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SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    Reviews    Movie, Television and DVD Reviews  ›  Inglorious Basterds Moderators: Nixon
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  Author    Inglorious Basterds  (currently 2227 views)
Toby_E
Posted: August 19th, 2009, 5:25pm Report to Moderator
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I saw it, and actually loved it. It was exactly what I expected: entertaining, with Tarantino's flair. It was long, but I never felt bored.

So overall, a very good film.



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RobertSpence
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Just saw it the other day and I can surely say that Tarantino is back to his best. The film is fantastic. The tension that mounts throughout is what makes this film so great aswell as the usual Tarantino dialogue etc. However, Christoph Waltz (Hans Landa in the film) steals the show and it wouldn't surprise me if he got a best supporting actor nomination at the oscars.


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James McClung
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Quoted from RobertSpence
However, Christoph Waltz (Hans Landa in the film) steals the show and it wouldn't surprise me if he got a best supporting actor nomination at the oscars.


You're not the only one who thinks so. Critics and fans alike are raving about Waltz's performance. Even the film's detractors are giving him props. It makes me excited. Considering Robert Downy Jr. can get a nomination for a Ben Stiller comedy, I wouldn't be surprised if this guy gets a nod as well.


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Murphy
Posted: August 20th, 2009, 5:06pm Report to Moderator
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Saw it last night, was supposed to take Mrs Murphy on Saturday night but couldn't wait and went to see the first showing on my own.

It was excellent, it really was. The performances from all the cast were top notch and for me is what has made this film a success. Even Mike Meyers in his brief role was brilliant and Michael Fassbender did a great job too.

I wished I had not already read the script and tried to imagine what is must of been like for the rest of the audience watching while not knowing what was coming next and can only assume it was an even better experience for it. But even without knowing how things pan out  it was still a great film and while it is definitely QT back to his best he does seem to have moved on somewhat as it does very much feel like a different kind of movie from the Pulp Fiction/Jackie Brown era.

Although you knew it was QT alright, I mean who else would make a period WWII film with a mexican style soundtrack and a David Bowie song?

Christoph Waltz was excellent, everyone is right here, his character was the only one for me that departed somewhat from the script and while I read him as quite a serious, straight character Waltz managed to add some humour and humanity into the character  that really worked.

Melanie Laurent is beautiful and was perfect as Shoshanna, but with her lies my only real problem with the film and that is that I am sure (and need to read the script again to make sure) that there was lots more back story on Shoshanna and her early life in Paris with her Aunt. None of this was in the film and it more or less relegated Shoshanna to a supporting character rather than the central character as per the script. In fact the script seemed to be a yet another chick on a revenge mission QT staple and this certainly was not followed through in the movie.

Maybe it was decided that he had already made that movie, or maybe the addition of Brad Pitt to the cast made it important that Aldo was more the main character. I don't know, I would have liked to have seen more of the Shoshanna story, maybe there is a directors cut in the works somewhere?

Overall though I am very pleased with the film and looking forward to seeing it again tomorrow and seeing what the missus (who has not read the script) thinks.

A couple of geeky questions...

Is this the first QT film ever without a shot from the trunk of a car?

Was the American General on the radio at the end being played by Harvey Keitel? Sounded like him anyway.
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Zack
Posted: August 20th, 2009, 5:34pm Report to Moderator
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How is Eli Roth in this movie? Can he act?

~Zack~
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Murphy
Posted: August 20th, 2009, 10:03pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Zack
How is Eli Roth in this movie? Can he act?

~Zack~


He was great at what he did, but to be honest I don't think he had a single line in the film until the climax and that was a bit of a comedic turn. There was certainly not much acting going on.
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Murphy
Posted: August 21st, 2009, 2:13am Report to Moderator
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Okay, I know I wrote my initial thoughts on the movie compared to the script but for something more akin to a review of the film I shall give it a go.

The film is good, have no doubt about that. It is certainly not Deathproof and while it still would rank below Pulp Fiction in my book it certainly is as good as, if not better than Kill Bill part 1 and Jackie Brown.

