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Old 08-10-2009, 06:49 PM   #11 (permalink)
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As 'Inglourious Basterds' is just about to hit cinemas worldwide, I thought i'd give a rundown of my thoughts on Quentin Tarantino's directorial work.

Reservoir Dogs




Reservoir Dogs is what many would consider a perfect directorial debut. It contains some of the most iconic scenes in modern cinema, and in the 98 minutes that you spend watching it, you not only feel a great connection with each of it's fantastically well-rounded characters, but you also feel a connection with Tarantino himself. Never will you find a film that so boldly states it's directors ambitions whilst never succumbing to self-indulgence.

Tarantino put it best himself when he stated that his aim for Reservoir Dogs was to create a heist film that wasn't necessarily about the heist. We never see the heist in question, and it is only explained to us by the central characters. However the writing is so sharp and engaging that you never feel like you have missed out, and this is where Tarantino shines the brightest.


Best Bit: The infamous scene featuring a spectacularly insane Mr Blonde, a shaving blade, an unassuming pop record and a very worried cop.



Pulp Fiction



Many claim this to be Tarantino's masterpiece. I am one of them.

Pulp Fiction is one of those very rare films that I could literally watch again and again and again. It still manages to impress me each and every time. This was before Tarantino became a little bit too smug and self-indulgent, when his indie-directorial-cool seemed effortless and not as forced as it was in, say, Kill Bill.

The opening scene of this film involving Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield is one of the finest character introductory scenes you will EVER see. And this is even more impressive when you take into account that the characters never discuss themselves or anything remotely linked with the plot, but instead they are discussing quarter pounders with cheese.

Best Bit: Butch Coolidge and the taxi driver. A subtle yet brilliant scene/

Jackie Brown



Until recently I was very much under the impression that this was Quentin Tarantino's debut as a director. In fact, I had only heard of it after buying the Tarantino boxset, and had assumed that it was his obscure first step into the world of movies. It certainly plays out that way.

To me, Jackie Brown does not have the feel of a Tarantino movie. It does not gel with the rest of his output, and it does not stand out in my mind along with his other work. Even though it is a fairly good crime drama, it is nothing more than that - a crime drama. Certainly, it does have its charm and good, well-rounded characters, but it just doesn't hit you as much as his other work.

Tarantino is best at making Tarantino movies. This is a crime drama, pure and simple. And there are better crime dramas out there.

Best Bit: Any scene with Robert De Niro in. He inevitably steals the show.

Kill Bill Vol. 1 & 2


If Reservoir Dogs was Tarantino's heist movie, Pulp Fiction his gangster movie and Jackie Brown his 'blaxploitation flick', then the Kill Bills were his balls out martial arts movies.

The term 'style over substance' was given a new definition upon Vol 1's release, with every single last detail of the entire movie seemingly created purely for the benefit of cool computer wallpapers and ringtones.

Saying this makes the film sound bad, but it isn't by any means. No, it's not as engaging as his other work. But that's not the point. Kill Bill makes you sit back and think "yeah, that was pretty fucking cool" for its entire runtime.

Vol. 2 was more of the same, but tweaked into a state of surrealism that was charming in the first installment, but a bit tired and try-hard in the second. I'm not sure whether the whole scene with The Bride digging herself out of a grave with a spoon was supposed to be funny, but if it was, then it's slightly disappointing that the film spent so long on the whole 'palm-fist' scenario just for that stupid and throwaway outcome.

That leads me onto another negative - Pai Mei. I understand that his character was intentionally overblown, but that overblown? Eventually I grew tired of any scene featuring him and I found myself grateful when he met his demise, allowing the film to venture onto genuinely interesting action scenes.

All in all, both films are what they were intended to be - a collage of great action scenes. They both have their faults, in particular Vol. 2, but Kill Bill remains a good foray into a franchise from Tarantino. Plus, it has The Bride, one of the best femme fetales in cinema history.

Best Bit: Gogo's ball and chain demise. Gruesome.

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Old 08-10-2009, 07:00 PM   #12 (permalink)
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it wouldn't let me use another image, so here's a seperate post for death proof.

Death Proof



Perhaps Tarantino's only directorial 'flop' as it were, Death Proof is what all it's cynics say it is. A self-indulgent, low-budget yet highly-hyped foray into the depths of Tarantino's mind and perversions. Yet, even with that being said, it's still not as bad as people would lead you to believe.

The dialogue isn't as sassy as you'd expect from a cast almost entirely comprised of ladies, and the only part of this film other than the car chase that had me fully engaged was the conversation involving Stuntman Mike and the girl sitting at the bar. Stuntman Mike is a fantastic character, a withered old pervert who is easy to love and loathe simulataneously. He's an excellent creation in an otherwise mediocre film, which is a shame, as if Tarantino didn't become so obsessed with attempting to make a 'Grindhouse' feature, then he could have had a classic premise on his hands here.

