How ironic that Nolan, who isn't a journalist, does a better job at interviewing than most interviewers because he doesn't interrupt Tarantino. The goal is not to ask many questions, but to let the other one talk with a little guidance from yourself.
Agreed. Nolan is highly focused on the complexity of an idea and putting it to story. Tarantino is focused on the relatable roller coaster movie style of feel this, then that, then that again. He even says in one interview that he likes playing the audience like a fiddle. Both of them have remarkably different styles; so it’s funny to see people name calling one or the other based on their style preference.
John MacTavish are you serious? QT has Pulp fiction, reservoir dogs, the Kill bill movies, Django and Inglorious Basterds under his belt. Nolan got nothing on that besides maybe TDK and Inception
The word "good" definitely doesn't describe Quentin though, you can say he's bad or he's fucking brilliant or he's really awful or he's fantastic... So my opinion is that both these two guys here are truly outstanding as directors.
I love that Nolan is giving Tarantino the time to be thoughtful and honest with his answers, it's so wonderful to see and hear. I love it when Quentin pauses and gives himself time to construct a really eloquent sentence.
What a great interview. Most of the time Tarrantino gets interviewed by someone who doesn't know films and or movies that well. So the interview gets tied up with nonsense about violence. Here we have, in my opinion two of the best visual directors in the history of movie making. Nolan knows movies, Tarrantion knows movies. I love the talk about the use of camera work and cranes. Thank you, really enjoyed this.
Aqua - true, true no argument here on that. Kubrick was a true visionary. 2001 still blows me away. I have often thought what a Kubrick film would look like with the film tech that is available today. I know he would not be the type to overuse cgi, but I have a feeling he would have some clever way of using it to his advantage.
@@ZQZHD Not like he tries perfection like Kubrick, he lets the big actors go off a lot with changing lines and avoids a lot of the long shots liked by most directors.
@Alexander Kerensky I agree with you, he hasn't had control over some of the big stars in past movies by his own admission, perhaps that's why he has cast young leads in his current one. A quote from his latest project "That was perfect, let's do it again"
I think Kubrick was overrated, my favorite film he was involved with, Stephen Spielberg directed and that was A.I., the other film I like is Full Metal Jacket, however the second half of the film falls very sort, it could have been one the greatest films ever made but for that 2nd half. The Shinning, Clockwork orange, and 2001, each have moments of greatness but also have huge flaws. 2001 for instance is pure eye candy, and of course the music is classic, but the story side of the movie is dull, mainly due to pacing. As far as Scorsese & Francis Ford Coppola, It would be hard to argue against them, Raging Bull and Taxi Driver are about as flawless as I can think of next to maybe The Seven Samurai, and Goodfellas might be my favorite. The Godfather and Apocalypse Now are both classic and would be hard to beat. However not sure they blew Tarantino away. Jango Unchained wasn't great but his other films have all been outstanding. Not only that but Tarantino is a great writer, and a great editor, (maybe the best), as well as being brilliant at putting music to his films. He is above all else great at telling a story using all of the elements that are needed to make a great film. Kubrick always had some of these elements perfect but always seemed to be missing some.
Tarrantino tells a story? His movies never have any plot. That is ok it is cinema and David Lynch uses his vivid imagination to remake the genre as other have before. But other than Resevoir Dogs; a movie I live most of the time there is no plot as in the self indulgent aimless lack luster Kill Bill series
I do and people like my insight unlike your sad retort that didn't address anything little sad man on the internet. I would take any Kubrick movie over cliche laden, Tarantino but Nolan is promising. Now go crawl back under that rock and come back and make a meaningful statement or learn something about cinema douche bag
Oh wouldn't you like to slap this loser wimp in mom's basement upside the head with his limited criticism and obsequious suck up to this over rated bore of cinema and no plot and derivative rip off of far better directors sruclips.net/video/t_cZ3rOmY-s-/видео.html- Here is a movie for you of limited imagination pretentious bore . This is what an original director looks like alternia of the myopic eternal small town pretense of knowing movies. Dear Tarrantiono plot is essence and your no Scorcese or Lynch who can appropriate and come up with far better results instead of a derivative repetition of the same film over and over again
Tarantino and Nolan are by far the greatest DIRECTORS of the 21st century. My opinion. Obviously Scorsese is the greatest of all time. But this is titans colliding
William Gates III I’m gonna have to say that Following, memento and insomnia are absolutely nothing like reservoir dogs or pulp fiction so I have no idea what the hell you are talking about haha
04:20 I wish T. had said this before I went and saw the film. I would have appreciated it a lot more, despite it consisting of a kind of stylistic spoiler.
