Let’s start with Daryl Hannah; she has always been nothing more than eye candy and window dressing. She chews the scenery and the turgid dialogue like the lobster she ravaged in Splash. I mean c’mon, her greatest film achievement in the last ten years was the remake of Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman.
...to Kurosawa, he has the character of Pai Mei (Chia Hui Liu), the wizened Shaolin priest, stroke his beard repeatedly, just as Kambei, the samurai leader rubbed his shaved head in Shichin no samurai. Then there’s the in-your-face close-ups that gave you the ability to count the nose hairs on David Carradine’s face, a la Leone. But Quentin wasn’t done with Leone yet, the score for this film sounds as if it's been lifted part and parcel from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly or Once Upon a Time in the West.
Yet, a film is only as good as the actors who portray the cast of characters, and Tarantino is slowly starting to build a stable of stock performers reminiscent of Ford, Hawks and Kurosawa. Unfortunately, his choices tend to be over the hill has-beens whose best work was over two decades ago.
Which brings me to my final point on this tired film; it’s predictability. For someone who is supposedly a gifted screenwriter, Tarentino’s twists and turns come at you like a punch-drunk prizefighters roundhouse rights, you can see them coming a mile away. For instance, (click to show/hide)when Beatrix (Uma) is about to kill Budd (Madsen), who is behind his trailer door, you know that he knows she’s coming and is ready for her. Then there’s the scene with Budd and Elle. The minute he opened the case, I knew there was going to be a snake in it. Finally, with the extensive build up in the beginning of the film about the Pai Mai 5 finger punch, it was extremely easy to figure out who was going to die that way. It once again begs me to ask Tarantino fans one question, what do you find so great, so original or so moving in his films? I am at a loss as to what it could be.
What do I find so original about his films? You're gonna love this! [pauses while painting a bullseye on my own arse] His honesty.
He's brave too. Takes chances, respects the viewers and trusts they'll follow him.
Pam Grier(she was better in Jackie Brown than she had ever been)
Maybe I am a Tarantino fanboy without knowing it? I don't rave about them or disect them, just have enjoyed a lot of his stuff Colour me naive or uninformed, I purely review on my own enjoyment of the movie.Of his films that he has either written or directed, my reviews show I have rated them (out of 5).... kill bill 4.5kill bill 2 4.5reservoir dogs 4.5deathproof 3.5pulp fiction 4from dusk till dawn 3.5true romance 4sin city 2.5jackie brown 1natural born killers 3and still to watch on dvd...four roomsinglourious baterds
reservoir dogsfrom dusk till dawntrue romance
Quote from: Jon on December 10, 2009, 03:05:45 AMWhat do I find so original about his films? You're gonna love this! [pauses while painting a bullseye on my own arse] His honesty. Just kidding, actually you're the first and only Tarantino defender whose opinion I've respected. Why, because I know that you have seen the films he's 'procured' parcels from, and are not talking out of a sense of either pretentious self-gratification or blind loyalty based upon cinematic naivete. Alas, you will probably never sway me. To me, he's a hack. And I feel that in 30 years, I will be proven right when his career is assessed by future scribes. I think the other reason I don't respect him, aside from his petty larceny, is the fact that he seems to want to have bestowed upon him, a level of cult stature akin to what has attached itself to Roger Corman, Russ Meyer and George Romero. The problem with Tarantino is, that he doesn't seem to grasp the fact that those three directors made seminal B-films out of necessity due to limited budgets. You can't make drive-in type films with multi-million dollar budgets, it just looks like pearls on a pig. Yeah, the films have a limited bit of entertainment for some, but don't call it art. Unfortunately, Jackie Brown is the one film I still haven't seen, and I feel, from what I've heard, may be the one and only film I may like by him.
Quote from: Jon on December 10, 2009, 03:05:45 AMPam Grier(she was better in Jackie Brown than she had ever been)I don't comment on the rest but be serious Jon Have you seen Foxy Brown, Coffy, The Arena or The Big Doll House? Now that's Pam Grier at her best I know that you are a Tarantino fanboy (), but try to be objective. Even a little bit...
I love both movies, I think they are great. I do not engage in arguments over directors "stealing" ideas and whatnot. It's eitehr good or bad on it's own and either way I don't care where he got the idea. And that's all I am going to say.
Quote from: DJ Doena on December 10, 2009, 01:32:20 PMI love both movies, I think they are great. I do not engage in arguments over directors "stealing" ideas and whatnot. It's eitehr good or bad on it's own and either way I don't care where he got the idea. And that's all I am going to say. That's all you needed to say!