Quentin Tarantino - Tumblr Posts



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Favorite Movies 1/10: Reservoir Dogs (1992) dir. Quentin Tarantino

Behind the scenes of Kill Bill Vol 1
The Quentin Tarantino Connection
When he was a teenager in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Quentin Tarantino was by his own admission way into ā50s rockabilly music. āI was like the second coming of ElvisĀ Presley. I dyed my hair black. I wore it in a big ole pompadourā, he said in an interview. In his recent book Cinema Specualation, he writes about discussing cinema with his momās black friend Floyd, who was into blaxploitation. He loved hearing Floydās first-hand accounts of being a black Elvis fan back in the 1950s, also rebuking claims that the King of Rock ān Roll was racist. He even included āElvis impersonatorā in his early rĆ©sumĆ© and it must have paid out because he was cast as one in an episode of the sit-com The Golden Girls in 1988. Incidentally, Tarantino was born in Elvisā home state of Tennessee, where his mother is from, and as a kid was even left there for a year, describing his family as āhillbilly alcoholicsā.

Elvis often comes up in his movies. For example in a deleted scene of his now classic film Pulp Fiction (1994), Mia Wallace uses a hand-held video camera to interview Vincent Vega with either/or questions. She explains the game as follows: āThere are only two kinds of people in the world, Beatles people andĀ ElvisĀ peopleā. Mia has no doubts about Vincentās allegiance. With his swagger, callback to āGreaseā and dance moves, John Travolta is an Elvis man through and through.

Of course, Mia and Vincent later go a to ā50s themed diner called Jack Rabbit Slimās, where they have the famous twist contest dancing to Chuck Berryās āYou Never Can Tellā. The waiters are all dressed like dead stars from the 1950s, such as Marilyn Monroe, James Dean and Buddy Holly. Even though, as Vincent would put it, the King of Rock ānā Roll must have had the night off, in Miaās words āan Elvis man should love itā. Tarantino said that the design for the diner, where the guests sit in booths made like ā50s vintage cars and the dance floor looks like a tachometer, was partially inspired by the nightclub with race car motifs in one of Elvisā movies, Speedway (1968).

Tarantino references Elvis here and there in his work. In the novelization of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood that he wrote, for example, Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio in the movie) is described by his agent Marvin (Al Pacino) as having spent all his career ārunning pocket combs through his pompadourā, which by 1969 not even Elvis has anymore.
His biggest Elvis homage came very early on in his career, though. As a matter of fact, to finance what would become his first movie, Reservoir Dogs (1992), Tarantino auctioned a script that he had written, True Romance. It was made into a movie by Tony Scott and it ultimately came out in 1993. True Romance begins with a casual conversation about pop culture in the style of Mr. Brown with his infamous āLike a Virginā theory in Reservoir Dogs. Clarence (Christian Slater) is at a bar, chatting up a girl. Like Tarantino, Clarence prefers ā50s Elvis and praises Jailhouse Rock (the movie not the song) where Elvis was everything that rockabilly was about: āMean, surly, nasty, rudeā. And then, obviously interesting in picking up the girl, he continues: āElvis looked good. I mean, I aināt no fag, but Elvis was prettier than most women, you know. Most women. You know, I always said if I had to fuck a guy ā you know, I mean, had to ā if my life depended on it, Iād fuck Elvisā. Tarantino establishes the rules for his story right away: just like you have fantasies where you wish you were Elvis or as cool as Elvis, or you wish you could fuck him, this movie is a whole fantasy where you wish you were a hero who had a crazy adventure and passionate love story involving pimps, drugs and guns.

Clarence, an alter ego for the author, falls madly in love with Alabama (Patricia Arquette), a call girl. Clarence loves martial arts movies, comic books, hamburgers and Elvis, just like the film director. He also wears Elvis glasses and drives a purple Cadillac. Throughout the movie, Elvis pops up several times, in magazines, on T-shirts and on furniture or posters. The most striking appearance is obviously when Clarence sees Elvis (Val Kilmer) in the bathroom mirror, dressed in his gold lamĆ© suit but anachronistically sporting his ā70s big glasses. Elvis tells Clarence that he has to kill Alabamaās pimp, and there the adventure begins.

In Cinema Speculation, which sits halfway between film criticism and memoir, Tarantino goes back to Elvis several times. He writes that Elvis could have been the biggest movie star of the 1960s, if it werenāt for Colonel Parkerās greediness and for the weight of his own enormous success in the music business. He even mentions excitedly that Elvis was considered for the role of Sundance in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) opposite Warren Beatty, before the roles went to Paul Newman and Robert Redford.
Tarantino has always took a liking for B movies, so it doesnāt come as a surprise to learn that heās not dismissive of Elvis movies as a whole and writes about a few of them in detail. He considers Flaming Star (1960), for instance, to be āa truly great fifties Western, and maybe the most brutally violent American western of its era.ā According to him, the film director, Don Siegel, who would go on to direct Dirty Harry (1971), was a master when it came to film fistfights and chase sequences. This was because of his background in editing and his penchant for violence. Tarantino also praises Don Siegelās unexpected use of shocking bouts of violence, of which there are several in Flaming Star. His protagonists, including Elvisā Pacer, were often at odds with the society they lived in, which reflected the way Siegel felt around film executives and producers. āPod peopleā is how he called them, in reference to his movie The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and in this category he included Elvisā nefarious manager, Colonel Tom Parker.

Tarantino recognizes that Elvis movies werenāt real movies but āElvIs moviesā, but heās a fan of Roustabout (1964) nevertheless. He describes it as: āa pretty entertaining little picture chock-full of cool elements, Elvis entering the movie on a motorcycleādressed head to toe in black leather [ā¦], a strongĀ Big ValleyĀ era Barbara Stanwyck as his colead, a one-line bit at the beginning by Raquel Welch, the best soundtrack of any of Elvisā color films, including a rarity for the King on filmāElvis singing a cover of somebody elseās hit, the Coastersā Little Egypt, and the only film where Elvis gets to demonstrate his Ed Parker-taught karate moves.ā Because of course Tarantino loves martial arts movies, just like Elvis did. And blaxploitation, hamburgers, comic books and being over the top. They would have been great friends.
Read here my previous posts on Elvis connections. So far Iāve written about Jimi Hendrix, Andy Warhol/Bob Dylan, the Clash and Jim Morrison.

FASTEST GUN IN THE WEST - Django Unchained (2018)










Love and Revenge of a mother for her daughter










iām so obsessed with this movie

"I'm gonna give you a little somethin' you can't take off."



George Clooney as Seth Gecko FROM DUSK TILL DAWN (1996)










Revenge is never a straight line. It's a forest, And like a forest it's easy to lose your wayā¦ To get lostā¦ To forget where you came in.
Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) dir. Quentin Tarantino
No, he doesn't...

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iām seeing yall worship t*rantinoās ass with his new movie and conveniently forgetting he spit on uma thurmanās face, choked her with a chain and nearly had her dead during a car scene because he didnāt want her to use a stunt double in kill bill







Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino, 2009)

āI used the word āangerā but I was more worried about crying, to tell you the truth,ā she says now. āI was not a groundbreaker on a story I knew to be true. So what you really saw was a person buying time.ā