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QT's 'The Movie Critic' cancelled/mothballed


Here's The Hollywood Reporter's piece on this:
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/quentin-tarantino-no-longer-making-the-movie-critic-1235876453/

See also their commentary:
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-features/quentin-tarantino-10-final-movie-retirement-1235876755/

For myself I wonder whether living in Israel during the current conflicts has influenced QT away from making another self-excavating, Hollywood hangout movie. Maybe he's being drawn towards more realistic even contemporary political concerns as a topic. Goodness knows that the '70s were full of real-politik/gritty thrillers often with a mid-east focus. We know from Kill Bill, for example, that QT loves Black Sunday. Could something like that be where's he's headed, particularly if it's going to be his last feature film?

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See also their commentary:
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-features/quentin-tarantino-10-final-movie-retirement-1235876755/

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It is this commentary that hits all nails on the head and digs in nice and deep on how QT's famously pronounced theory is..in many ways..but not all...just flat out wrong.

Chiming in with the commentary and revisiting my own here -- QT's theory about "final films of directors being bad" seems to fit more directly to the oldsters of the 'Golden Age --Hawks, Ford, Capra and...least of all...Hitchcock(because, two from the end, he got great reviews and decent box office for Frenzy.)

Health, and health care was different back then, and THOSE old men had to face down "hippies," the counterculture and a New Hollywood out to bury them. Today, old men Scorsese and Spielberg remain beloved and capable of getting big budgets(if the go to Netflix) and great stars.

And the commentary nails the "ten movies" rule -- Oppenheimer was after 10, Goodfellas was after 10, etc.

(Hell, try Hitchcock...does 10 end around The Lady Vanishes?)

Scorsese was asked about QT's "10 and out rule" and graciously noted "Well, he writes his own material" and -- agreed, its hard to keep up the writing. (As "all time great" screenwriter Billy Wilder found out when he and IAL Diamond wrote The Front Page(a re-write) and Buddy Buddy.)

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At the end of the day, I don't think QT cares what anybody says about him-- or he cares so MUCH that he tells his critics to get the f away from him anyway -- but perhaps, deep down, he knows that his "old director" rule has come back to bite him in the ass.

Or has it?

I love The Wolf of Wall Street and The Irishman but...are they just too LONG? I don't love Killers of the Flower Moon and people say I is too long. I say(again) those movies are as long as Scorsese wanted them BUT...are their overlength part of HIS old age?

And Spielberg is just in a weird place. He makes whatever he wants now and most of the time, not only does no one come(where once EVERYBODY came) but it seems he really doesn't care. The studios will let THIS multi-billionaire work and work to the end. (For me, only Lincoln was really engaging in the last 20 years.) HIS "Van Sant's Psycho" -- West Side Story -- got Oscar noms and key wins but -- it WAS Van Sant's Psycho.

But back to ol' QT -- the commentary nails him on the "false alarms" of a Star Trek movie and Kill Bill 3 and rather exposes the childish side of his promotional gimmickry. Those ideas just weren't original enough to sound like anything much(even if he makes one of them.)

And that IS massive pressure that his "final film" HAS to be great(it will be, he'll get a cast of stars in it, you know, like Don't Look Up. Ha.)

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Lets look at Hitchcock in comparison.

I'll paraphrase an interview he gave when Family Plot came out. He was asked if he was done and going to retire(after all The Exorcist and Jaws had been released to megacrowds.)

"I shall never retire. What would I do, sit in a corner and read a book? I intend to go on forever."

And indeed he did. Rather like QT now, Hitchcock teased an Elmore Leonard novel(Unknown Man Some Number) intended to star Steve McQueen or Burt Reynolds. He kept working on The Short Night and convinced folks like Clint Eastwood, Sean Connery, Liv Ullman and Walter Matthau to say that they MIGHT be in it.

He didn't work til he died. He DID retire(he couldn't work anymore) in 1979 and died in 1980. But he never told anybody he retired in 1979, so it FELT like he was working right up til he died.

THAT is the model QT might better emulate.

Here's a memory that materialized out of nowhere:

I recall when Hitchcock announced Frenzy going into production -- with its weird cast of British no names -- I sort of felt: "Naw, Hitchcock isn't REALLY making a movie called Frenzy -- not with THAT cast."

But lo and behold, he did, and it came out and got those great reviews and i was shocked.

When he announced a film of The Rainbird Pattern in 1973, I REALLY didn't think it would get made. And it took until 1975 to go before the cameras and I STILL didn't think he would make it. But he did (Family Plot) and it got SOME good reviews(not as good as Frenzy) and THEN he KEPT announcing new films and I KEPT thinking he would never make them but -- I was right this time, but very grateful he kept the charade up to the end -- the very end. Again, nobody knew that he had retired when he died in 1980.

C'mon QT, it isn't too late -- tell us all that you were joking and there will be plenty more movies from ya.

Or tell us that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood(with three superstars if you count Pacino, plus Margot) WAS the last one and don't make anymore.

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For myself I wonder whether living in Israel during the current conflicts has influenced QT away from making another self-excavating, Hollywood hangout movie.

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Its a real twist in his career. He marries a supermodel. So far so typical (get as rich and famous as QT and you are SUPPOSED to marry a supermodel.) And she has given him a child or two(thus joining up with Bob Dylan and Keith Richards in creating kids from interesting sources -- a beauty and an "ugly." OK maybe not THAT ugly, but ...)

But she's Israeli, and he elected to move there -- at least some of the time -- and to some extent he was now LIVING in his blood and guts world. And now the conflict has mutated in various directions and...what will he do?

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Maybe he's being drawn towards more realistic even contemporary political concerns as a topic.

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This would be a surprise. I don't think he's ever made movie with much of a poltical view at all -- EXCEPT The Hateful Eight, which made a very dark case for everybody hating everybody else: white, black, Mexican..Yankee. Rebel. British.

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Goodness knows that the '70s were full of real-politik/gritty thrillers often with a mid-east focus.

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And Hitchcock, even in his immobile old age, was OFFERED them to direct. He wrote Truffaut that he would never and could never make a movie about Middle East conflict because "there is no humor" there. If he was offered Black Sunday -- which REQUIRED a younger, vibrant director -- I'm glad he didn't get it(though the movie WAS half written by Ernest Lehman of North by Northwest and Family Plot.

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We know from Kill Bill, for example, that QT loves Black Sunday.

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Yeah. And so do I. My favorite movie of 1977 -- the year of Star Wars, Close Encounters, Saturday Night Fever, Smokey and the Bandit and Annie Hall. But I like thrillers. And: Bruce Dern!

I LIKED that Black Sunday elected to take up the Palestine/Israeli situation THEN, today I surely think it would be NOT be made THAT way again. The politics almost didn't matter to me. Just the thriller construction and the action mattered -- and the climax right up to is disappointing finish(and truly thrilling final stuntman shot.)

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As another article pointed out, what QT is doing here mirrors what happened with The Hateful Eight: he said somebody leaked the script and so he was NOT going to make the movie./

Buit then he staged it as a PLAY to an elite Hollywood crowd AND some entertainment reporters -- who LEAKED the plot -- and then he made it anyway.

He's earned it, but there is touch of a spoiled child in how QT likes to prank his fanboys(OK, I'm one but with limits) and act all indecisive and then pull things away from us.

A new tantalizing clue about The Movie Critic emerged: it wasn't ONLY about the movie critic, it would be more of the story of Brad Pitt's Cliff Booth(and he tentatively signed on ) and I guess I'm glad THAT didn't get made. Cliff Booth is perfect in OATIUH and that's why he won Brad Pitt an Oscar. Cliff Booth is pretty horrific in QT's novelization of the movie so I wouldn't want to see THAT on screen.

No, if The Movie Critic had to die so that Cliff Booth could remain perfect in one movie only...I'm for THAT.

But c'mon QT, stop jerking us around. It backfires eventually. Case in point: The Sopranos creators kept that show on hiatus for a couple of years to peak interest and by the time they came back -- they weren't so cool. Though they GOT cool again.

Watcha gonna do, QT?

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PS. How come QT never counts Four Rooms as one of his 10 movies? UPDATE: I looked it up. He didn't direct it. Though he is IN it, in a tale based on the Steve McQueen/Peter Lorre Hitchcock episode "Man From the South"(about the bet that McQueen's cigarette lighter will light 10 times to win a luxury car -- or his finger gets cut off if he misses. SPOILER: QT's guy sees his lighter fail on the FIRST TRY. Chopped finger. Ha.)

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I despise QT's idea that all artists are subject to "diminishing returns." Some of my favorite filmmakers did their best work late in their careers, like Akira Kurosawa with KAGEMUSHA and RAN. While Billy Wilder's late period is hit and miss (FEDORA is damn bad, and I've heard terrible things about THE FRONT PAGE), it does contain gems like THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES and THE FORTUNE COOKIE. Even IRMA LA DOUCE has its moments and is hardly painful to sit through. Kubrick's EYES WIDE SHUT is as provocative as his most daring work of earlier years.

And don't get me started on the "10 movies" rule. It just doesn't bear out when you examine the great filmmakers of the past who had long careers. Yeah, not everything's gonna be a home run. So what, QT?
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(Hell, try Hitchcock...does 10 end around The Lady Vanishes?)
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Earlier than that. Hitchcock's tenth feature was BLACKMAIL, his first talkie in 1929!!

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PS. How come QT never counts Four Rooms as one of his 10 movies? UPDATE: I looked it up. He didn't direct it

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Update TO an update: Evidently, QT DID direct his segment of Four Rooms...he didn't just write in it and act in it.

At least one source I went to says that.

So is QT already at 10 movies? or 9 and one-half?

He tells us that Kill Bills 1 and 2 (released about six months apart) are one movie.

Meanwhile, Death Proof was HALF of one movie("Grindhouse" -- a fake double bill with Robert Rodriguez's Planet Terror).

Oh, well. QT defines his own universe....

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I despise QT's idea that all artists are subject to "diminishing returns." Some of my favorite filmmakers did their best work late in their careers, like Akira Kurosawa with KAGEMUSHA and RAN.