I want a Tarantino Star Trek movie, I want a Nolan Star Wars movie, I want an Oliver Stone Bourne movie. I want an Edgar Wright Batman Beyond movie, I want....... forget it.
Django would have been a better fit for 70mm as H8tful 8 takes place predominantly within a single enclosed setting and more akin to a "who-done-it" PLAY.
Thomas Percy yeah ...but 35mm in those closed spaces woulda been sufficient. besides watch the old Agatha Christie film OR the Peter Ustinov 1970's films: Murder on Orient, Death on Nile etc.. many scenes have shots where we see characters in deep focus conversing while we focus on Poirot before us. ultimately I think the opportunity just presented itself to QT so.. hell yeah..shoot in 70mm ..I would too. I can just imagine tho' some of those shots in Django at 70mm: death of Brittle Brother off the horse ..the explosion of Schultz wagon, shultz telling the myth of broomhilda with shadows behind him..etc. woulda been beautiful!. Maybe QT will shoot 1969 in 70mm ....that'd be cool.
You have to make a movie and you can choose between the director/writer/filming style/producer. You have Nolan, and Tarantino. Who do you choose for which role/responsibility and why?
12 angry men - the hateful eight. Anyways, how fucking genius is the part where Tarantino is actually talking to us about his decision to go ahead with the hanging ...16:07
I liked this a lot better when it was called "The Hateful Eight DGA Q&A with Quentin Tarantino and Christopher Nolan" (), but it's sorta refreshing ~ enlightening ~ encouraging to see the illustrative examples you include of some of the stuff they talk about, even if the sound is mixed badly and you somehow lost a lot of video quality from the already-compressed original. Did you do the subtitles? Did you add the "consumer camera BTS" overlay stuff?
Anything that is too complex for that small mind is labeled "artsy " to you. I bet you're quiet the coward in real life but only brave on line. Now back to your comic book movies. Move on little boy this is a conversation for grown ups and yes both these guys are good directors making great movies likely to complex even for you. Enjoy the Transformers right up your alley
great video except high volume on music blew out the room after listening to an interview please dont over use music. please dont use music. let the viewer think and generate their own emotions and ideas. we don't need music to keep interest and attention! other than that I love your channel keep up the good work
It used to come on before feature presentations at movie theaters in the 70's. Here's a good use of it if you're into rap. ruclips.net/video/zNK7WO7_lDA/видео.html
*Who is Nolan, Christopher Nolan? (in comparison to Tarantino.) Bangkok-Johnny CarSanook Media THAILAND. BTW. Both going ‘baldie’ Tarantino first followed by Nolan, Bangkok-Johnnie, again*
Woah what the fuck this is real? I never thought this would happen. I literally am scared of the fucking universe vortex that’s ab to happen from witnessing this interaction
Exactly. I remember walking out of the movies after Django thinking "That was not that great for a Tarantino flick." Then I got exited when I heard he was making another western thinking he would get it right this time. Sad to say he did not.