What Tarrantinto has done is make a war film in the style of a Spaghetti Western, over the top characters, plots and dialog that take place over the backdrop of conventional and  very violent WWII setting. The most important thing is that it works remarkably well and there is no reason that anyone who has enjoyed at least one Tarintino film in the past will not enjoy this one. It is certainly a Tarantino film, even if it is Tarantino trying to be Sergio Leone.

The use of subtitles is a great move by QT here, after all this is a director renowned for his wonderful and realistic dialogue and yet we have have a film that contains a good mixture of French, German and English (I will not really include the Italian in that). I think it is another brave move my QT, we all know how subtitled films bomb at the US Box Office as a rule and it will be interesting to see if the lure of Tarantino is enough too convince hoards of American teenagers to sit through two and a half hours of subtitles.

The climax in the theater is simply amazing and just reeks of Pacino in Scarface, no doubt very intentionally, but very well done and a great ending to a film that never once takes itself seriously and yet manages to not stray over the line into complete farce. Typical of Tarantino is the scene where Shoshanna is preparing her revenge to the soundtrack of Bowie's Cat Peope, Is there any other director who would even dream of doing that in a movie set in 1944 Paris?

All in all this is a great, fun, violent, funny, fast and loud war film with Quentin Tarantino splashed all over it, I cannot see what there is not to like in this film. The writing is brilliant, the music while so out of place works so very well and it is surely to Tarantino's credit that he has managed to get brilliant performances from every single actor in the film.

No doubt this film will open the age old debate of whether Tarantino is a thief or just a movie fan who loves referencing and re-using his influences. I definitely put him in the latter camp, in fact while everyone is entitled to their own opinion I do have to say anyone who does not agree is wrong. Haha, seriously though, how can anyone have a bad word to say about someone who makes films with so much passion and sheer love for his craft as Quentin Tarantinto? Like him or loath him you have to admit he is one hell of a filmmaker. I just wish he would make more films.

Seriously folks, everyone, go to and watch it this weekend, it certainly is no Deathproof.



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chism
Posted: August 21st, 2009, 4:31am Report to Moderator
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I fucking loved Death Proof (it's two words everyone, look it up) and I know I'm in the minority on this but I seriously think it stands on the shelf with Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill as classic Tarantino.

There is a difference between a great movie and a great Tarantino movie. Of the two, Inglourious Basterds falls into the former. For me, what is missing from the film that would make it a good Tarantino film is that one magic music moment. Who among us will ever forget the torture scene from Resevoir Dogs when Stuck in the Middle With You is playing? Or Kill Bill's use of Battle Without Honour or Humanity? Even Death Proof had that great lap dance scene with Down In Mexico playing. Inglourious Basterds had nothing. I can't remember one great song that played during one great scene.

Having said that, Inglourious Basterds is a fucking awesome flick. The performances are universally brilliant. Obviously Christoph Wentz is the stand out as Colonel Landa, but I want to mention Eli Roth. His performance in this movie is funnier and scarier than anything in any movie he has ever directed. My advice to him would be to stick to in front of the camera stuff from now on. That's where his talent lies. And he barely has a line in this movie.

And therein lies another major problem I had with the film. I expected it to be about the basterds and their mission, but so little time is given to the supporting members of the basterds that it's a little difficult to care. So much is going on, so many characters, so many subplots, that the basterds themselves kind of fall by the wayside. I was expecting much more time with them, and I didn't get it. I was expecting three hours of scalpings. It was built up like Kill Bill. The trailers made it very clear that this was a woman out for revenge, and the movies delivered; fuck me swinging, balls out it did it deliver. But I.G. did not, on that regard at least.

The rest of this movie was absolutely awesome. Beautifully shot and written, with great and memorable performances from the entire cast. Tarantino has said that a prequel is possible and, even though he has said this about every movie he has ever made, I am definately looking forward to spending more time in the Basterd's universe if I am given the opportunity.