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I am not versed in "foreign films"(anything other than American studio and indie product) but I wouldl guess that "foreigers" like Kurosawa and many European directors had the latitide, financial support, and "low stakes" to keep making great work into old age.

Ford and Hawks and Capra (if not Hitchcock) were faced with animosity from New Hollywood. Scorsese and Spielberg are embraced by TODAY's Hollywood, and Spielberg is so megarich that nobody CAN oppose him.

I would like to note that Frank Capra was actually FIRED off of two projects at the end of his career and forcibly retired:

He was fired off the political movie "The Best Man" -- from a play by Gore Vidal, a very intellectual sort who felt that Capra was simply too old, too dumb, and all wrong for the project.

And THEN Capra was fired from a rather oddball John Wayne movie -- "Circus World."

I think that Ford's final movie -- "7 Women" -- went out as the SECOND HALF of a double bill!

Hitchcock survived not only because of his wealth and fame and hit TV series. From what I've read, Psycho(mainly) but also Vertigo, NXNW and The Birds got Hitchcock identified with "hip sixties culture" along with(in one Esquire article) Bob Dylan and some other cool cats. I mean, Psycho WAS wild and avant garde and hip even though it was also Gothic and quite formal.

But Hitchcock also survived because Superagent Lew Wasserman became the head of Universal, lured Hitchcock there on a contract, and protected him until retirement(1979.) Wasserman also stopped Hitchcock from making some projects(The First Frenzy, Mary Rose) and kept his budgets low at the end - but at least Hitchcock still got to work.

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While Billy Wilder's late period is hit and miss (FEDORA is damn bad, and I've heard terrible things about THE FRONT PAGE), it does contain gems like THE PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES and THE FORTUNE COOKIE. Even IRMA LA DOUCE has its moments and is hardly painful to sit through.

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ElizabethJoestar, you raise an interesting point here: when DOES a director's "late period" begin?

In some ways, Billy Wilder's "latest period" was the 70's through 1981: Avanti, The Front Page, Fedora and the egregious Buddy Buddy(the final straw; no more projects greenlighted.)

But if one starts the "late period" in the sixties - where you find Irma La Douce(Wilder's biggest hit, boy did 60's suburbanites love that hooker movie), Kiss Me Stupid, The Fortune Cookie, and Sherlock Holmes well..that'a a damn long late period.

And yet it IS a late period.

When Billy Wilder picked up his final Oscar at the 1960 Oscars -- Best Picture -- for The Apartment, after having won Best Director and Best Screenplay the same night, a presenter leaned into Wilder's ear on the stage and said "Time to stop, Billy." Stop making movies.

Well, the 1960 Oscars is also where Hitchcock was up for Best Director for Psycho(losing to Wilder) and Psycho wasn't even nominated for Best Picture, but perhaps it was time for Hitchcock to stop too.

Wilder had Some Like It Hot(1959) and The Apartment(1960.)
Hitchcock had NXNW(1959) and Psycho (1960.)

BOTH directors probably peaked in 1960...everything they made after that (even The Birds and Frenzy for Hitchcock; even Irma La Douce for Wilder) wasn't really "of its time." So..QT is right?

No...QT is WRONG. ALL of those movies expressed their directors' visions with continuing power --I'd say ALL of those movies EXCEPT Buddy Buddy was worthwhile in SOME way.

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Kubrick's EYES WIDE SHUT is as provocative as his most daring work of earlier years.

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Yes. And visually , it is not only sumptuous but a complete "visual match" for The Shining -- made 19 years before! (Full Metal Jacket was in between and didn't match up visually with either of its bookends.)

Kubrick is a special case...more fitting in regard to QT's "10 movies and out theory."

So I'll do that next.

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And don't get me started on the "10 movies" rule. It just doesn't bear out when you examine the great filmmakers of the past who had long careers. Yeah, not everything's gonna be a home run. So what, QT?
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(Hell, try Hitchcock...does 10 end around The Lady Vanishes?)
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Earlier than that. Hitchcock's tenth feature was BLACKMAIL, his first talkie in 1929!!

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I suppose Hitchcock is a real rejection of the 10 year rule as almost an exception to the rule. I mean, the guy not only worked steadily from the 1920s into the 1970s...in his peak years he made ONE MOVIE A YEAR (QT has put three, four, SIX years between movies and is about to go longer before his "final film") AND sometimes made TWO MOVIES in one year! (Rebecca and Foreign Correspondent were BOTH up for the 1940 Best Picture Oscar and we also get To Catch and Thief AND The Trouble With Harry in 1955 and The Man Who Knew Too Much AND The Wrong Man in 1956.)

So QT may be thinking about Kubrick.

Hitchcock made one to two movies per year.

Kubrick made The Shining five years after Barry Lyndon, Full Metal Jacket 7 years after The Shining...and Eyes Wide Shut 12 years(!!) after Full Metal Jacket. And promptly died at 70.

I'll do my count of "real" Kubrick movies here, in order, from memory:

The Killing
Paths of Glory
Spartacus(Kubrick disowned this as Kirk Douglas' baby.)
Lolita
Dr. Strangelove (my favorite of his films)
2001
A Clockwork Orange(looks great but here is a movie I actually despise...come and get me.)
Barry Lyndon
The Shining
Full Metal Jacket
Eyes Wide Shut

I count 11. Made from 1956(The Killing) to 1999 (Eyes Wide Shut.) Made over 43 years. (And yes, Killers Kiss and Fear and Desire are there, but got no real releases, etc.)

I suppose QT is trying for that kind of reputation, but he's cutting himself off a lot sooner than 43 years.

And that commentary in The Hollywood Reporter mocks 10 as too pedestrian a number to choose.

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roger1 wrote:

He's earned it, but there is touch of a spoiled child in how QT likes to prank his fanboys(OK, I'm one but with limits) and act all indecisive and then pull things away from us....But c'mon QT, stop jerking us around. It backfires eventually.

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I return to note that, after further reflection, perhaps I'm too harsh in that analysis(and too quick, I have a couple of other corrections to make here) because...

HITCHCOCK announced...and dumped...quite a few projects too. In one interview he said something like "Sometimes when it is clear that a project isn't shaping up as you wanted it to..you must close it down and move on to something else before its too late. The studio spent over $100,000 on a movie called No Bail for the Judge and I didn't make it." (I recall that $100,000 figure.)

We've talked about No Bail for the Judge -- over at the Breakfast at Tiffany's board, I think -- but it is relevant here. Hitchocck had Audrey Hepburn announced as the main star, with Laurence Harvey over the title as the male lead and John Williams in support(as the judge for whom there is no bail -- he is framed for murder and barrister lawyer Audrey must save him by ...going undercover as a London hooker?!) Evidently the story that Hepburn back out of the 1960 project over a veiled rape scene isn't entirely accurate(more over at the BAT page) but Hitchcock cast the leads, announced the project...and dumped it. And made Psycho instead! What a great historical bit of luck!

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I was interested to learn that in the 1960s -- with Psycho pretty much as the "driver" -- Hitchcock was JUST as indecisive as QT in trying to pick projects. With QT it is "how can I pick my final film?" With Hitchcock it was "How can I top Psycho?" He only really tried once -- The Birds -- and sort of succeeded(it had more set pieces than Psycho) and sort of didn't(neither the script nor the story were as good as Psycho and it wasn't as scary as Psycho...hell I saw it on release when I was under 10.)

Anyway, Hitchcock announced these projects starting in 1961 after Psycho:

Village of the Star(a nuclear bomb gets stuck in the bomb bay of the plane carrying it , with a countdown--Hitch goes nuclear)
Some movie about a man coming home to find his wife doesn't know him(made as a TV movie with Jack Klugman as the cop investigating)
The Mind Thing "Hitchcock SciFi" about space aliens who take on the shape of animals -- bulls, dogs, BIRDS -- to attack humans. (This led Hitchcock to DuMaurier's The Birds.)

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Then, around the time of Marnie, Hitchcock had different teams of writers working on different projects. Only one -- Torn Curtain (from HITCHCOCK's original idea) -- made it. These did not:

The Three Hostages: Another Richard Hannay story -- pencilled in to re-unite Sean Connery and Tippi Hedren in lighter fare.
Mary Rose: Hitchcock's long-thwarted "ghost story" romance. Jay Presson Allen("Marnie") wrote a script, Wasserman killed the project.
RRRR -- THIS one fascinates me. Part of Hitchcock's "internationale" period (Torn Curtain, Topaz, Frenzy) -- Marcello Mastrianni and Sophia Loren were in Hitchcock's mind for a "caper film" about a family of Italians running a New York City hotel -- and some of them are crooks trying to stage a robbery there. Hitch put Italian writers on it but...no.
The First Frenzy (aka Kaleidoscope -- but Warren Beatty made a movie with that title in 1966). Hitchcock's first attempt at a psycho story since Psycho...and Waserman killed this one, too.

I guess as opposed to QT, some of these Hitchcock projects were STOPPED by others(Lew Wasserman leading them) but Hitchcock himself pulled the plug on No Bail for the Judge, RRRR , and others.

So maybe we should cut QT a little slack as he goes searching for that elusive final film...

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I have decided to here -- in an OT vein as we have been graciously alllowed here on this page -- to say a few things in FAVOR of QT even as he seems to be inviting invective. (QT is a guy who seems to have drawn haters equal to his fans in this internet era; Hitchcock had haters too but it was never like THIS.)

See, I AM a QT "fanboy" (and I don't mind using that term even as I hit later years -- movies can keep us young) and this has been even in the face of his demonstrated "sick" qualities --I have found things such as Samuel L Jackson's illustrated tale of raping and killing Bruce Dern's son in The Hateful Eight sick, the strangulation of Dianne Kruger in Inglorious Basterds sick, the Mandingo fight to the death in an elegant brothel lounge in Django Unchained sick; many of the girl on girl fights to the death in Kill Bill sick(not to mention the multi-gender dismemberments in the Crazy 88's sword battle) and yet....I get it. Personally I would never write or submit a screenplay to a studio with such sick scenes, but QT gets off on this stuff, he knows the audience rather "enjoys" subjecting itself to the perversions...its a game of human nature. What QT is mainly saying is: "I'm not making safe movies." He has a "sick" reputation to protect.