I know I am in the minority, but I think Christopher Nolan about scrapes the bottom of the barrow of film-makers in my book. I found both Inception and, more recently, Tenet unwatchable -- or at least unwatchable to the ending -- and both for the same reason: the "mind-bending" factor thrown into the narrative. That is to say: in Inception (with the fantastic premise of the ability to program and inhabit the DREAMS of others) and in Tenet (with the TIME-TRANSPORTATION of objects and related "mind-benders") one finds that a huge chunk of the dialogue and story-telling has to be invested in EXPLAINING the mechanics of the fantasy premise -- while the action itself slogs along in some entirely recognizable well-trod genre (i.e. heist-drama or secret-agent drama). I guess if one is the type to just sit opened-mouthed at the MARVEL of the premise; then one is well-served. I myself have always been a lover of more realistic storylines and find 50% of any Nolan movie utterly uninteresting. Ultimately, I realize I don't care any longer about the characters, that the whole thing is just leading up to some over-blown and over-the-top final sequence of dream creation or time inversion and, thus, that I have simply lost interest.
Pretty much spot on with my interpretation of Nolan films. It's almost as if he's trying to hard to convince the audience he's Original. In doing so, he slows down the story with over the top ideas and shots. QT on the other hand is maybe, the best film maker yet. Scorsese is great too. But Tarantino's movies are his completely. From the script, screenplay vision, characters,music. I have a suggestion for a pretty good movie. It's titled Sukiyaki Western Django. It's really neat. Like a Japanese Tarantino style flick. QT even has a cameo in this film. I think it's on RUclips now.
Django was so soulless, so forced and unoriginal (it felt hollywoody to the core). I didn't even bother to watch the Hateful Eight and that Manson flick idea sounds like the most tasteless idea ever...
I've seen all his work except for death proof(not a big fan of b movies). But for me, it's(pretty sure this is gonna piss people off) kill bill vol 2. It's still a pretty good movie. It had more story and less fights and I thought it could've used more action and less story (i felt it didn't strike that much of a balance between the story and the fighting, for the third time).
How ironic that Nolan, who isn't a journalist, does a better job at interviewing than most interviewers because he doesn't interrupt Tarantino. The goal is not to ask many questions, but to let the other one talk with a little guidance from yourself.
Nolan also is genuinely interested to hear Tarantino talk about his pov
American Late Night show hosts just left the groupchat!
This actually feels like two different universes colliding....
Probably two of the best directors of our generation
tarantino is the greatest director and writer of all time. my opinion.
@John MacTavish both absolutely. No one makes films like Tarantino
Agreed. Nolan is highly focused on the complexity of an idea and putting it to story. Tarantino is focused on the relatable roller coaster movie style of feel this, then that, then that again. He even says in one interview that he likes playing the audience like a fiddle. Both of them have remarkably different styles; so it’s funny to see people name calling one or the other based on their style preference.
John MacTavish are you serious? QT has Pulp fiction, reservoir dogs, the Kill bill movies, Django and Inglorious Basterds under his belt. Nolan got nothing on that besides maybe TDK and Inception
So I says to the guy, I says to him, I says,
Director AND Writer? YES. Only directer to solely write and direct all his movies
Seeing Quentin Tarantino sit down and talk with Christopher Nolan is amazing. Two outstanding Directors and Writers.
Yes both writers as well and you get very good dialogue
I only see one outstanding and one good director.
Saul Grant you chose. I don't want to get into an argument ;)
The word "good" definitely doesn't describe Quentin though, you can say he's bad or he's fucking brilliant or he's really awful or he's fantastic... So my opinion is that both these two guys here are truly outstanding as directors.
Paula Nah Paula fucking blows.
The most extroverted and introverted directors; talk about a clash of energies.
Opposites attract, I guess!
Damn Christopher Nolan is a really good interviewer. He should be famous some day
Probably my 2 favorite directors
thank god Nolan isn't interrupting Tarantino, as would most *professional* interviewers do.
BCOZ it's too much fun jan
He understands how to interview
I love that Nolan is giving Tarantino the time to be thoughtful and honest with his answers, it's so wonderful to see and hear. I love it when Quentin pauses and gives himself time to construct a really eloquent sentence.
