i don't understand why nobody ever talks about the music in his movies. i think it's way more awesome than most other soundtracks and quentin gets it right in every single movie
He says he starts his writing by listening to songs first to get a vibe for what he wants to write. So he usually writes to the songs he’s going to use.
this was 1993-94 he was still living in one bedroom apt not in a mansion dvds were not a thing he sorrounded by film book scrpts laserdisc and vhs and pop culture toys posters etc
Tarantino has always been a big influence on me, I've always wanted to be a writer/director and he gave me hope that a guy coming from nowhere could end up making it. And my first movie just got greenlit so thank you Quentin
“Where Eagles Dare is my favorite guys on a mission movie. I’m going to do a guys on mission movie one day”. QT dude weaves dreams into reality. He’s the man
The Casualties of War to Reservoir Dogs comparison is instrumental in showing how Tarantino doesn’t just copy - and how what comes out of his brain - coming from what goes in - is truly something special.
We need to keep a few video stores around just for nostalgia & socializing purposes. I enjoyed arguing over a movie as a family or in my HS & college yrs asking the clerk for date night film advice. ( I remember choosing "Heather's" "Johnny Mnemonic" & "Simon Birch" lol) It really was a unique film experience. Bring back the in store popcorn machines & VHS tapes. Can even rent out the VCRs too!
It was the 90's, downtown Ann Arbor MI... I went into the theater as an English major, left with a whole new goal in life. I've been writing for the screen ever since....
It is funny to watch that nowadays knowing the movies he made from those ideas, just like when he talks about a movie about the end of a relationship (Kill Bill Vol 1 & 2) or the "guys on a mission" movie (Inglorious Basterds).
The casual dialog paired with some of the most violent characters, leading up to some of the most violent scenes.. Grips you in a way thats difficult to even measure.. suddenly you find yourself identifying with some ruthless gangster, on a level that's never even occurred to you.. it speaks to the shadow in us all, on a level that transcends even the creator. Most people spend a lifetime trying to touch it for a second.. Quinton make a career out of it.
Maybe we'll see your name in a movie someday! It'll be like the ending of Live by Night. When he finds out his brother wrote the movie he and his son are watching.
Tarantino's journey in the entertainment industry is basically the Holy Grail of pursuing your dreams and passions in life, etc. I mean, being a director of his status is close to being the Holy Grail of the entertainment industry. Quintin has what we all dream of. He is on the Mount Rushmore of Hollywood stories. Others like Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger have great stories, as well, but Tarantino's really helps others to dream big.
Just recently found out about his inspirations from the gailla films. Some of the stuff is straight out of his favorite movies. The affinity for yellow, the opening scene of death proof is the opening scene of a classic.
It’s Inglorious Basterds. This is what became the „guys on a mission“ movie. I saw almost every interview of Quentin there is to find on RUclips. And he referred to the Basterds as „guys on a mission“ two or three times... but he wanted to „take it a step further and put a spin on it“... Amazing to see him having the seedling already in his head in 1994...
Mark Coll django and hateful are gory but in a very evil dead over the top way as to where it doesn't feel gruesome (some of the scenes from django that is) I think his most violent from a realistic and mature point is jackie brown
Huh, I can't believe they introduce True Romance with someone claiming that it didn't work out... I always thought True Romance was considered one of Tarantino's and Tony Scott's best. I thought people loved it... I certainly love it...
He was saying that Scott didn't do the script full justice witch is true. Scott's style was to slick and obvious. Tarantino hated the choice of Slater for the role since he was supposed to nerd who never gets laid. The soundtrack was horrible and distracting. The movie would have been so much better if Tarantino would have directed it.
My favorite Reservoir Dogs scene. Michael Madsen dancing to Gerry Rafferty's Steelers Wheel Stuck In The Middle With You, and cuts the guys ear off. Best movie soundtrack ever!
One of the most talented directors. Period. - In another way "Django Unchained" reveals also the weakness of a director, when he can't count on one of the world's best editors. Sally Menke.
ghostwriter71 I agree. The weakest point of Django, and the reason it's (imo) his weakest film by far, is because it lacked the amazing Menke at editing. Hateful Eight was much better with the editing. Maybe it just takes time for him to get used to a new editor.
@Frozen Bananas Death Proof is easily his worst movie. I'd rank Django above Kill Bill Volume 1 as well. Not sure about the others, but Django is fantastic.