It's the best movie I've seen so far this year.
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Shelton
Posted: August 21st, 2009, 9:13am Report to Moderator
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I split the reviews from the rumor thread into this one to keep things separated.  The rumor thread is now locked since the movie's been released.


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Toby_E
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Quoted from Murphy

Was the American General on the radio at the end being played by Harvey Keitel? Sounded like him anyway.


I thought the exact same thing, and found out that it was.

But yeah, its been two days since I saw this film, and I already want to see it again. I love this film. I saw it with 8 people, and 3 of us - including me - actually preferred it to Pulp Fiction (it's important to note that all 3 of us also prefer Reservoir Dogs to P.F.). Lots of people might disagree, but I think that I.G. was a fantastic. The film was a lot better than the script, as I personally felt the script was a bit boring.

Yeah, I loved this film.


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Zack
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Saw it last night and loved it. A bit more subtitles than I expected, but I didn't mind. Waltz and Pitt were awesome. Even Roth did great as the "Bear Jew". His baseball bat "rant" was hilarious. Great movie.

~Zack~
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Grandma Bear
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Good comments Murphy!

I can't write reviews so I'm just going to speak from the heart.

I LOVED IT!!!!

How fresh it was to see something like this. Totally unique IMHO. Sure there are occasional WWII movies, but they all sort of stay true to history and are often heavy dramas. This one is bold, fresh, violent, funny and everything else.

Btw, who else could pull off playing  F�r Elise with a spagetti western twang to it. Or like Murphy said David Bowie???

Brilliant!!

All the characters were great and original. LOVED Pitt and I'm not usually that crazy about him. He was really really great. Looked a lot like Marlon Brando though... Maybe that was intentional... The Godfather?

I loved Eli Roth too and Waltz was great too.

I do think chapter ! and 3 could have been a little shorter, but perhaps it was because I had read the script and new how it would end. My favorite parts were the ones involving the Basterds. I would have liked to see more of them.

Anyway, I think the movie was great and I also think seeing Nazis getting their asses kicked makes everyone feel good. So yeah, this is a feel good movie for sure!!  

PS. people did applaud at the end!



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ABennettWriter
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My theatre had a midnight showing of this last night. I talked to my managers (they see the dry run the day before opening night) and they said the same thing: Typical QT movie. Talk. Plot. Talk. Plot. Not enough killing. Wasn't his best.

I can't stand QT, and I have no desire to see this at all.
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slabstaa
Posted: August 22nd, 2009, 1:12am Report to Moderator
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Not enough killing?  lol there's always 4 or more people getting killed in all of his movies.
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albinopenguin
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Just saw it, and I'd give it an A- overall. to be honest, i wish it followed the basterds more because i found their stories to be really intriguing. but you can't review a movie based on your expecations. you have to review it for what it actually is.

The good: the opening sequence is one of the best scenes QT has ever done, Waltz and his character were awesome, solid story, its really fun at times,  getting smothered with a pillow + getting stabbed in the face = kickass, and as expected, the dialogue is natural and fluid (but that's why QT is the king of dialogue)

The bad: some of the scenes (especially the restaurant one) were a little too long and could have been more tightly edited, a little more gore would have been nice, the scar on brad pitt's neck was never explained (or did i just miss that part?)

BUT my biggest gripe with the film was how hitler was portrayed. and please, allow me to explain myself. ive never liked how movies portray hitler and nazis as these bumbling idiots. im not defending nazis or hitler, just how they are portrayed in film. to me, making hitler act like a loud, obnoxious, whining baby is overdone and played out for a cheap laugh. even if there is an element of truth to his portrayal, hitler was no idiot in real life. i dunno, maybe i just never found the humor in charlie chaplin's The Great Dictator. So in this film, i wish hitler was portrayed as a serious, dangerous person because it would have been more fitting (especially when his face was shot to shit)


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cloroxmartini
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Quoted from albinopenguin
especially when his face was shot to shit


Hitler gets shot up? Not that I'll see it, but that kind of blows from a historical point of view.

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Grandma Bear
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Quoted from cloroxmartini


Hitler gets shot up? Not that I'll see it, but that kind of blows from a historical point of view.



