played the incarcerated Manson in the Netflix Series "Mindhunter".

  • @brentharker7868
    @brentharker7868 Год назад +2

    Tatantino Movies ........ in a nutshell (They are all good watches)
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD = What happens when the Manson Family, foolheartedly, assault Clint Estwood's home when both his tougher than Bruce Lee, stunt double, and the guy's killer dog are there rather than taking out the defenseless Polanski household?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN A WHAREHOUSE = Resevoir Dogs = What happens to trigger reconsideration of a Career in Law Enforement?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH = Djanjo = What happens when a noble German dentist and the fastest gun in the west, a freed slave, visit Candyland, the baddest plantation ever?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN VICHY FRANCE = Inglorius Basterds = What happens when an army squad of avenging Jews, and their allies, entrap the entire German High Command, prior to DDay?
    ONCE UPON A TIME RIDING SHOTGUN = Death Proof = What happens when the b@#$% can take a punch?
    ONCE UPON A TIME DURING PREGNANCY = Kill Bill 1&2 = What happens when returning unwanted wedding presents.
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN A RESTAURANT = Pulp Fiction = How can I get The Wolf to clean up the mess of my life?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN A STEWARDESS OUTFIT = Jackie Brown = What happens when the girl power of Pam Grier and Bridget Fonda act little Bobby DeNiro into the shadows?
    ONCE UPON A TIME AT MOTEL 6 = The Hateful Eight = What happens when the entire Wild West isn't big enough for the 8 of them?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN BREAKING BAD = True Romance = What happens when the love of your life arrives in the form of a Crack Ho?
    ONCE UPON A TIME IN OLLIE STONE'S MIND WHILE HE'S HIGH ON SOME GOOD %*&#
    = Natural Born Killers = What happens when you direct Woody Harrelson, Juliette Lewis and Rodney Dangerfield to just be themselves?
    ONCE UPON A TIME WITH SALMA HAYEK TABLE DANCING WEARING NOTHING BUT A BIKINI AND WITH A REAL PYTHON SNAKE WRAPPED AROUND HER NECK = Dusk to Dawn = Does any charactor deserve to die more than the one played by Tarantino?

  • @mrdavman13
    @mrdavman13 6 месяцев назад +2

    Lol that’s almost EXACTLY what Charlie Manson looked like at the time. He was small, squirrelly, long bowy hair. Lol in his old age obv he looked very different. But that younger time he looked very much like how he did in this movie

  • @MrBellsa61
    @MrBellsa61 3 года назад +4

    "take this mechanical asshole off my street" is an iconic line when it's said by a night robe wearing Leo as he's holding a jug of margarita. 👌😂

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 3 года назад +6

    The ending was quite shocking and unexpected and amazing! It shows, what if two guys, an actor and his friend, a stuntman, saved the life of an actress from a fate worse than death?

    • @thorstrebla980
      @thorstrebla980 3 года назад +3

      @callmecatalyst Your comment makes me think about the O.J. Simpson case. All the jokes about the bloody knife, the "colon/slash" internet jokes...people didn't care about two dead people. They totally disregarded the fact that the blood and guts came from two victims.

  • @junietunes2148
    @junietunes2148 3 года назад +5

    I used to live in Seattle, Kona Kitchen is amazing!

  • @mvasqu762
    @mvasqu762 Год назад +2

    Women, please for the love of God. Please stop asking for the answers the the movie will give you. I shut these off soon as I hear you ladies trying to ask questions that your can learn in time. Just let the reaction happen. Quit trying to figure it out before your get shocked

  • @Kirbybaby
    @Kirbybaby 3 года назад +3

    the part where leo fucks up his line and freaks out is so enjoyable cause it's very realistic being and working with actors 🤣 I didnt like the bruce lee scene but I guess tarantino is literally rewriting history with this movie and it's not meant to be taken as a serious depiction of the real people characterized.

  • @pokeround
    @pokeround 3 года назад +2

    A real return to form for QT and his best since Jackie Brown (imho). He takes his time meticulously building a fascinating 'alternate' reality and his penchant for revisionist storylines hits the sweet spot here. Gonna do my usual schtick and ask for a Solaris (2002) reaction. Might get lucky one day...
    Keep at it, you lovely people!

  • @paulallen1656
    @paulallen1656 11 месяцев назад +2

    Just because you haven't figured out the movie in the first 3 minutes is no reason to sit there with constipation face. Just relax....the story will unfold at the pace it should.

  • @donaldstone540
    @donaldstone540 8 месяцев назад +1

    The ending here came close to happening irl. Steve McQueen was invited to thePolanski' house that night, he just didn't go. Had he showed, the night would've ended about like this movie. McQueen was a Veteran, a brawler, and a student of Bruce Lee. The guests at the Polanski house were sensitive type intellectuals, McQueen was a take-no-shit kinda guy. I'm sure he would've taken that .22 away from Tex and shoved up his a$$ sideways then disarmed the hippie chick's in short order. Just my humble opinion.

