The "basement bar shootout" is one of the best written and acted scenes in cinema imo. A masterclass in writing, acting and building up tension. Genius.
@@TheOctobersReact Congrats to the both of you. Not only for your reaction to the film, but even more so for the editing job you did. I saw that you uploaded this yesterday, but I held off watching it because it's personal for me. The Nazi's killed most of my family during the war. And in the last few years, I've had to watch the rise of white supremacy and hate in the US. all my best to the both of you. :❤
Agreed, it's my favorite scene in all of cinema. The suspense is very intense and the result is crazy. Everyone did a great job all around in this scene, especially the actor that played Col. Helstrom
Mrs. October was right on the money early in the reaction when she said that he was "charming", even though Mr. October didn't seem to agree with that choice of word. He exudes charisma and is absolutely terrifying because you can't understand his intentions.
I feel like even though I know pulp fiction is his greatest, his masterpiece, Inglorious Basterds will always be my favourite. It’s just such a good time
Kill Bill will always be his best to me. Although as they say in that movie, if you're going to compare a Hanzo sword (Tarantino movie), you compare it to every other sword in the world, wasn't made by Hattori Hanzo. Seven of his Nine official titles so far all have the right to contend as his best and/or THE best movie imo. With a record like his, it's all just amazing.
@@crimsontide9532 I came her to say just that. Django overtakes this one easily for me. I take Django over Pulp Fiction as well, Pulp Fiction as a plot doesn’t do much for me where as Django tells a full story and has better action imo
@@misterisak I’m in the minority but Hateful Eight might be my favorite of his. The thing with Tarantino is it’s so hard to pick your favorite/his best because they’re all so good.
Mrs. October nailed it though. One of the things Tarantino is great at is making charismatic villains. Landa is pure evil, but he makes you forget it for moments.
Charismatic villains are the absolute best. Its that one thing that makes them memorable. They are super rare as well, and even more rare to have been written well. Thankfully this is how a perfect villain should look like, right here. Film-makers and even creators from other mediums should be taking notes here.
The genius of Tarantino is how tells stories with details. Like watching Shoshana eat the creme (a type of food forbidden by Jewish law) was so stressful, even not knowing anything about what kind of food Jewish people can eat. 😐 So many hidden details, but also not so hidden!! 🤯 Happy October, Octobers!! 😅🎃👻
Bridget von Hammersmark is loosely inspired by Marlene Dietrich, who was an actual German movie star who left Nazi Germany and strongly supported the Allied cause. She donated money that helped people escape the Reich. Tarantino being Tarantino, he turns her into a femme fatale and gives her feet an entire scene.
Brad Pitt is actually from Oklahoma. Not saying his accent wasn’t over the top-it totally was and it worked, IMO-but he’s definitely not the California native he appears to be. Love the reactions! Excited for you guys to finish up the Tarantino films!
Guys, ngl. I'm German. But I'd like to believe that somewhere out there in the multiverse, a timeline exists, where this stuff actually HAPPENED.... 😅🤭
This reaction is gonna be so good Now I can’t wait for them to watch Django Unchained. It’s always a pleasure to watch people’s first reactions to both of Christoph Waltz roles.
Au revoir Shoshanna! Au revoir means goodbye, technically, but literally translated it also means: au “until” revoir “see again” Until I see you again Shoshanna!
@@MickeyStartravellerI think it has to do with his speech. He doesn’t really feel any animosity toward those he hunts. In a strange way it makes him more reprehensible because you know he doesn’t do what he does out of some misguided belief. He’s not one to fall for propaganda. It’s just a day at the office. The banality of evil.
@@krono5el So then why doesn't he? As I understand the order was to capture/kill the last jewish family, and Landa just abandoning the mission for no reason, feels weird. It feels like I'm missing something.
Originally Adam Sandler was going to play the Bear Jew, and I would have paid anything to see him go Happy Gilmour on an SS sergeants skull with a baseball bat.
@@TheOctobersReacthe wrote the part for Sandler after Adam had QT cameo as the blind priest in Little Nicky, but Sandler was filming Funny People at the time and couldn't do it. But watching it knowing that was Sandler's part, you can tell QT wrote that part for him.
No more than likely a test. Hans Landa main job is to hunt Jews. So he provides her with strudel & crème both not kosher, to see if she would have a negative reaction with eating it. He’s trying to see if she is a Jew hiding in plain sight.
When Landa tells the farmer "under new management there is always duplication", what he is saying is, "those other Germans were probably idiots, now watch how I work".
"I wish I knew what they were talking about..." The Germans dancing because the card was Mata Hari is a deep reference 😅 Mata Hari was a Dutch performer who spied for Germany during WW1 (and was 😵 in France), paralleling Bridget spying for England and getting shot (and later 😵) in France.