That's part of what makes this film good. It's not sticking to history. It's a fabulous "what if" kind of movie.  



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Xavier
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Quoted from Grandma Bear


That's part of what makes this film good. It's not sticking to history. It's a fabulous "what if" kind of movie.  



Yeah, it's completely fictional and hell, that makes it way better. Hell if Hitler wasn't involve some how I don't think Taratino would have based it during WWII.


Those who believe that they are the best, the most popular, the go to guy, those are usually the ones who need the most help.
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James McClung
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This was terrific! Obviously it wasn't the film I'd hoped for when I first saw the trailer but I'm still very surprised at how good it was. I'd say it's Tarantino's 3rd best film out of all of them, including the ones he didn't direct. Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill are still ahead, respectively. First off, the WWII backdrop works well for Tarantino. The mixed languages and lack of hipster influence in the dialogue makes it feel like a real movie for a change and not just a hodgepodge of pop culture references. Hans Landa obviously steals the show. Easily the best character Tarantino's ever written as he has more personality than any other character in the film combined. Pitt and Roth were decent but my favorite Basterd was Stiglitz. What a total badass! I would've liked to have seen more of the Basterds but honestly the other characters were intriguing enough that I didn't really miss them. Even the Shosanna/Marcel subplot was intriguing, despite the suffocating Jon Luc Goddard influence (God, I hate that guy!).

Obviously, I didn't leave the theater without quibbles. The transitions to Sam Jackson's narrative were awkward and out of place, the scalpings looked pretty fake and surprisingly un-brutal and there were times when the film channeled a little too much Kill Bill. Not necessarily a bad thing but Tarantino's been able to give every other one of his films a distinct style. Chapter 2 in particular felt a tad too back-to-the-well. None of them hurt the film in the end though. It was really pretty damn entertaining. Way funnier than I expected and probably the first Tarantino flick I'd ever call "moving."

So yeah. Good stuff! Tied with Watchmen as my #2 film this year (Drag Me To Hell still holds the top spot).



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seamus19382
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What a great movie!

I really wasn't planning on seeing this, because I had a feeling I was going to be terribly disappointed.  But Friday night my buddy convinced me to go with him on Saturday to see it.  And as it got closer to showtime, I found myself getting more excited.  And then it blew away even my heightened expectations.

Toby is right.  This is his second best movie after Resevoir Dogs.  Don't get me wrong, there were some issues with it, as people have already mentioned.  They could have cut 15 -20 minutes and not lost anything (or added another Basterds chapter) but you can say that about all of Tarantino's movies, except Resevoir Dogs.  (and as people mentioned, it was the first Chapter, the one with Shosanna and Lana, and the bar scene that went too long).

I personally didn't like the Bowie song, or the Hitler part, but neither of them bothered me enough to dislike the movie.

It was fun, it was funny, it was gory enough for me, and from the groans, I'm assuming most of the other people in the theater.  Definitely worth seeing.
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rendevous
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I see it's outearning District 9 at the moment. QT is back!

I watched this film again to see if my opinion would change. It has, but only for the better. It was good watching it with a young crowd who were keen to be entertained.

It's long, a lot of it is dull and some of the scenes go on. And on.

But Waltz is brilliant. Outstandingly good performance. It's more of a spaghetti western than a war movie.

The tension is kept up throughout. The plot is a bit silly and those numerous film references irk after a while. Who gives a shit.

But, when it's good it's great. Thoroughly enjoyed Pitt as Raine as well. He's been unfirly slagged for his wooden performance. Everyone's entitled to their opinion. Even if it's wrong.

I loved this movie. It's not without it's faults, but then what isn't. QT is back! He's been sorely missed.


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I saw this the other day and really enjoyed it. I'm not the biggest QT fan but I do respect his work and am always curious to see what he comes up with.

I think he did a great job of showing the urgency and cruelty of the times while adding good comic relief moments. I expected more of the Basterds, as well, but I was satisfied with what I saw.