No, what I go for with QT is...his dialogue. His "talk scenes." They are SO great, so entertaining, so unique. And I mean like almost ALL of them.

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Take Pulp Fiction. Though one can select individual lines as "great" (like "They call it a Royale with Cheese" or "Check out the big brain on Brad!") its entire SCENES that are FILLED with great lines that remain QT's calling card and will be his legacy. The ENTIRE dialogue scene with Jackson and Travolta in the car going to the hit. The scene AT the hit ("Say what again, m-fer! I dare you! I double dare you!"..."Oh I'm sorry...did I spoil your concentration?") The date between Travolta and Thurman ("Don't you just love it when you come back from the restroom in a restaurant and your food is waiting for you?" "I believe that my husband, your boss, told YOU to take ME out and show me a good time.") The entire sequence with Harvey Keitel.

Take Reservoir Dogs. I have a simple rule there. Any scene in which Lawrence Tierney(the bald headed crime boss) talks is great. ("Mr. Purple is some guy on some other job. You're MR. PINK") Any scene in which Harvey Keitel talks is great. ("..cut off one of his fingers. After that he'll tell you if he wears ladies underwear.I'm hungry. Let's get a taco.") Any scene in which Steve Buscemi talks is great. (Especially his speech about not tipping.) Any scene in which Michael Madsen talks is great. ("You gonna bark all day, little doggie..or you gonna bite?" "I'll bet you like Lee Marvin movies.") Any scene in which Chris Penn talks is great ("Let me say this out loud, because I want to get it straight in my head.") And QT's long sexual speech about "Like a Virgin" is great and exactly sets the tone for who he wants to be in his movie career.

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My favorite scene in EITHER of the two "Kill Bills" is in Part Two. No action at all. Just talk. In a scene that could EASILY have been cut for time.

Its Michael Madsen as a strip club bouncer getting his head handed to him by his oily, slow talking rager of a boss (Joey Bishop's real life SON) over being late and getting days docked off his work calendar. This scene could have easily been cut for time -- but its the best scene in the movie, IMHO.

With things like Madsen quietly saying to his boss in weak defense: "But you've hired me as a bouncer and look out there..there's....nobody...to...BOUNCE."

And the boss just tearing into him:

"You're saying that you shouldn't show up to do the work I pay you to do because there's no work for you to do?"

"Cutting off your cash is the only way to get through to you kids."

"Let's go to the calendar. Its calendar time for buddy!" (Proceeds to draw Xs through calendar days thus depriving Madsen of work days.

"I'm not the boss of the customers. I"m the boss of you."

I'll bet some REAL boss told off QT like this(maybe at the porn theater where he worked?) and what's funnier still is that WE know that Madsen is a "former" professional swordsman assassin who could kill this a-hole boss in three seconds flat if he wanted to. But he doesn't. He sheepishly takes it. Great scene. Great dialogue.

And so forth and so on, over, er NINE movies, now? I'll put up with QT's sick scenes and overlong scenes and oddball structure just to keep getting those words, those lines, those SCENES..usually enacted by some of the most entertaining actors(superstars and just plain stars and exiled stars) alike.

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Only 9 movies, eh?

Well here's my ranking of 11 of them:

The top three are all by themselves, I call them "the modern day Los Angeles crime trilogy" -- and Number One(my favorite of all QT movies) is Jackie Brown.

1. Jackie Brown
2. Pulp Fiction
3. Reservoir Dogs

None better. Then QT took off six years and CHANGED. Hung out with supermodels and young goremeister Eli Roth(Hostel.) Got into drugs? (Rumored.) Came back more gory and more violent than ever AND turned into a great action director(Death Proof has one of the greatest car chases on film in that tired category, the action scenes in Kill Bill 1 and Django Unchained are classic)...but NEVER lost that dialogue gift.

I rank 'em this way:

4. The Hateful Eight(his most gorgeous looking film, which counts for a lot. Also in some ways his best cast, with not a superstar among them. Morricone's Oscar winning score. A classic opening credit scene("Crucified Jesus in the snow.") Also...something to say about hate in our society.
5. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. (Totally non-violent for 90% of its running time-- less "fake" TV Western violence -- and then QT's ultra-violence arrives wonderfully at the end to uplift us all.)
6. Django Unchained(better than Inglorious Basterds before it -- shorter scenes.)
7. Inglorious Basterds(I love every scene with Brad Pitt. Christoph Waltz makes a great debut. But the opening interrogation and the basement bar scenes run way too long.)

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8. Kill Bill 2 (for the strip club boss scene, Uma's long talk with David Carradine at the end and the sense of achievement related to the scores of people Uma had to kill to reach her happy ending.)
9. Kill Bill 1(The Crazy 88's massacre swordfight is great but the rest seems like "not a real movie." Beautiful death match with Lucy Lieu in the snow, though.
10. Death Proof. QT called it with confidence: his least great film, but still great. Kurt Russell is charismatic and good as a serial killer filled with surprises. QT failed to provide his young actresses with his best dialogue. Kurt's car killing of the first four women is ...really sick in its detail. But what the second four women do to Russell is...most satisfying(and there is a great song over the end credits with great shots of 60s "color tone setting models" for photography.
11. Four Rooms -- QT meets Hitchcock, but remakes one of his TV shows, not one of his movies. And the punchline is spectacular.

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From a different angle: QT got my "Personal Number One movie of the year" EVERY TIME he made a movie from 2009 on...but that's because so much else that came out in those years didn't work for me.

It was harder going for QT to get Number Ones before then. Witness

1992: I've had to shoehorn Reservoir Dogs back in there -- I guess its Number Three now. My favorite is My Cousin Vinny, a truly funny and intricate courtroom comedy in which I fell in love with Marisa Tomei(no Oscar was more RICHLY DESERVED) and was delighted to see Fred "Herman Munster" Gwynne get the role of a lifetime(other than Herman) to go out on(he died soon after.)
Think: the movie could have had Fran Drescher in the Tomei role and Gene Hackman as the judge and been...nothing special. Joe Pesci "worked" as a romantic lead, too(ANOTHER reason Tomei got the Oscar.) Unforgiven was my second favorite -- I ALMOST liked the Best Picture best of all, but ...good enough. "Unforgiven" is Eastwood's Frenzy...it was a big comeback for him and he did it on HIS terms...with a grim story and "old man actors."
So Reservoir Dogs Number Three. (I also liked Batman Returns that year.)

1994. Pulp Fiction is my Number One, but it WORKED its way there over the years. I thought 1994 was the best movie year of the 90s other than 1997 -- but I'll confess: for awhile Forrest Gump was my Number One. Folks forget that the claim to Tom Hanks career in the beginning was: Tom Hanks makes you cry. I heard audiences SOBBING at the end of Big, Turner and Hooch(the dog dies) Philadelphia, Forrest Gump, Saving Private Ryan, You've Got Mail, and Cast Away. Hanks KNEW that tears were right behind thrills in generating box office. The scene where Forrest (1) gets his unrequited love back AND (2) learns he has a son by her -- that's his Oscar. (And 3 -- learns she is dying -- is later.)The rest was a Boomer Epic across the 50s, 60s and 70s with music to match and...boy does everybody hate it now.

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I can't really watch Forrest Gump anymore, but I watch Pulp Fiction every year so...its Number One to me. I remember the first night I saw it, I was entertained , a little confused...and not IMMEDIATELY in l ove iwth it. But boy did it grow on me, fast. Other 1994 faves were: Ed Wood(Tim Burton's best movie other than Batman), True Lies(James Cameron gives Arnold his final real hit and a great Bond movie to boot, with a DIZZYING climax), and The Shawshank Redemption(but only for the joyous final ten minutes -- the rest is torture getting there.

1997. Jackie Brown is my favorite QT movie...but I can only give it Number Two for 1997...because LA Confidential is my Number One of 1997 AND my Number One of the entire 90s'(shading "Pulp Fiction" for that honor because I got no use for that "blueberry pancakes and a pot belly" French woman. and her scene.)

2003: Kill Bill 1 didn't make my list. Love Actually did, as Number One -- I will AGAIN defend its emotion and uniqueness against all haters. (I guess its like Forrest Gump that way -- other number one tearjerkers on my list include ET and Terms of Endearment, back to back in '82 and '83.)

2004: Kill Bill 2 didn't make my list. Alexander Payne's Sideways was Number One. Tom Cruise as a cool psycho hitman in Michael Mann's Collateral was Number Two. But I'll never forget QT's Strip Club Boss Scene.

2007: Death Proof didn't make my list, though Kurt Russell and the final car chase are something to behold.

2009: Ingloroius Basterds got Number One. We all anticipated "The Dirty Dozen" and got THIS "Eurofilm wannabee" instead. Pretty grisly, too(The Bear Jew baseball bat scene, the scalpings, the strangulation per Frenzy). Pitt is great. Waltz is great. And the scene where they finally meet and talk is GREAT. I also liked Taken that year -- like with John Wick, a FIRST great basic action premise movie immediately got ruined in sequels. But the original MATTERED.

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2012: Django Unchained: My number one of the year. Unsung acting hero of the movie: Don Johnson as Big Daddy, in his two or three scenes. Samuel L. Jackson managed to be hilarious and deeply horrifying at the same time. I love how Christoph Waltz bookended his QT Oscar as a VERY bad guy in Inglorious Basterds with a QT Oscar for a VERY good guy in Django.(I like the good guy better.)
Between this and Collateral(as Tom Cruise's cabbie hostage), Jamie Foxx got some star cred(Will Smith turned Django down.)

2015: The Hateful Eight: My number one of the year.(Reasons above.)

2019: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. I gave it a tie with Scorsese's The Irishman for Number One. I loved both of them, but each of them was flawed in some way and couldn't beat the other for Number One. With Scorsese, the first hour is too slow(but it really picks up once Pacino's Hoffa enters the movie). With QT, again as with Inglorious Basterds, ALL of Brad Pitt's scenes are great(he is a "real" movie star) but I found my interest dragging when Leo's part came up at the studio. Still, the "fantasy" of seeing Sharon Tate saved from the Mansons was bittersweet indeed, and the movie also lets us feel the sadness of her REAL last night on earth.

