Quentin Tarantino Explains How He Writes Dialogue

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  • Опубликовано: 9 дек 2012
  • Quentin Tarantino reveals the writers who have influenced him the most in regards to creating his personal style for dialogue as part of a SiriusXM Town Hall event, explaining that "...when it comes to my dialogue, I think the three writers that affected it the most as far as a genuine influence, would probably be a combination of Elmore Leonard, David Mamet and Richard Pryor...I think those were actual conscious influences in me finding my voice and my dialogue and character voices and stuff."
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    Quentin Tarantino on Writing Dialogue // SiriusXM // Stars DEC 2012 • Quentin Tarantino Expl...
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Комментарии • 585

  • @wonderstorms4030
    @wonderstorms4030 5 лет назад +1160

    i love how down to earth tarantino is while at the same time incredibly blunt, he doesnt put on this whole fake modesty thing and can actually acknowledge when hes good at something, i respect that

    • @dimebagforever251
      @dimebagforever251 3 года назад +7

      Idk to me it sounds like Trump

    • @TomEyeTheSFMguy
      @TomEyeTheSFMguy 3 года назад +35

      @@dimebagforever251 Excuse me?

    • @Ryuksgelus
      @Ryuksgelus 3 года назад +73

      @@dimebagforever251 Mentioning you're good at something is vastly different than claiming you're the best at things you have little to no experience with.

    • @jeffbrown8117
      @jeffbrown8117 3 года назад +11

      BLAIR M Schirmer huh? Even as an opinion, that’s not accurate.

    • @misteral1083
      @misteral1083 3 года назад +2

      @BLAIR M Schirmer Obviously this is going to be subjective! But for me, Pulp Fiction and True Romance are his top works. Dogs is not quite my thing but I can see that it's good work. Django was fantastic. Jackie Brown I remember enjoying but would need to revisit to confidently give it a thumbs up. OUATIH though it had excellent moments was not satisfying overall. IB was not for me. KB1+2 weren't really for me either (too much of a fan of Asian cinema to enjoy seeing it riffed on/ripped off like that). So I guess I have three and a half or four. Which are your two and a half?

  • @thanksfernuthin
    @thanksfernuthin 10 лет назад +1648

    That's an outstanding idea. Writing scenes from memory when you get home and eventually tailoring them and adding to them. Starting with a blank page and creating a scene is impossibly daunting for most people. I'm blown away by this idea.

    • @B3RT1822
      @B3RT1822 9 лет назад +7

      is it not just copying? are you shia lebouef?

    • @DaedalusR
      @DaedalusR 9 лет назад +67

      Gary Nicholls no its like practicing kicking a soccer ball into a net, its a creativity exercise

    • @thanksfernuthin
      @thanksfernuthin 9 лет назад +34

      I should add this; I'm not a fan of Tarantino. Frankly, I can't remember why I clicked on the video in the first place. But that only adds weight to the value of the idea. I suggest it for any person hoping to write for a living. (And no, not copying. Not to sell. But to practice and improve.)

    • @sharathkumar8422
      @sharathkumar8422 6 лет назад +24

      Basically do this and then go back and compare your scene with the original. See if your scene holds the same engagement level as the original. See if it can improve. Try and understand what made the original better and work on it.

    • @vagabond8385
      @vagabond8385 5 лет назад +2

      @@thanksfernuthin Tarantino is a genious

  • @RagnarokMic
    @RagnarokMic 3 года назад +2787

    First, he writes the n-word hundreds of times, then he separates them with clever banter.

  • @imsa15463
    @imsa15463 7 лет назад +408

    Quentin, you are one strange, goofy, brilliant, dude. I can't help but think of his bar scene in Inglorious Basterds. Some of his best writing.

    • @advancedraymondology2914
      @advancedraymondology2914 3 года назад +15

      Definitely. That will go down as one of the all-time classic scenes. So tense and perfect. I can't think of a better scene, actually. The end of Rosemary's Baby, maybe.

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 3 года назад +6

      Also, in that movie, his decisions when to and when NOT to write the dialogue in English.

    • @southlondon86
      @southlondon86 2 года назад +3

      Well if this is it old boy...

    • @MM-eb7hm
      @MM-eb7hm 2 года назад +3

      That was no scene, that was a short film

    • @rafaelbalsan4512
      @rafaelbalsan4512 2 года назад

      DREI GLASER!