I thought the bar scene was also very long, but at the same time it worked well because it really brought out the tension and the real challenges of spies during that time.

The acting was excellent.  I do think Shosanna's role should have been larger as I was thrown about her position in the film. Meaning, it seemed like she could have had more of a role, but it was so minimal, that I wondered, if she should have been there at all.  But then, I see that she was supposed to be more of a main character. Interesting.

One of my only pet peeves of the film, is the accuracy in the women's dress and hair. In the 40s, one of my favorite periods, their hairstyles were overly dramatic to make up for the rationing of material and stark clothing. Aside from the movie star, Shosanna did not have this and I thought that was lacking.  A tiny thing to some, but it would have added to this already authentic movie.
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Takeshi
Posted: September 11th, 2009, 5:47pm Report to Moderator
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I saw Inglorious Basterds last night and thought it was just okay. I'd rank it above Jackie Brown and Dusk Til Dawn and just below Kill Bill. But it isn't within a bulls roar of his early stuff like Pulp Fiction True Romance and Reservoir Dogs. The fact that it took Tarantino 8 years to make this middle of the road flick just confirms that he's lost whatever it was he had when burst on to the scene.
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Dreamscale
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Finally got around to seeing Inglorious Basterds yesterday.

Let’s start by saying that QT is easily 1 of my all time favorite writers and directors.  Many of his previous works are at the top of my list, with True Romance and Pulp Fiction probably being 2 of my favorite non horror movies of all time.

I was a bit worried about IB, based on trailers and what I’d read, so I guess it’s not surprising that I waited as long as I did.  It turned out to be everything I love about QT as well as everything I was worried about going in.  I left the theater kind of scratching my head, and still today, it’s difficult for me to decide if I liked it or not overall.  For the record, I definitely didn’t dislike or hate it, but I’m 50/50 as to whether I’d actually say I really liked it.

Here’s the skinny…

As others have noted correctly, this is definitely a QT flick, through and through.  No one else would attempt to get away with the stuff he did, and most likely, no one else would get away with it either.  It’s nice that he can do what he wants for the most part, but it’s also a bit of an issue.

The opening scene is a perfect example of what’s right and wrong with this movie at the same time.  It’s shockingly long…and slow…and quite dull for the most part.  It’s also amazingly well set up, played out, and moving…maybe even terrifying in ways, once we learn the family is indeed under the floorboards.  But why let it run so damn long?  I didn’t time it, but I’d bet it was at least 12 minutes, if not a lot more, and the vast majority involved 2 characters, sitting and talking in 1 very drab, dull setting.  Throw in the fact that over half of the conversation is in other languages, and subtitled, and it’s just shocking to me that this is how he chose to open things up.

But, don’t get me wrong, cause I did enjoy this intro, but it left me worried about the rest of the movie, based on how slow and long this played out.  It’s the best and worst of a guy like QT.

Another great example is the basement bar scene, which is just downright WAY too long, slow, and dull for the most part.  People in here often knock scripts because they involve nothing but talking heads…meaningless banter with absolutely no action going on. This is a perfect example of how scenes such as these can actually work, but also why they are a gamble, and even how they detract from a movie.

How long was this scene?  25 minutes or so?  Longer?  I don’t know, but I do know that it should have been cut way, way back.  The biggest problem I had with it was how fast and furious the action hit, when it finally did.  I wasn’t even sure who was dead, but then again, everyone except Bridget and Wilhelm was taken out in a matter of seconds.  We lost 3 Basterds in seconds, and 2 of them appeared to be cool characters who could have offered so many good scenes to come.  A waste IMO.

The movie was too rambling for me as well.  The Basterds really weren’t the main stars or plot here at all.  They were barely in it, if you think about it.  I did like Shosanna’s character and plot, but it wasn’t the movie it makes itself out to be.