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All those Number Ones and Number Twos for QT rather put him in spittin' distance of Hitchcock in my movie going life. Hitchcock got MORE, and to demonstrate, I'll show Hitchcock for me in the 50's and 60s and 70s only:

The 50s

1950: Sunset Boulevard
1951: Strangers on a Train
1952: High Noon
1953: The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms(from childhood; still fun.)
1954: Rear Window
1955: To Catch a Thief
1956: The Wrong Man
1957: 12 Angry Men
1958: Damn Yankees(Vertigo Number Three after Touch of Evil)
1959: North by Northwest

Yep, Hitchcock got half of the Number Ones of the 50s for me, with three back-to-back(Rear Window, To Catch a Thief, The Wrong Man) and he made OTHER MOVIES in those years!

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The 60s:

1960: Psycho
1961: Judgment at Nuremberg(Guns of Navarone Number Two)
1962: The Manchurian Candidate
1963: Its a Mad Mad Mad Mad World(The Birds at Number Three after Charade)
1964: Dr. Strangelove (Marnie not ranked)
1965: The Great Race
1966: The Professionals(Torn Curtain at Number Four after Harper and Gambit)
1967: Wait Until Dark
1968: Bullitt
1969: The Wild Bunch (Topaz not ranked)

North by Northwest(1959) and Psycho(1960) are back-to-back Hitchcock Number Ones released one summer apart -- and my two favorite movies. NXNW is my favorite of the 50s and Psycho is my favorite of the 60s and yet...again...one year apart! But each reflects its decade: NXNW climaxes the 50s and Psycho launches the 60s. (Spielberg pulled off this one-two punch with Raiders of the Lost Ark in 1981 and ET in 1982, but I don't think those two equal NXNW and Psycho in acheivement.)

its a Mad Mad World and The Great Race are "from childhood" -- matching race/chase "comedia guargantuas."

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The 70s:

1970: MASH the Movie(10 years after Psycho with somewhat of the same impact, but with the new R rating: sex, blood(in the operating room) even a shower scene with a NAKED woman.)
1971: Dirty Harry
1972: The Godfather (and Hitchcock's triumphant comeback Frenzy at Number Two for me.)
1973: American Graffiti (1973 is maybe my favorite year in movies: also see The Sting, The Exorcist -- which I don't really like -- The Way We Were, Charley Varrick, The Paper Chase, Pat Garrett and Billy the kid, Westworld, Sleeper and on and on and on.)
1974: Chinatown
1975: Jaws(the closest blockbuster thriller TO Psycho.)
1976: The Shootist(John Wayne's final film , by Don Siegel) Family Plot(Hitchocck's final film, by Hitchcock at Number Two...despite some flaws, its NICE and a wink at the end.)
1977: Black Sunday(co-written by Ernest Lehman of North by Northwest and Family Plot)
1978: Animal House(watched endlessly by superfan Alfred Hitchcock in his screening room)
1979: North Dallas Forty(Alien at Number Two -- a SciFi Psycho.)

Well, I enjoyed this little "self check up" on the favorite movies of my formative years, but take a look: BOTH Hitchcock AND QT (who is on record as not much liking Hitchcock's work at all) got so many Number Ones and Number Twos of my personal years.

Must mean something. And thus I forgive QT his more inflammatory and, er, unwise comments. About Hitchcock, about "old directors," about "10 films."

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roger1 wrote:

And Spielberg is just in a weird place. He makes whatever he wants now and most of the time, not only does no one come(where once EVERYBODY came) but it seems he really doesn't care. The studios will let THIS multi-billionaire work and work to the end. (For me, only Lincoln was really engaging in the last 20 years.)

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I return to "self correct" yet again. If my standard is the last 20 years, it turns out that I liked three other Spielbergs as well as Lincoln in those years, with reservations:

2005: War of the Worlds. Two spectacular and terrifying effects scenes: (1) the alien tripods emerge and start killing everybody and (2) the tripods sink a ferry and keep killing everybody. A later terrifying sequence where Cruise allows himself to be taken up into a tripod(high above the ground) to rescue his daughter(humans are being treated like cows to the slaughter up there, pink blood covers all hillsides.) But the rest is pretty perfunctory.

2005: Munich. One of Spielberg's "ultra violent" movies(like Hitchcock, he got gruesome in his older age) and timely take on the Middle East(takes are ALWAYS timely on the Middle East, aren't they?)

2015: Bridge of Spies. The film owes a lot to The Spy Who Came In From the Cold AND Torn Curtain in taking us "behind the Iron Curtain" in a nostalgic early 60's. Mark Rylance won a well-deserved Oscar(supporting) as friendly-neutral Soviet spy in America who bonds with his lawyer Tom Hanks("Would it help?"_ but was perhaps a little TOO cuddly. Still, my second favorite film of 2015 behind The Hateful Eight.

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I dunno. Maybe Spielberg did something else in there I liked. It wasn't The Post. Jason Robards had done a perfect Oscar winning Ben Bradlee in "All The President's Men;" Tom Hanks was nothing like the man and Meryl Streep and Hanks together anchored...a damn dull take on a story many times told. It was sold with the usual hype of "And its exactly like what is happening today." Naw its not. What an overused Hollywood political bromide...

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With Spielberg, I really liked THE FABELMANS (I think you didn't care for that one though, right?) and his WEST SIDE STORY. Comparing his work to his younger peers, it strikes me how "classical" his directorial style is, if that makes sense. It's appealing to me.

I still want to see MUNICH and WAR OF THE WORLDS. Actually, there's a lot of Spielberg I need to get off my ass and see (or I guess given how movie watching works, get on my ass and see?).

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With Spielberg, I really liked THE FABELMANS (I think you didn't care for that one though, right?)

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No, I didn't...and maybe another viewing or two will change my mind. Well, I did like the final scene where young Spielberg(under another name) meets John Ford in his office(wonderfully played by David Lynch, how he lights a cigar is genius) and learns something about how to frame the horizon in the shot and then--- in the final shot of the film, Spielberg "adjusts the horizon." Brilliant.

But the rest of it just seemed a little too self-worshipful to me(its Spielberg's life story with movies, plus his parents divorce.) Also, rightly or wrongly I compared it unfavorably to Licorice Pizza the year before(something about the use of biographical material of filmmakers when they were young linked the two films, I felt..)

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and his WEST SIDE STORY.

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I'm reminded that with both West Side Story and The Fabelmans, Spielberg got lots of Oscar nominations, and WSS won a key one(Supporting Actress.) Hitchcock famously never won a competitive Oscar and was never nominated again after a failed Best Director nom for Psycho.
But Spielberg -- part for his talent, part for his Hollywood power -- just keeps getting the Oscar love in HIS old age. (Hitchcock the outsider; Spielberg the Insider.) And yet, very few people showed up at theaters for The Fabelmans or West Side Story.

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A bit more on Spielberg's West Side Story:

Cut to the chase: the really big and exciting number in the movie is "America" a thundering fandango (with links to the tempo of Herrmann's North by Northwest credits and the opening of the lesser known 1965 film Ship of Fools.)

In the 1961 original, this big group dance number is staged "on a fake tenement rooftop" as the characters dance in various color costumes that practically GLOW. Its all very artificial even as the number is GREAT. And it is staged at NIGHT.

Spielberg stages "America" in the DAY, much more realistically, inside and then OUTSIDE on city streets and its very exciting too, but much more realistic. I salute the then-70-something Spielberg for his muscular outdoor staging of America(a song with immigrant relevance for OUR times, natch) but my heart goes to -- the 1961 version.

West Side Story is another one of those "50s/60s cusp" movies -- a 1961 movie based on a 1957 broadway play(which, btw Cary Grant was going to see in North by Northwest if one goes with his protestations about the Winter Garden theater to the bad guys -- and Ernest Lehman screenwriter of NXNW would write the screenplay of West Side Story and I'm getting dizzy!) And the movie is SO of its time with its "ultra Panavision 70 wide screen shots," its mix of street and studio, its colorful costumes, etc.

Spielberg seems to have made HIS West Side Story(though his cinematographer?) look like ALL of his RECENT movies -- smoky, gray-green color tinting(it looks like War of the Worlds!) and here is a case where an "auteur" (Spielberg) sucked the original energy out of the movie to make it his own(its a bit more political too -- as Spielberg is.)

Of course, the songs in WSS 2022 are the same songs as the songs in WSS 1961 but...its like the "shot by shot" remake of Psycho...its the ERA thats missing, the film stock, the historical moment.

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2019: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. I gave it a tie with Scorsese's The Irishman for Number One. I loved both of them, but each of them was flawed in some way and couldn't beat the other for Number One. With Scorsese, the first hour is too slow(but it really picks up once Pacino's Hoffa enters the movie). With QT, again as with Inglorious Basterds, ALL of Brad Pitt's scenes are great(he is a "real" movie star) but I found my interest dragging when Leo's part came up at the studio. Still, the "fantasy" of seeing Sharon Tate saved from the Mansons was bittersweet indeed, and the movie also lets us feel the sadness of her REAL last night on earth.
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It's amazing how the ending of that movie is both awesome and sad.

I love the hangout vibe so much too. Who knew watching DiCaprio and Pitt watching TV and drinking beer could be so engaging?

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It's amazing how the ending of that movie is both awesome and sad.

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Yes, I think writer-director QT really achieved something there. He reaches "the night Sharon Tate will die." He gives us "Baby You're Out of Time" on the soundtrack by the Stones. (QT asked an interviewer, "did you think I was too on the nose with that?" Naw...its affecting. He gives us that brilliant dusk-into-dark montage of neon lights coming up on buildings all over the city(including the Cinerama Dome showing "Krakatoa, East of Java."
Kurt Russell's narration gives us a sad, sad, SAD look into the final hours of the lives of Sharon and her friends -- a heat wave night, a Mexican dinner, lazing around the Cielo Drive house watching a TV horror movie show (Seymour) . Its all so SAD.

And then, "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" a "what if?" save arrives. Treating the Mansons as they so richly deserved. (Tex is still alive and in prison -- I hope they showed him this movie!)

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I love the hangout vibe so much too. Who knew watching DiCaprio and Pitt watching TV and drinking beer could be so engaging?

