Inglourious Basterds

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IB is so good, I'd like to see him leave it alone. More scenes? Sure. But IB, like Pulp Fiction, is high enough in quality to leave as a stand alone picture. I never get why people need to see more. Not everything needs a sequel/prequel. My favorite is the group that was positive he would make Kill Bill Vol 3, even though Bill dies at the end of Vol. 2.

Let him try something new. He has already basically said he is only going to make movies into his 50s and "retire" early and given he usually has a 3+ year gap between them (though not this time), I'd like to see new films.


No I know it's great as is but if he has story left to tell that he originally wanted to, then go for I say. He said it was far too vast and ambitious before Kill Bill which is why it took so long. So assuming that it is bold enough, then why not? It's not like he'd call it Inglourious Basterds 2. Hell the Baterds as a group would not even be in it most likely.
 
As much as I loved IG, I'd rather see Tarantino make another original film, instead of a prequel or whatever, and bring his unique touch to a new genre the way he did with Basterds for war movies.
 
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As much as I loved IG, I'd rather see Tarantino make another original film, instead of a prequel or whatever, and bring his unique touch to a new genre the way he did with Basterds for war movies.
He should do the British Spy movie he was talking about in the sun newspaper....
 
My review

still working on my writing

Quentin Tarantino's World War II epic and homage to the great spaghetti westerns finds 3 intersecting stories, in true Tarantino fashion. One story revolves around Lt. Aldo Raine, Brad Pitt's redneck soldier, and his band of Jewish-American soldiers showing no mercy to Nazi's in France, the other story is that of Shoshana Dreyfus, a survivor of a Jew extermination who has big plans for her movie theater. The last is that of the "Jew Hunter," one of the more ruthless Nazi officers who show no mercy to the Jewish. There storys take an explosive turn at Shoshana's movie theater.

After the long-winded Kill Bill, although I really liked Vol. 2, and the bland Death Proof, Inglourious Basterds is a return to form for Tarantino, relying heavily on snappy dialogue, controversial violence, and unforgetable performances from his actors, yet it is able to stay fresh mixing elements of the WWII period and spaghetti westerns, especially the music, creating a brand new outlook on the past.

The story itself was split into 5 chapters. The first one, "Once Upon a Time … in Nazi Occupied France," is superb. This is where Landa truly shines. Col. Landa and his men arrive at a French farm to interrogate the owner about claims that he may very well be hiding Jews. It is unforgettable and one of the tenser scenes to ever be shot for cinema. The second chapter, "Inglorious Basterds," is are first introduction to the titular heroes and their violent and merciless methods. It is truly crazy and over-the-top. It is the chapter for Tarantino to truly cut loose, living up to the legacy that so much controversy has created. This is followed by "German Night in Paris." This is where the story catches up with Shoshana and introduces a lot of exposition for what is to come in the film's climax surrounding the movie theater and Pvt. Zoller. Unfortunately, the movie lost a lot of its pacing here, but the performances stay strong regardless. Next up is "Operation Kino," probably my second favorite chapter after the first. It revolves around a meeting of the Basterds, a German double agent, and a British middle man. Not only my second favorite, it is also the second most tense scene, as the German native members of the Basterds as well as the German speaking British soldier find themselves among the enemy in a small, basement pub. The only thing that really is bad about this scene is the quite hectic editing of the ensuing gun fight that makes who shot who very hard to discern. The fifth chapter is the explosive climax and following conclusion, Aldo and Landa face to face. A decent ending, but chapters 1 and 4 are easily the best.

The acting is phenomenal. Brad Pitt puts his underrated sense of humor to good work as the outlandish Aldo. B.J. Novak, Michael Fassbender, Gideon Burkhard, and Til Shweiger all perform well too as his more seen Basterds. Even Eli Roth, a career director, does well as the Boston-bread "Bear Jew." The beautiful Diane Kruger performs effectively, but is out-shined by Melanie Laurent, who plays the very cold and shut in Shoshana aiding in the creation of one of Tarantino's better female characters. Daniel Bruhl is an exciting actor to watch. He brings so much charm and likeablitiy to his character that it is even more surprising and scary to see his dark side come out near the last moments of the film. The performance that really stands out is that of Christoph Waltz, who plays "Jew Hunter" Landa. A truly frightening villain who seems tickled by the death and destruction he creates. I would compare him to Gary Oldman's Stansfield role from, Leon. There isn't many roles or performances that could have you laughing and on the edge of your seat at the same time.