"I'm gonna make my guys on a mission movie" 2009, Inglourious Basterds. He's still the gun guy though I would love to see him do a romance in the fashion of Q.T.
I just viewed "Resevior Dogs" for the first time..Its not violent at all..they didn't even show when they cut the ear off..when I refer to the movie I refer to the movie as sardonic and obtrusively evasive.the characters were unique...Violence is used to support the story..Pulp Fiction was also the same..everytime I see it today I still see something new.His movie entails alot of details.It aludes to
33Preston33 Not really. I mean sure we have some over the top gore fests now but back than things were no super different. You definitely had films with just as much lovable smut back then as you do now. Fuck just off the top of my head Scarface. That movie was in the goddamn 80's.
So inspiring, is there a group of people somewhere that I can get involved with who see his genius as much as I do. Everytime I rant about him to much friends they ask, who's that...
listen here boy, let me tell you something before i tuck you in to bed...back in the day, this is the best camera for TV that you can get.and like you said..it was 20 years ago...we don't have HD back then.
what, everyone who likes Tarantino is just doing it to fit in? If people like his movies then that's up to them, not for you to tell people whats good or not. I personally love him. His screenwriting is incredibly clever, and realistic while tapping in to the popular culture of today. He is also an incredibly competent director. He's had the odd misfire, Death Proof. But he is incredibly talented, there's no denying it. Even if you don't "like" his films.
I want to be a film director but I don't like to go and study film!! I love to watch them!! When ppl say i have to go to film school!! I Just don't care!! I See Quentin tarantino!! You are my inspiration! 💓💓💓
how someone can be offended by a film is beyond my realm of understanding. IT IS A STORY!! they are portraying characters, characters that can be good or bad. if a character does something you don't agree with that doesn't mean the movie is advocating it, it is showing you a side of life you wouldn't have seen otherwise (or maybe you have witness someone get murdered or what have you). Point is It doesn't matter how fucked up it is, it is art, it is expression, and they're based on things that have happened and happen on a daily basis. I swear people rather be sedated with stupid shit instead of real art. go listen to shitty fabricated pop music and watch the film equivalent of that, because it adequately reflects who you are!!!!
+Tyler Durden fucking hypocrites have no problem wearing a chain that has a guy nailed to a fucking cross but they have a problem with "violent" movies. The same people that have pre marital sex, cheat on their spouses, and get divorced, are the same that want to point fingers at others immorality, how convenient that they only care about "gods" rules when it suits them. Im surrounded by bigots, racists, and idiots. Hate to break it to you guys but religion doesn't have a monopoly on morality because if we got our morality from religion we would still be killing homosexuals and women who weren't virigins on their wedding nights (read your bible for proof).
Nothing should surprise you about your fellow man at this point but you do have a point. On the other hand art informs culture just like culture informs art. I respect QT but I can see how his dialogue has settled into the consciousness when that happens it informs how you think. I don't want Pulp Fiction dialogue informing my thoughts too much but with mass media once, it's in it don't come out. So in a way he is responsible for that and has some responsibility for the state of things now in general. He is a tastemaker and he set a trend of ultra stylize violence. He made brains splattered all over a tee shirt in the back seat of a car funny. Same thing with the guys at Rockstar games with Grand Theft auto. How many times have a group of friends driven around in that game mowing over civilians and abusing hookers? You don't think hours and days spent doing that over GTA 3, Vice City, etc etc have a long term affect? I do and I think this deification of violence have desensitized us to the point where nothing shocks us except someone saying NO MORE. This may be a bit abstract but it's reasonable.
Well said but that’s not the way our Orwellian owners see it. They must control what we say in order to control what we think and ultimately what we do. Welcome to the jungle.
I love natural born killers but I can understand ppl disliking it, but true romance is a masterpiece and Tarantinos dna and vibe is all over it he might as well have directed it, and anyone downplaying that movie is just factually wrong
I must say, I fucking love Tarantino for the dialogue. I feel like they set up the mood so well. When you think about the scene with Mia, it was supposed to be awkward and their interaction showed it great. When Vincent and Jules cashually talk about the job, it makes it even more so intence when they start. Because you see, those guys don't give a fuck. They are stone cold. You know shit will get down. That being said, Inglorious Bastards really wore me down. I guess everybody has a limit. XD
Pino Donaggio - Blow Out theme. One of Tarantino's favorite films. Funny thing is he actually used this theme in Death Proof when jungle Julia is texting her boyfriend. Interesting foreshadowing by this doc.