The main problem with this film is the overwhelming amount of dialogue involving characters we really don't care that much for. The original line-up of female leads are given way too much screen time when they really don't have anything good to say at all. Then, alarmingly, they are killed off in a flash and we are left feeling cheated out the last 45 minutes that was spent trying to make us feel anything for any of them. It isn't enough that they're sexy, if they're going to be on the screen for so long then at least make them interesting, too. The next group of females are decidedly more likeable, lead by a fantastically tomboyish Zoe Bell. You feel that if the film focused more on this group, it would have been a lot more successful with dialogue.

Then there's the car chase, which, even with all the hype, wasn't as good as expected. The girls beat Stuntman Mike to death, and then it ends. Anti-climax...

Best Bit: The bullet in Stuntman Mike's arm and the realisation that he has now became the hunted and not the hunter.
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Old 08-10-2009, 07:59 PM   #13 (permalink)
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i actually haven't seen Jackie Browne or Death Proof, never really cared to watch them for the sake of knowing all of Tarantino's works. Reservoir Dogs is probably my favorite of the ones i have seen, Buscemi's role as Mr. Pink in it was fantastic and one for which he never eclipsed throughout the rest of his career.

i will say that it's about f*cking time he started injecting humor into his films instead of the requisite blood and gore, and if the trailer is any means to judge that it seems Inglorious Basterds is going to follow that line.
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Old 08-10-2009, 08:12 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Pulp fiction is my favorite ... I've been wanting to watch Jackie Brown since i watched Pulp ... Tarentino and samuel L. seemed a great mix ...
but all those movies are great!
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Old 08-10-2009, 08:18 PM   #15 (permalink)
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The only Tarantino movie I can watch without getting bored is Reservoir Dogs, which I really enjoy. The rest of his stuff is either rubbish or so-so.

And as for the Indiana series, nice to see a review there from Spielberg himself. Seriously, Crystal Skull was dire, bad plot, bad CGI, and barely any fun to watch. Temple of Doom isn't as bad as people make it out to be but definitely second worst, again, not many fun parts for a 'fun action adventure' and Spielberg's wife deserve a bitch slappin'. Raiders of the Lost Ark is the best out of the series and Last Crusade is second. Both are fun, have great action scenes and have similar structure.
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Old 08-11-2009, 05:29 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ToeAndno View Post
And as for the Indiana series, nice to see a review there from Spielberg himself. Seriously, Crystal Skull was dire, bad plot, bad CGI, and barely any fun to watch. Temple of Doom isn't as bad as people make it out to be but definitely second worst, again, not many fun parts for a 'fun action adventure' and Spielberg's wife deserve a bitch slappin'. Raiders of the Lost Ark is the best out of the series and Last Crusade is second. Both are fun, have great action scenes and have similar structure.
Well as I explained, I never had any sort of expectations for the film as it was the first one out of the Quadrilogy that I saw, and it remains the only one that I watched at the cinemas. Obviously, not being a fan of the first three films helped in some way because I wasn't left holding my head in my hands at the fridge, the prairie dogs or Shia LaBeoufs Tarzan antics. To me, it was just a silly and ridiculously overblown action movie that was entertaining in its own insane right.

I've since watched the quadrilogy again and for me it still stands;

1: Temple of Doom
2: Raiders of The Lost Ark
3: Kingdom of The Crystal Skull
4: The Last Crusade

Sorry, fanboys


EDIT: I agree that this was the best I've seen Buscemi, alongside his role as Seymour in Ghost World. And as for Inglourious Basterds, I haven't heard that many good things about it thus far... apparently the dialogue is still not up to Reservoir/Pulp standards and the action is hit and miss. Still though, I'll give it a watch, and I think Brad Pitt's character has all the potential to be a fantastic movie character.
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Old 08-14-2009, 12:35 PM   #17 (permalink)
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I'm a Star Wars fan. Not a Star Wars fan to the point where the prequels had me ripping my hair out in passionate rage, but a normal, run of the mill fan. You've all probably heard enough of your fair share of opinions on each film already, but here's me giving you some more.

The Phantom Menace


I was 9 years old when the hype for The Phantom Menace took control of the world. I had seen the original trilogy, forced upon me by a particularly fanboyish best friend at the time, and eventually grew to love it. He had all the old action figures, passed on by his sister, and everytime I went to his house I was the TIE fighters, he was the Millenium Falcon, and that was the end of that. More and more friends would come over and play and we'd have a big Star Wars-fest, with barely any of them having actually seen the movies, but fuck those toys were cool.