During the basement scene, the german soldiers in the background are playing the guessing game. One guy failed to guess he was Mata Hari. Mata Hari was a belly dancer? Exotic dancer? Executed as a german spy in the ww1 era. You notice one of his friends do a parody of a belly dance to tell him who it was, and he realises too late.
Y'all are the first channel that I've seen that realized that Shoshana and Marcel weren't going to survive the fire. Well done! Mrs October is right about Hans Landa. He's charming and charismatic and that's what makes him such an effective villain. Christoph Waltz definitely deserved his Oscar win. Absolutely enjoyed y'all's reactions!
@@TheOctobersReact I think its a different kind of fear when you know you are guilty of something or when you are hiding something. When it's your job , and this goes probably for the psychology profession as well, you end up being able to detect the different kinds of stress and fear through experience over time. And some people are simply more gifted than others to detect it and are better at it. Call it intuition, mind-readers or whatever, but these kind of people do exist. And many people are not really great at hiding those thoughts and emotions. And in this particular situation it was of course indeed terrifying. Christoph Waltz, legendary underrated actor, this is the moment that Tarantino realized he found one of the most perfect actors, for his movie style.
@@kobarsos82This is not true. People who study capable psychopaths are just as likely to be seduced by them. Their only saving grace is that they can check the signs in hindsight after some distance is built
Some of Tarantino’s actors over the years- 20. Kerry Washington 19. Don Johnson 18. Channing Tatum 17. Chris Tucker 16. Vic Rhames 15. Jamie Fox 14. Steve Buscemi 13. Margot Robbie 12. Uma Thurman 11. Mike Myers 10. Christopher Walken 9. Al Pacino 8. John Travolta 7. Kurt Russell 6. Bruce Willis 5. Christoph Waltz 4. Brad Pitt 3. Samuel L Jackson 2. Robert De Niro 1. Leonardo DiCaprio Tarantino is one of the most respected directors in Hollywood. He always gets the BEST actors.
Landa absolutely knew it was Shosanna right away. His favourite thing is playing with people so he orders her a glass of milk and also makes her eat the Strudel with cream which was because eating dairy with fat is against Kosher rules. My favourite scene is before the movie when Landa and Aldo both know the masquerade is blown but they keep it going anyway, Aldo because he has to and Landa because it's fun.
So in the scene with the cream, he absolutely remembers her. He messes with her by ordering the cream because at that time, cream was made with pigs fat so it wasnt kosher.
(1:02:48) This could happen at any time in history. It seems to me that as WWII passes from living memory, more and more people seem willing to ramp up the repulsion again. I've seen quite a few videos recently of young people learning about the Holocaust for the first time. It's Santayana's quote in action, and it's really depressing. Anyway, great reaction. I also enjoyed the discussion afterward. ✌🤘🖖
You should watch Four Rooms with Tim Roth. It’s an homage to the classic comedy The Bell Boy. Directed and written by four different directors, including Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez. Classic. Also don’t forget True Romance and Natural Born Killers. Written by Tarantino.
I think Landa knew who Shoshanna was at the restaurant, or at least had a suspicion that she was Jewish. The fact that he forced her to eat the strudel was a test, as in those days it would have been made with lard (pig's fat), which is non kosher and against Jewish religion to eat.
The milk during the lunch was absolutely intentional, Landa knew who she was and how she looked before he even went to that farm house. That scene has crazy layers though, the apple strudel is made with beef fat for the pastry, Jewish people following a Kosher diet can't mix meat and dairy. By adding cream it makes the dish not edible to Jewish people, it was a subtle act of psychological torture.
As a Frenchie, I am always always amazed at Christoph Waltz mastery of the language and how insanely funny he is in a language that is not his native one. And that's true for five fucking different languages. The man is a beast. Also... cannot not mention Daniel Bruhl's performance when it comes to languages there.
I counted four languages. And he doesn't actually speak all those languages, but he can act out a script after rehearsing and memorizing. It's nice, but I find it funny for someone to be so enthralled by that, as I've studied alongside literally hundreds of students who can speak more languages than him, and actually know the languages (somewhat), not just memorize scripts like him.
