RESERVOIR DOGS (1992) TWIN BROTHERS FIRST TIME WATCHING MOVIE REACTION!
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 24 фев 2022
- Continuing our journey into Quenton Tarantino movies and this might just be my favorite yet!
Patreon: / octokrool
Twitter: / octokrool
Instagram: / octokrool
PO Box
Chris G.
PO Box 30509 Brossard QC J4Z 3R6
*Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners. Кино
Not only is Buscemi a phenomenal actor, fun fact, he was a firefighter and voulenteered rescue finding missing firefighters working 12 hours a day for a week after September 11. He also advocated to congress for permanent funding of Ground Zero funds for disabled firefighters and those lost. All around just a great fucking guy.
His role along side Bill Burr in "The King of Staten Island" was the very first role of his career where he played a firefighter.
he was well retired from volunteer ff when 9/11 happened but he did advocate for the 1st responders.
Michael Madsen's and John Travolta's characters are actually brothers in the Tarantino universe. I believe there was talks at one point about doing a flick called the Vega Brothers
So does that mean The Wolf has a twin brother?
True, Tarantino was going to make a movie about the brothers; but the actors got to old to play their younger selves.
Michael Madison? 😒😒
Sorry, Michael Madison is a real life serial-killer who is currently on death row.
This is Michael Madsen.
The reference of Scagnetti in this film is the same guy in Natural Born Killers.
Marcellus is also mentioned
Reservoir Dogs was supposed to be an Indie post-college type film so Tarantino could show people he could direct. However, when Harvey Keitel read the script he immediately poured money into the project and got top-notch actors to sign on. Secured a distribution deal for Tarantino and suddenly Tarantino was the hottest young director in Hollywood. Making a movie ten times better quality than his peers for one-tenth the money. Sending Tarantino into legendary status.
Harvey Keitel - one of my favorite actors -&- his movie
*Bad Lieutenant* is some pretty powerful stuff - not sure it could be made a reaction on RUclips, as it is intense, graphic, and raw. But, a movie that is a cult classic / must see.
Which, would also include these other cinematic classics :
Blue Velvet
Requiem For A Dream
Fear & Loathing Las Vegas
Super Troopers
Half Baked
The Orphan
The Faculty
Hoping that maybe a Patreon viewer, with more influence, can take from this list, and help it to get more attention, as good content, and certainly a list of movies, that nobody else seems to be reacting to.
I'm glad that they have reacted to some of my favorites, already -
Training Day
Snatch
Full Metal Jacket
So, I know they have a similar interest in movies, and think they would enjoy most of the titles that I suggested.
✌️ 🇺🇲💪
A similar thing happed with the films, "Narc" and "Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels" when Tom Cruise got involved. Without Tom, both of those movies would have been dead in the water.
@@PhantomFilmAustralia
Not even remotely similar.
Keitel read the unproduced & unbought script, got it bought, supported the script became the producer, got the financing, got it made, starred in the film & shepherded it all the way through.
Cruise did not read the scripts for either, produced neither, funded neither or starred in either.
BOth films were already made.
He saw a screening of lock stock at an exec screening, & recommended it be bought.
He saw a screening of Narc at a festival & bought the rights himself.
@@USCFlash You're right. Everything you said was spot on. I was referring to an actor with clout in the industry running with low budget projects helmed by inexperienced directors because they believed in the projects, and wanting to get them made.
@@PhantomFilmAustralia
i appreciate your acknowledgement...but what you are referring to, cruise has never done.
Quentin originally wrote Mr. Pink for himself to play but Steve Buscemi read for it and nailed it.👌🏾
We’re supposed to be f**king’ professionals!
When Tarrantino gave the role of Mr. Pink, we all know why he took the role of Mr. Brown.
I’m glad that Tarantino took a smaller acting role in this; he’s a great writer and director but a mediocre actor.
@@peytone5387 yeah the only time I've liked his acting is in from dusk till dawn, four rooms, planet terror and his top gun monologue in whatever movie it was in. I guess he acts decent when he's not acting in his own movie
@@aaxyz9990He was perfect in From Dusk Till Dawn.