I didn't know legends could meet
The hateful eight is a masterpiece
Nolan: So how did that work?
Tarantino: I FUCKING LOVE MAKING MOVIES
Nolan: Guess what, so do I!!
What a great interview. Most of the time Tarrantino gets interviewed by someone who doesn't know films and or movies that well. So the interview gets tied up with nonsense about violence. Here we have, in my opinion two of the best visual directors in the history of movie making. Nolan knows movies, Tarrantion knows movies. I love the talk about the use of camera work and cranes. Thank you, really enjoyed this.
i think kubrick had better visuals than nolan
Aqua - true, true no argument here on that. Kubrick was a true visionary. 2001 still blows me away. I have often thought what a Kubrick film would look like with the film tech that is available today. I know he would not be the type to overuse cgi, but I have a feeling he would have some clever way of using it to his advantage.
Aqua agreed, I think Nolan focused on the abstract idea more than the visuals
@@ZQZHD Not like he tries perfection like Kubrick, he lets the big actors go off a lot with changing lines and avoids a lot of the long shots liked by most directors.
@Alexander Kerensky I agree with you, he hasn't had control over some of the big stars in past movies by his own admission, perhaps that's why he has cast young leads in his current one.
A quote from his latest project "That was perfect, let's do it again"
Ch. Nolan is my new favourite interviewer.
You had 22 minutes to write this comment, and you abbreviate Chris?
two of the best modern filmmakers right now. Amazing video.
Two geniuses.
@David Lynch how old are you
@Robert Roblox you are probably Just a kid. Both are great in their own styles.
2 of my Fav Filmmakers
i love how christopher nolan can't take his eyes away from tarantino when he is talking... this is when artists listen to artists
Can't wait for his Charles Manson movie.
Where you get it? Is it the final script? Can I take a look?
This World Is Dead
Walter White what the fuck how
Walter White I don’t believe you
i read somewhere that that’s not the focus of the movie. all that stuff is happening in the background but the movie doesn’t focus on that 🤷🏻♀️
My two favorite directors talking together, amazing
both of them loves the cinema. the art of filmmaking. they are the last frontier against the Disney/Marvel/Netflix bullshit
Fuck you bro. Superhero genre is just as real Films as these two legends make
My two favourite directors 😍
Both of my favourite directors together
Nolan for best thrillers and nail bitters
Tarantino for best entertaining
Sadly any Kubrick film blows them away for obvious reasons let alone Scorcese or Francis Ford Coppola. Really Dark Knight ... I think not
I think Kubrick was overrated, my favorite film he was involved with, Stephen Spielberg directed and that was A.I., the other film I like is Full Metal Jacket, however the second half of the film falls very sort, it could have been one the greatest films ever made but for that 2nd half. The Shinning, Clockwork orange, and 2001, each have moments of greatness but also have huge flaws. 2001 for instance is pure eye candy, and of course the music is classic, but the story side of the movie is dull, mainly due to pacing.
As far as Scorsese & Francis Ford Coppola, It would be hard to argue against them, Raging Bull and Taxi Driver are about as flawless as I can think of next to maybe The Seven Samurai, and Goodfellas might be my favorite. The Godfather and Apocalypse Now are both classic and would be hard to beat.
However not sure they blew Tarantino away. Jango Unchained wasn't great but his other films have all been outstanding. Not only that but Tarantino is a great writer, and a great editor, (maybe the best), as well as being brilliant at putting music to his films. He is above all else great at telling a story using all of the elements that are needed to make a great film. Kubrick always had some of these elements perfect but always seemed to be missing some.
