Quentin Tarantino Videos
Hints About 2010 Oscars Emerge: No More Five-Person Presenting
from Cinematical on November 17, 2009
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As you've probably already heard, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is shaking things up at this year's Oscars by having 10 Best Picture nominees instead of five, and by moving the honorary awards (read: the boring part of the show) to a special ceremony of their own. That ceremony will be held in November, and-- holy crap, it was this weekend! The almost-Oscars were on Saturday! They're called the Governors Awards, and while they won't be televised, the AMPAS website has some photos and background info. Honorary Oscars went to actress Lauren Bacall (pictured), cinematographer Gordon Willis (the Godfather trilogy, Manhattan, All the President's Men), and director/producer Roger Corman (numerous MST3K films). Astonishingly, the legendary Bacall has only received one Oscar nomination in her 65-year career, for The Mirror Has Two Faces. Willis was nominated for The Godfather: Part III and Zelig. Corman, who has directed more than 50 films and produced nearly 400 (!), has never been nominated for an Oscar, probably because all of his movies are terrible. But apparently the Academy is rewarding quantity now, too. So don't give up, Uwe Boll! Just make another 300 movies! The other award at the special ceremony was the Irving G. Thalberg Award, given to John Calley, who produced The Remains of the Day and Closer and oversaw worldwide production for Warner Bros. throughout the 1970s. The Governors Awards were also a chance for Oscar telecast producers Adam Shankman and Bill Mechanic to drop a few hints about what the big show will be like on March 7. Mechanic said they're not going to repeat the thing the 2009 show did where a coven of five past Oscar winners introduced the acting nominees.Filed under: Awards, Quentin Tarantino, Oscar WatchContinue reading Hints About 2010 Oscars Emerge: No More Five-Person Presenting Permalink | Email this | Comments
also in: Honorary oscar Lauren bacall Roger corman Awards Quentin Tarantino Oscar Watch
'Name That Movie' ... Based on These Drawings
from Cinematical on November 09, 2009
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Most of us know our favorite movies by heart, and we can quote dialog (although not always accurately), describe a scene down to its last detail, or even recount production history if we are particularly geek-minded about it. When movies are a big part of your life, the attention to detail can become downright obsessive, but as we all know, a movie is really just a sum of its parts. Paul Rogers, an illustrator who works at the California Art Center College has taken those separate parts and devised a clever little game of Name that Movie on his blog, Drawger. Rogers' game takes some of our favorite flicks and breaks them down into six drawings, and covers the gamut of Hollywood classics old and new. So if you are a fan of Pictionary and showing off your movie knowledge, this is definitely the game for you. Now I don't want to brag, but I did manage to guess most of Rogers' selections -- although I am honest enough to admit that I didn't get a perfect score. There were a few that, frankly, I wouldn't even know where to begin. But it did remind me how those iconic images can work their way into your brain, and when all you need to see is an ink drawing of Big Kahuna soda cup and you can almost hear Samuel L. Jackson exclaim "That is a tasty burger."Filed under: Fandom, Quentin Tarantino, Fan Made Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Free Flick of the Day: For A Few Dollars More
from Cinematical on November 02, 2009