I just love the fact that Steve Bucemi was in Pulp Fiction as Buddy Holly the waiter at Jack Rabbit slims, but in Tarrantino's first movie, he is against tipping waiters and waitresses
Dude… I never made that correlation. Cheers.
YES!!! The dialogue in this film is iconic as is the film. Tarantino at his early best, making magic with no money.
His most impressive film he ever made.
@@MasterBetty69 It was an excellent film but I wouldn't go that far and say it's his best.
@@AdamtheGrey02 I didn't say it was his best, I said it was his most impressive.
As much as I love Pulp Fiction, Django and Bastards, the subtleties of this movie puts it in my personal favorites. You gotta watch Jackie Brown when you get the chance. Pam Grier is an icon.
Yes, this film and Jackie Brown are my favorite Tino films.
What I love about Tarantino is on any given day, his movies could rank in any order and it would be justified. I don’t watch this movie as frequently as his others, but I’m reminded of how brilliant it is every time I do.
I'm saying! 😀💛
The bare bones approach to this movie just makes it so gritty and realistic. In my opinion, Tarantino never fully captured the sheer brilliance of this movie again.
You will never hear Stuck in the Middle with You the same ever again
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You are 100% correct. If I ever hear this song at work, I can't help but do a little dance.
Gerry Rafferty
Such an amazing movie - worth many rewatches for the subtleties.
Rumor has it Michael Madsen had to call cut when the cop ad libbed “come on man I got a little kid at home” because it made him emotional
That's true. At the time, Michael Madsen wife recently gave birth to their first child. Madsen in real life is a big softy, and that line triggered him big time.
@@PhantomFilmAustralia Aw, god, was it his boy who recently died? Cause it’s extra awful to think it affected him like that and then ended up losing him.
@@83gemm It wasn't the same son. The son who committed suicide was Hudsen Madsen, born a few years later. Hutson's godfather was Tarantino.
If you listen closely after the cop says that, you can hear Madsen saying "No, no, no" offscreen.
@@rushguy1wow I've watch that scene countless times and I never noticed that. It sounds like a completely different mic aswell like it's something they just missed in post production.
Steve Buschemi really shines here with the best dialogue! He is just so smooth!
The guy in the blue who plays the bosses son, just so happens to be Sean Penn's brother Chris Penn who died. He was a great actor, just like his brother. RIP 🙏🏽
Mr.pink actually dies, if you listen closely after he leaves the warehouse you can hear mr.pink having a shoot out with the police
Sorry to break it to you guys but Mr. Pink dies too.
If you listen closely you can hear sirens, cops telling him to freeze and put his hands up, and subsequently opening fire on him.
Modern day Shakespearean tragedy. Everyone dies.
Yeah. Chris Penn (Sean's brother) gave a great performance in this one. I love his speech when he ends with "now tell me what REALLY happened". His eyes are insane crazy. We was also in the great 80s vampire flick "The Lost Boys".
Mr. Blonde is so calm because he's in his element. He's a sadist. Example of a similar character in another movie is O-Dog from Menace II Society, which you've seen already. (Except he's completely indifferent rather than calm.)
Given the budget for this film, getting this cast and their performances is nothing less than extraordinary. This is more (I would say) seriously artistic than many of his other films. Pulp Fiction was the bigger budget, commercially serious masterpiece. This film is making the most of what you've got.
The song that plays at the end of the movie was "the lime in the coconut" which is about a woman treating a stomach ache by drinking the very same drink that gave her the stomach ache in the first place
The impact of this movie cannot be understated.
You need to go back to this time, when violence in movies was always portrayed in the utmost glorious fashion. (Chuck Norris, Arnold, etc.) The violence was satisfying, but brief because the bullet or knife went in and the bad guy always died instantly, so as a moviegoer, you never had to deal with any realistic consequences.
The violence in this movie grabbed audiences by their guts and twisted them more than that bullet in Mr. Orange. Everybody's perspective on gunfights being cool either evaporated, or underwent a sober revision, literally overnight.
I recall that the first time I saw this in the theater, I had popcorn, a hot dog, candy, and a drink. And I'd completely lost my appetite, fifteen minutes in.
one of the best movies ever made....love the fact that it looks like a stage play than a movie in the warehouse scenes.
they had a medical professional on the set to get the blood loss from a gunshot to the stomach accurately
Been waiting for you guys to do my favourite Tarantino film. Tim Roth is phenomenal in this.