Tarrantino tells a story? His movies never have any plot. That is ok it is cinema and David Lynch uses his vivid imagination to remake the genre as other have before. But other than Resevoir Dogs; a movie I live most of the time there is no plot as in the self indulgent aimless lack luster Kill Bill series
I do and people like my insight unlike your sad retort that didn't address anything little sad man on the internet. I would take any Kubrick movie over cliche laden, Tarantino but Nolan is promising. Now go crawl back under that rock and come back and make a meaningful statement or learn something about cinema douche bag
Oh wouldn't you like to slap this loser wimp in mom's basement upside the head with his limited criticism and obsequious suck up to this over rated bore of cinema and no plot and derivative rip off of far better directors sruclips.net/video/t_cZ3rOmY-s-/видео.html- Here is a movie for you of limited imagination pretentious bore . This is what an original director looks like alternia of the myopic eternal small town pretense of knowing movies. Dear Tarrantiono plot is essence and your no Scorcese or Lynch who can appropriate and come up with far better results instead of a derivative repetition of the same film over and over again
Tarantino and Nolan are by far the greatest DIRECTORS of the 21st century. My opinion. Obviously Scorsese is the greatest of all time. But this is titans colliding
Alfred Hitchcock??
@@onidoremc9490 Scorsese >
I love Tarantino's work, Nolan is also a favourite.
half the people are saying tarantino sucks and the other half is saying nolan sucks. they’re both kings of modern cinema
Both have different style tho. Their use of dialogue is different as well
@@alexfzg9936 The big actors like Dicaprio can't have the freedom to change lines in the script but they do it for Nolan and he allows it
People who are starting fights are the biggest idiots who have no sense of respect. Screw that!
enjoyed seeing the set with warm wood everywhere and the cold snow, Mr. Tarantino really does scenery well.
Wow that's so amazing to see and hear this conversation between those two particular gentlemen. I could listen to them all day.
holy fucking shit. i have watched countless videos on both quentin and nolan on youtube. WHY WASNT THIS IN MY RECOMMENDED SOONER!!!!!!!
Tarantino dancing in the background 5:38 :)
Great director but no rhythm.
angelthman No shit Sherlock. That's why he's a director not a dancer.
Nolan looks like he's taking in Tarentino's perspective to heart :p
Two legends!
my two favorite director
My two most favourite & influential directors........
& together ❤❤
Both have different style as well 🤣🤣
Two friends who are each geniuses and one's tweakin
WOW...... JUST INCREDIBLE
thanks for uploading this!
How can people not like Tarantino films.
I do not trust those people...
How can people not like Nolan and Tarantino's movies?
Alexander
People who like Transformers
@@MichaelTPaulo I like the first transformer movie tho 🤣🤣🤣
I liked even once upon a time in Hollywood that is one of my favourite movie except that Bruce Lee scene 🤣
Thank you for posting this and the edit. I love these two together!!
The kings of the 70mm.
Nolan must hear the words “layman’s terms” from people very often
What a fucking delight this was.
lol nolan ois so calm and terantino spaz lol love em both
John Williams or Ennio Morricone? You decide what my question about things that are impossible to quantify is.
Polecat Slam easy, Morricone
Zimmer
A dream come true.
Early Nolan copied early Tarantino. Not hating, just stating. Nolan and Tarantino are my top 2 making movies today. Thank God for them.
William Gates III I’m gonna have to say that Following, memento and insomnia are absolutely nothing like reservoir dogs or pulp fiction so I have no idea what the hell you are talking about haha
My both masters together in an highly intellectual interpretation about a film very technical and script wise way precisely 👏 ❤❤🖤🖤
2 legends
Legends under one roof my 2 fav directors in the world, They both don't use mobile phones
04:20 I wish T. had said this before I went and saw the film. I would have appreciated it a lot more, despite it consisting of a kind of stylistic spoiler.
The way quentin looks at nolan
Makes me feel that he wanna hit him😂😂
It indeed is a mad mad mad mad world
I saw Hateful Eight in 70mm
He is F'in brilliant!
I want a Tarantino Star Trek movie, I want a Nolan Star Wars movie, I want an Oliver Stone Bourne movie.
I want an Edgar Wright Batman Beyond movie, I want....... forget it.
