Quentin Tarantino — "If my movies were any more violent, they’d have to come with a vomit bag and a t…"
If my movies were any more violent, they’d have to come with a vomit bag and a therapist.
If my movies were any more violent, they’d have to come with a vomit bag and a therapist.
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"I'm not trying to make Hateful Eight contemporary in any way, shape, or form. I'm just trying to tell my story."
"I'm a big fan of revenge. I think it's a great motivation."
"I'm a big fan of ensemble casts."
"I grew up on exploitation movies. I grew up on kung fu movies. I grew up on spaghetti westerns. I grew up on blaxploitation movies. I grew up on all that stuff. And I love all that stuff."
"I wish I had sat him down and gone, 'Harvey you can't do this, you're gonna f*** up everything.' I don't think anybody talked to him about it."
American filmmaker (Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill, Inglourious Basterds) whose intertextual genre-collage redefined 1990s independent cinema. Closely associated with Robert Rodriguez (frequent collaborator (From Dusk Till Dawn, Sin City)) and Paul Thomas Anderson (1990s indie-auteur peer). For an intellectual contrast, see Stanley Kubrick, meticulous formalist filmmaker (1928-1999) — Kubrick's films erase influences into singular monolithic vision through year-long shoots and 100-take perfectionism; Tarantino's foreground every reference as a deliberate tribute — the two opposite ways auteurist cinema can be made.
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