First of all, accusing him of ripping off other movies is so old now.
Additionally, he doesn't chase her because he can't be bothered. Would you chase a "rat"? No, you just want it out of your way.
Would you make such sweeping dismissals of Peckinpah?
I also take exception to your remark about slavering fanboys demanding violence. His understanding of screen violence has always been excellent.; his manipulation of the viewer is not pandering to ultra-violence.
But for now I think Kermode and your good self are missing that this is clearly Tarantino's comic book phase.
considering every other mainstream director is going for 3d this, cgi that on everything.
If he falls into the trap of thinking this is the only style audiences want, he will quickly run out of steam, but I expect he will prove to be more versatile.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMFirst of all, accusing him of ripping off other movies is so old now. I must be missing something Jon, where did I accuse him of ripping off other movies? By stating that he's stuck in an endless Leone money shot? Please Jon, you have to admit, it's getting very, very old.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMAdditionally, he doesn't chase her because he can't be bothered. Would you chase a "rat"? No, you just want it out of your way.Now Jon, you're clutching at straws to defend his screenplay. For Christ's sake, she's not an amalgamation of Muhammad Ali, Carl Lewis and John Rambo. It's not as if she's about to jump into a machine guns nest and give them a fight.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PM Would you make such sweeping dismissals of Peckinpah? Actually, when looking at some of his later films, yes.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMI also take exception to your remark about slavering fanboys demanding violence. His understanding of screen violence has always been excellent.; his manipulation of the viewer is not pandering to ultra-violence.Really? Then why hasn't he made a film yet that doesn't contain gratuitous violence? Yes, his understanding of screen violence is excellent, it's his bread & butter. Without it, he'd starve.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMBut for now I think Kermode and your good self are missing that this is clearly Tarantino's comic book phase. I'm not missing it, I understand it's his mission to secure for his legacy, a sort of Roger Corman/George Romero kind of status among film lovers and historians. Unfortunately, he doesn't understand that those two directors made their reputations on films with shoestring budgets, not major Hollywood financing.
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMconsidering every other mainstream director is going for 3d this, cgi that on everything. P.T. Anderson?(Who's in a league far above Tarantino) Joel & Ethan Coen? Pedro Almodóvar? Wes Anderson? Jean-Pierre Jeunet? David Fincher?(and if you mention Benjamin Button, I'll lose all respect for you)
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 01:47:17 PMIf he falls into the trap of thinking this is the only style audiences want, he will quickly run out of steam, but I expect he will prove to be more versatile. You may be right, but one thing I've learned in my 40+ years of film appreciation is that very few fans like to admit they were wrong in their assessment of the films and the film makers they loved and grew up with. They'd rather keep their heroes on the higher pedestal they built for them. And to that end, they'll support whatever they release. Does the name George Lucas ring a bell?
I'm not missing it, I understand it's his mission to secure for his legacy, a sort of Roger Corman/George Romero kind of status among film lovers and historians.
I don't want to piss off Jimmy by insulting one of his favourite genres, but I find the bulk of the real Grindhouse material absolutely unwatchable.
Quote from: Antares on February 26, 2010, 03:54:34 PMI'm not missing it, I understand it's his mission to secure for his legacy, a sort of Roger Corman/George Romero kind of status among film lovers and historians.Please don't compare him to Roger Corman, he doesn't have 1% of the talent of Roger Corman....
Quote from: Jon on February 26, 2010, 07:27:42 PMI don't want to piss off Jimmy by insulting one of his favourite genres, but I find the bulk of the real Grindhouse material absolutely unwatchable.As I've said previously how many of them have you seen? It's easy to dismiss something without checking it first1 and if for you the best era of the american film productions is unwatchable they're nothing I can say... By the way grindhouse is a term who means absolutly nothing like torture porn, it's just the unofficial name of the 42nd street in New-York at the time. I watch sexploitation, roughies, white coat documentary, seventies hardcore, italian seventies and drive-in classic. Alll of them can be simply pack together with the term "independant films made in the sixties and seventies", not the crappy term grindhouse.1. see Sophie I use your argument
I'd love to see Tarantino remake Coffy...
No, I do realise the versatility and I certainly haven't seen many, but as you yourself said elsewhere, informed decisions can be made from trailers.
I've told it about the recent film trailers, not the sixties and seventies trailers... The old trailers are not the same at all than the new one who gives the best part of a movie. Jon, Beyond the Valley of the Dolls isn't the best way to start watching Meyer. But if you want to give him a real chance try Vixen, Supervixen, Faster Pussycat... Kill! Kill!, Common Law Cabin or Good Morning... and Goodbye!
I could respond to every one of the points you have made, but it would be fruitless. I'm never, ever going to sway you in your fascination with him, and you're never going to sway me. That is, until he releases something completely original and not targeting his mainstream demographic of young males between the ages of 15 - 30 year old males.
But I will ask you this question. If you were to take this screenplay and make it with the same actors, in the same way as Tarantino has done, but instead of affixing Tarantino's name to it, you add say... David Lynch. Another director known for work that pushes the boundaries. Do you think, it too, would have been nominated for all these awards and received this kind of praise from the critics?
What about if it had come out of nowhere with a director who had no recognisable form, or at least a reputation for being fairly conventional? I think if someone like Bryan Singer did it, he'd be congratulated, rewarded, but everyone would be so shocked, he'd never work again! Michael Powell, Peeping Tom style...