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I think the mania for Sergio Leone is stronger than it's ever been. It's undoubtedly due to the championing of Quentin Tarantino, and films like Sukiyaki Western Django and The Good, the Bad and the Weird, which are driving fans to seek out where they borrowed their serapes and squints from. There also seems to simply be a hunger for good adventure stories and rugged antiheroes, and there's no better place to get sated than Leone's films. If you feel like spending two hours in the broiling sun with a man who'll shoot you as soon as look at you, then you'll love today's free flick: For A Few Dollars More. For A Few Dollars More might be my favorite of the Dollars Trilogy. I love them all on their own merits, but this installment stands on its own (I hate saying it, but Fistful is decidedly less cool after multiple viewings of Yojimbo), and is less operatic than The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. More also tips the balance thanks to the way it adds a little to the Man with No Name. Here, he's dubbed Monco (Spanish / Italian for maimed) due to the way he keeps his right hand hidden, and he doesn't just ride quietly out of the dust. Now he has a trail in a score of bloody newspaper clippings which suggests he could afford more than one serape. Ennio Morricone fans will also appreciate the little flourish he gave to Monco's gun hand Even if you hate Westerns, you should watch it. Leone called his films "fairy tales for adults," and that's really what they are. They feel like every genre rolled in one, and have been borrowed from 1965 onward. Fans of everything from Tarantino to Pirates of the Caribbean will see something they recognize here. Watch For A Few Dollars More on SlashControl! Filed under: Classics, Quentin Tarantino, Home Entertainment, Western Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Watch and Listen: 'Pulp Fiction' Remix
from Cinematical on October 28, 2009
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Some super-fan made a crazy audio/video remix of scenes and sounds from Pulp Fiction that you have to check out. It's so good that it could be confused with an underground techno mash-up. The remix uses multiple split-screens with the sounds from the scenes remixed to a beat, like Jules's delicious shake, Butch's getaway, Jimmie Dimmick slapping soap into Jules's hand, Zed slapping the Gimp's head and shushing his victims, and Marsellus Wallace grunting behind a ballgag. The detail on this is impressive, especially the remixing of the different scenes. The person's YouTube channel is otherwise made up of music performances, so I'm very curious if there's a collaborator involved or what. There's a lot of Pulp Fiction mashups on YouTube that pale in comparison, although this one is pretty cool. The music mashup culture is a fascinating one; it seems more underground than the video mashups, probably because of how easy it is to share things via YouTube and perhaps how much more litigious the music industry is. Personally, I love music mashup artists like A Plus D and think that creating new forms of art through pre-existing work, like the source files offered by Sita Sings the Blues creator Nina Paley, will become more acceptable as artists realize the potential of sharing their work. Then again... everyone's got bills to pay. Watch the Pulp Fiction Remix after the jump ...Filed under: Fandom, DIY/Filmmaking, Quentin TarantinoContinue reading Watch and Listen: 'Pulp Fiction' Remix Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Bad Lieutenant Stuck With Their Band Name
from Spinner on October 23, 2009
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Filed under: News, New Music, Exclusive, Movies Motley Crue's initial name was Christmas and Radiohead narrowly escaped being called On a Friday, but Bernard Sumner doesn't get to do a do-over with his newest band, Bad Lieutenant. As a key member of New Order and Joy Division, Sumner knows a thing or two about band names that stick. But in the case of Bad Lieutenant, the name stuck before he decided to stick with it. As you may have guessed, Sumner did indeed christen the band after the classic 1992 movie starring Harvey Keitel. He was at Johnny Marr's house when he first caught the film during a work break in the former Smiths guitarist's home studio. Sumner sat down for a scene and became engrossed. "I've got a bit of a black sense of humor and a bit of a dry sense of humor, and to me it was over the f---ing top in the same way perhaps that a Tarantino film is over the top," Sumner tells Spinner. "Perhaps the humor in a Tarantino film is intentional, but the humor didn't come from the film the Bad Lieutenant -- it came from me."