The character subtext in this movie is so next level. Because Harvey Keitel feels responsible for getting Tim Roth shot. HE stops thinking like a criminal and starts taking on a father figure role, soothing Tim Roth as he bleeds out. He knows ROth's going to die, he feels responsible for it and it won't let him entertain the fact that Tim Roth is a cop. Tarantino's subtext is always next level and gives the meaning of events in the movie so much more psychological impact than would be in a normal shoot-em-up heist flick.
The tiny violin, we used to say It's the world's tiniest record player playing " My heart bleeds for you"
Fun little side note, at the dinner table during breakfast, it’s hinted that mr orange is the rat, when he instantly snitches on mr pink, when joe is asking who didn’t throw in.
That’s such a interested idea, I wonder if this would apply in real life. Do undercover cops who take the role as the “infiltrator tend to show characteristics like this more often? Like Tim Roth immediately outs Mr.Pink al thought it means nothing to the group, it references that he is eager to showcase the wrong doings of others when it so happens. I love this scene in the movie. Glad you brought it up 👍🔥🔥🔥🔥😁
1992 was a great year for dialogue in Hollywood movies. Primarily due to this one along w/ writer Aaron Sorkin's "A Few Good Men" & David Mamet's "Glengarry Glen Ross".
1992 marked the changing of the guard from the decade long era of 80's new wave filmmakers....
Travoltas character in pulp fiction is brothers with Mr blonde. The marcellus mentioned in the beginning of the movie is marcellus wallace from pulp fiction
Marcellus Spivey=Marcellus Wallace? Oh, okay, dude.
Mr White mentions he did jobs with someone called Alabama, and she ends up in True Romance. There are always links in Tarantino movies
@@viviandarkbloom1 Gary Oldman character in True Romance is Drexel Spivey!! Possible connection?
Wow is right. I loved this reaction. It was so interesting, especially the torture scene. I think it's the best most economical movie ever made, simple af plot, settings, tons on dialogue is the complex part. The action is top notch & paced perfectly in many ways. It's an impressive movie. I agree all the actors are amazing, but I gotta respect Chris Penn outta the bunch RIP Chris Penn. His shouting anger emotions were epic af "stop pointing that gun at my dad!" RIP
@Kurtice YZ I completely agree. Especially the pacing. That is something Tarantino lost after becoming a big time director over the years. I am a much bigger fan of his earlier work than I am of his later films.
"Should they let the cop see their face?!"
me, knowing what's about to happen: Uh... yeah... I think they'll be ok... lol
He could only hear half of what was going on anyway.
@@PhantomFilmAustralia 🤣
Yeah, Vic Vega (Mr. Blonde) is supposed to Vincent Vega's brother, the character played by John Travolta in "Pulp Fiction." Back in the day Tarantino kept saying he wanted to make a prequel movie about Vic and Vincent Vega together but time kept passing and Travolta and Madsen got too old to believably play their younger selves and he ended up shelving the idea.
The actor who plays Joe was also in Silver Bullet. He's the bar owner that has "Peacemaker" written on a baseball bat.
Oh man if they haven't seen Silver Bullet they should watch it on the channel. Great 80s horror!
@@ItsLexy Agreed! That's why I didn't want to give too much away, not sure if they have seen it yet.
Also played Elaine’s father on an episode of Seinfeld.
Lawrence Tierney. He's a pretty famous tough guy actor going back to the noir movies of the 1940s. He would have had a much bigger career were it not for chronic alcoholism and a long series of violent incidents. The guy really was a loose cannon for most of his life.
The actor who plays Mr Blonde was also in 'Thelma and Louise' which was another MASSIVE film that same year. Well worth seeing. It was also Brad Pitt's breakout film.
This was a good movie R.i.p. Chris Penn
This is one of my fav movies of all time and your becoming my fav reactors for movies....so...
I'm gonna keep telling you this!
You MUST watch "4 Rooms". Quintin Tarantino directs one scene, 3 other directors do thw other 3 rooms. The undercover cop(Timothy something or other) is the main character. It's one of the best performances I've ever seen in any movie. Just classic!