  • @valhalla1240
    @valhalla1240 7 лет назад +141

    I can never stop watching Tarantino's hands when he's talking. Because he looks like a fierce and stoic person, but he has the hands of a fragile nerd and it warms my heart to see the combination of both.

    • @sandraswan9008
      @sandraswan9008 3 года назад +1

      @Ocean Drive ok boomer

    • @philcollinslover56705
      @philcollinslover56705 2 года назад

      pls i love the comment

    • @ausgepicht
      @ausgepicht 2 года назад

      It's in the DNA. I'm Sicilian as well and any family gathering is a handfest.

  • @ejrosenthal
    @ejrosenthal 3 года назад +60

    Quentin's dialog writing is incomparable. How can I watch these scenes over and over and over? Because they're that good. I'd rather watch two QT characters in a diner have a conversation for thirty minutes than just about ANYTHING else onscreen.

  • @jonathanlocke6404
    @jonathanlocke6404 3 года назад +21

    I remember seeing "Pulp Fiction" in the theatre for the first time, and how revelatory the "Royale with cheese" scene was. It just seemed like a real, casual, but interesting, often funny, conversation. Later, it was hard to imagine someone could have actually "written" that. I think it was the little commonplace asides, like "I don't know. I didn't go into Burger King", that made it seem so real...

    • @Maynard-il1yj
      @Maynard-il1yj 6 месяцев назад

      He write with an acting mindset and actually gives the characters something to play with and work with

  • @abdulkhafidsulaymaan
    @abdulkhafidsulaymaan 3 года назад +45

    This dude is the reason why I really started wanting to be a writer- I mean on a serious level. It was back in 2005-06, I was in prison, on my bunk watching Pulp Fiction for the first time and it was like reading a book but watching it. I was captivated. His style was simply direct to an extreme that it came off as genuine and real. This dude gave me a new found respect for simple delivery that it is my signature til this day. The way he would introduce each part of his movie as a chapter- I still do that today.
    I've always been intrigued by this dude's dialog. I really don't believe he writes dialog all by himself for each actor/character in his movies. I think the actors help him because the dialog is so specific for each character.

    • @artistaccount
      @artistaccount 8 месяцев назад

      There's a clip on RUclips where Quentin Tarantino says he pays actors to say the words he wrote. And that he doesn't like improv acting cause he writes his scripts like so exact

    • @artistaccount
      @artistaccount 8 месяцев назад

      And Tarantino says he gets to like 40% of the movie script then he says the characters practically write themselves cause he has a better idea of who each character is and what they do and things like that

  • @HeresaBanana
    @HeresaBanana 7 лет назад +128

    I looked away from the screen at 3:21 and thought he started beat boxing.

  • @probablyhuman5295
    @probablyhuman5295 8 лет назад +103

    omg I love how he says "genuine." Gen-U-ine. I weep with joy.

    • @stoop911
      @stoop911 3 года назад

      omg I love how he says "genuine." Gen-U-ine. I weep with joy.

    • @duhquadman
      @duhquadman 3 года назад

      That is how I imagine Stephen King pronouncing that word.

    • @michaelqiu9722
      @michaelqiu9722 2 года назад

      Ew

  • @jeffwalker3734
    @jeffwalker3734 7 лет назад +339

    If you do a shot of tequila every time Quentin says "Paddy Chayefsky" you can get pretty buzzed in three minutes and twenty-seven seconds.

    • @ryanbarker5217
      @ryanbarker5217 7 лет назад +6

      that and 'actually.' seems he said that quite a bit, too.

    • @timy9197
      @timy9197 6 лет назад +4

      Or when he says "alright" not here but usually

    • @mollycromb4412
      @mollycromb4412 6 лет назад

      Ti My omg he says "alright?" SO MUCH. I thought I was the only one who noticed

    • @harrycahill2140
      @harrycahill2140 6 лет назад +2

      I laugh every time he compares himself to Paddy Chayefsky or David Mamet as writer.

    • @Nixn_From_Da_Hood
      @Nixn_From_Da_Hood 3 года назад +1

      You would drink half a bottle I guess.

  • @ckaz007
    @ckaz007 8 лет назад +570

    Paddy Chayefsky was one of the great screenwriters. If anyone has not seen Network, I would highly recommend it. He predicted reality television back in 1976.
    I see Quentin's influence of Richard Pryor in the number of times he uses the N-word.