  • @ravissary79
    @ravissary79 3 года назад +2

    I think there's a strong subtextual social commentary here about how Hollywood is effed up BECAUSE of the death of innocence surrounding the not so innocent golden age of Hollywood... that there's something inherently ruggedly American about that post war generation, and a failure culturally in the clash between mainstream culture snd counter culture in 1969, between Manson, the John Lennon song "I Don't Believe", Woodstock being held out as this utopian hope, but resulting in a muddy confused orgy that accomplished nothing. Our hyper-sensitive, false liberal (regressive) moment is symbolized by the Manson family, and Tarantino's adult version of golden age Hollywood is the libertine but responsible libertarian impulse of the greatest generations humble idea of success.
    He reimagines that cultural moment differently and what it represents for us today if we're willing to fight back for our personal freedom against insane weirdos (damn dirty hippies). Doing so doesn't make you perfect, but it's better than letting psychos tear us apart.
    But to do that he has to gully transport you back to that 1969 reality, warts and all, to buy into his alternate history emotionally and what it stands for.

  • @mattcup8541
    @mattcup8541 3 года назад +3

    Please watch Death Proof. Or the whole Grindhouse double feature.

    • @SaRENRampaiger
      @SaRENRampaiger 3 года назад +1

      yass Planet Terror too! I love those movies. Esp. Machete!!!

  • @kalevi7821
    @kalevi7821 3 года назад +5

    I remember watching this with my friend in the cinema. I found a good portion of it interesting, before watching the ending. I was in and out sometimes. Then that ending hit, and boy did it hit hard! I hadn't been so happy with a movie ending like that in a long time!

  • @stvpodcast
    @stvpodcast Год назад

    Rewatched this just the other day so wanted to check back to see your reactions. Sorry if I probably repeat a lot of what has already been said.
    This film is just incredible.... the ending with Rick and Sharon is just perfection. ❤
    I believe Brad and Leo's characters were based on Burt Reynolds and stuntman Hal Needham. Burt Reynolds was actually lined up to play the part of George Spahn but I believe fell too ill.
    I also love that Tarantino didn't replace the actual Tate footage in the film that Margot Robbie watches. I thought that was very touching but also surreal.
    The sets in this film are some of the most amazing I've ever seen too. Would love to know how they did it.
    Incredible piece of movie making.

  • @willv7868
    @willv7868 3 года назад +4

    QT really did his research with this one. So many details in this actually happened. Even the two cars parked at the Polanski house were the same the night of those murders.

  • @artdeco64
    @artdeco64 3 года назад +8

    Have to say that I am jealous of Mr. because the Mrs. is so pretty and smart.

  • @skeezaworkan
    @skeezaworkan 3 года назад +2

    It's a ballad about old Hollywood, a love letter of sorts. And kind of revenge on those dirty hippies from Manson's Family.

  • @kaibricturner8836
    @kaibricturner8836 3 года назад +3

    This is basically a love letter film about the 50’s & 60’s of Hollywood filmmaking. It’s centered around three characters and their journey through that time period, the good, the bad, & the ugly. Great film! One of my favorites actually. I saw this 3 times in the theaters. Maybe 🤔 4, but who’s counting? 🤷🏾‍♂️😂😂😂🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾💝❤️

  • @n0body550
    @n0body550 Год назад +2

    Looks nothing like manson? Girl are you blind 😂 he plays manson in more than just this you know

  • @darkmagus64
    @darkmagus64 3 года назад +4

    I loved this movie. Tarantino grew up in California in the seventies and he paid respect to his memories. Also the late sixties a early seventies began the new Hollywood when the westerns died and the anti hero arose.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад +1

      As an Angeleno of roughly the same age as Tarantino, there are a thousand little details he got right. For me, this movie carried a big nostalgic load, giving the ending a powerful emotional payoff.

  • @Lespaul13100
    @Lespaul13100 2 года назад +2

    Tarantino's alternate endings are great, just like Inglorious Bastards!

  • @npenta551
    @npenta551 2 года назад +2

    that Manson was used in David Finchers Netflix series Manhunter.

  • @hissatsu4937
    @hissatsu4937 3 года назад +5

    Jason Voorhees would be proud of Brad in that final scene there. Absolute savage.

  • @the9-2-5outlawdoestech9
    @the9-2-5outlawdoestech9 2 года назад +1

    If only the lives of Sharon Tate, her unborn child, Abigail Folger, the heir to the Folger Coffee Company/activist, Jay Sebring, the Hollywood hair stylist, and Woicjiech Piotrozki, the friend and producer to Roman Polanski were spared, Roman Polanski probably would have not sexually abused the then 13-year-old Samantha Geiner. When I saw this film, everyone thought what happened historically was going to happen in this film. Thank Quentin Tarantino for creating alternate realities in cinema.