+Zaq Voir Django Unchained was in 2012 and The Hateful Eight will come out at the end of this year. That's a three year break which is "normal" for Tarantino.
i love it, even after he makes one of the greatest movies of all time they still call him the "boy" wonder. do people even understand what theyre dealing with here?
Can i go back to the 90s PLEASE
You think you want to do that. But what you really wanna do is go back to the 90's with the information you have now.
Back when you could afford a nice apartment in a safe neighborhood while living on a video rental store salary lol
If you ever find a way to do it, please post directions in this comment section. Thank you in advance. See you there.
i don't understand why nobody ever talks about the music in his movies. i think it's way more awesome than most other soundtracks and quentin gets it right in every single movie
a good director needs to have good taste in music no way around
@@luislozano6332 yea i think music and movies have in common the importance of sense of rythm
He says he starts his writing by listening to songs first to get a vibe for what he wants to write. So he usually writes to the songs he’s going to use.
People very often talk about the music in his films - it's something he learnt from Scorese, obviously
@@jimnewcombe7584yes. Mean Streets and Reservoir Dogs are immensely similar, and arguably the two greatest directorial debuts ever
1994 what a time to be alive
10th-11th grade for me
It sure was.
I was only five years old at the time, but I distinctly remember feeling the general greatness of the decade weighing heavy on my subconscious mind.
i was 23 in 1994 it so so
Q's apartment literally littered with VHS tapes and books everywhere
Smart people are always doing intellectual shit like reading and watching movies and stuff.
Exactly what you would expect of him
Huh interesting, looks around sees dvds vhs books manuals..... i shoulda went to college
this was 1993-94 he was still living in one bedroom apt not in a mansion dvds were not a thing he sorrounded by film book scrpts laserdisc and vhs and pop culture toys posters etc
At the begining, we can hear musics from three movies that Quentin loves the most: Blow out, Taxi Driver and Rio Bravo.
I love you, Tarantino.
Tarantino has always been a big influence on me, I've always wanted to be a writer/director and he gave me hope that a guy coming from nowhere could end up making it.
And my first movie just got greenlit so thank you Quentin
cool
Good luck bro.
Congrats brother
awesome! whats the title? has production wrapped?
“Where Eagles Dare is my favorite guys on a mission movie. I’m going to do a guys on mission movie one day”. QT dude weaves dreams into reality. He’s the man
What is Quentin's "guys on a mission" movie?
@@karlimo4034 that would be Inglorious Basterds!
@@karlimo4034Inglorious Bastards of course.
The Casualties of War to Reservoir Dogs comparison is instrumental in showing how Tarantino doesn’t just copy - and how what comes out of his brain - coming from what goes in - is truly something special.
52 minutes of my life well spent
tarantino meeting his idol depalma. he is now up there with him as a top director. thanks for the upload.
I love how Quentin looks like another one of the geeky guys as soon as he walks into the store with his old friends.
I love you, Quentin.
Thank you for posting this piece of gold
Lol it's so fun and kinda sad to see the video store from the 80's and 90's. It's a thing of the past, never to come back as it were.
A beautiful and soulful documentary.
We need to keep a few video stores around just for nostalgia & socializing purposes. I enjoyed arguing over a movie as a family or in my HS & college yrs asking the clerk for date night film advice. ( I remember choosing "Heather's" "Johnny Mnemonic" & "Simon Birch" lol) It really was a unique film experience. Bring back the in store popcorn machines & VHS tapes. Can even rent out the VCRs too!
Pulp Fiction changed my life.
Could you give a little detail on how.If it's just because you were entertained,no need to reply.
It was the 90's, downtown Ann Arbor MI... I went into the theater as an English major, left with a whole new goal in life. I've been writing for the screen ever since....
+barefoot and independent thank you and let me know when you get your writing turned into a film.
You'll be the first to know!
You started heroin?
RIP Sally, Tarantinos movies will not look the same without her.
Hands down the most influential and talented writer/director of out time.
Spike Lee pretty good
I miss the 90's Tarantino. He was my favorite director.
the greatest there is, was, and ever will be! long live Tarantino Movies!!!!!
This is 1 of the best documentaries on tarrantino I av seen so far
They used the music from Blow Out here, in the very beginning, which Quentin also used in Death Proof.
It is funny to watch that nowadays knowing the movies he made from those ideas, just like when he talks about a movie about the end of a relationship (Kill Bill Vol 1 & 2) or the "guys on a mission" movie (Inglorious Basterds).