Quintopher Nolantino
Django would have been a better fit for 70mm as H8tful 8 takes place predominantly within a single enclosed setting and more akin to a "who-done-it" PLAY.
1 Bad Jesus that's why he uses 70mm so you get a wide perspective and what the other characters are up to in the background!!
Thomas Percy yeah ...but 35mm in those closed spaces woulda been sufficient. besides watch the old Agatha Christie film OR the Peter Ustinov 1970's films: Murder on Orient, Death on Nile etc.. many scenes have shots where we see characters in deep focus conversing while we focus on Poirot before us. ultimately I think the opportunity just presented itself to QT so.. hell yeah..shoot in 70mm ..I would too. I can just imagine tho' some of those shots in Django at 70mm: death of Brittle Brother off the horse ..the explosion of Schultz wagon, shultz telling the myth of broomhilda with shadows behind him..etc. woulda been beautiful!. Maybe QT will shoot 1969 in 70mm ....that'd be cool.
the moment hollywood fell
Apart from the Kill Bill movies I have absolutely loved every Tarantino movie I've ever seen. It's a real shame that he's gonna stop making movies.
Abhishek Tarafdar 2 more my friend
Gabriel Wisniewski Really? Great.
I'd still like to know that why if he had the original score did he use the Thing piece on just that one scene? Kinda killed the momentum for me...
I could heat them talking forever
Personally my two favorite directors.
Protectors of Hollywood.
You have to make a movie and you can choose between the director/writer/filming style/producer. You have Nolan, and Tarantino. Who do you choose for which role/responsibility and why?
nice edit dude
What a mind on that boy!
12 angry men - the hateful eight. Anyways, how fucking genius is the part where Tarantino is actually talking to us about his decision to go ahead with the hanging ...16:07
What language are the subtitles in? Armenian, Russian..?
in Armenian
If you have to explain your story or your film, you're simply L.O.S.T.
I liked this a lot better when it was called "The Hateful Eight DGA Q&A with Quentin Tarantino and Christopher Nolan" (), but it's sorta refreshing ~ enlightening ~ encouraging to see the illustrative examples you include of some of the stuff they talk about, even if the sound is mixed badly and you somehow lost a lot of video quality from the already-compressed original.
Did you do the subtitles?
Did you add the "consumer camera BTS" overlay stuff?
Americans should experience more movies from other cultures because it is a nice way to compare and contrast different styles.
Empty vessels do make the most noise. Typical insular Yank
Jay of small mind empty vessels do make the most noise little man. Get a life or learn to articulate a coherent thought loser
Thank you for your lack of insight small angry little man of no consequence
You epitomize the word asinine . Enjoy the Marvel Comic book movie douchebag
Anything that is too complex for that small mind is labeled "artsy " to you. I bet you're quiet the coward in real life but only brave on line. Now back to your comic book movies. Move on little boy this is a conversation for grown ups and yes both these guys are good directors making great movies likely to complex even for you. Enjoy the Transformers right up your alley
great video except high volume on music blew out the room after listening to an interview please dont over use music. please dont use music. let the viewer think and generate their own emotions and ideas. we don't need music to keep interest and attention! other than that I love your channel keep up the good work
This interview caused the black hole in Sagittarius A
R Vs Pg13
What is that great music that starts at 2:33?
ruclips.net/video/wnNW3ti1NPc/видео.html
Thanks man I really appreciate the link.
It used to come on before feature presentations at movie theaters in the 70's. Here's a good use of it if you're into rap.
ruclips.net/video/zNK7WO7_lDA/видео.html
How to ruin a great piece of music lol. Thanks for the link though.
Cant ever go wrong with DOOM
Holy SHIT.
You no what practice makes
*Who is Nolan, Christopher Nolan? (in comparison to Tarantino.) Bangkok-Johnny CarSanook Media THAILAND. BTW. Both going ‘baldie’ Tarantino first followed by Nolan, Bangkok-Johnnie, again*
Nolan is still my fav.