Quentin could not find an actor to play Col. Landa. He auditioned so many actors, and none of them could do the role the way he wanted. It was so bad that Quentin almost pulled the plug and stopped the production. Christoph Waltz auditioned at the last minute and because he was Austrian (and spoke German), and could passably speak French and Italian, Quentin cast him. As soon as the audition ended, Quentin was relieved he could make the film. This was Quentin's first film with Christoph...the second is Django Unchained. Both films earned Christoph the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. French actress Melanie Laurent played Shoshanna. After this, she made a few pretty good American films. Now You See Me, and Beginners are two of her biggest. Donny Donowitz, aka The Bear Jew, was played by Eli Roth. Roth has acted but is best known as a director of horror films like Hostel 1 & 2 and Cabin Fever, and he directed the recent Borderlands. Charlotte LaPaditte, the dairy farmer's eldest daughter in the film's first section, was played by Lea Seydoux, another French actress. Lea has been in several huge films, including Dune, Part 2, the James Bond films SPECTRE (which also stars Christoph Waltz) and No Time To Die, and Mission: Impossible 4. What got her noticed was a French coming-of-age lesbian love story called Blue Is the Warmest Color, which received the dreaded NC-17 for the American release, but also wowwed a lot of critics and filmgoers who saw it. She frequently models for many prominent fashion designers as well as in print ads. There are a couple of Tarantino veterans in the film who have had roles in other films: The voice on the radio who negotiates with Landa and then has a brief conversation with Aldo is Harvey Keitel, aka Mr. White, in Reservoir Dogs. The French woman who is a translator for Dr. Joseph Goebbels was played by Julie Dreyfus, aka Sophie Fatale, O-ren Ishii's lawyer in Kill Bill, Vol. 1.
A few weeks after Hitler got himself appointed Chancellor, one night, the Nazis set fire to the Reichstag building (where the parliament met), and the government blamed it on the Communists. During the war, German officers tried to kill Hitler with a bomb, but through some unfortunate events, he was only wounded (the movie Valkyrie is based on it).
Definietly my favourite Tarantino's movie. More tension than in majority of horrors. And the acting is SUPREME. Chris Waltz is something else. Love to hate him here
Frenchman here, btw, the German "three" with the fingers is also how we do it in France. I assume it's basically the European "three", because I've never seen anyone doing it like American people do.
The basement bar shootout. The German made him when he said "3 glasses" then stuck up his 3 fingers (pointer, middle and ring finger). Real Germans use, thumb, pointer and middle finger. Tarintino is a genius.
Had to chuckle when you said how amazing it was to you that life back in those days are not much different from life today. I was born in the early 50s and the thing that amazes me is that there were people alive who fought in the Civil War. The fire you were asking about may have been the 1933 Reichstag (German Parliament) fire.which was allegedly set by Nazis who blamed the communists in order to sieze complete power. As to people of color in Europe back then, the French didn't seem to have much of a prejudice against them but the Nazis of course saw them as a subservient and inferior class and Tarantino depicts them accordingly in this movie. I don't believe though that they were incarcerated in any of the death camps. The Nazis were too busy at the time killing all the Jews and the Gypsies and the Jehovah Witnesses and the Catholics and the communists and the gays and the invalids and those that they saw as the greatest immediate threats. No doubt they would have gone after them however once they'd finished off those aforementioned groups.
"Black Panther and Age of Ultron" ...did you mean Captain America: Civil War and Falcon and Winter Soldier? Other than that, this is an amazong movie. Its classic Tarantino.
Im Polish Slav..no love for Hitler whatsoever.excellent movie,, Christophe is such an incredible actor... Total Nazi in this movie.. total anti Nazi in Django..🔥🤘👍 great reaction y'all.
The clue in the bar scene that the guy wasn't really German was how he ordered the three beers. Germans use their thumb, pointer, and middle finger for three. The thumb is one.
The guy who is giving a briefing on operation Kino, to young magento, was Mike Meyers, Austin Powers himself. And he was talking to Michael Fasbender, young Magneto.
Dude sitting next to the piano wearing the bowtie is supposed to be Winston Churchill. I keep waiting for reactors to notice this, but they never seem to
A movie about a group of Jewish Nazi killers in WWII? What's not to like?! Seriously, though, this is the film that took Tarantino's game to that next level.
You absolutely need to watch Band of Brothers. It’s an amazing series that puts you in the shoes of the parachute infantry soldiers in WWII. Every thing about it is a masterpiece of storytelling and film making and on top of that it’s a true story that does an amazing job at accurately telling the men’s story. Please don’t take this wrong but the education system really doesn’t do a good job at teaching history in general so most everyone tends to think they know more about history especially relatively recent US history when they graduate until they actually start reading and watching things about it on their own time. Things like WWII are just too big a scale and to intricate with way too many different perspectives to be taught in detail in an hour long history class in four years of high school even if the entire curriculum of those four years was just WWII it probably wouldn’t come close to explaining it all in all parts of both theaters of war during that time.
Great movie reaction as usual. I see you guys recognize the actor that played young Magneto, but did you guys recognize Mike Myers as General Ed Fenech? He was the one that sent Lt. Hicox's undercover to meet the Inglorious Bastards. He usually plays Austin Powers and Dr Evil in the movie Austin Powers. His character in Inglorious Bastards basically reminded you of a cross between. the two. 😂🤣
Its definitely Tarantinos best work as far as quality. I always thought this was one of his most ambitious (this and django). The one thing that does remain true with all his movies though is his dialogue. The man can have a 20 minute scene of 2 people talking and it's captivating.