    • @pvtrichter8816
      @pvtrichter8816 8 лет назад +3

      +ckaz007 i thought it was more Eddie murphy but i get the gist of what he says i also realize how the RHythmic cadences he uses are more of a Mamet influence !!

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 5 лет назад +7

      Bullshit! You try writing something like Kill Bill or a Pulp Fiction and see if you can make millions like he does, if you think it's so easy what he does!!!!

    • @emmanuelsalazar9424
      @emmanuelsalazar9424 4 года назад +5

      His script for “Network” is staggering. Brilliantly prescient.

    • @charleshendrix3137
      @charleshendrix3137 3 года назад +9

      You can see the Pryor influ
      ence in how Tarantino writes jokes into the dialogue. The set ups and punchlines are very similar especially because Pryor comedic style is heavily rooted in storytelling

    • @flyingfrogofdeath9616
      @flyingfrogofdeath9616 2 года назад +4

      @@charleshendrix3137 thats the route of all the greatest comedians. In fact it's the route of most comedy. You'll didn't the greats are the best storytellers. Take out / ignore the comedic parts and focus on the journey they take you on. One of the absolute best is Dave Chapelle

  • @Soldier4USA2005
    @Soldier4USA2005 6 лет назад +82

    A great example of how just a LITTLE BIT of support in someones life can make all the difference.
    For all we know......if Mr Tarantino hadn't get that comment, we might not have the awesomeness of Pulp Fiction or Hateful 8 today.

    • @castelodeossos3947
      @castelodeossos3947 2 года назад +1

      Hadn't got that comment....

    • @Soldier4USA2005
      @Soldier4USA2005 2 года назад +1

      @@castelodeossos3947 Thanks. Sometimes the inner grammar brain just ... fails. Granted .... this is a 3 year old comment, but still a poorly written one.

  • @missingenue
    @missingenue 7 лет назад +72

    My favorite filmmaker. I have so much respect for him

  • @crimsonmask3819
    @crimsonmask3819 6 лет назад +306

    Tarantino's real gift is plotting. He thinks it's dialogue, but actually all his characters have his one, singular, voice. It can be a fun voice when he's got a good plot-driven scene going as well, but if we're stuck with a tangential Tarantino monologue coming out of multiple characters like the middle bit of Death Proof, it is not so good.
    I didn't notice this until several movies in, but after that, going back I can see it even in Reservoir Dogs (which is still a great film).

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 5 лет назад +20

      Don't agree! This is certainly not true of pulp fiction or kill Bill or the hateful 8, every character talks different.

    • @freddoproductions
      @freddoproductions 5 лет назад +52

      @@MrParkerman6 I think it's mainly because they are spoken by different people. The dialogue is still very similar between all the characters. They all inhabit this tarantino world, and essentially all have the same accent (they talk like quentin tarantino).

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 4 года назад +6

      No they don't, they all have completely different dialogue from one another. It isn't just the different actors.

    • @patr1ckk3ll3y
      @patr1ckk3ll3y 4 года назад +29

      @@MrParkerman6 Its the personality & cadence of speaking. Most of his characters seem very self assured when they speak and like they said, many times his characters feel like theyre giving a monologue even in a busy conversation.

    • @RenegadeShepard69
      @RenegadeShepard69 3 года назад +9

      You described what I noticed closely for the first time a little while ago watching again some parts of Kill Bill and I think Hateful Eight better than I could describe it. I usually just think to myself, huh, that's odd, sounds like I'm hearing the filmmaker talking. One thing I try to do when I see that, just to make sure, is imagine the director talking over it, and it fits perfectly. I felt the same with Lynch the other day watching Twin Peaks. And because those are two directors who speak so uniquely, almost like a caricature, it's even easier to notice. But yeah I think this is one big trait in his dialogues that always take me off from the experience when 'those' scenes start to happen, because it feels like it's him talking to himself, well put a tangential tarantino monologue coming out of multiple characters. It's almost like he is a voice that keeps trying to talk by the characters, in some scenes he is whispering through 'em, and in those show-off monologues he's screaming.

  • @victorallencook7107
    @victorallencook7107 4 года назад +14

    My dialog is going smoothly , very smooth today . I really love my story.