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It is. I guess its "a guy thing," but probably women have the same camarderie while watching TV together.

I remember making time with the guys to gather at various houses with beer to watch "Kung Fu" on Thursday nights. We sort of enjoyed the show and made fun of it at the same time. We liked to preface serious remarks with "Grasshopper...remember this:".

And QT's movie GOT that. Whether Kung Fu on Thursday nights or The FBI on Sunday nights...ALL TV fans knew when their shows were on each week and in "QUATIH" both Squeaky Fromme(and Bruce Dern's George Spahnn) AND Leo and Brad are ready for The FBI on Sunday night. (Of course, Leon's Rick Dalton is in that episode.)

Youtube, btw, has the REAL FBI opening footage from that Rick Dalton episode -- BURT REYNOLDS was the bad guy. And Burt Reynolds was supposed to play George Spahnn in OATIH but died during the table read period.

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Roger1, your ranking has made me realize how few QT films I've seen. I've watched Pulp Fiction countless times over the years. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is probably my favorite, though PF is a close second.

Saw RESEVOIR DOGS years ago and liked it. Same with INGLORIOUS BASTERDS. I don't recall thinking any scene ran too long. I found that first scene super tense and brilliant. The ending is fabulous.

Annnddd-- that's it. I still need to see JACKIE BROWN. Online, that seems to be the critic-anointed QT title.

I recall the brouhaha over the KILL BILL movies in the mid-2000s, when I was about 10/11ish. I remember teenage cousins loving it and the adults in my family (with the exception of an uncle who loved himself some ultraviolence in genre movies) calling it trash. It's overdue for a watch from me.

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Roger1, your ranking has made me realize how few QT films I've seen.

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Good news: he hasn't made that many movies so it won't take too long to catch up...if you want too.

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I've watched Pulp Fiction countless times over the years.

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Me, too. I have "'fessed up" to naming Forrest Gump my Number One of 1994 AT THE TIME(the epic sweep of it, the emotion of it and being part of that fan wave),but over the years that one is just harder to watch and Pulp Fiction is -- to use a great well-worn phrase -- "when it comes on TV and you start watching it, you can't stop." Plus all the great lines. Plus how the story plays out of order, so that John Travolta dies early...but COMES BACK TO LIFE(the story backs up) and in the final scene you realize he is on his way to die.

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--- Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is probably my favorite, though PF is a close second.

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I GUESS I stand by my list. My take is that QT's first three -- a trilogy if you will of modern-day Los Angeles crime stories -- were written and filmed when he was young and hungry and was making his name. Then he took SIX crucial years off and I swear that the man who came back was CHANGED. The ultra-violence got more ultra-violent. The violence against women. But still also against men.

And THIS weird "tic": QT made THREE movies in a row -- in which an important character is a bounty hunter. Chirstoph Waltz teaches Jamie Foxx how to be a bounty hunter in Django Unchained; Sam Jackson and Kurt Russell are bounty hunters in The Hateful Eight. Leo DiCaprio is a TV bounty hunter in OATIH. And this: Kurt Russell dangerously LIKES to keep his prisoners alive(thus risking escapes or counteraction against him); Leo's TV character likes to keep his prisoners DEAD -- its as if QT set up this "bounty hunter credo dialogue" across three films. I guess that's his "bounty hunter trilogy."

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Saw RESEVOIR DOGS years ago and liked it. Same with INGLORIOUS BASTERDS. I don't recall thinking any scene ran too long. I found that first scene super tense and brilliant.

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Yeah, I guess that's just me about that scene. A couple of critics who did NOT like Inglorious Basterds wrote the same thing: "That first interrogation scene is brilliant...and the rest of the movie never lives up to it." And the scene introduced Christoph Waltz to the world.

On the DVD, that scene is so long it has TWO chapter stops. I compare it(natch) to Arbogast interrogating Norman in Psycho. Hitchcock got HIS scene (from porch to office back to porch again) in about half the time that QT got HIS scene. But...that's just me, and it IS great scene. Still, I also remember getting impatient when QT "did it again" in the later basement cafe scene(about which Pitt's character gripes "I don't want to fight in a basement. The problem with fightin' in a basement is...you're fightin' in a F-IN BASEMENT!)

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The ending is fabulous.

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All the plots come together in a movie theater ..so fitting. Its been said that QT did the same thing in Basterds that he did in the Manson movie: let his characters kill off historical villains. So Hitler gets machine gunned and his lieutenants fry. I think the difference is that Hitler DID lose in real life, DID kill himself -- but the Manson gang pretty much got to live on for decades in prison, which Charlie for one, didn't mind. It was more satisfying to see Manson's gang(if not Manson himself) die.

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Annnddd-- that's it.

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Well, give yourself some time to see if QT's for you "all the way." Maybe. Maybe not. He is for me. Though I remain sort of sad about his rather mindless attacks on Hitchcock and Psycho (and also my favorite movie of 1976, The Shootist.) Unlike the gracious Scorsese and Del Toro, QT has no compunction about dumping on other filmmakers -- past(Hitchcock) or present(Paul Thomas Anderson re Boogie Nights.)

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--I still need to see JACKIE BROWN. Online, that seems to be the critic-anointed QT title.

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Well, its my Number One. Its from an Elmore Leonard novel, so it has perhaps more structure than other QTs. It IS the "Rio Bravo" of QT pictures...laid back, takes its time, gets to know the people. The standout actor -- the only one to get an Oscar nomination -- is Robert Forster, just knocking it out of the park with his quiet, calm, NICE and decent character. He's a bail bondsman and the early scene where Sam Jackson comes to Forster's office to talk bonding someone out of jail(while slow Robert DeNiro lurks in the background; Sam's "pal") could go on forever as far as I'm concerned. "A coupla guys talking."

DeNiro is hilarious. Bridget Fonda is sexy and mean. Michael Keaton is live wire energy as a semi-villainous drugs cop. And Pam Grier's Jackie Brown gets her star turn.

But it is Robert Forster's movie. All the way.

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I recall the brouhaha over the KILL BILL movies in the mid-2000s, when I was about 10/11ish. I remember teenage cousins loving it and the adults in my family (with the exception of an uncle who loved himself some ultraviolence in genre movies) calling it trash. It's overdue for a watch from me.

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I wrote that I didn't "rank" either Kill Bill in my top movies for 2003 and 2004. That's not quite true. I think I meant that neither of them made Number One or Number Two. I don't do Top Ten Lists each year because I simply don't see that many movies.

I think what I meant is that while most QT movies either land at Number One or Number Two for the year, a few of them didn't get that high. But ALL of them are among my favorite movies. It was the same way with Hitchcock.

That's why I said I didn't rank Topaz in 1969 -- there were too many OTHER 1969 movies I liked better(The Wild Bunch, True Grit, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Butch Cassidy and yes, Hello Dolly and Paint Your Wagon) but...my "family memory" of seeing Topaz at Christmas in a giant Palace theater whose lobby had been turned into a "Htichcock shrine"...well, thats one of the best Hitchcock EXPERIENCES in my life. Its just that I can't rank Topaz that high.

Or Kill Bill 1. Or Kill Bill 2. Or Death Proof.

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I have decided to here -- in an OT vein as we have been graciously alllowed here on this page -- to say a few things in FAVOR of QT even as he seems to be inviting invective. (QT is a guy who seems to have drawn haters equal to his fans in this internet era; Hitchcock had haters too but it was never like THIS.)
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Oh yeah, he's always been that way, it seems. A very divisive filmmaker and his brash manner doesn't help. For me, it's a case of really enjoying the man's films while not caring for the man himself. I find him annoying in interviews and podcasts, though he is undeniably passionate about film and a talented creator.
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No, what I go for with QT is...his dialogue. His "talk scenes." They are SO great, so entertaining, so unique. And I mean like almost ALL of them.
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Oh without a doubt. I love the dialogue in his movies.

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Oh yeah, he's always been that way, it seems. A very divisive filmmaker and his brash manner doesn't help.

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One video interview I HATED with QT was where the young interviewer was trying to challenge him on something and he said something like 'I'm shutting you down right now. .Understand something..your job is to sit here and help me sell my movie. Nothing more."

This versus Hitchcock being confronted while promoting North by Northwest by French journalists saying "the color seemed bad" during the Mount Rushmore sequence("Well, that happens in the lab," Hitchcock replied) or an interview where a "killer journo" named Orianna Fallaci went about 10 rounds with Hitchcock -- he didn't expect it, but he stayed and fought back all the way. QT? "I'm shutting you down...you're here to sell my movie." Well, a new generation is pretty defensive, I guess.

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For me, it's a case of really enjoying the man's films while not caring for the man himself. I find him annoying in interviews and podcasts,

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A distinctly weird voice and manner...OK? (That's HIS phrase..."OK?")

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though he is undeniably passionate about film and a talented creator.
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Well, I say with ALL these famous people , they earned their way up, spent time in the trenches, got rejected...its not EASY to make it in Hollywood, even if you ARE talented. And that's what drives them nuts about critics and about US. "YOU didn't do what I haad to do to make it and YOU don't have my talent." So they have a love-hate relationship with all of us. QT just wears it more on his sleeve.

And a WRITER gets more respect from me than an actor or a director, honestly, IF they really have the talent. "No script, no movie."

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he is framed for murder and barrister lawyer Audrey must save him by ...going undercover as a London hooker?!
OMG, I love AH and think she was a pretty good actor as well as a great star, but this (near-ludicrous) part sounds like it needs a real acting virtuoso-type - someone like Davis or Stanwyck back in the day or their modern heirs such as Mirren, Huppert, Blanchett, maybe Streep or Theron or Winslett or Weaver. I think it's very good thing that this project fell apart and not just because it led Hitch to pick up Psycho!

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And the thing with Kubrick is that he tended to take longer and longer between projects because of research or-- as with Hitchcock-- doing pre-production on certain projects that didn't pan out (Napoleon and The Aryan Papers being two-- even Eyes Wide Shut had been percolating for decades-- at one point with Steve Martin in consideration for lead, if I remember correctly). It's not like Kubrick was like, "I'm only making a few films for quality purposes." He seemed to be very particular about which projects he was going to commit to.