59:00 - Kurt Russel's scream from Death Proof! P.S. Filming the theater fire scene ended up being incredibly dangerous. The fire grew faster and much larger than planned, and had they kept filming another 15 seconds the stage that the cast and crew were on to film the scene would have collapsed, resulting in many lives lost.
Its already been said, but i love Christoph Waltz's performance as well. He actually is multilingual speaking English, German, French and i believe some Romansh as well. Quite impressive.
2 more early early Quentin movies that he has had some hand in either writing, producing or directing.. please react to: True Romance & From Dusk til Dawn. Both entertaining and amazingly unique movies. Guarantee you both will love them. You can even watch Dusk til Dawn for Halloween. You won't be disappointed. No poll needed 😉💯💛🙏
The man you know as the "Bear Jew", Eli Roth is also a film director. Please check out his Horror film, Clown. A very fitting selection for October viewing. And you would be the FIRST reactors to do so.
27:35 ... the music that kicks in at that mark when Landa arrives is takes from an 80s supernatural horror film called "The Entity". In that movie,the same soundtrack plays when horrible things happen to the main female character,when she gets attacked by an invisible entity.
To me, this is the start of Tarantino's "mature phase". What I mean is, his films are more about the dialogue and characters now, then ultra-violence. Not that his earlier work wasn't per se, but from here he took it to the next level imo. These films are more like plays on a stage. The dialogue and performances are off the chart. Christoph Waltz is INCREDIBLE in this. Acting in French, English, Germany AND Italian fluently. Melanie Laurent is also fantastic. Her story with Daniel Bruhl (who is also an outstanding actor), is amazing. I can talk for hours about this film. This, Hateful 8 and OUATIH are ALL masterpieces imo. (OUATIH is my personal fav Tarantino).
On another channel I repeated what I overheard from a veteran who said in Germany if you are in crowded noisy tavern and want one beer, just give a thumbs up. If you hold up your index finger, it will be counted as two. Someone commented who said he was German and said that was not true. I figure this may be a generational thing, as the guy I first overheard this from was a Boomer. Maybe a regional thing, not sure. I just know I had no reason to believe vet, who I knew, was pulling anyone's leg.
The "basement bar shootout" is one of the best written and acted scenes in cinema imo. A masterclass in writing, acting and building up tension. Genius.
That part was awesome. I had a lot of copyright issues during that scene. That’s why I didn’t leave as much as I wanted to.
@@TheOctobersReact Congrats to the both of you. Not only for your reaction to the film, but even more so for the editing job you did. I saw that you uploaded this yesterday, but I held off watching it because it's personal for me. The Nazi's killed most of my family during the war. And in the last few years, I've had to watch the rise of white supremacy and hate in the US. all my best to the both of you. :❤
Agreed, it's my favorite scene in all of cinema. The suspense is very intense and the result is crazy. Everyone did a great job all around in this scene, especially the actor that played Col. Helstrom
and camera work too the whole direction of the scene is perfect they had us study it in film class it truly will be studied for decades to come
@@IamCaptainInsano 100% agree. His performance is excellent.
The performance of Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa, is one of the greatests ever. What an amazing character. Terrific and smart as hell.
100% agree. However I 100% disagree with him getting another Academy Award for his performance in Django....
Mrs. October was right on the money early in the reaction when she said that he was "charming", even though Mr. October didn't seem to agree with that choice of word. He exudes charisma and is absolutely terrifying because you can't understand his intentions.
@@chanceneck8072exactly. It should have gone to Sam Jackson
Yes, the first guy getting scalped is indeed Quentin Tarantino! ;) You're the first reactor to spot it! ;)
There’s a line near the end of the movie that no one ever catches and it’s my favorite
My first time ever noticing it and I watched this at the movies and had the DVD 🤦🏾♂️
I feel like even though I know pulp fiction is his greatest, his masterpiece, Inglorious Basterds will always be my favourite. It’s just such a good time
No this is his masterpiece. He tells you with the last line of the movie.
@@joemargle3115 I think he one upped with D’jango but it’s very close
Kill Bill will always be his best to me. Although as they say in that movie, if you're going to compare a Hanzo sword (Tarantino movie), you compare it to every other sword in the world, wasn't made by Hattori Hanzo. Seven of his Nine official titles so far all have the right to contend as his best and/or THE best movie imo. With a record like his, it's all just amazing.
@@crimsontide9532 I came her to say just that. Django overtakes this one easily for me. I take Django over Pulp Fiction as well, Pulp Fiction as a plot doesn’t do much for me where as Django tells a full story and has better action imo
@@misterisak I’m in the minority but Hateful Eight might be my favorite of his. The thing with Tarantino is it’s so hard to pick your favorite/his best because they’re all so good.