The scenes with Harvey Kietel, Tim Roth, plus Steve Buscemi make me miss these old style classic movies. Harvey Kietel’s confusion, doubt, guilt are so clear and related in a sense. His assurance that Orange is not the rat throughout the movie very honorable.
The opening scene of them at breakfast establishes many things, but mainly each character is intensely passionate for whatever ideology they have come upon. The other thing is Harvey Keitel is willing to go against JOe, when he won't give him his notebook. Tarantino's dialogue is never there for fluff. it always takes us somewhere. We never understand until the movie credit roll, but it's there for a reason.
and Mr. Orange immediately rats out Mr. Pink for not tipping - HUGE hint that he's the rat. It's such a perfect scene that has resonance throughout the movie.
@@blackjackbarron5315 True True. So much to unpack in this opening monologue.
@@lethaldose2000 -Mr. Blonde mimicks a gun when Joe says to shoot White, hinting at his homicidal ways
- Pink's rant about tipping shows us that he's opinionated and is willing to stand up for himself
- Orange rats Pink out for not tipping, but is also swayed BY Pink.
- Brown and Blue don't say much at all
A lot of little details and foreshadowing.
I saw this when it was new after a friend told me I need to see this new director going places... when the Mr Orange part came up I knew he was right he was going to be huge
Hands down the Reservoir Dogs best soundtrack ever.
Watch more films
One of the last of the Tough Guy movies. Brilliant.
Your reactions and comments for this film are exactly right.... I enjoyed every minute here . I agree this is a hard movie to react to while watching because it's hard not to be so invested and keep up with everything going on . This is a film to Love.... everything from the setting , script , dialog , and even the wardrobe stood out as impressive . A favorite movie character of mine is Rock Hound played by Steve Buscemi in "Armageddon"~ 1998 . Thank you for this and I look forward to much more .
Michael Madsen's sister, Virginia Madsen is also an actor, nominated for an Oscar for a role in 'Sideways', a 2004 film.
Was also in Candyman, which I believe Octokrool have already reacted to
If you want more Buscemi look into his directing work too! Trees Lounge is great
True Romance is Tarantino's first script. You MIST watch that if you haven't already
Ha ha ha ha…. “MIST”…
Yes, and the Brad Pitt character made the movie for me 😊
Curtis keeps topping his intros with every upload… I LOVE IT!!!
Mr Pink running between Mr White and Blonde when they were about to fight never could have been me. I'd just be like "you guys can kill each other, I'm out"
And you guys are right Travolta's character was Vincent Vega and Vic (Mr Blonde) is his brother! Tarantino wanted to do a movie about the brothers but never got around to it sadly.
It foreshadows Mr. Orange being the rat in the first scene when he tells Joe about Mr. Pink not tipping.
I'm 38 and i wouldn't even be mad if chubby rain was ringing my mum!
There are a lot of same name characters in Tarantino movies/scripts. The "Scagnetti" name is also in the script-written "Natural Born Killers."
I made the same comment before scrolling and reading yours. 😂😂😂 Vic and Vincent Vega too.
There’s a reference by Joe of Marcellus in the earlier part of this one. And the bar that Brad and Leo go to get drunk in Hollywood is called Vega’s.
If you listen closely at the end, when Mr. Pink runs out with the diamonds, you can hear cops yelling at him to get down on his knees. I watched the movie's commentary years ago, and I believe Tarantino spoke on this. Pink lived, but was caught by the cops. So nobody really got away. But perhaps Pink lived to rob another day 🤔
Loved your reaction, guys! One of my favorite movies. Thanks 😎👍
If you saw SNL years later when John Travolta hosted, they did a skit called Quentin Tarantino's Welcome Back Kotter. It was pretty much the characters acting out this movie, with Lenny and Squiggy showing up for a standoff. And the very end Steve Buscemi popped up as his character Mr Pink.
I like to think that's what happened after this movie.
@@primepm8861 The PS2 Reservoir Dogs game had Pink being caught by the police at the end. It also had segments where it shows what happened in the jewellery store and how Blonde kidnapped the cop.