4:55 - blckng
The hateful 8 is long in the tooth ...
Woah what the fuck this is real? I never thought this would happen. I literally am scared of the fucking universe vortex that’s ab to happen from witnessing this interaction
Do a movie together already!
🤣🤣🤣
film is too expensive
he jumped the shark at django imo
Exactly. I remember walking out of the movies after Django thinking "That was not that great for a Tarantino flick." Then I got exited when I heard he was making another western thinking he would get it right this time. Sad to say he did not.
@@OP-oj9od Unpopular opinion
9:09 - clrdo
I wish Nolan would shut up and let Tarantino speak
Hahah
Bcoz its too much fun jan
Was anyone else distracted by the microphones? Why not use lavalieres??
Pulp fiction vs TDK
Pulp fiction for sure..
TDK
I know I am in the minority, but I think Christopher Nolan about scrapes the bottom of the barrow of film-makers in my book. I found both Inception and, more recently, Tenet unwatchable -- or at least unwatchable to the ending -- and both for the same reason: the "mind-bending" factor thrown into the narrative. That is to say: in Inception (with the fantastic premise of the ability to program and inhabit the DREAMS of others) and in Tenet (with the TIME-TRANSPORTATION of objects and related "mind-benders") one finds that a huge chunk of the dialogue and story-telling has to be invested in EXPLAINING the mechanics of the fantasy premise -- while the action itself slogs along in some entirely recognizable well-trod genre (i.e. heist-drama or secret-agent drama). I guess if one is the type to just sit opened-mouthed at the MARVEL of the premise; then one is well-served. I myself have always been a lover of more realistic storylines and find 50% of any Nolan movie utterly uninteresting. Ultimately, I realize I don't care any longer about the characters, that the whole thing is just leading up to some over-blown and over-the-top final sequence of dream creation or time inversion and, thus, that I have simply lost interest.
Pretty much spot on with my interpretation of Nolan films. It's almost as if he's trying to hard to convince the audience he's Original. In doing so, he slows down the story with over the top ideas and shots. QT on the other hand is maybe, the best film maker yet. Scorsese is great too. But Tarantino's movies are his completely. From the script, screenplay vision, characters,music. I have a suggestion for a pretty good movie. It's titled Sukiyaki Western Django. It's really neat. Like a Japanese Tarantino style flick. QT even has a cameo in this film. I think it's on RUclips now.
Which language is that ? The subtitles
armenian
Not suspense, tension.
Tarantino’s dialogue is fucking annoying. Nolan is a far greater film maker.
Dude stop comparing them. They are both amazing directors, and it would just be retarded to call one better than the other
Was Tarantino drunk during this Q&A...?
thats how he is!🤣
Richard Hoppes close eyes
Richard Hoppes lol yes
Christopher Rowley meth.
Cocaine
Wonderful movie, only an idiot wouldn't like it.
LFC303606 I didn't like it...When should I expectto be crowned as an "idiot," much good sir?
ruclips.net/video/RvLkjR9t638/видео.html
my least favorite Tarantino movie.
I can see why you think that, I actually thought Django Unchained was his worst by far.
Django was so soulless, so forced and unoriginal (it felt hollywoody to the core). I didn't even bother to watch the Hateful Eight and that Manson flick idea sounds like the most tasteless idea ever...
I've seen all his work except for death proof(not a big fan of b movies). But for me, it's(pretty sure this is gonna piss people off) kill bill vol 2. It's still a pretty good movie. It had more story and less fights and I thought it could've used more action and less story (i felt it didn't strike that much of a balance between the story and the fighting, for the third time).
Worst is Death Proof. Second worst is Django. H8 was surpisingly solid. Great music and camera and very funny at times.
This is my favorite tarantino movie till date.least favorite one is jackie brown.
hateful 8 was hasty, made no sense, and was pretty boring. His only REALLY bad film
John Spence “I reject your hypothesis” - QT
2 legends