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Bronson Pinchot Gets Candid About Hollywood Stars
from Cinematical on October 20, 2009
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We get to see celeb's opinions on Twitter, even if movie studios are trying to squelch that, we're treated to Katharine Heigl getting frank every so-many months, and now we've got the world according to Pinchot. Bronson Pinchot. The A.V. Club talked with the actor about his newly released (on DVD) film Mr. Art Critic, and after the briefest chatter about the new film, A.V. got Pinchot talking about his whole career -- very candidly. Not the "Oh gee, they were swell to work with" crap, but behind-the-scenes word on Tom Cruise homophobia, Denzel Washington's meanness, Eddie Murphy's depression, Bette Midler's diva ways, and some praise for the likes of Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, and Mischa Barton. Kicking it off is The Cruise, who seems to have been busy with his weird ways for years. Back when Risky Business was being filmed, it seemed he couldn't stop adding gayness into everything, from the confusing: "You want some ice cream, in case there are no gay people there?" to the more decipherable "It's a nice day, I'm glad there are no gay people standing here." As for the others, it seems Denzel gets the harshest words: "He was so vile," while Midler was "such a bitch" to director Hugh Wilson during The First Wives Club. On the nicer end of things, Scorsese gave Pinchot some of his best professional advice, Tarantino dug his "cackle of joy" in True Romance, and Barton revealed her body issues to Pinchot to help get her crying for Finding t.A.T.u: "She was a very sweet kid, actually. Rather brave in a way." Filed under: Celebrities and Controversy, NewsstandContinue reading Bronson Pinchot Gets Candid About Hollywood Stars Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Villains We Love: Angel Eyes
from Cinematical on October 19, 2009
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Great villains are scattered throughout the Westerns, but some of the most memorably savage come from the films of Sergio Leone. While Henry Fonda in Once Upon a Time in the West gets a lot of props for the way he mows down the McBain family (including its youngest and most adorable moppet), it was nothing that Lee Van Cleef hadn't already done in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. Angel Eyes seems to be dismissed as something akin to Leone fan fiction, and it's his relation (or lack of) to Van Cleef's Col. Mortimer in A Few Dollars More that people find to be more interesting than his villainy. But he's a great villain, mostly because he's absent for much for so much of the film. Leone gives him a ruthless introduction (a scene Quentin Tarantino mirrored perfectly with Hans Landa in Inglourious Basterds) and promptly yanks him out of the narrative. As Tuco and Blondie torture each other for an hour, Angel Eyes is doing his own thing and it's a wonderful shock when he shows up running a Civil War prison camp. In today's cinema, no one could resist giving Angel Eyes a prequel and a spin-off relating the trail of bodies that led to that alias and that prison camp. But Leone allowed a squint to speak for itself, and told you everything you needed to know by the way men like Blondie and Tuco squirm around him. Considering that no one in this film is exactly good, and they're all a little bit ugly, it takes a lot to convince us that a man is worse than all the others. Van Cleef and Leone did that, and few villains can match his nastiness even when they've got double the screen time. Go below the jump -- they don't call him Angel Eyes in here! Filed under: Quentin Tarantino, Western, Scenes We LoveContinue reading Villains We Love: Angel Eyes Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Uma Thurman On 'Motherhood' & 'Kill Bill 3'
from Access Hollywood on October 15, 2009
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Uma Thurman talks with Access about her new movie, "Motherhood," and why she loved the script. Plus, could she reprise her role as The Bride in "Kill Bill 3"?
also in: Access Hollywood Access Hollywood Uma Thurman Minnie Driver Anthony Edwards Motherhood Quentin Tarantino Kill Bill Celebrity and Gossip
Tarantino Teases 'Kill Bill 3' - Here's Five People Who Should Star
from Cinematical on October 01, 2009
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The energetic Quentin Tarantino was out and about promoting Inglourious Basterds in Italy, and seeing as he was in the homeland of his hostess spaghetti western, he teased everyone by promising Kill Bill 3. Again. Bad Taste reports that while on Italian talkshow Parla Con me, he prompted his hostess, Serena Dandini, to ask him whether there would be a continuation of the Bride's saga. When I say prompted, I mean it literally. "You didn't ask me whether there will be a third installment, a Kill Bill Vol 3!" Dandini obliged him by asking, and Tarantino said "Yes! The Bride will fight again ... I want ten years to pass between the second one and the third one. Two reasons. I think Uma [Thurman] and I needed a ten year break because the first one was so hard. The second one is that I love the character a lot. I just really really love her. And I think she deserves ten years of peace. ... I put her through a lot in those first two movies, and I wanted her to have a nice, peaceful life for ten years. I want her to put up her sword, and have some peace. And in ten years, something will happen to make her fight again." Tarantino has been teasing us with a continuation for awhile now (usually themed around the daughter of Vernita Green), so it's hard to get too excited. It's also awfully hard to make predictions as to who or what would cause the Bride to fight again as she did leave most of her enemies in pieces. But we can cast our votes as to who we would like to see as the Bride's villains. Here's five of the people I'd like to see in a Tarantino flick, and I hope some of you have even cooler suggestions ... Filed under: RumorMonger, Fandom, DIY/Filmmaking, Newsstand, Quentin Tarantino, Remakes and SequelsContinue reading Tarantino Teases 'Kill Bill 3' - Here's Five People Who Should Star Permalink | Email this | Comments
also in: AndrewRobinson Bill DIY Filmmaking Fandom KenWatanabe Kill KillBillVol1 KillBillVol2 KillBillVol3 MichaelFassbender MichaelParks Newsstand QuentinTarantino Remakes and Sequels RumorMonger UmaThurman Vol YunjinKim
Now It's the 50 Best Movies of the Decade!