Great movie. You should give 'True Romance' a watch. Tarantino's script that he sold to fund Reservoir Dogs. Lots of great actors and such a great movie as well.
one of many fantastic Tarantino films!!
You know what's better than watching this film? Playing the videogame. You get to choose any of the main characters & reenact the stuff the film didn't show us. The run away from the cops missions were my fave part of the game mainly for the music & the dirty jokes. I really love this film but the game truly makes you feel like one of the boys, it's so awesome. 👌
Mr. Pink didn't get away. You can hear in the background the cops lighting him up when he ran outside. Then they came in and got Larry after he shot Mr. Orange.
Tarantino did a movie with others called, Four Rooms. It’s freakin great! I hope you guys watch it.
Mr. Pink didn't get away though. After he leaves the warehouse, in the background you can hear the cops yelling at him and then a shootout. Its implied he got got too.
I first watched this at the age of 13 with my mate who made the observation that when Mr Orange is in the back of the car shot, he sounds a lot like Gonzo from the Muppets.
That was 19 year's ago and I've never been able to watch this without hearing Gonzo in that scene.
Mr Pink likely doesn't get away. If you listen to the background sounds after Pink runs out of the warehouse, you can hear the cops yelling for him to stop, then lots of gunfire
i think you are the only reactors that realize that Pink is the only professional. notice at the beginning, in the diner they kind of all reveal their personalities by the conversations. Joe & Larry (White) are friends just like Eddie & Vic (Blonde) & have a playful demeanor towards each other but Larry has his arm around Orange a couple times like he's taking him under his wing. protecting him. Blue & Brown {Tarrantino} are just there, no need to invest any attention in them. Orange rats out Pink for not tipping & he ends up being the main rat. & Pink basically is all business & all for himself (not wanting to tip). sidebar: in Pulp Fiction, Buschemi plays the waiter of all things while Travolta & Thurman are at that diner
Steve Buscemi is pretty good as the main character in a show called Boardwalk Empire.
Pink doesn't get away, if you listen in the background. He gets caught, you can hear him say I'm shot
I love the scene with mr pink running from police in streets, the alarms soundind, he runs in streets and take the woman from car by the window, but the best is the shooting angle,him standing behind the car shooting and the police in a corner, its so real..and he enters the car and run..very intense
I haven’t watched yet, but I’m stoked. Lads, I’m having a bad morning and just saw this and I need this entertainment so much today!!! Thank you!
Have you guys seen 'Four Rooms"? Stars Tim Roth as the lead on an all star cast. 4 stories taking place in 4 hotel rooms where Roth is the bellhop. Each story written and directed by someone different and epic. The 4th room was done by Tarantino.
In what's known as the Tarantinoverse, there are two connections between this film and two of his other films, 'Pulp Fiction' and 'Kill Bill Vol. 2'. Michael Madsen's character, Vic Vega is the brother of Vincent Vega/John Travolta in 'Pulp Fiction', and the straight razor that Vic Vega used on the cop in this film was the SAME straight razor that Uma Thurman used inside the coffin in 'Kill Bill Vol. 2' to cut the bonds around her wrists.
ngl, i saw this when it came out, and to this day i still randomly do the dance mr. blonde was doing during the torture scene 😂
0:21 ....Ok, I really need to ask..... How is that Chris isn't deaf from his right ear with that scream?.... I can barely hear my thoughts and I have the volume turn down to half.....
This is Tarantino's best movie hands down.
Like many writers, directors and other artists, giving them limits (in this case budget restraints) forces them to strip away everything unnecessary and focus on making the minimum the best it can be since you can't hide any flaws under glitz. Once they get the keys to the candy store they can become self-indulgent, and they have fewer if any people to tell them "No, that doesn't work".
One of Tarantino's best movies.. then again, a lot of them are great.
You'll never hear Stealer's Wheel "Stuck in the Middle with You" the same, ever again !
Great movie great music!
Check out "Trees Lounge". Steve Buscemi wrote and directed it. A slice of life.
React to Jackie brown which is one of Quentin Tarantinos most underrated films
1000%!!!!
Definitely my favorite Tarantino movie.
The second Mr Orange ratted out Mr Pink for not tipping Joe should have cut him loose there.
