Quentin Tarantino — "I'm a slave to my imagination."
I'm a slave to my imagination.
I'm a slave to my imagination.
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"I'm a big believer in the fact that if you're going to write something, it better be good."
"I'm a big fan of genre films. I think they're a lot of fun."
"There are two kinds of violence. First, there's cartoon violence like Lethal Weapon. There's nothing wrong with that. I'm not ragging on that. But my kind of violence is tougher, rougher, more disturb…"
"I think every film I make is a genre unto itself."
"I don't like to be realistic. I like to be fantastical."
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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