So I can thoroughly understand the reasoning behind the hype behind The Phantom Menace, and how much people anticipated it. Star Wars was a franchise that was easy to love - enough imagination to captivate children and a fantastic, classic storyline to draw in their parents. Obviously, some people took the hype a bit too far, and even though I understand the greatness of the original trilogy, turning up to see a movie dressed as Boba Fett will NEVER be acceptable.

The Phantom Menace is, then, as you all have heard by now, a huge disappointment on all counts. I went to see this film at the cinema, and I was one of the many children that Lucas evidently wanted to impress with Jake Lloyd being the central character and Jar Jar Binks the 'lovable' sidekick. However, it just didn't work. The storyline was too convoluted for any child to get into, with talk of Trade Federations, Galactic Senates, Medechlorians. Sure, at the time I got along just fine with the idea of Jar Jar Binks - at that point he was the only thing that could stop the film from sending me into a boredom induced coma. Almost 10 years later I can watch the film back and understand the story (although it's still boring as shit and I couldn't care less about any of it) but the childish elements of it that were acceptable when viewed through the eyes of a child annoy the fuck out of me now I'm a little older and wiser.

I'm one of the 'lucky' few that can completely deny the claim that the Phantom Menace was Lucas' film for the kids. It wasn't, we hated it.

Best Bit: Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon vs Darth Maul. Ah, Darth Maul, what a wasted opportunity.

Attack Of The Clones



For many, the above image summarises the tone of Attack Of The Clones. Which is a pity, because if you take away the poorly written and honestly embarassing love story tacked onto Episode II, it really is quite a good addition to the Star Wars franchise. The character of Anakin got off to a pretty bad start with The Phantom Menace. Portraying the soon-to-be-Darth-Vader as an overexcitable child was a bold, if somewhat poorly thought out maneuver. He doesn't do too well in Attack Of The Clones either.

Many blame Hayden Christensen's poor acting, but in all fairness, I don't know how anyone could have made any of his dialogue sound at least half respectable. There's even a part where he yelps 'Its Not Fair!!!' like a pre-pubescent whining little bitch. The love story is incredibly bland and you just feel uncomfortable watching it. I know it's integral to the story and it had all the potential to be a classic plotline, but Lucas' dialogue has always been notably patchy and it really is the case here. In the original trilogy, Han, Leia and Luke's love triangle had some spectacularly campy moments full of hammy dialogue, but we cared about the characters so it left us wanting more. We don't care about Anakin or Padme here, which is the biggest failing of Attack Of The Clones.

Otherwise, it's a good watch. I love that Jar Jar effectively ruined the entire galaxy by passing powers over to Palpatine, the opening chase scene through the city reminded me of the Fifth Element, the whole Obi-wan versus Jango Fett plotline was also handled very well in my opinion. I'm glad we got to see what Boba would have been like if he actually knew how to use any of his weaponry. And, of course, the final battle between Yoda and Dooku was a classic moment of cinema.

Best Bit: Anakin slaughtering the Tusken's - the men, women and children. He ruins it a bit with his angsty moan afterwards, ("Obi-Wan's just jealous! I HATE THEM!!!) but it's good to know that Vader's in there somewhere...

Revenge Of The Sith



Revenge of the Sith is, in my opinion, the second best Star Wars film. Not of the prequels, no no no, but the second best Star Wars film of the whole franchise. I know it's widely regarded as the best of the 'new trilogy', but fanboys are adamant that it comes nowhere near the original trilogy in terms of quality.

Finally, the legacy of Darth Vader is done some justice and he is no longer excitable-kid or angsty-teen, but a mature young adult who feels he has no other choice to go to the Dark Side. Obviously, Lucas' adversion to decent dialogue doesn't make this whole scenario as heartbreaking as it may sound, but from what we've come to expect from the Star Wars prequels in terms of emotion then it's no mean feat that this time around we actually feel something for poor Ani's downfall.

Aside from the obvious few linking errors between this film and the original trilogy (the whole 'Leia remembering her mother' debacle) but all in all it does a very good job at tying up all the loose ends, and I think that's what's so special about Revenge of the Sith. You are actually getting to watch all the answers to all the questions you had about the original trilogy. From the reasoning behind Anakin's transition into Vader to Yoda's retreat to Dagobah, it's all there. The lightsaber battles are all spectacular, and both the opening space battle and the battle for Kashyyk are similarly epic. My only major disappointment with the film was the treatment of General Grievous, who, as a four-lightsaber wielding beast, should have been the highlight of the show - he wasn't.

Best Bit: Ian McDiarmid's portrayal of Palpatine/Darth Sidious. A classic villian, completely stealing the show.




(I'll be posting on the original trilogy soon enough)
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Old 08-14-2009, 07:25 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull is quite possibly one of the worst films I have seen for years. It was absolutely terrible.
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