  • @lenibanez4732
    @lenibanez4732 8 лет назад +40

    Man. He is intelligent.

  • @apocalypse123
    @apocalypse123 10 лет назад +693

    It's official. The Tarantino method.

    • @ren.8137
      @ren.8137 3 года назад +6

      Bro you still alive, how you doing?

    • @dan-mb2ne
      @dan-mb2ne 3 года назад +5

      Bro you still alive, how you doing?

  • @rigsby1454
    @rigsby1454 8 лет назад +18

    When you read an Elmore Leonard book you can't help but picture it in the QT universe. Very similar style.

    • @scattjax3908
      @scattjax3908 7 лет назад +4

      Leonard's writing is pretty cool, really conversational. Really surprised me how you didn't have to make every sentence completely correct. They could just be fragments, separated by commas, but totally make sense.

    • @paulg903
      @paulg903 3 года назад +3

      Elmore Leonard wrote a novel called Rum Punch which then became adapted to a film called Jackie Brown which was then directed by the one and only Quentin Tarantino

  • @siriusxm
    @siriusxm  10 лет назад +74

    Quentin Tarantino shares the writers that influenced his personal "voice".
    The list might surprise you.

  • @mentalcircuspodcast1254
    @mentalcircuspodcast1254 7 лет назад +207

    The King of Dialogue

    • @Leon-zu1wp
      @Leon-zu1wp 7 лет назад +30

      Mental Circus Podcast
      Kubrick king of visuals
      Spielberg king of story
      Hitchcock king of directing
      Bay king of explosions
      put them all together you got the best damn movie ever made

    • @ritajitdey7567
      @ritajitdey7567 7 лет назад +10

      I'd like mine with Bay on lite please ;)

    • @HAHA-bu7vj
      @HAHA-bu7vj 7 лет назад +4

      and JJ King of Lens Flares!

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 7 лет назад +24

      +Tiernen Replace Bay w/ George Miller. Also, "directing" is too broad of a term. I say Hitchcock is the king of suspense, Scorsese is the king of character development, and so on...

    • @ryanbarker5217
      @ryanbarker5217 7 лет назад +8

      not to be a contrarian cuz QT is known for his dialogue, but i think the coen brothers do dialogue better. that's just me, though. :) i say that because the coen brothers' dialogue seems to have more of a natural flow, whereas QT's dialogue comes off as overly constructed at times.

  • @cevahirileri7594
    @cevahirileri7594 7 лет назад +38

    I love you, Quentin.

  • @a_literal_brick
    @a_literal_brick 3 года назад +15

    His voice is about 2 octaves higher than you'd expect from looking at him

  • @1805movie
    @1805movie 10 лет назад +29

    When "Pulp Fiction" came out in theaters, film critic Gene Siskel said Quentin Tarantino was "...writing the most original dialogue since David Mamet."

  • @TerriJones_terriaminute
    @TerriJones_terriaminute 2 года назад +7

    All artists start out by copying and then riffing on artists they are exposed to, whether they're aware of it or not. This is a terrific example of that process.

  • @enzocignetti6359
    @enzocignetti6359 Год назад +5

    That’s crazy that not only is Ronnie Coleman one of the most badass bodybuilders of all time but his influence is also the reason we have Tarantino films

  • @2012XF3
    @2012XF3 5 лет назад +50

    Ronnie Coleman: "Yeah... buddy.. lightweight baaabay.."

  • @onlyalifetime
    @onlyalifetime 3 года назад

    Well, I'm very happy that you did explore it a little bit more!

  • @dustcircle
    @dustcircle 3 года назад

    YES! I knew it. I've seen the influence. Elmore Leonard has great conversations in his fiction!

  • @peteradaniel
    @peteradaniel 8 лет назад +1

    Just had to re-watch The hospital after seeing this. Love Chayefsky. Great writer.