Acting was great all around, except for Mr. Brad Pitt, IMO.  I hated his phony accent and I really didn’t think his character had much to offer or even do. He was not the star of this movie, but he was necessary to launch it the way it did, and generate interest.  It’s funny, cause a female friend of mine was telling me she couldn’t wait to see this…because Brad Pitt was in it.  I warned her up front that it wasn’t her type of movie and that she would literally hate it.  She said I was crazy and that she just couldn’t wait to see her Brad.  She hated it, fell asleep several times, and almost walked out even.  Oh well.

Finally, I think the biggest issue for me was that I just couldn’t figure out what feelings I should have.  Was it serious?  Was it a joke?  Was it all in fun?  Was it viscous?  Was there a message?  Well, yes to all questions, and that’s the issue. It was bloody and full of over the top graphic violence, but it was done in a tongue in cheek way for the most part.  It was moving, sad, and emotional, but done in a tongue in cheek way, again.  It was serious, but joking, and I always seem to take issue when that’s the case.

The soundtrack was exceptional, as are all QT’s flicks.  The man likes his eclectic tunes and figures out how to incorporate them into his movies flawlessly. The Bowie tune was a classic example…again, of what works, and what doesn’t.  It was so powerful with that tune and that scene of Shosanna “getting ready”.  But it was also shockingly slow, dull, and drawn out.  Did that scene really run almost the entire song?  Like 3 minutes at least?  Of her looking in a mirror and putting on makeup?  Yep, it did. It worked for me for sure, but a scene like that isn’t going to work anywhere else…ever!  Amazing!

OK, so here I am again, feeling exactly the same way I did yesterday when the credits started rolling.  Yeah, sure, I liked it, and I loved parts of it, but at 2 ½ hours, it left me bored and confused at its pace during much of the movie.  It’s obvious QT has the talent to pull off pretty much anything he wants to, but it’s also obvious that he makes his movies the way he wants to, and I doubt he really cares what we all think, when it’s all said and done.

I would recommend this to QT fans in a heartbeat, but not to the general public.  For me personally, I’m glad I saw it, and I’m sure I’ll watch it again when it comes to the movie channels…I won’t buy the DVD though, and I’ll look forward to much better in the future from my man, QT.
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Andrew
Posted: September 18th, 2009, 5:54pm Report to Moderator
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Well, my views on QT's movies are generally different from the majority. His early works, 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Pulp Fiction' were very, very good films, but it was 'Jackie Brown' that sat best with me. I consider that to be his masterpiece, and yet most consider it one of his weaker efforts. 'Pulp Fiction' remains the most overrated of the bunch, for me. Great film, but every film aficionado must consider this a masterpiece, it would seem.

Anyway, 'Inglourious Basterds' pushes 'Jackie Brown' all the way. It's vintage Tarantino. Huge surprise, 'cos the trailer-makers should be scalped. Never have a set of trailers done such an injustice to a movie.

Right off, from the opening moments, QT crafted a tense, perfectly paced, dialogue-driven epic of a scene. Couldn't disagree more with Jeff that it "drags". I know you were fan of it in equal measure, Jeff, but it was film heaven for me. This notion that a film must do a certain thing by a certain point is ludicrous. Why should the pace move the story along when this kind of directing can tease out every nuance of tension. Through the heavy dialogue, we get a real sense of who these people are. We have the devilish looks of our French friend, to the Chigurh-eqsue menace from Landa. The dialogue is very pointed. We learn so much about Landa. We understand his motives in life, his mission as the "Jew Hunter" and how he views it, his selfishness, his tenacity - it's not nonsense dialogue.

Another criticism levelled is the lack of a protagonist. Why should we always have someone to root for? 'American Psycho' remains one of my all-time favourites, and he's a despicable person. Compelling characters are more important. I mean, look at Travis Bickle - what a SOB. Truly fantastic film, and again, one of my faves. Whether or not the main character is likeable, or very little action happens is of little consequence to me. If the story is worth following, it will keep me. It's the same with theatre - less musical, and more gritty, dialogue-driven plays. That's the way I like it.

It's my suspicion that the opening scene/non-conforming structure in IB play better to the European audience, and the difference in cinema output tends to confirm this. That's not a subtle dig at American filmmaking, or Americans, btw. To my mind, Hollywood still puts out the lions share of the best work each year.

