Quentin Tarantino can really hold a grudge!
20.07.2021 - 23:57 / deadline.com
EXCLUSIVE: Quentin Tarantino has long taken his encyclopedic cinematic influences, including genres and actors from the past, and blended them through his filter to create wildly inventive films that have influenced many up and coming filmmakers. Now, he has done a similar thing that I bet will not be copied by other filmmakers.
Quentin Tarantino can really hold a grudge!
Twin Atlantic have marked their return with their cinematic new Once Upon A Time In Hollywood-themed video for ‘Bang On The Gong’.
Rambo.The 57-year-old director intends to retire after his tenth film, with speculation rife on how he’ll follow up Once Upon A Time In Hollywood starring Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio.Speaking on The Big Ticket podcast, Tarantino offered some potential perspective on his mindset heading into his final film, explaining how he’d adapt David Morrell’s 1972 novel of ‘First Blood’ if he decided to just make a “good movie”.“When David O.
For The Record’s Tarantino Live is coming back to Los Angeles this weekend with a brand new production!
Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino has been doing a heap of various interviews, podcasts, and television appearances to promote the novelization of “Once Upon A Time In Hollywood.” He’s said some interesting things in every interview, such as potentially having Uma Thurman co-starring with her real daughter, Maya Hawke, in the long-teased “Kill Bill 3,” a desire to remake “First Blood” with Adam Driver and Kurt Russell in the lead roles, and the idea of remaking “Reservoir Dogs” with an all-Black cast
Quentin Tarantino has shared some of his literary favourites while promoting his debut novel Once Upon A Time In Hollywood.The filmmaker listed his recommendations while speaking on The Big Picture podcast. Alongside his reading list the filmmaker also spoke about his plans to release another novel, which is adapted from his breakthrough film Reservoir Dogs.“I can definitely see the idea of a Reservoir Dogs novel,” he said.
Quentin Tarantino has suggested he was left somewhat confused by Christopher Nolan’s latest film Tenet.The Once Upon A Time In Hollywood director has previously praised the director’s work, calling Dunkirk his second-favourite film of the 2010s.However, speaking of 2020’s Tenet, Tarantino admitted in a new interview that he may need to watch it again to get a better grasp.“I think I need to see it again,” he told ReelBlend.
Those who knocked “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” as nothing more than a pretense for Quentin Tarantino to meticulously recreate and hang out in the 1969 Los Angeles located somewhere between his boyhood memory and imagination (like that’s a bad thing) will not be dissuaded by his new novelization of the 2019 film (our original review here), an act of uncommonly authoritative fan-fiction that goes so far as to insert mention of a li’l nine-year-old QT into its final moments.
Quentin Tarantino always has been the ultimate alpha director – a man who often likes to do things ass backwards. He depicts historic events in his movies, deliberately scrambling the dates. While many cinemas now stand empty, this week he defiantly purchased his second movie theater in Los Angeles.
If you’ve been following film news over the past couple of weeks, you know that Quentin Tarantino has been making the podcasting rounds. And over that time, the filmmaker has been making headlines by trashing Bruce Lee (and his wife), teasing an expansive “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” empire, and talking about various other projects that he’ll never get around to making.
Whether or not the fans think “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is the greatest Quentin Tarantino film of his career, the director himself seems to think the feature is his magnum opus. How can we be sure of this? Well, over the course of the various podcasts and interviews he’s given, it’s clear the filmmaker thinks ‘Once Upon’ will be the film that leaves the biggest mark, and though the feature was released in 2019, he still has plenty more story to tell in that universe.
Quentin Tarantino has revealed that he cut his and Leonardo DiCaprio’s favourite scene from Once Upon A Time… in Hollywood.The filmmaker told the ReelBlend podcast about the scene in question, which involved an emotional phone call between DiCaprio’s Rick Dalton and Trudi Fraser (Julie Butters).“That was my favourite scene in the script. So the idea that that wouldn’t be in the movie was unfathomable,” Tarantino said.“I think it was probably Leo’s favourite scene that he shot.
Burt Reynolds died happy having been cast in 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'. Quentin Tarantino - who directed the 2019 comedy-drama set against the backdrop of the real-life Manson Family Murders - hired the late actor to play George Spahn in the blockbuster but died before he was able to film his scenes.
Quentin Tarantino is sharing his thoughts on the future of movie theatres following COVID-19.
The Quentin Tarantino discourse isn’t great right now. Following his disparaging remarks about Bruce Lee in the recent podcast conversation he had on the Joe Rogan show about his “Once Upon A Time In Hollywood” novelization and his whole career, people are angry and upset.
Quentin Tarantino is making a push to save some of Los Angeles’ most prestigious shuttered movie theatres and added to his portfolio of Old Hollywood relic locations.
Armchair Expert,” the “Pulp Fiction” and “Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood” director said that he bought the Vista Theatre and plans to open it around Christmas time. He added that the plan is to show older movies exclusively on film prints.
Quentin Tarantino for his recent criticism of her late father.In an open letter penned for The Hollywood Reporter, Lee said she is “tired of hearing from white men in Hollywood that [Bruce Lee] was arrogant and an asshole”.The letter has been shared in response to comments Tarantino made on The Joe Rogan Experience last week (June 29).During his recorded appearance, Tarantino defended his portrayal of Lee in Once A Time In Hollywood. Lee (played by Mike Moh) features in a single scene in the
Chris Willman Music Writer“A love letter to cinema” was the tired-but-true trope that everyone trotted out when Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” the movie, hit theaters two years ago. But it’s now clear just how insufficient a mere mash note to the movies was for Tarantino.
Just recently, Quentin Tarantino defended his portrayal of martial arts expert and actor Bruce Lee in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.