  • @iamthemoneyj
    @iamthemoneyj 3 года назад +6

    Who knew Tarantino was in acting class with the greatest bodybuilder of all time

  • @squeekydog8468
    @squeekydog8468 11 месяцев назад +5

    This is not Tarantino explaining how he writes dialogue. This is Tarantino telling us that he’s good at writing dialogue

  • @naturalcreativity3388
    @naturalcreativity3388 6 лет назад

    Genius! I’m going to practice this

  • @MontyQueues
    @MontyQueues 3 года назад +1

    those bells ring true... there are moments where you learn and grow and realize you're made for it
    you could spend one full year and one day a bell will ring

  • @venkatdenduluri816
    @venkatdenduluri816 3 года назад +1

    I love it that me and Quentin Tarantino are very similar in terms of thinking. I'm so proud of myself rn lol! Slowly faith is building that, I too, can become a good writer someday! 🤞🤞

    • @stevelivers3793
      @stevelivers3793 2 года назад

      Yeah but Harry Kane is still trophyless at spuds

  • @talos2373
    @talos2373 2 года назад +2

    Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez make those fast paced scenesurround scenes that captivate an audience much like "Bonnie and Clyde" and "The Wild Bunch" did.

  • @yaseengani1
    @yaseengani1 3 года назад +1

    Among my top 5 favourite directors in the world !!!

  • @davidwhitt2717
    @davidwhitt2717 5 лет назад +3

    So glad he said Elmore Leonard first. THE MAN in crime writing & dialogue

  • @lonewalkerproductions
    @lonewalkerproductions 3 года назад +1

    Such a brilliant method to help those without formal education in a field learn

  • @melhoward5674
    @melhoward5674 9 лет назад +20

    Rollin Stoned Repprin the wu-tang. He has Reza to his musical schemes sometimes. Quentin nvr disappoints.

  • @mr.marvelasmr5872
    @mr.marvelasmr5872 3 года назад +1

    His writing is so poetic!

  • @perrymorrisjr
    @perrymorrisjr 5 лет назад

    Quentin Tarantino is absolutely my favorite. He is to narrative cinema what Prince was to music.
    I'm sure many won't get that but, I do.

  • @zipididua
    @zipididua 11 лет назад

    amazing thanks so much for this.

  • @lorendorky
    @lorendorky 9 лет назад +83

    Dat extreme combover tho

    • @burnsfactor
      @burnsfactor 8 лет назад

      Lmaooo

    • @Lucifer103
      @Lucifer103 8 лет назад +15

      that's not a combover though

    • @scattjax3908
      @scattjax3908 7 лет назад +9

      Combfronter? :) Male pattern baldness, from Hell's heart I stab at thee.

    • @flipjupiter1
      @flipjupiter1 5 лет назад +1

      At least he can spell.

    • @flipjupiter1
      @flipjupiter1 5 лет назад +1

      With more talent, fans, wanna-bees and money than you, your parents, and your future relatives could ever dream of.

  • @kevin5073
    @kevin5073 6 месяцев назад +1

    Greatest dialogue writer in film today. Head and shoulders above everyone else.

  • @ahmeds3139
    @ahmeds3139 5 лет назад +1

    What font does tarantino use? What type of courier because it's very pleasing to eyes.
    I can't seem to find it anywhere?

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 5 лет назад

      He first long hand writes everything (pen or pencil to paper.)

  • @wayneanthonypopesr.3
    @wayneanthonypopesr.3 5 лет назад

    Would love for this Legend to read one of my books that im told would make great movies someday.

  • @joeygonzo
    @joeygonzo 6 лет назад +4

    I can listen to him for 12 hours straight if needed.

  • @beanman2206
    @beanman2206 3 года назад

    dialogue in every tarantino movie is always on point
    legend of cinema

  • @franzhaas1481
    @franzhaas1481 8 лет назад +9

    he is one sharp dude.

  • @melhoward5674
    @melhoward5674 9 лет назад +4

    That explains Mia Wallaces dialogue, when she speaks of her pilot. This is reminiscent of maybe his acting, before he became a actor.

  • @EmperorsNewWardrobe
    @EmperorsNewWardrobe 11 лет назад

    Thanks!

  • @brammurti
    @brammurti 3 года назад +3

    03:05 who would have thought an absolute legend bodybuilder could inspire tarantino to become a screen writer 😂

  • @luiabundi8371
    @luiabundi8371 7 лет назад

    I showed one of my older friends a video that I made and he told me that it looked ​like a Quentin video and I had no idea who he was so I looked him up on RUclips and watched some of his movies then I felt the connection between our work. but I try not to feed of him.