from Cinematical on September 25, 2009
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Earlier today we brought you Rotten Tomatoes' list of the 100 worst reviewed films of the decade. Now, though it might be a little premature (considering that we still have a little while to go before we hit our next decade), the good folks over at I Heart Chaos have decided to get the ball rolling on those end-of-decade lists by shoveling out what they believe are the Top 50 Movies of the 2000's. Usually these kinds of things start to gain in popularity towards the end of the year, but I guess the early bird does get the worm, so let's get right to the chase and find out who made the cut. When you've got a a list of 50, there is plenty of wiggle room, and it's a pretty comprehensive list that manages to find room for cult faves and foreign flicks. But I'll admit, even though Chaos has put together a solid list, I was a little surprised that the #1 film for this decade is Quentin Tarantino's Samurai/Cowboy epic, Kill Bill -- though that's the beauty of a list, everyone wants to have a little friendly debate, I guess. You can read the entire list over at Chaos, but rounding out the top five are The Dark Knight, No Country for Old Men, and Kinji Fukasaku's adaptation of Battle Royale. The great thing about a long list like Chaos' is that it makes room for all kinds of movies that sometimes you just don't have room for in streamlined lists of five or ten entries. But I love a challenge, so I decided to put together a list of my top films of the 2000s ... although I've cheated just a little. After the jump: my nominations for the top films of the 2000s...Filed under: Fandom, Tom Cruise, Steven Spielberg, Quentin Tarantino, Lists, Trailers and ClipsContinue reading Now It's the 50 Best Movies of the Decade! Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
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'Inglourious Basterds' is Tarantino's Top Earner - Because of Twitter?
from Cinematical on September 21, 2009
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In what could be read as a big "nyah, told you so" press release, The Weinstein Company would like you all to know that Inglourious Basterds has not only grossed over $108M* in North America but has now out-earned Pulp Fiction, which was previously Tarantino's biggest money-maker to date. But what's strange is that TWC is giving some of the credit to "an innovative marketing plan. The film was the first to make use of Twitter and other social networking sites in such a direct fashion, even involving Twitter in the film's LA premiere," according to the press release. Harvey Weinstein is even quoted as saying, "It was great working with Biz Stone at Twitter on Inglourious. It took the campaign to another level." Okay, what have I missed? How was the Inglourious campaign different from any other of the studios' use of Twitter or Facebook to promote movies through links, contests, and meet-ups? I don't even recall seeing anything on Twitter about it, other than the normal studios using Twitter to cross-pollinate coverage.Filed under: Box Office, Exhibition, The Weinstein Co., Brad Pitt, Quentin Tarantino, Movie MarketingContinue reading 'Inglourious Basterds' is Tarantino's Top Earner - Because of Twitter? Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Uinterview.com: Diane Kruger
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on September 20, 2009
Duration: 90
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Inglorious Basterds' star Diane Kruger takes questions exclusively from users of Uinterview.com. For more celebrity interviews, go to http://www.uinterview.com
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Hyperbole - Inglourious Basterds, District 9, Muramasa: The Demon Blade, and Magic: The Gathering - The Totally Rad Show
from The Totally Rad Show (HD MP4 - 30fps) on August 17, 2009
Duration: 3459
Duration: 3459
A special, early review of Inglourious Basterds! Is District 9 the next Star Wars or The Matrix-level sci fi film? Hands-on with Muramasa for the Wii! Plus, Magic: The Gathering, table-top vs XBLA
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INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS Interviews -- Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Eli Roth, Diane Kruger and B.J. Novak
from Favorites of heremit979 on August 10, 2009
Duration: 597
Duration: 597
Emmy nominated Jake Hamilton talks with the stars of INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS -- Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Eli Roth, Diane Kruger and B.J. Novak -- only on JAKE'S TAKES!
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