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And the thing with Kubrick is that he tended to take longer and longer between projects because of research or-- as with Hitchcock-- doing pre-production on certain projects that didn't pan out (Napoleon and The Aryan Papers being two-- even Eyes Wide Shut had been percolating for decades-- at one point with Steve Martin in consideration for lead, if I remember correctly).

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...and I could never see Steve Martin in that sexualized a role, frankly. But maybe.
(Not that Cruise has much sex in the movie at all, but he is surrounded by it.)

I forgot a BIG project that Hitchcock started and rejected, and the literally monumental film that replaced it.

Hitchcock was hired to make ONE movie for MGM around 1958. From a book called "The Wreck of the Mary Deare." He hired Ernest Lehman to write it and they struggled with it, and -- Hitchcock decided "oh, let's drop that project and write something from scractch." From SCRATCH. And Lehman said "how about the Hitchocck picture to end all Hitchcock pictures," and Hitchcock said "I always wanted to do a chase on Mount Rushmore" and...you know. But what's amazing is how North by Northwest was simply "built from the ground up"(like a QT original screenplay I guess) Hitch had Mount Rushmore and story idea to offer Lehman(about a decoy nonexistent spy, sold to Hitchcock for $1000 from a newspaperman.) They borrowed from The 39 Steps and Saboteur and..together and apart, Hitchocck and Lehman cooked up North by Northwest.

I went to a Q and A with Ernest Lehman in the 70's and he pointed out that originally, Mount Rushmore was a "non-final" chase to end only the SECOND ACT. Then the movie headed to the new state of Alaska for a climax involving a light plane chase and a TIDAL WAVE. Hitch and Lehman went overboard trying to conceive this "super-thriller." They came to their senses and ended the story at Rushmore.

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And "Mary Deare" got made with Gary Cooper(whom Hitch always wanted to work with) and Charlton Heston. A macho man movie. And...just OK. I saw it.

Imagine: Hitchcock starts work on The Wreck of the Mary Deare, scuttles it and makes North by Northwest instead.

Imagine: Hitchcock starts work on No Bail for the Judge(with Audrey Hepburn), scuttles it, and makes Psycho instead.

Did this guy catch the luck, or what?

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It's not like Kubrick was like, "I'm only making a few films for quality purposes." He seemed to be very particular about which projects he was going to commit to.

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I suppose that's a good and realistic "alternative theory" about why Kubrick took so long between movies. I haven't read enough about him to know if he liked to "sit around all day" for months on end and THEN start working on movies or if he was ALWAYS working on movies -- research, scripting, false starts, discarded projects.

Think of the luxury afforded him by Warner Brothers(where he ended up from Clockwork Orange on): they were always standing by to greenlight a Kubrick movie and made no demands on him to make anything until he was ready; and then they gave him literally all the time in the world to SHOOT the movie. Also, Kubrick must have been comfortable enough in his wealth over time to just live in his England house(a mansion?) and not WORRY about money. (A wish for us all.) Some directors would take or make movies "because they needed to pay the mortgage." Not Kubrick.

Wasn't Terrence Malick another director who waited years and years to make films?

And QTs no slouch in delays. It was three long years from Pulp Fiction to Jackie Brown. And then SIX longer years from Jackie Brown to Kill Bill 1 and 2. Then 4 years to Death Proof. Then 3 year intervals to Inglorious Basterds, Django, and The Hateful Eight. Then four to Hollywood. And now...we are almost five years after Hollywood and it will likely be six -- or more -- til we get the final film.

Oh well...

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ElizabethJoestar, you raise an interesting point here: when DOES a director's "late period" begin?
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I feel like everyone defines it differently, so it's hard to measure. At least with hitchcock, PSYCHO tends to be the dividing line between Hitchcock in his prime and late period Hitchcock. Wilder is a bit trickier. I think THE APARTMENT is the perfect point, for all the reasons you spelled out.
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BOTH directors probably peaked in 1960...everything they made after that (even The Birds and Frenzy for Hitchcock; even Irma La Douce for Wilder) wasn't really "of its time." So..QT is right?

No...QT is WRONG. ALL of those movies expressed their directors' visions with continuing power --I'd say ALL of those movies EXCEPT Buddy Buddy was worthwhile in SOME way.
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Yes, even the lesser films are of interest from either of these guys. As boring as I find TOPAZ, it has some wonderful sequences. Same with FEDORA, which has a gothic camp quality and cynical twist I find interesting... though it generally feels like warmed over SUNSET BLVD, unfortunately. But still, these aren't worthless films by any stretch.

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I am not versed in "foreign films"(anything other than American studio and indie product) but I wouldl guess that "foreigers" like Kurosawa and many European directors had the latitide, financial support, and "low stakes" to keep making great work into old age.
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Kurosawa is an interesting case. He didn't have much financial support at all in the late 60s/early 70s, when his career went into a slump. He tried working on a Hollywood production, TORA! TORA! TORA!, but this ended badly, with Kurosawa directing the Japanese portions of the film for only a few weeks before being more or less fired from the project, his footage entirely scrapped. In 1970, one of his films flopped. He suffered from poor mental health and tried killing himself in 1971. Luckily, he survived, though his next few films were made with support from abroad rather than his native Japan. DERSU UZALA was technically a Soviet funded film and his 1980 KAGEMUSHA was funded by Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, both big Kurosawa fans who were shocked to find the director struggling to get funding for future projects. KAGEMUSHA's international success helped Kurosawa going forward, and he was able to make some of his most striking work in his last years.
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Ford and Hawks and Capra (if not Hitchcock) were faced with animosity from New Hollywood. Scorsese and Spielberg are embraced by TODAY's Hollywood, and Spielberg is so megarich that nobody CAN oppose him.
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True, though Spielberg's name on a project no longer guarantees box office sadly, even though he's still a strong filmmaker. I watched his WEST SIDE STORY remake the other night and was surprised by how much I enjoyed it. He's adept at directing musical numbers and I'm sad he probably will never get the chance to do another, due to the film's poor box office and his own age.

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I despise QT's idea that all artists are subject to "diminishing returns."
That's been my basic line about QT's views on this topic too. Ultimately there's age-ism involved here: QT has definitely got in his head the idea that directing movies after you're about 60 (the age when Hitch made Psycho and Wilder made The Fortune Cookie) is a bad idea and he's often used the phrase 'limp dick' to characterize his point. Allow some slippage for better health care etc. and perhaps the moral QT wants to draw is that once you are 60 you should be looking to wrap up your directing career with a final film within the next few years. QT is currently 61.

As personal policy there's nothing wrong with that. For example, it seems to have worked out well for Ingmar Bergman. His final film was Fanny and Alexander (1982), a masterpiece, when he was 64, and he busied himself for the next 25 years with writing scripts for a bunch of people including his son to direct, as well as directing lots of theater and TV (some of which even got theatrical releases around the world, most notably Saraband (2003)).

But taken as a general prescription QT's policy seems spectacularly stupid, and you don't have to 'go foreign' to see this. Altman was 60 in 1985. His big 'comeback' film, The Player (1992), didn't drop until he was 67, and his post-75 output included Gosford Park, The Company, and Prairie Home Companion, all very good to excellent. Sure, Altman made some pretty bad movies all though his career, including a final down period after Short Cuts and before Gosford Park, but, *my* policy, who cares about those (bad stuff just gets forgotten about)? I *need* (the world needs) the eggs of his good ones right up to the end.

But maybe this doesn't matter. QT may be making a mistake to try to tie off his directing career the way Bergman did, but like Bergman he plans to stay creatively active so any diamonds he later turns up will make it into the world somehow.

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I despise QT's idea that all artists are subject to "diminishing returns."

That's been my basic line about QT's views on this topic too. Ultimately there's age-ism involved here: QT has definitely got in his head the idea that directing movies after you're about 60 (the age when Hitch made Psycho and Wilder made The Fortune Cookie) is a bad idea

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I think, yet again, that QT seems to have "locked in" on a handful of American directors who sort of ran out of gas in the 60s and 70s and..in focussing on about 20%of directors(Hitchcock, Ford, Hawks, and Wilder were true giants in their time) forgot about the other 80 percent.of directors

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and he's often used the phrase 'limp dick' to characterize his point.

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There is 1972 movie about a US Senator race in California called "The Candidate." At a certain point in the story, Young Candidate" Robert Redford's handlers tell him that the hidden message of his campaign against the incumbent, a much older but handsome man played by Don Porter(TV suave) should be: "the other guy can't get it up." Redford reacts with distaste -- "that's what you think, huh?" -- but it remains a very tough gauge of male power the extent to which physiology can affect potence as a politician. Or a movie director. (And hey...Viagara!)

So you've got QT insulting people about age AND sexual prowess. Nice going there!

(By the way, I catalogued all the QT movies I LOVE, and WHY I love them -- to counteract the fact that in his interviews, he gives every reason to REJECT those movies. I can't. The writing is too special, the films are too entertaining even as they have a very brutal undertow to them_

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Allow some slippage for better health care etc. and perhaps the moral QT wants to draw is that once you are 60 you should be looking to wrap up your directing career with a final film within the next few years. QT is currently 61.

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Well, only he knows how he feels physically now that he is that age.

I think that Clint Eastwood's career of dircting across his 70s, 80s and into his 90s actually reveals something a bit embarrassing: how EASY movie directing may well be.

You sit in a chair. You watch OTHER people light the set, take on the camera work, ACT . Usually, someone ELSE wrote the script. You say action. You say cut. You're done.

I will never forget some critic's stray line in a column around 1973 that I read. The auteur era was peaking -- not only with old masters like Hitchcock and Ford, but a TON of "new auteurs" like Coppola, Friedkin, Bogdo and a young Marty Scorsese.

And this critic wrote "Exactly how hard IS it to direct a movie, anyway? You photograph some actors and some scenery."

Maybe yes, maybe no. But if you can do it at 90...not THAT hard.

I recall seeing Eastwood's averted-airline-disaster movie "Sully" a few years back(starring Tom Hanks in white hair.) The film had many impressive CGI shots of a plane crashing(in a dream) and of course, the crash in the Hudson River that everyone survived and I thought -- "did Clint Eastwood REALLY direct these CGI action sequences?" No he probably just signed off on the Silicon Valley work.