Christophe Waltz is both hilarious and terrifying in this role. Great actor.
Mrs. October nailed it though. One of the things Tarantino is great at is making charismatic villains. Landa is pure evil, but he makes you forget it for moments.
This is very true
Charismatic villains are the absolute best. Its that one thing that makes them memorable. They are super rare as well, and even more rare to have been written well. Thankfully this is how a perfect villain should look like, right here. Film-makers and even creators from other mediums should be taking notes here.
YES depending on the moments, he makes you sympathize with him…. I LOVE It
I kept waiting for you to recognize Mike Meyers ❤
Landa gave a master class on interview and interrogation. Presence and slowly but surely ratchet up the tension and then tells him he knows
The genius of Tarantino is how tells stories with details. Like watching Shoshana eat the creme (a type of food forbidden by Jewish law) was so stressful, even not knowing anything about what kind of food Jewish people can eat. 😐 So many hidden details, but also not so hidden!! 🤯 Happy October, Octobers!! 😅🎃👻
Also the strudel was made with animal lard which also would’ve been considered not Kosher 👍
Bridget von Hammersmark is loosely inspired by Marlene Dietrich, who was an actual German movie star who left Nazi Germany and strongly supported the Allied cause. She donated money that helped people escape the Reich. Tarantino being Tarantino, he turns her into a femme fatale and gives her feet an entire scene.
Brad Pitt is actually from Oklahoma. Not saying his accent wasn’t over the top-it totally was and it worked,
IMO-but he’s definitely not the California native he appears to be. Love the reactions! Excited for you guys to finish up the Tarantino films!
Guys, ngl. I'm German.
But I'd like to believe that somewhere out there in the multiverse, a timeline exists, where this stuff actually HAPPENED.... 😅🤭
This movie is based on a true story called Operation Greenup
@@niajan5892Its still nearly completly fiction.
Not to steer away from Tarantino - But - Highly recommend Jo Jo Rabbit !!! Keep up the great work you two !!!
Tarantino's greatest screenplay, without question.
This reaction is gonna be so good
Now I can’t wait for them to watch Django Unchained. It’s always a pleasure to watch people’s first reactions to both of Christoph Waltz roles.
One of the most intense opening scenes to a movie. Just on the edge of your seat the whole time
In the cards game at the bar, till the last question, might have been King Kong or... Kunta Kinte. What a great writing in that scene.
Au revoir Shoshanna!
Au revoir means goodbye, technically, but literally translated it also means: au “until” revoir “see again”
Until I see you again Shoshanna!
They’ll really like Django.
What's up with just letting her go after making a whole trip to catch them? This has always bothered me.
@@MickeyStartraveller like Tarantino loves feet, the jew hunter loves the hunt.
@@MickeyStartravellerI think it has to do with his speech. He doesn’t really feel any animosity toward those he hunts. In a strange way it makes him more reprehensible because you know he doesn’t do what he does out of some misguided belief. He’s not one to fall for propaganda. It’s just a day at the office. The banality of evil.
@@krono5el So then why doesn't he? As I understand the order was to capture/kill the last jewish family, and Landa just abandoning the mission for no reason, feels weird. It feels like I'm missing something.
The three table scenes are the best parts of this movie
Well another great reaction Octobers!!! I’ve enjoyed the Tarantino journey with you, thanks 😊❤
2 more to go!
Originally Adam Sandler was going to play the Bear Jew, and I would have paid anything to see him go Happy Gilmour on an SS sergeants skull with a baseball bat.
Oh wow, that would of been nuts
THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN OUTSTANDING!!!!!!! I WOULD HAVE LOVED THAT!!!!!!!
@@TheOctobersReacthe wrote the part for Sandler after Adam had QT cameo as the blind priest in Little Nicky, but Sandler was filming Funny People at the time and couldn't do it. But watching it knowing that was Sandler's part, you can tell QT wrote that part for him.
Fighting in a basement offers a number of difficulties. Number one being... you're fighting in a basement.
Best Brad Pitt line ever.
The cream wasn't kosher for the strudel
It was Landa's way of trolling her
Or ... knowing that she and her family were staying with the French "dairy farmer.
No more than likely a test. Hans Landa main job is to hunt Jews. So he provides her with strudel & crème both not kosher, to see if she would have a negative reaction with eating it. He’s trying to see if she is a Jew hiding in plain sight.
When Landa tells the farmer "under new management there is always duplication", what he is saying is, "those other Germans were probably idiots, now watch how I work".
Tarentino films are by far some of the best ever made.
YES!! One of my favorite movies of all time and for sure my favorite Tarantino film
"I wish I knew what they were talking about..."