There is a theory that Steve Buchsemi's character in Pulp Fiction is the same person in this movie. They are connected Vincent Vega and there is also a reference to the "snake charmer" which is Bill from Kill Bill.
Vincent and Vic "Mr. Blonde" Vega are also supposed to be brothers.
You could kinda apply that theory to most characters in most Tarantino movies, since he likes using the same actors over and over lol. (A great choice of them too)
So Buddy Holly doesn't get tipped? :-D
Laurence Tierney, who played Joe, was a genuine criminal alongside an acting career stretching back to the heyday of film noir (his line that Mr. Blue is "dead as Dillinger" is actually a reference to how he played John Dillinger in a 1945 biopic), and just about every production he was involved with has some crazy stories about him.
Yeah, on Seinfeld he tried to steal a big knife. And when he got caught, he pulled it out and did the 'Psycho' stabbing screech and said he did it as a joke. They were like, uh ok, nice joke... and never called him again.
And Mr Blue is Edward Bunker. Noted career criminal & later famous author.
Lawrence Tierney was not a "genuine criminal". His father was a cop, he worked as labourer and was even a model before getting into acting.
He was a tough guy that liked to drink and fight, which landed him in jail many times, but that is very far from being a "genuine criminal".
2:16 .....I'M A WINNER, BABY......🤘🤘....(First time in my life I win at something)
YO! Listen...leave MY 95 yo Mom alone LOL 🤣
True Romance…Four Rooms…From Dusk till Dawn…Tarantino had a hand in all these and they are all worth a watch! I love Four Rooms it’s by 4 different directors and they each direct the story that happens in that room, really different and a great movie!
CARLOS: "So, what, were they psychos, or..."
SETH: "Did they look like psychos? Is that what they looked like? They were vampires. *Psychos do not explode when sunlight hits them,* I don't give a fuck how crazy they are!”
Four Rooms has been my new years hangover movie for decades
Man I love this movie. Also just wanted to say that I enjoy your videos but bringing your brother into the reactions was a great idea. I really enjoy the banter you two have.
P.S. Good on you for picking up on Vic's last name being Vega. Him and John Travolta's character Vincent from Pulp Fiction are brothers.
I always thought this would be an AWESOME play.
Also, you watch Steve Buscemi in Con Air. It's a supporting role, but he'll make your skin crawl; he plays a character befitting his . . . face. XD
Con Air is actually one of my mothers favorite movies, I've seen it many times and love it; Steve in that movie is incredible
@@OctoKrool Ha, right on! Keep doing what you're doing guys! =D
I remember seeing it in the cinema at release. It's really difficult to convey how ground breaking this was at the time. It was electrifying. It changed everything. I can't tell you how we felt as teenage boys leaving that cinema...
Love Quintin Tarantino!!!! You guys are awesome!!!!
Having watched this movie many times, and knowing what happens, it was fun watching you guys see it for the first time. Not knowing how things turn out.
Please notice how Quintin T. Uses similar shots in his movies. The trunk shot, the Mexican standoff, and the slo mo characters walking together.
And the products- Red Apple Cigarettes, Big Kahuna Burger, Akita Boys Donuts, they show up in his movies several times.
These intros are becoming wild haha!! Amazing movie and glad you watched!!
Fun fact: In the beginning of the movie when Joe asked who didn’t tip. Mr. Orange says Mr. Pink. That’s because Mr. Orange is the rat.
Vic's parole officer (Seymour Scagnetti) is the brother of the "nemesis" cop (Jack Scagnetti) in Natural Born Killers, which was directed by Oliver Stone but written by Tarantino. Mr. White's backstory references an offscreen character in Reservoir Dogs named "Alabama". Alabama is the name of the protagonist's girlfriend in True Romance, written by Tarantino and directed by Tony Scott.
Both Natural Born Killers and True Romance are must-see Tarantino films even though he didn't direct them. Please add them both to your list.
Epic..you guys are right...the acting was incredible...Just like in all Tarantino movies...love Steve Buscemi also...love him in his many comedic roles in Adam Sandler movies. great reaction!!