  • @mattmoves5920
    @mattmoves5920 3 года назад +11

    You can totally see his italian roots by the way he moves his hands while talking

  • @AgentGordonCole
    @AgentGordonCole 3 года назад

    I love that he acknowledges mamet. Didn't know that he considered him an influence.

  • @MiguelExhale
    @MiguelExhale 6 лет назад

    My first attempt at writing Dialog like that.. you are good as Petty Chiesky.. it's just as good as his stuff.

  • @neaituppi7306
    @neaituppi7306 3 года назад

    That reminds me of Kill Bill, the first several times I watched it, I didn't watch it as a martial art film, though I am really into training martial arts. Recently I watched it again, and the whole time, I am thinking, though I noticed the martial arts in it, why I didn't "fully" notice that it is almost constant. Then I watched it again, to notice all the martial art references to types of martial art movies and movie production companies. I could hone in on particular things, and more fun out of it.

  • @americagreatagain818
    @americagreatagain818 4 месяца назад

    He also read many lines when he played character Richie from From Dusk Till Dawn

  • @grantbarnes6004
    @grantbarnes6004 9 лет назад +1

    Waldo Salt and Paul Schrader up there for dialogue too.

  • @RogerPeet
    @RogerPeet 9 месяцев назад +1

    The same thing happened to me ! It was completely different, but I can hear what he's trying to say, kinda.

  • @burt591
    @burt591 3 года назад +4

    3:03 Wow! Ronnie Coleman inspired Tarantino to write. He probably told him "Yeah buddy! Light weight baby!!!"

  • @Godzilla52
    @Godzilla52 11 лет назад +4

    David Mamet is no surprise, his dialogue writing has influenced generations of writers.

  • @ferminandresparra3266
    @ferminandresparra3266 Год назад

    This questions are bangers

  • @PierceTravels
    @PierceTravels 3 года назад

    Thank you for the movies

  • @CommieApe
    @CommieApe Год назад

    That snappy witty dialogue in Sergio Leone movies seems like a major influence too.

  • @bmla88
    @bmla88 2 года назад

    It’s interesting that he included mamet and pryor.

  • @ResistanceQuest
    @ResistanceQuest 3 года назад +3

    It's crazy that Quentin Tarantino received career guidance from 8x Mr Olympia winner Ronnie Coleman. That's such an unexpected factual occurrence.

  • @pinklemonade5310
    @pinklemonade5310 3 года назад

    I use this same method, that's awesome (:

  • @experienceanimation217
    @experienceanimation217 3 года назад

    What I do is I have a dictaphone and randomly turn it on and leave it in my pocket for a few minutes. You get authentic conversation and pick up genuine human mannerisms to help build a character you're making. And maybe take asentence or a few from the conversation to build on

  • @thelivealohashow6162
    @thelivealohashow6162 3 года назад

    I thought I recognized the David Mamet influence. Was one of mine too, since I was the lead in "Sexual Perversity in Chicago" back in college.

  • @MrArbeter
    @MrArbeter 3 года назад +2

    3:06 i did not know the worlds biggest and freakiest bodybuilder did acting i learnt something important today

  • @Idk-xq9nu
    @Idk-xq9nu Год назад +1

    0:45 can someone please write the 3 names he said? Is too fast for my english and I want to know!

    • @____uncompetative
      @____uncompetative Год назад

      Press 'C' on the keyboard for Subtitles
      Elmore Leonard
      David Mamet
      Richard Pryor

  • @welaughatstupidshit
    @welaughatstupidshit 11 лет назад +12

    1:43 - I think he stopped himself from saying "one of the BEST" lol

    • @ThePickledOnion
      @ThePickledOnion 3 года назад

      he said "and maybe wanna think about exploring this"

  • @coldbattery
    @coldbattery 3 года назад

    "Maybe I should explore this a little bit more."
    And thus, a legend has born.

  • @Anudorini-Talah
    @Anudorini-Talah 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant

  • @Sandra-hc4vo
    @Sandra-hc4vo 7 лет назад

    That very interesting.

  • @jackbanner3262
    @jackbanner3262 5 лет назад +2

    Interesting... I hate writing dialogue because it's so... difficult. Now, I'm not interested in screenwriting, but I HAVE been trying to write stories for some time and this subject always trips me up. Quite frankly, I suck at it. It's too much or it's too little. It's lame or it's ridiculously over the top. Too much "he said-she said" or not enough. Sometimes I just ignore those altogether and find myself with a wall of quotation marks and words... It's maddening! So, what do I do? Usually I use Select All-Delete. And I'm always thinking... my dialogue has to move the story forward, it has to reveal something - personality, backstory, thought process... SOMETHING pertinent to the story. It's one of the most difficult things for me to do. It's caused me to go months without writing anything at all at times. :) But never to quit.