The Germans dancing because the card was Mata Hari is a deep reference 😅 Mata Hari was a Dutch performer who spied for Germany during WW1 (and was 😵 in France), paralleling Bridget spying for England and getting shot (and later 😵) in France.
During the basement scene, the german soldiers in the background are playing the guessing game. One guy failed to guess he was Mata Hari. Mata Hari was a belly dancer? Exotic dancer? Executed as a german spy in the ww1 era. You notice one of his friends do a parody of a belly dance to tell him who it was, and he realises too late.
Y'all are the first channel that I've seen that realized that Shoshana and Marcel weren't going to survive the fire. Well done! Mrs October is right about Hans Landa. He's charming and charismatic and that's what makes him such an effective villain. Christoph Waltz definitely deserved his Oscar win. Absolutely enjoyed y'all's reactions!
In the beginning of the movie, when Hans Landa grabs one of the farmer’s daughter, he was checking her pulse for her heart rate. He knew it right away
But wouldn't anyone's heart rate increase? Soldiers
intruding your home and all?
@@TheOctobersReact I think its a different kind of fear when you know you are guilty of something or when you are hiding something. When it's your job , and this goes probably for the psychology profession as well, you end up being able to detect the different kinds of stress and fear through experience over time. And some people are simply more gifted than others to detect it and are better at it. Call it intuition, mind-readers or whatever, but these kind of people do exist. And many people are not really great at hiding those thoughts and emotions. And in this particular situation it was of course indeed terrifying.
Christoph Waltz, legendary underrated actor, this is the moment that Tarantino realized he found one of the most perfect actors, for his movie style.
This is a fan theory and not a very good one. Detectives like Landa don't base their work on a scared girl's pulse
@@kobarsos82This is not true. People who study capable psychopaths are just as likely to be seduced by them. Their only saving grace is that they can check the signs in hindsight after some distance is built
Yes / and they also checked for sweaty palms at same time
"And I want my scalps!" 😤🔪
Top tier movie, can always come back to it. 😅❤
👨🦲
@@TheVillainousTitan It's so re-watchable.
I must say, those were some EXCELLENT responses! it is so obvious you are very skilled and you will enjoy success. I wish you many successes!
Some of Tarantino’s actors over the years-
20. Kerry Washington
19. Don Johnson
18. Channing Tatum
17. Chris Tucker
16. Vic Rhames
15. Jamie Fox
14. Steve Buscemi
13. Margot Robbie
12. Uma Thurman
11. Mike Myers
10. Christopher Walken
9. Al Pacino
8. John Travolta
7. Kurt Russell
6. Bruce Willis
5. Christoph Waltz
4. Brad Pitt
3. Samuel L Jackson
2. Robert De Niro
1. Leonardo DiCaprio
Tarantino is one of the most respected directors in Hollywood. He always gets the BEST actors.
You forgot Tim Roth, Harvey Keitel, Luci Liu, David Carradine, Jennifer Jason Leigh...
The opening scene of this movie is incredible
maybe the best we have seen!
LET’S GOOOO!!!! I love the Octobers 😂 you guys are cool, excited for this one. Quentin Tarantino has such a specific style, it’s great
Landa absolutely knew it was Shosanna right away. His favourite thing is playing with people so he orders her a glass of milk and also makes her eat the Strudel with cream which was because eating dairy with fat is against Kosher rules.
My favourite scene is before the movie when Landa and Aldo both know the masquerade is blown but they keep it going anyway, Aldo because he has to and Landa because it's fun.
58:08 Yes. It's called the Sedgley glove gun.
The recurring plot element of language, speaking/understanding multiple languages is brilliant.
SUPER power play in the opening scene with the size of the smoking pipe. This film is expertly done.
Enjoying all the Tarantino reactions, thanks. Cheers
So in the scene with the cream, he absolutely remembers her. He messes with her by ordering the cream because at that time, cream was made with pigs fat so it wasnt kosher.
The opening to this movie is one of the greatest movie openings ever
Awesome watching you guys do Tarantino like this. ❤
Thanks Ruben! We are having a lot of fun!
Thanks for watching ❤️
Love this movie! This, “Django Unchained”, and “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” are my top three Tarantino flicks 🤓💜💃
Definitely my favorite Tarantino movie.
(1:02:48) This could happen at any time in history. It seems to me that as WWII passes from living memory, more and more people seem willing to ramp up the repulsion again. I've seen quite a few videos recently of young people learning about the Holocaust for the first time. It's Santayana's quote in action, and it's really depressing.
Anyway, great reaction. I also enjoyed the discussion afterward.
✌🤘🖖
@@angelagraves865 The US is currently doing a genocide.
@@angelagraves865 The US is currently doing a "gen".
Amazing movie and the dialouge and acting is top notch. Waltz was incredible in this movie.