I remember this its a brilliant little documentary. At the end it says to be continued but it never did.
davefilms345 Thanks, was wondering about that.
Is there a part 2?I would love to see more of this.A inside look at a young Tarantino is rare and entertaining.
I took it to mean what would be continued was his flow of ideas / his career -- not the documentary.
The casual dialog paired with some of the most violent characters, leading up to some of the most violent scenes.. Grips you in a way thats difficult to even measure.. suddenly you find yourself identifying with some ruthless gangster, on a level that's never even occurred to you.. it speaks to the shadow in us all, on a level that transcends even the creator. Most people spend a lifetime trying to touch it for a second.. Quinton make a career out of it.
Quentin Tarantino inspired me to become a good filmmaker and writer if I never knew about him I wouldn't have been inspired at all lol
hey Humble, still in the business?
Ni
You still writing, directing homie?
@@melvinthdark yeah I'm still at it, just on a different channel instead
@@mathers7600 too bad you never became a good filmmaker
Tarantino is an inspiration to me. I'm currently studying film. I want to produce and direct, star in my own films.
I hope to see your name in the credits of a film one day.
Robert Lugo Thank you Robert :) have a nice day
***** i need the right motivation for that kind of shit :/
how did that go sir?
Maybe we'll see your name in a movie someday! It'll be like the ending of Live by Night. When he finds out his brother wrote the movie he and his son are watching.
This documentary is such a gem. Thanks for the upload Y0cke ❤
"I didn't steal the WHOLE thing..." - Quentin Tarantino, 1994.
What an inspirational person he is, God bless him and his boundless enthusiasm, I love him.
Terrific documentary, cheers for posting it. I love every movie this man has ever made (hey, even Death Proof has one of the best car chases ever).
Tarantino's journey in the entertainment industry is basically the Holy Grail of pursuing your dreams and passions in life, etc. I mean, being a director of his status is close to being the Holy Grail of the entertainment industry. Quintin has what we all dream of. He is on the Mount Rushmore of Hollywood stories. Others like Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger have great stories, as well, but Tarantino's really helps others to dream big.
Tarantino was in his mid 30s here. Its cool to see a grown man stuck in a young mans body. Great life to have.
Im in my mid 30s too...and "developmentally retarded" 😊
Thank you for the upload, one of my favorite directors, such a cool guy.
This is insane, I never knew reservoir was one of his first. Massive inspiration!
What? How could you not know that
Just recently found out about his inspirations from the gailla films. Some of the stuff is straight out of his favorite movies. The affinity for yellow, the opening scene of death proof is the opening scene of a classic.
What I am seeing about Tarantino is much of his work make homage and encourage viewers to look into true classic films, but just does it better.
51:48 "I'm going to do a guys on a mission movie someday". Inglorious Bastards and Django Unchained anyone???
Kennedy James the hateful eight
It’s Inglorious Basterds. This is what became the „guys on a mission“ movie.
I saw almost every interview of Quentin there is to find on RUclips. And he referred to the Basterds as „guys on a mission“ two or three times... but he wanted to „take it a step further and put a spin on it“...
Amazing to see him having the seedling already in his head in 1994...
Django Unchained is not a guys on a mission movie. It's a road movie at best.
@@thingshappen4062 they had clear mission of escaping django's wife from Calvin Candie's hands.
@@nikk796 that's not what makes up a guys on a mission subgenre. Characters have goals.
"Someday I might make the most violent movie ever." (immediately starts writing Kill Bill)
I think django unchained or the hateful eight was gorier but I don't know if it's the goriest movie ever
Mark Coll django and hateful are gory but in a very evil dead over the top way as to where it doesn't feel gruesome (some of the scenes from django that is) I think his most violent from a realistic and mature point is jackie brown
good comment. lol
I love that i saw pulp fiction before reservoir dogs. It made me appreciate it so much more for some reason.
This was awesome thanks for posting
I appreciate the upload. Thank you.
Huh, I can't believe they introduce True Romance with someone claiming that it didn't work out... I always thought True Romance was considered one of Tarantino's and Tony Scott's best. I thought people loved it... I certainly love it...
He was saying that Scott didn't do the script full justice witch is true. Scott's style was to slick and obvious. Tarantino hated the choice of Slater for the role since he was supposed to nerd who never gets laid. The soundtrack was horrible and distracting. The movie would have been so much better if Tarantino would have directed it.
most people who are self taught in a field often become one of the best, mainly due to their love and commitment to that field.