    • @track1219
      @track1219 4 года назад +1

      Jack Banner I have the same problem with song lyrics. Of course writing a book is very different. If I tried seriously to write dialogue I would get very familiar with how my favorite authors do it. Just throwing it out there. Best of luck

  • @flickfilms3603
    @flickfilms3603 4 месяца назад +1

    Cant believe Tarantino went to acting class with 8x Mr.Olympia Ronnie Coleman

  • @severusfloki5778
    @severusfloki5778 3 года назад

    Wow, great technique

  • @NostalgiNorden
    @NostalgiNorden 10 лет назад +2

    #Marc W.S - Lindelof said that Pulp Fiction was a huge insperation to Lost

  • @quelo007
    @quelo007 11 лет назад

    whats the name again of the four writerts?

  • @joaonao1
    @joaonao1 11 лет назад

    He is a genuine nice guy.

  • @mariatineo4614
    @mariatineo4614 4 года назад +1

    Quentin Tarantino...one of my favorite film directors! I actually put a split screen in one of my movies as an homage to Tarantino. Quentin when you see it you're going to be proud! Bam!

    • @MoncoField
      @MoncoField 4 года назад

      Wait...you think Tarantino was the first to do that? Go back some decades

    • @mariatineo4614
      @mariatineo4614 4 года назад +2

      @@MoncoField . Of course not! Tarantino did not invent the split screen but he sure uses it well, to the point where it has become one of his signature story telling techniques as an artist and effective film director in motion pictures. In this way, I liken Tarantino to artists such as Matisse who used the color wheel well, but did not invent it. Just as Matisse personalized the use of similar bright colors by boldly placing them side by side without mixing them, Tarantino too personalizes the split screen in our modern era.

    • @MoncoField
      @MoncoField 4 года назад

      @@mariatineo4614 Well that's kind of what im trying to tell you... Tarantino did not modernize the split screen, he borrowed it from a director he really admires; Brian De Palma (that's who modernized it). He's been split screening since the 70s, and it's clearly his own personal style

    • @RagnarokMic
      @RagnarokMic 3 года назад +1

      Monco Field In all fairness, just because a person didn’t invent a thing, doesn’t mean they personally can’t be your inspiration in your own adoption of said technique.

  • @santiagotandazo703
    @santiagotandazo703 3 года назад

    Es muy interesante.

  • @clareregem9743
    @clareregem9743 3 года назад

    Wu Wear 95. So cool!

  • @theramilpodcast2300
    @theramilpodcast2300 3 года назад

    The distance between his index finger and his thumb is crazy!

  • @renegonzalez6058
    @renegonzalez6058 6 лет назад

    rocking the classic wu wear, oh yeeeee!!

  • @echad6259
    @echad6259 6 лет назад

    Very creative guy

  • @rogerrobie2451
    @rogerrobie2451 6 лет назад +36

    Say "paddy chayefsky" one more time, I dare you....

  • @elalacransinner4070
    @elalacransinner4070 5 лет назад +3

    Elmore Leonard
    David Mamet
    Richard Pryor...............👍🏽

  • @falguniroy6852
    @falguniroy6852 6 лет назад

    SUPER,,

  • @najammallick5587
    @najammallick5587 6 лет назад

    Nice

  • @stollinroned5090
    @stollinroned5090 9 лет назад +131

    Is it me or is Quentin wearing a wu tang hoodie?

  • @Zkfilmz
    @Zkfilmz 11 лет назад

    That's the second time I've heard him do that in an interview haha

  • @cigarettebutts
    @cigarettebutts 3 года назад

    Sick sweater

  • @javonduarte4240
    @javonduarte4240 3 года назад

    richard pryor?? wow thats incredible

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet Год назад

    "Vincennntttt!! My man in Amsterdammmmm" 😁

  • @BlaineGamble
    @BlaineGamble 11 лет назад

    Richard Pryor!

  • @sporister
    @sporister 10 лет назад +9

    genueyne