As for Tarantino's universe: In Pulp Fiction, Mia Wallace talks about her being on a pilot TV show when at the restaurant with Vincent "Fox Force Five". If you follow the description Mia (Uma) gives in "Pulp Fiction," the five girls in Fox Force Five match up perfectly with the five women in Kill Bill Vol 1.: Blonde (Daryl Hanna), Japanese (Lucy Liu), French (Julie Dreyfus), African American (Vivica A. Fox) and knives (Uma Thurman). So Kill Bill is a movie that was made IN Tarantino's universe.
After Pink runs out at the end, you can hear police shouting, Pink shouting back, followed by gunshots.
Pink didn't get away.
James Gandolfini's character in "True Romance " which was written by Tarantino is also a Vega Brother.
I think that Joe was late because he heard that the job had gone to hell and he as waiting to see the fallout. Eddie was his manager, he was the one coordinating, and he needed to know what the situation was before he came out.
if you like buchemi you should watch boardwalk empire
Or Con Air.
The scope of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood must've been such a production nightmare to put together, but Reservoir Dogs is still my favourite Tarantino movie
Everyone always complains about Mr. White being stupid at the end of the film but most fans don't know that Mr. White was a seasoned Vietnam vet & watched alot of fellow soldiers die & bleed to death infront of him so seeing Mr. Orange being so much younger than him & bleeding to death , it pretty much gave Mr. White flashbacks of seeing his old comrades like that during the war hence his extreme empathy for Mr. Orange which unfortunately caused him to unintentionally over cloud his own judgement in the end!!!!
This film has very detailed back stories that Quentin wrote for each character but unfortunately he didn't have a big enough budget to actually show everything & that's also why we never see the actual heist go down either but thank Harvey Keitel (Mr. White) for believing in Quintin enough to finance this entire film which basically gave Quentin Tarantino his chance in the business & everything we got later from him👍
If u want to learn more about each characters backstory, just buy the 10th anniversary DVD & go to the Special features & u can read Mr. Pink , Mr. Brown , Mr. White & Mr. Blondes complete back stories 👍
Mr. Pink is a seasoned criminal/stick up artist that grew up in the ghetto in a all black neighborhood & is extremely street smart!!!!
Mr. Brown is a rapest & a sex addict hence his conversation at the beginning of the film & why he got shot in the forehead because it was basically like his karma for having such a sick mind!!!!
Mr. White is a seasoned Vietnam vet , a professional stick up artist & very good with weapons hence why he was basically made the lead man for the entire jewel heist job by Joe & why hes so accurate with those duel handguns !!!
Mr. Blonde is another career criminal but also a undercover serial killer that grew up spoiled in a mid - upper class family with both of his parents as a only child & never went hungry a day in his entire life & just like most sociopaths , he was a bed wetter , a fire starter & he loved to torture small animals as a child 💯
You're welcome 👍
'Skagnetti and meatballs' - yeah, that one got me, hahahahaha ;'D
Nice guy Eddie and Vic Vega are basically like brothers, with Joe being the father.
The look on your face when mr.blonde got shot is priceless
The way I understand it, this is the 'First Tarantino movie', in that he wrote and directed it. However, there are a few movies that he wrote, that he sold that others directed. I'm unsure of which were released before, but I remember he wrote True Romance & Natural Born Killers. Both are great movies and if you haven't watched/reacted to them, you should. Another great movie he wrote but didn't direct is From Dusk 'till Dawn. Again, you should react to that, but I'd wait for Halloween for that one.
CARLOS: "So, what, were they psychos, or..."
SETH: "Did they look like psychos? Is that what they looked like? They were vampires. *Psychos do not explode when sunlight hits them,* I don't give a fuck how crazy they are!”
Next in line should be Pulp Fiction & True Romance is also worth a look.
Two things one is if you notice where they're talking in the bathroom just mr. Pink and mr. White you will notice that the shampoos or soaps whatever they are in the background they're separating from Orange from pink and white and the second thing is is that Vince Gilligan a Creator Breaking Bad he got inspiration to name Walter White and Jesse Pinkman from mr. White in mr. Pink from this movie
I use to work at a 99 cent store and they would play that song all the time (the song Mr. Blonde puts when he's torturing the cop) and everytime i would hear it at work i would think of this scene lol good times good times