OK. that's the "directing isn't that hard" argument. But on the other hand clearly great directors have directed GREAT films by properly vetting the script, casting right, working with actors well, overseeing(if you are Hitchocck, Scorsese, or DePalma) some great shots and camera movements -- it IS a profession that can create popular art for the ages and maybe it IS good to be younger and healthier when you do it.

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QT has definitely got in his head the idea that directing movies after you're about 60 (the age when Hitch made Psycho and Wilder made The Fortune Cookie) is a bad idea

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Revisiting that phrase from a different angle.

Writer-director Cameron Crowe(Jerry McGuire, Almost Famous) tried to do a "Hitchocck/Truffaut" book with his favorite writer-director, Billy Wilder. It was OK, but Wilder was much older than Hitchcock when he did the interviews and hence a lot less sharp in memory and phrasing.

Still I remember Wiilder saying of The Fortune Cookie: "That was my the beginning of my downfall, right there.I was downhill from there."

The year was 1966. The same year Hitchcock made Torn Curtain which was sort of HIS downfall start. The Fortune Cookie won an Oscar (Supporting) for Walter Matthau. Torn Curtain had big stars Paul Newman and Julie Andrews. And the NEXT movies that Wilder and Hitchcock made (Sherlock Holmes/Topaz) did NOT have major stars and indeed portended some decline(but not entire decline. There are fine scenes in Sherlock Holmes and in Topaz, and fine scores for both.)

What's more impressive to me is that both Hitchcock and Wilder kept getting funding for movies. It was easier for Hitchcock: Lew Wasserman protected Hitchcock at Universal and funding was allways available for a film --IF Wasserman greenlighted the idea and Hitchcock kept the budget low. Wilder had to struggle -- it was, indeed, Lew Wasserman who ENDED a Universal contract with Billy Wilder after The Front Page(which, I've read, actually made some money.)

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But here is the interesting thing I read: in Billy Wilder's case, a famous but aging producer named Walter Mirsch(of The Mirsch Brothers and The Mirsch Corporation which had produced big movies like West Side Story and In the Heat of the Night) NEEDED Billy Wilder to keep making movies --whether good or bad -- so as to pick up a "producer's fee" and pay the mortgage. In short, these aging directors in decline were "kept afloat" and making movies by guys who NEEDED them to make movies so...they could earn fees themselves.

But I guess Buddy Buddy -- after Fedora and The Front Page and Avanti and Sherlock Holmes -- was finally a "last straw" and Billy Wilder never got greenlighted again.

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But taken as a general prescription QT's policy seems spectacularly stupid, and you don't have to 'go foreign' to see this.

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Interesting: the "don't have to go foreign" angle, swanstep. On the one hand...I guess not. On the other , I guess I was just sort of wondering if it is harder to survive in the cutthroat world of big budget Hollywood.

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Altman was 60 in 1985. His big 'comeback' film, The Player (1992), didn't drop until he was 67, and his post-75 output included Gosford Park, The Company, and Prairie Home Companion, all very good to excellent. Sure, Altman made some pretty bad movies all though his career, including a final down period after Short Cuts and before Gosford Park, but, *my* policy, who cares about those (bad stuff just gets forgotten about)? I *need* (the world needs) the eggs of his good ones right up to the end.

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Yes, but this raises another point: for the most part, ALL of Altman's movies -- less the wide-in-scope Nashville and maybe, MASH - -were small scale, actor-driven movies, "little movies" in production difficulty.

I like to note that the entire movie of Frenzy was probably easier for Hitchcock to direct in 1972 than just the ten-minute Albert Hall sequence in Man Who Knew Too Much '56. He made The Man Who Knew Too Much '56 when he was a younger man and had the stamina to supervise such an intricate sequence. You can throw in the crop duster sequence and the Rushmore sequence (TWO sequences) in NXNW for the same kind of hard work and youthful energy to get those done (and Hitch had to go on location, outdoors to get the crop duster scene on film.)

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Hitchcock seems to have been attracted to Frenzy because its three central set-pieces were small scale and indoors: an office(the murder of Brenda Blaney), a stairwell(the unseen murder of Babs Milligan -- involving a moving camera shot LESS strenuous than the hanging camera following Tony Perkins up the stairs in Psycho) and then -- in a real trick -- an entire sequence inside the storage area of a POTATO TRUCK -- really an enclosed platform on a sound stage.

See, Hitchcock VISIBLY declined from the "big sequences" in Strangers on a TRain(berserk carousel) , The Man Who Knew Too Much 56(Albert Hall), NXNW and..The Birds to.. the minimalism of Frenzy.

And that's noticable . Robert Altman making small scale actors' movies over the decades had less to lose.

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But maybe this doesn't matter. QT may be making a mistake to try to tie off his directing career the way Bergman did, but like Bergman he plans to stay creatively active so any diamonds he later turns up will make it into the world somehow.

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We shall see. If QT writes plays..they won't be as widely seen as his movies. But maybe someone ELSE will buy those plays to make into movies?

His novel of "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" was a fun, different read. He re-wrote entire scenes(Al Pacino's agent warns Rick Dalton about playing TV heavies in HIS OFFICE, not at Musso and Frank's over lunch), added a bunch of new scenes and(as I've noted before) give's Brad Pitt's
Cliff Booth a much more brutal and displeasing back story(a few years as a pimp in Paris, for instance -- as if QT is just riffing on the most outrageous thing he could think of.)

Though QT isn't that much younger than me, I suppose younger people than me will get to see QT take his career to its full closure and then his death. He's not THAT young anymore, so once he makes his "final movie," he better get cracking on those books, plays and TV episodes!

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I think, yet again, that QT seems to have "locked in" on a handful of American directors who sort of ran out of gas in the 60s and 70s
I suspect that that's what happened too, and, to be fair to QT, if you're a big fan of some director (or other artist) to see them suddenly producing genuinely inferior work is shocking, galling, gutting, traumatizing, a betrayal, pick your epithet. My biggest experience of this kind (and from the same period that seems to have burned QT) was with Stanley Donen. As a budding film buff I worshipped Donen but then I got to see my first hot-off-the presses Donen film: Saturn 3 (an ugly, plodding, embarassment). I vividly remember the feeling of a kind of hour-long, full-body-cringe in the cinema. You don't forget that sort of experience. As a result, I couldn't bring myself to pay money for Donen's final film a few years later, 'Blame it on Rio', notwithstanding that it had one of my fave actors, Michael Caine as lead. I did catch BIOR on vhs a few years later, however, and, my God it was awful. While BIOR was more enjoyable and certainly more technically competent than Saturn 3 it was evidently trying to be a kind of late-addition to the wave of middle-aged guy sex-comedies that began with '10' only with a downshift of lust to high-school age/daughters. There's some undeniably luscious teen nudity but it all leaves you feeling pretty icky (and it makes the genuine teen sex-comedies that were around at the time seem pretty innocent by comparison). And if you're there for Donen and Caine you can't help thinking something along the lines of 'What are we doing here?' and 'Thank god I didn't pay real money for this'.

Donen lived for another 30+ years after these twin debacles (most of that happily cohabiting with my ideal woman, Elaine May). It's sad in a way that he didn't direct again except a little TV, but I'm pretty sure that most of Donen's biggest fans were glad that there were no more S3s or BIORs.

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I think, yet again, that QT seems to have "locked in" on a handful of American directors who sort of ran out of gas in the 60s and 70s

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I suspect that that's what happened too, and, to be fair to QT, if you're a big fan of some director (or other artist) to see them suddenly producing genuinely inferior work is shocking, galling, gutting, traumatizing, a betrayal, pick your epithet.

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Take Howard Hawks. His Rio Bravo of 1959 is truly classic in a great way: a laid back, very warm, very upbeat "hang out movie" that takes time to take its Western plot seriously, but plays perhaps better as a buddy comedy(with a buddy woman, Angie Dickinson.) 8 years later, Hawks pretty famously reworked El Dorado into Rio Bravo remake. John Wayne with Robert Mitchum instead of Dean Martin. James Caan instead of Ricky Nelson. Arthur Hunnicutt instead of Walter Brennan -- and it worked AGAIN (but a little more soundstagey, a little less "big.")

Then 3 years later -- Rio Lobo. Wayne again, but the studio wouldn't pay for another star this time. Weirdly, they cast a Mexican actor as a "former Rebel" after the Civil War, and it just didn't work, and the movie seemed(to me at the time I saw it in 1970) terribly basic and derivative. Third time WASN'T a charm. That was Hawks final movie. 1970. Two years before Hitchcock did Frenzy -- with Family Plot 6 years away, too.

One thing I read: Working on Rio Lobo, the aged Hawks lost track of the days (as we all do sometimes) and thought it was Saturday so went to hang out by his pool. But it was really a WEEK DAY ,and the entire cast and crew of Rio Lobo was waiting for Hawks to show.

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My biggest experience of this kind (and from the same period that seems to have burned QT) was with Stanley Donen. As a budding film buff I worshipped Donen but then I got to see my first hot-off-the presses Donen film: Saturn 3 (an ugly, plodding, embarassment). I vividly remember the feeling of a kind of hour-long, full-body-cringe in the cinema. You don't forget that sort of experience.

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Stanley Donen is a great example of QT's theory WORKING. I suppose it is a hit or miss theory -- and having just seen some passionate verbiage AGAINST QT's theory, I won't wallow in the "I told you so" rightness of Donen's career PROVING QT's theory. Perhaps the issue is: "sometimes directors can keep going strong to all ages -- sometimes they cannot."

I think the hidden reason taht modernly directors CAN go on longer -- other than my health rationale -- is they are surrounded by professionals who can make movies LOOK and SOUND great, by CGI that can do anything...its as if a modern movie is a perfectly made contraption which can make ANY director, ANY age, look at least competant.

Stanley Donen was famous for musicals -- co-directed on key occasions. Singin' in the Rain is the big one (with Gene Kelly as co-director and star.) Damn Yankees -- my favorite of 1958 --(with George Abbott) is another. (I'll concede Rain as the much more important classic than Damn Yankees but my Number One for 1952 is High Noon; Singin' in the Rain's probably Number Two that year.)