The standout scene, however, was the mind-bogglingly good bar scene. Wow, that's the best work I have seen from Tarantino. The performances were stellar, and we see tension fill every single second. As the audience, we never quite know where the story will twist and turn, and each spoken word challenges us to try and fit the jigsaw together before it unravels before us.

Typical with Tarantino's work is the set of self-contained stories that complete the whole, and he weaves them together with an assured cohesion. Enough adulation for now.

Having said all the above, I really think the next QT film should be Tarantino dropping the 'Tarantino' from his work, and trying his hand at something more traditional in pacing, structure and character development - something with a considerable message. That isn't to suggest that he should go 'commercial', but I want to see something from him that has some real heart.


Quoted from Dreamscale
Finally, I think the biggest issue for me was that I just couldn’t figure out what feelings I should have.  Was it serious?  Was it a joke?  Was it all in fun?  Was it viscous?  Was there a message?  Well, yes to all questions, and that’s the issue. It was bloody and full of over the top graphic violence, but it was done in a tongue in cheek way for the most part.  It was moving, sad, and emotional, but done in a tongue in cheek way, again.  It was serious, but joking, and I always seem to take issue when that’s the case.


Completely agree. Last night, I rewatched 'Almost Famous', and that film has some heart. Tarantino crafting a movie with similar heart, a movie that can create real sadness/happiness/consideration and realisation at the end credits would confirm him as a talent of more than just 'Tarantino'. My only real criticism of his movies is that he produces abstract pieces devoid of true emotion, which often take little time to figure his message. When I think of the very best, they create films which really have something to say. His skills seem more than substantial enough to get there.

Andrew


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Old Time Wesley
Posted: December 16th, 2009, 9:42am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Takeshi
I saw Inglorious Basterds last night and thought it was just okay. I'd rank it above Jackie Brown and Dusk Til Dawn and just below Kill Bill. But it isn't within a bulls roar of his early stuff like Pulp Fiction True Romance and Reservoir Dogs. The fact that it took Tarantino 8 years to make this middle of the road flick just confirms that he's lost whatever it was he had when burst on to the scene.


Did he lose his writing ability or his directing ability? Dusk and True Romance were written by him so if I'm putting HIS films up against one another those two wouldn't be considered unless you're an ultimate completionist for his entire body (Acting, Directing, Writing, Films he likes)

This is a fairly decent flick but again like I mentioned before about another movie it ultimately suffers from being too long.

On the 30 minute conversation with Quentin and Brad Pitt he says that the basement pub scene is like thirty minutes long.

As someone who watches a lot of movies it is one of the better ones i saw this year.


Practice safe lunch: Use a condiment.
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Mr. Blonde
Posted: December 16th, 2009, 9:29pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Old Time Wesley
On the 30 minute conversation with Quentin and Brad Pitt he says that the basement pub scene is like thirty minutes long.


That story (story 4) was the weakest in my opinion. It just went on TOO long. I mean, I enjoyed it, but compared to the rest, it fucking dragged.

I do feel bad, though, that the best part of the movie was the beginning AKA Chapter 1... It's a shame, but at least it was great.


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Dreamscale
Posted: December 16th, 2009, 9:39pm Report to Moderator
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Chapter 1 was also WAY too long!  I liked it and it worked over all, but it was painfully long, slow, and dull.  Not the way to start things off, IMO.    

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rendevous  -  December 16th, 2009, 10:39pm
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Mr. Blonde
Posted: December 16th, 2009, 10:16pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Dreamscale
Chapter 1 was alos WAY too long!  I liked it and it worked over all, but it was painfully long, slow, and dull.  Not teh way to start things off, IMO.    


Aw, you didn't like their friendly little chit chat? That's ok. =(


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Dreamscale
Posted: December 16th, 2009, 10:41pm Report to Moderator
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No, don't get me wrong, I did like it and it worked over all...BUT it was just so frickin' insanely long, drawn out, slow...and...well...just crazily long.
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