You should watch Four Rooms with Tim Roth. It’s an homage to the classic comedy The Bell Boy. Directed and written by four different directors, including Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez. Classic. Also don’t forget True Romance and Natural Born Killers. Written by Tarantino.
A strudel is a German pastry made with lard (pork fat). Which is not Kosher.
13:00 we call this episode “Mrs October gets charmed by a Nazi”… 😂😂😂
I think Landa knew who Shoshanna was at the restaurant, or at least had a suspicion that she was Jewish. The fact that he forced her to eat the strudel was a test, as in those days it would have been made with lard (pig's fat), which is non kosher and against Jewish religion to eat.
We are currently living through the notification of the United States of America. These times are analogous to Germany 1927.
The milk during the lunch was absolutely intentional, Landa knew who she was and how she looked before he even went to that farm house.
That scene has crazy layers though, the apple strudel is made with beef fat for the pastry, Jewish people following a Kosher diet can't mix meat and dairy. By adding cream it makes the dish not edible to Jewish people, it was a subtle act of psychological torture.
33:20... In case yaw aint realized it, that's Mike Meyers, yes, Austin Powers, Wayne's World lol, yep, that's him!^^ Quinten's crazy!^^
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As a Frenchie, I am always always amazed at Christoph Waltz mastery of the language and how insanely funny he is in a language that is not his native one.
And that's true for five fucking different languages. The man is a beast.
Also... cannot not mention Daniel Bruhl's performance when it comes to languages there.
I counted four languages. And he doesn't actually speak all those languages, but he can act out a script after rehearsing and memorizing. It's nice, but I find it funny for someone to be so enthralled by that, as I've studied alongside literally hundreds of students who can speak more languages than him, and actually know the languages (somewhat), not just memorize scripts like him.
yeah, and don't forget to watch "Valkyrie" with your GREAT reactions!!!! I'll be watching and waiting!!!!!
Quentin could not find an actor to play Col. Landa. He auditioned so many actors, and none of them could do the role the way he wanted. It was so bad that Quentin almost pulled the plug and stopped the production. Christoph Waltz auditioned at the last minute and because he was Austrian (and spoke German), and could passably speak French and Italian, Quentin cast him. As soon as the audition ended, Quentin was relieved he could make the film. This was Quentin's first film with Christoph...the second is Django Unchained. Both films earned Christoph the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
French actress Melanie Laurent played Shoshanna. After this, she made a few pretty good American films. Now You See Me, and Beginners are two of her biggest.
Donny Donowitz, aka The Bear Jew, was played by Eli Roth. Roth has acted but is best known as a director of horror films like Hostel 1 & 2 and Cabin Fever, and he directed the recent Borderlands.
Charlotte LaPaditte, the dairy farmer's eldest daughter in the film's first section, was played by Lea Seydoux, another French actress. Lea has been in several huge films, including Dune, Part 2, the James Bond films SPECTRE (which also stars Christoph Waltz) and No Time To Die, and Mission: Impossible 4. What got her noticed was a French coming-of-age lesbian love story called Blue Is the Warmest Color, which received the dreaded NC-17 for the American release, but also wowwed a lot of critics and filmgoers who saw it. She frequently models for many prominent fashion designers as well as in print ads.
There are a couple of Tarantino veterans in the film who have had roles in other films:
The voice on the radio who negotiates with Landa and then has a brief conversation with Aldo is Harvey Keitel, aka Mr. White, in Reservoir Dogs.
The French woman who is a translator for Dr. Joseph Goebbels was played by Julie Dreyfus, aka Sophie Fatale, O-ren Ishii's lawyer in Kill Bill, Vol. 1.
this is some good stuff right here thanks for this!
A few weeks after Hitler got himself appointed Chancellor, one night, the Nazis set fire to the Reichstag building (where the parliament met), and the government blamed it on the Communists. During the war, German officers tried to kill Hitler with a bomb, but through some unfortunate events, he was only wounded (the movie Valkyrie is based on it).
I wanna watch it!
yeah, with your GREAT reactions, you gotta see "Valkyrie"!!!
Watch from dusk till dawn, another one of Tarantino’s works. It’s a good one for October.
You two will LOVE the hateful 8!! 100%
Definietly my favourite Tarantino's movie. More tension than in majority of horrors. And the acting is SUPREME. Chris Waltz is something else. Love to hate him here
The actress who Played Sophie Fatale in Kill Bill was in that scene where Shoshanna meets Hans Landa again at the dinner table.
Frenchman here, btw, the German "three" with the fingers is also how we do it in France. I assume it's basically the European "three", because I've never seen anyone doing it like American people do.
Another Christophe Waltz amazing acting is in Quetin Tarentino Django
that’s next!
The basement bar shootout. The German made him when he said "3 glasses" then stuck up his 3 fingers (pointer, middle and ring finger). Real Germans use, thumb, pointer and middle finger. Tarintino is a genius.