My favorite Reservoir Dogs scene. Michael Madsen dancing to Gerry Rafferty's Steelers Wheel Stuck In The Middle With You, and cuts the guys ear off.
Best movie soundtrack ever!
It's from the True Romance soundtrack, called "You're so cool"
He did end up making a guys on a mission movie after all. One of the great ones, too.
Thank you very much for posting this documentary =)
10:13 no offence, but Quentin Tarantino is suddenly Brad Pitt when standing with these guys
I have a fixed audio version of this if you neeed it
Quentin Tarantino is a film geek and I know guys like that, he feels like someone I'd know
Thank you so much.
One of the most talented directors. Period. - In another way "Django Unchained" reveals also the weakness of a director, when he can't count on one of the world's best editors. Sally Menke.
ghostwriter71 I agree. The weakest point of Django, and the reason it's (imo) his weakest film by far, is because it lacked the amazing Menke at editing.
Hateful Eight was much better with the editing. Maybe it just takes time for him to get used to a new editor.
ghostwriter71 I agree and I think Fred Raskin brings a new style and technique. 28 minutes into Hateful Eight, I became a fan.
It was also poorly written
@Frozen Bananas Death Proof is easily his worst movie. I'd rank Django above Kill Bill Volume 1 as well. Not sure about the others, but Django is fantastic.
This is why i fuckin love QT fans. No matter who i talk to, each person ranks his films differently. Thats why he the goat💯
My favorite documentary ever. Exept for maby full tilt boogie.
Casualties of war-great film.
That part showing the audience' first reaction to the ear scene in RD made me so smile for some reason. Very cool
Best upload ever! been looking for this for ages
Thank you so much for posting!
"I'm gonna make my guys on a mission movie" 2009, Inglourious Basterds. He's still the gun guy though I would love to see him do a romance in the fashion of Q.T.
Awesome, a 1000 thx for the upload, yocke!!!
Thank you so much for this upload
I like you Quentin. Always have. Always will.
51:50 and today we have Inglourious Basterds...
yup
What a great doc...thanks for the upload..
This is bloody amazing!
thanks so much for posting this : )
Thank you for this upload, this is gold!
THANK you!!!!!!!
Amazing. Thanks for uploading it.
"Violent Scene Missing" nice touch
looking at the comments is like looking at the competition from other filmmakers.
p.s - Terry Gilliam also rules
I just viewed "Resevior Dogs" for the first time..Its not violent at all..they didn't even show when they cut the ear off..when I refer to the movie I refer to the movie as sardonic and obtrusively evasive.the characters were unique...Violence is used to support the story..Pulp Fiction was also the same..everytime I see it today I still see something new.His movie entails alot of details.It aludes to
Garfield Harrison Considering those 2 movies were released in 1992 and 1994, they were BOTH extremely violent for their time.
33Preston33 Not really. I mean sure we have some over the top gore fests now but back than things were no super different. You definitely had films with just as much lovable smut back then as you do now. Fuck just off the top of my head Scarface. That movie was in the goddamn 80's.
Jim Biafra Oh fuck Quentin just brought up Scarface for it's violence. My point has been made.
Garfield Harrison cant agree more. when the violence is off screen the effect is doubled.
Garfield Harrison cant agree more. when the violence is off screen the effect is doubled.
Nice! Here's mine. :)
1. Inglourious Basterds / Pulp Fiction [tie]
2. Django Unchained / Jackie Brown [tie]
3. Death Proof, Kill Bill 1&2, Reservoir Dogs, Four Rooms-segment
So inspiring, is there a group of people somewhere that I can get involved with who see his genius as much as I do. Everytime I rant about him to much friends they ask, who's that...
listen here boy, let me tell you something before i tuck you in to bed...back in the day, this is the best camera for TV that you can get.and like you said..it was 20 years ago...we don't have HD back then.
This is awesome thanks for sharing
Thank you very much :)
In the 90s i wanted to own my own big 16:9 or 21:9 TV like Quentin here had in his appartment. Such TVs were very expensive.
what, everyone who likes Tarantino is just doing it to fit in? If people like his movies then that's up to them, not for you to tell people whats good or not. I personally love him. His screenwriting is incredibly clever, and realistic while tapping in to the popular culture of today. He is also an incredibly competent director. He's had the odd misfire, Death Proof. But he is incredibly talented, there's no denying it. Even if you don't "like" his films.