The last line of the film, "I think this may be my masterpiece," has been noted as being Tarantino's opinion of this movie, but I can't help but disagree. Pulp Fiction was fresh while staying familiar. It was creative, inventive, and inspired hundreds of knock-offs. It included some of the better lines and images of '90's cinema. Until he makes something even better, Pulp Fiction will remain Tarantino's masterpiece.

Inglourious Basterds, while oddly paced and unfocused on its titular heroes, remains an exceptionally inventive, well-made, and fun film. Easily Tarantino's better scripts, second only to Pulp Fiction, and one of the more incredible villain performances in some time.

9/10

Nice job with this. I agree with it too.
 
It's safe to say that Brad Pitt is having a pretty good year. He started the year with an Oscar nomination and he now has a movie that has already, only after two weeks made back it's budget, domestically. He's like the only A-List star (unless you count Shia LeBeouf and Megan Fox) to have a blockbuster hit movie in the summer.

It's probably a good thing Will Smith wasn't in a summer blockbuster this year.

Even if Pitt bombed at the box office and had failures, he still wins. He has Angelina and every woman on earth drooling over him.
 
who do you guys think he would cast in his western?

I guarantee you, his spaghetti western will be his final goodbye film and probably will end up being my favorite of his.

If still around, i bet hed try everything to get Clint Eastwood for a role of some kind.
Look for small roles with Madsen and his usuals

I think hes going to try and get Leonardo Di Caprio as a protagonist, Samuel Jackson as the side buddy, Tim Roth, Harvey Keital, and if i had to guess a guy like Benicio Del Toro as a villian

Ennio Morricone will score the whole damn film.

This would be some movie
 
Maybe he'll have some winks to Blazing Saddles. But in a twisted way.

Jackson can be a runaway slave who exacts revenge on the white men, and maybe tries to become the first black black sheriff. But doing it the Sam Jackson way. Kicking ass and taking names.

There could be a few different stories. Clint Eastwood could narrate it. Or he could show up early, have one line or a cameo, and be killed off in that same scene.

Keital could be cool. He could play a corrupted sheriff or some bad guy.

It would be cool to see Leo. Just a more manly version of his character in The Quick and the Dead. Eye patch and all. They'll of course should have some Van Cleef references (crosses fingers) Maybe Leo can play the bay guy. A civil war young hero who hunts down Sam Jackson. A tobacco chewing quick fire cowboy Leo can be.
 
I was kind of interested in his idea to do a 'Southern' about America's slavery past.
 
Anyone think that Quentin believes that this is his best film...I might be looking into it too much...but there were some nods to it being his masterpiece and such...
 
Anyone think that Quentin believes that this is his best film...I might be looking into it too much...but there were some nods to it being his masterpiece and such...
definitely, i mean, he practically screamed it in the last line of the movie.
 
Yea...as well...I recall some nods to it being his favourite/best when people were watching the movie...I think Hitler said it was amazing and such...I think I remember some others, just can't think of them right now...!
 
I guarantee you, his spaghetti western will be his final goodbye film and probably will end up being my favorite of his.

If still around, i bet hed try everything to get Clint Eastwood for a role of some kind.
Look for small roles with Madsen and his usuals

I think hes going to try and get Leonardo Di Caprio as a protagonist, Samuel Jackson as the side buddy, Tim Roth, Harvey Keital, and if i had to guess a guy like Benicio Del Toro as a villian

Ennio Morricone will score the whole damn film.

This would be some movie

Thank you, this is the cast I couldn't think of, this would be the most badass western, but I could see him pulling a 180 and making Del Toro the Hero and DiCaprio the villain or Keitel the villain, but this ar all people I would like to see in a Tarantino western.

Don't forget Tarantino also has a tendency to cast actors you've never heard or people way out of left field.

There a couple of actors I kind of want to see him work with really random ones though like Jeff Goldblum, Rupert Grint, or someone even like Lauren London. Actors and actresses you would be suprised to see him cast.
 
Clint is done with acting. But yes, Tarantino has yet to make his full blown Leone movie. He probably will make that in 10-20 years as his last film. Til then we'll see other things, really.
 
Clint is done with acting. But yes, Tarantino has yet to make his full blown Leone movie. He probably will make that in 10-20 years as his last film. Til then we'll see other things, really.
 
Clint may not be done. It all depends how good the role is according to him.
 
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