  • @geoffmason7215
    @geoffmason7215 3 года назад +1

    Jake Cahill...Tarantino is a John Wayne fan? Amazing

  • @mikemath9508
    @mikemath9508 3 года назад +2

    Smart choice putting the Kona Kitchen shirt on the Mrs.
    I can't imagine a t-shirt over plaid

  • @mikemath9508
    @mikemath9508 3 года назад +2

    I like to think Mr watches the movie after without the glasses, if its something new.

  • @kyles5513
    @kyles5513 3 года назад +2

    The ending is Tarantinos vision for what should have happened

  • @eddieevans6692
    @eddieevans6692 3 года назад +5

    This is actually my favorite Tarantino movie. I love the pacing, sense of period and the slow build up of dread. When I saw it in the theater, I was literally in tears anticipating what was going to happen to beautiful, innocent, pregnant Sharon Tate and the others. And this one had an alternative ending I could embrace.

  • @jppennypincher9051
    @jppennypincher9051 2 года назад +3

    Pulp Fiction is a generational classic. One of my fave movies ever. That said, this may be Tarantino’s greatest accomplishment. This is such a great film and it continues to grow in its stature every viewing.

  • @kevindobson9732
    @kevindobson9732 3 года назад +2

    My fav Tarantino movie ever is Jackie Brown
    Gotta react to that

  • @Vertigotheatre1
    @Vertigotheatre1 3 года назад +3

    And RIP Luke Perry

  • @elwray3506
    @elwray3506 3 года назад +2

    Hell, it occured to me just now, that "Operazione Dyn-O-Mite" was made by Antonio Margariti, one of the "three Italians" from Inglorious Basterds. Haha... Marga-RI-TI

  • @yankeesfan3961
    @yankeesfan3961 2 года назад +1

    Leo and Brads characters in this movie were made up but they were inspired by real people in those days in those roles which actually existed. Actually, all these characters in this movie were inspirations so they are real, to a certain degree.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 3 года назад +1

    10:24, this scene drew controversy as Bruce Lee's daughter said that he was never a jerk to anyone on any set of his movies, and that Tarantino told her to STFU. Yeah, I kid you not, This exactly what happened, and also the reason why the film was banned in China.

    • @jackwhite6637
      @jackwhite6637 3 года назад +1

      However there are tons of stories from many people that he was very hard to work with and kind of narcissistic

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 3 года назад

      Is any movie worth a shit NOT banned in China?

    • @jackwhite6637
      @jackwhite6637 3 года назад +2

      @callmecatalyst why should Tarantino have to cut that scene from the film? If China don’t like it, then it’s their own fault the movie was banned, not Tarantino’s. You need to stick up for artistic integrity a bit more mate lol

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 3 года назад

      @callmecatalyst If they refused to show the movie as he made it, then they banned it. Cut the shit.

  • @MrDrokkul
    @MrDrokkul 3 года назад +2

    Tarantino's world building and dialogue is done like no other. In many other movies it would get boring, but it usually always builds to a beautiful crescendo in his movies. The only one that is a bit long winded in my tastes is Death Proof. I like the movie overall, but some of the build up is slightly tedious.

  • @mikewarker4445
    @mikewarker4445 2 года назад +1

    Been hooked to your channel since I came across it a couple weeks ago. Love your reactions. You ll love this movie for sure, Leo and Brad , what can go wrong

  • @ricocampos1331
    @ricocampos1331 3 года назад +3

    As in the case of the Inglourious Basterds, I can't watch this movie without the feeling of sorrow of this didn't happen that way. I can't forget how terrible it was and feel sorry for Sharon Tate and the baby as for Roman Polanski. The Fearless Vampire Killers with them two was one of my favorite movies till then. I can't watch her movies without sorrow.

  • @mikemath9508
    @mikemath9508 3 года назад +2

    Bloody Mary is the finest drink for my life. I actually consume less calories when I only drink alcohol, those veggies and tomato juice keep me alive.

  • @rlevitta
    @rlevitta 7 месяцев назад +1

    I just noticed that the director of the Italian spy movie that Rick Dalton was in was “Antonio Margariti” (sp) which was the name that they gave the “Italian cameraman” in the scene in Inglorious Basterds when they were pretending to be Italians at the movie premiere. I guess he worked his way up to director 🙂
    Don’t forget that Tarantino rewrote history when he killed off Hitler in Inglorious Basterds.

  • @SalGomez
    @SalGomez 7 месяцев назад +1

    Look up Charlie Manson in 1969 & you'll see that Damon Harriman looks exactly like Charlie. Damon was so good, he also played Charlie Manson in an episode of the Mindhunters series on Netflix

  • @andresjuan5173
    @andresjuan5173 3 года назад +2

    The Tarantino rabbit-hole is amazing

  • @TeamEvil84
    @TeamEvil84 Год назад +1

    Movies where leo does not die.
    Inception
    Shutter Island
    The Aviator
    Catch me if you can
    The Beach
    Marvin's Room
    This Boy's Life
    Gangs of New York
    Critters 3
    Basketball Diaries
    What's Eating Gilbert Grape
    The Revenant