Totally underrated
Amazing video, feel so inspired.
I want to be a film director but I don't like to go and study film!! I love to watch them!! When ppl say i have to go to film school!! I Just don't care!! I See Quentin tarantino!!
You are my inspiration! 💓💓💓
My advice is you make A LOT of films on your own. Get a camera and shoot on your own, yourself or your friends. Create something until you git gud.
how someone can be offended by a film is beyond my realm of understanding. IT IS A STORY!! they are portraying characters, characters that can be good or bad. if a character does something you don't agree with that doesn't mean the movie is advocating it, it is showing you a side of life you wouldn't have seen otherwise (or maybe you have witness someone get murdered or what have you). Point is It doesn't matter how fucked up it is, it is art, it is expression, and they're based on things that have happened and happen on a daily basis. I swear people rather be sedated with stupid shit instead of real art. go listen to shitty fabricated pop music and watch the film equivalent of that, because it adequately reflects who you are!!!!
+Tyler Durden fucking hypocrites have no problem wearing a chain that has a guy nailed to a fucking cross but they have a problem with "violent" movies. The same people that have pre marital sex, cheat on their spouses, and get divorced, are the same that want to point fingers at others immorality, how convenient that they only care about "gods" rules when it suits them. Im surrounded by bigots, racists, and idiots. Hate to break it to you guys but religion doesn't have a monopoly on morality because if we got our morality from religion we would still be killing homosexuals and women who weren't virigins on their wedding nights (read your bible for proof).
In Tyler Durden we trust
Nothing should surprise you about your fellow man at this point but you do have a point. On the other hand art informs culture just like culture informs art. I respect QT but I can see how his dialogue has settled into the consciousness when that happens it informs how you think. I don't want Pulp Fiction dialogue informing my thoughts too much but with mass media once, it's in it don't come out. So in a way he is responsible for that and has some responsibility for the state of things now in general. He is a tastemaker and he set a trend of ultra stylize violence. He made brains splattered all over a tee shirt in the back seat of a car funny. Same thing with the guys at Rockstar games with Grand Theft auto. How many times have a group of friends driven around in that game mowing over civilians and abusing hookers? You don't think hours and days spent doing that over GTA 3, Vice City, etc etc have a long term affect? I do and I think this deification of violence have desensitized us to the point where nothing shocks us except someone saying NO MORE. This may be a bit abstract but it's reasonable.
Well said but that’s not the way our Orwellian owners see it. They must control what we say in order to control what we think and ultimately what we do. Welcome to the jungle.
Those hand movements are still the same, priceless!
Кто от Бэда?
This is great
Quentin seems like a down to earth guy.
I love natural born killers but I can understand ppl disliking it, but true romance is a masterpiece and Tarantinos dna and vibe is all over it he might as well have directed it, and anyone downplaying that movie is just factually wrong
I always wondered what filmmakers were rough on Quentin at Sundance. Curious if any one knows
I must say, I fucking love Tarantino for the dialogue. I feel like they set up the mood so well. When you think about the scene with Mia, it was supposed to be awkward and their interaction showed it great. When Vincent and Jules cashually talk about the job, it makes it even more so intence when they start. Because you see, those guys don't give a fuck. They are stone cold. You know shit will get down. That being said, Inglorious Bastards really wore me down. I guess everybody has a limit. XD
Pino Donaggio - Blow Out theme. One of Tarantino's favorite films. Funny thing is he actually used this theme in Death Proof when jungle Julia is texting her boyfriend. Interesting foreshadowing by this doc.
tarintino and de palma, wow! best part of this documentry
+Zaq Voir Django Unchained was in 2012 and The Hateful Eight will come out at the end of this year. That's a three year break which is "normal" for Tarantino.
This man can make movies.Fuck the haters,man
i love it, even after he makes one of the greatest movies of all time they still call him the "boy" wonder. do people even understand what theyre dealing with here?
Steve Buscemi went and fucked up his career with Adam sandler movies
he was a thing of beauty
bob polo Yes he was
He's a fucking professional
need to go and watch Boardwalk Empire ASAP if you really feel that way.... lol
It was either that or do a remake of "Cruising"
Thank you
"Someday I'm gonna make a 'guys-on-a-mission-movie'!" --> Inglourious Basterds. Great docu by the way!
I'm the baby Eric in G.I. Blues,1960 the year I was born, Quinten knows that, he knows quite a bit about me 😊