My favorite Donen movie -- which I have downgraded from Number One to Number Two for 1963 -- is Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn in "the greatest Hitchcock movie Hitchcock never made" -- Charade. (To which Donen angrily replied in the press: "Who says only Alfred Hitchcock can make a mystery-suspense picture?" )In the same interview, Donen noted that he liked North by Northwest ONLY as far as the auction scene. He felt all the Rushmore business went on too long. Nah.

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Charade had a great Peter Stone script and some great stars-to-be supporting Grant and Hepburn: Walter Matthau(soon to be a star), James Coburn(soon to be a slightly lesser star than Matthau), George Kennedy(soon to win an Oscar and do Airport movies.) Actually, Matthau, Coburn AND Kennedy all won Supporting Actor Oscars. (And I've moved Mad Mad World -- my favorite movie of all time as a kid -- to the Number One of 1963 slot. An era long gone. Jonathan Winters!)

Anyway, came the 70's, fond memories of Donen's past work indeed started to be betrayed. For a 1975 period action movie called "Lucky Lady," Donen had Gene Hackman and Burt Reynolds as "buddy stars" with briefly -hot(at the box office) Liza Minnelli in the female lead. It was a jinxed production. George Segal walked off the picture so Hackman had to be paid BIG bucks to come in quickly. The ending was re-shot(Hackman and Reynolds got killed in the original script and that WAS filmed, but they re-shot and brought the boys back to life..) Spielberg, coming off "Jaws" warned Donen not to make "Lucky Lady" at sea, but...no such luck. And frankly, Ann-Margret should have played Minnelli's sexpot role.

But "Lucky Lady" was Singin in the Rain compared to Saturn 3. Just as I have great memories of the movies I LOVED on first viewing, I have harsh memories of a movie like Saturn 3 that I hated on first sight. I recall that aging macho man Kirk Douglas looked too emaciated and saggy(including a naked butt scene) to be bedding sexy co-star Farrah Fawcett(Majors?) I remember an incoherent SciFi plot and terrible production values(I DON"T remember Harvey Keitel in it, but I guess he was.)

And I remember this specific disappointment: The title "Saturn 3" was meant by the studio to suggest a sequel of sorts to the surprise hit "Capricorn One" of 1978. I LOVED Capricorn One for what it was: a non-violent throwback thriller in the North by Northwest tradition, a lot of exciting fun. Saturn 3 brought NONE of that back.

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s a result, I couldn't bring myself to pay money for Donen's final film a few years later, 'Blame it on Rio', notwithstanding that it had one of my fave actors, Michael Caine as lead. I did catch BIOR on vhs a few years later, however, and, my God it was awful.

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Yeah. Michael Caine is one of my favorite actors. He's literally been around in movies for most of my life. I saw Zulu(1964) ON RELEASE. At the drive-in with family. And then we all went to The Ipcress File the next year. I was forbidden to see "Alfie" but my "Caine love" was launched and there he's been across the 60's, the 70's(where he made his great R-rated movie Get Carter), the 80's(where he hung in and won his first Oscasr) the 90s(where he won his second Oscar) the 21st Century (where he got famous as Alfred in Batman movies AND worked with Batman director Chris Nolan all the time in other pictures, as a "lucky charm.".)

Caine is 90 now, yes? He finished one more movie but when he had to back out of Nolan's "Oppenheimer"("Enough's enough," Caine joked to the press) I figured retirement was imminent.

What a career. But it certainly has some bad movies in it. As Caine said at some event "I made all those bad movies for high pay so I could make good movies for free." Jaws 4: The Revenge is the worst I've seen, but I understand Caine also played the bad guy in a Steven Segal movie. That must have been bad.

Which brings us to Blame it On Rio...

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swanstep wrote:

While BIOR was more enjoyable and certainly more technically competent than Saturn 3

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Yes to both...including that "more enjoyable" part. That's what makes BIOR kind of dangerous. Caine IS a great farceur and so was the comic actor playing his more macho friend , Joe Bologna(who was vetoed as Spielberg's first choice for the Roy Scheider role in Jaws.)

The "joke" of Caine having a sexual affair with his best friend's Bologna's daughter and trying to hide it WAS funny, 'cmon...it was. But of course, the age thing created issues.

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it was evidently trying to be a kind of late-addition to the wave of middle-aged guy sex-comedies that began with '10' only with a downshift of lust to high-school age/daughters.

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Note in passing: just as George Segal walked off Lucky Lady forcing Gene Hackman into his part, Segal ALSO walked off 10,..forcing Dudley Moore into his part and making Moore a star for awhile.
Those "walk offs," plus a drug problem, ended Segal's movie star career. as a leading man.

Meanwhile, yeah, I'm guess it got worse and worse to "downshift"(Hah) from the woman in these middle-aged crazy pictrures from being 20-something into a teenager but..ah...that young woman playing the object of Caine's affection? I mean...va va VOOM. This comedy drove a very hard bargain in its fantasy(for men at least): If Marilyn Monroe was a teenager( and a late-age teenager at that) well...and CAME ON to you like that? Well? I guess I'm saying that the actress was carefully chosen for her "adult sexuality" and the excellent Caine was chosen to "reduce the dirty old man factor" with his Nervous Nellie comedy performance and trademark charm(that Cockney accent allowed Caine to get away with a lot.).

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There's some undeniably luscious teen nudity

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Yes, pretty much exclusively (less some Rio beach extras) by the woman -- Michelle was her name -- cast to play the teen seductress.

Folks may forget that playing CAINE's daughter was -- young Demi Moore. But she wore her long tresses strategically over her breasts. It was the OTHER gal who went all the way.

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but it all leaves you feeling pretty icky (and it makes the genuine teen sex-comedies that were around at the time seem pretty innocent by comparison).

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That's the real issue, isn't it? This was a remake of a French film, I think and arguments could be made "When the French do it, its sophisticated and adult..when an American studio tries to do it with mainstream stars...its dirty."

---And if you're there for Donen and Caine you can't help thinking something along the lines of 'What are we doing here?' and 'Thank god I didn't pay real money for this'.

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I watched it- on cable -- indeed because of Caine and Donen -- two favorites over the years. And I certainly thought it was better than Saturn 3. And personally, I just LOVE bossa nova music(hello, Sergio Mendes) and I found the movie quite colorful to look at, with its beautiful beach locations. And hell, Valerie Harper ("Rhoda") showed up. She wouldn't be in a dirty movie, would she?

But damn, it sure instilled then, and instills NOW, some serious unwanted guilt over the nature of the plot. I mean, as the kids say, that young woman was HOT. (Plus, if memory serves, Caine and the 'adult teen" only did it ONCE...he kept fending her off of the rest of the movie.)

Was this Donen's last film? If so, at least he went out with something more adult and sophisticated than Lucky Lady or Saturn 3.

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Donen lived for another 30+ years after these twin debacles (most of that happily cohabiting with my ideal woman, Elaine May).

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Interestingly, before being with Elaine May, Donen was MARRIED to the much younger and extremely hot Yvette Mimieux (who advertised a TV movie called "Hit Lady" in a bikini around the time of the marriage.) I suppose with Yvette as an ex-wife, Donen saw nothing wrong with Blame it on Rio.

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It's sad in a way that he didn't direct again except a little TV, but I'm pretty sure that most of Donen's biggest fans were glad that there were no more S3s or BIORs.

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Well, that's a corollary to "QT's rule," isn't it? If/when they STOP making movies...no embarrassment. And unlike Hitchcock...who literally worked on a movie until less than a year from his death....both Donen and Billy Wilder lived on and enjoyed life for DECADES after making their final film. I guess each had made enough money to retire comfortably -- and with the lovely Elaine May for Donen?(I did not KNOW that - he must have had his charms.)

BTW, three years after the big success of Charade, Donen made ANOTHER "pseudo Hitchocck' movie" -- Arabesque. Like Charade , it had a great Henry Mancini thriller score(with a BETTER credit overture) and it also had two big stars -- Gregory Peck and Sophia Loren -- ALMOST in the Grant/Hepburn tradition. But the supporting cast wasn't as good as in Charade and the 1966 release "went psychedlic" and is hence more dated today. Still' Arabesque is a lot better than Lucky Lady, Saturn 3, or Blame it On Rio.

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Changing topic ever so slightly.... QT's thoughts on Dirty Harry (from his book Movie Speculations) are presented in full in the following video on youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wcGEUXyP6AE
QT's text is read not by QT himself but by an, in my view, impeccable, flabbergastingly accurate AI-simulation of QT. It really does sound *exactly* like QT doing an audio-book. I didn't notice any giveaways *at all* that this reading was a machine-product. Jesus. The tech has gotten so good now that, within six months at the outside (at least if there's no major new regulation), literally no human will ever physically record another audio book.

If you want to check this out, I'd recommend clicking the link above without delay. The legal issues around the tech used to make the vid as well as that tech's specific outputs are only just starting to be tested in court, but there is no guarantee that youtube/google won't take down stuff like this precautionarily. Maybe it'll stay up for a few days or even a week or two, but don't dilly-dally grasshopper!

Note that the same channel did the same thing only using actual QT reading audio about Point Blank and The Outfit about 4 months ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krQ3YfGX4AI

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We await the truly enterprising youtuber who will put together a couple more generative-ai technologies and produce a (i) seamless QT talking head to go with the AI-QT audio, and (ii) have one of the better AI-oracles (in my brief experience with it, Claude 3.5 writes about as well as I do) write the underlying text. We could then have AI-QT visibly opining on the details of almost any movie you like.

I should add that while Claude 3.5 has some performance issues, so it's still not nearly as smart as I'd like, it's so eloquent that it does clarify some of the future of AI. AI won't have to fight us to take over, rather it's just going to out-competence us so we'll gladly hand over the reigns to it (i.e., rather than to another person). Claude 3.5 would already I think easily toast both Biden and Trump if it was allowed on stage with those guys at a debate - it would transparently be much more coherent, sensible, knowledgeable, thoughtful, etc.. Some future Claude *will* be voted in as President by humans, and 'getting humans out of most high public offices' *will* be a political and economic rallying-cry of, I dunno, the 2050s. The future is coming up fast.

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