Quentin Tarantino — "The only time I cry is when I watch 'E.T.' And when I run out of ketchup."
The only time I cry is when I watch 'E.T.' And when I run out of ketchup.
The only time I cry is when I watch 'E.T.' And when I run out of ketchup.
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"Bruce had nothing but disrespect for American stuntmen and was always hitting them. ... I can understand his daughter having a problem with it, everyone else could 'go suck a d***.'"
"I don't think there's any such thing as a bad movie, just a movie you don't like."
"I just want the same rights that a novelist has... you can write a novel about a bastard, but he can be totally interesting."
"Life is a bleeding, screaming, violently jerking pig in your arms. And death is you holding a bunch of heavy unmoving meat."
"I'm a big fan of movies that are controversial."
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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