You always do a great job! 😊💖
Had to chuckle when you said how amazing it was to you that life back in those days are not much different from life today. I was born in the early 50s and the thing that amazes me is that there were people alive who fought in the Civil War.
The fire you were asking about may have been the 1933 Reichstag (German Parliament) fire.which was allegedly set by Nazis who blamed the communists in order to sieze complete power.
As to people of color in Europe back then, the French didn't seem to have much of a prejudice against them but the Nazis of course saw them as a subservient and inferior class and Tarantino depicts them accordingly in this movie. I don't believe though that they were incarcerated in any of the death camps. The Nazis were too busy at the time killing all the Jews and the Gypsies and the Jehovah Witnesses and the Catholics and the communists and the gays and the invalids and those that they saw as the greatest immediate threats. No doubt they would have gone after them however once they'd finished off those aforementioned groups.
1:00:53 That's Tarantino reviewing his own movie.
The Hateful 8 and Django needs to be soon... completely agree living under a fascist tyranny is a definite Hell No,
13:00 Many women that met serial killer Ted Bundy said he was very charming (the ones that survived)
"Black Panther and Age of Ultron"
...did you mean Captain America: Civil War and Falcon and Winter Soldier? Other than that, this is an amazong movie. Its classic Tarantino.
yeah, with your GREAT reactions, you gotta see "Valkyrie"!!!
Im Polish Slav..no love for Hitler whatsoever.excellent movie,, Christophe is such an incredible actor... Total Nazi in this movie.. total anti Nazi in Django..🔥🤘👍 great reaction y'all.
It was an interesting choice to have David Bowie's Puttin' Out Fire aka The Theme to Catpeople in this film.
The clue in the bar scene that the guy wasn't really German was how he ordered the three beers. Germans use their thumb, pointer, and middle finger for three. The thumb is one.
The guy who is giving a briefing on operation Kino, to young magento, was Mike Meyers, Austin Powers himself. And he was talking to Michael Fasbender, young Magneto.
Dude sitting next to the piano wearing the bowtie is supposed to be Winston Churchill. I keep waiting for reactors to notice this, but they never seem to
A movie about a group of Jewish Nazi killers in WWII? What's not to like?! Seriously, though, this is the film that took Tarantino's game to that next level.
I remember everybody making fun of that movie 'American Sniper' when it came out bc it was basically an american 'Nation's Pride'
Another classic❤
Best opening scene ever
aaah.... actually.... I think the best opening scene is Jane Fonda in "Barbarella"!
The line at the end ''I think this just might be my masterpiece''. Tarantino is referring to this movie as his masterpiece.
Another great reaction
Haven't even watched it yet
You absolutely need to watch Band of Brothers. It’s an amazing series that puts you in the shoes of the parachute infantry soldiers in WWII. Every thing about it is a masterpiece of storytelling and film making and on top of that it’s a true story that does an amazing job at accurately telling the men’s story.
Please don’t take this wrong but the education system really doesn’t do a good job at teaching history in general so most everyone tends to think they know more about history especially relatively recent US history when they graduate until they actually start reading and watching things about it on their own time. Things like WWII are just too big a scale and to intricate with way too many different perspectives to be taught in detail in an hour long history class in four years of high school even if the entire curriculum of those four years was just WWII it probably wouldn’t come close to explaining it all in all parts of both theaters of war during that time.
Not only that, but you can't really understand WWII without learning about WWI.
Great movie reaction as usual. I see you guys recognize the actor that played young Magneto, but did you guys recognize Mike Myers as General Ed Fenech? He was the one that sent Lt. Hicox's undercover to meet the Inglorious Bastards. He usually plays Austin Powers and Dr Evil in the movie Austin Powers. His character in Inglorious Bastards basically reminded you of a cross between. the two. 😂🤣
Thanks, Tony! Thanks, Brooke! 💥 I perfectly fun bit of revisionist history.
Thanks Aunt Vesuvi!
@@TheOctobersReact You're so welcome, honey. 🫂
I LOVE this movie
They wouldn't have tolerated the me too movement to begin with. 😂
I was literally watching the pulp fiction reaction as this one dropped lmao
Have you seen Jackie Brown or Death proof?
32:10 that officer was played by Mike Meyers
I thought yall would hear the Spy Who Shagged me voice" . Oh behave: lol. Austin Powers
THE FIRST Tarantino movie was one he wrote, called TRUE ROMANCE. It came out just before Reservoir dogs.
Its definitely Tarantinos best work as far as quality. I always thought this was one of his most ambitious (this and django). The one thing that does remain true with all his movies though is his dialogue. The man can have a 20 minute scene of 2 people talking and it's captivating.
59:00 - Kurt Russel's scream from Death Proof!
P.S. Filming the theater fire scene ended up being incredibly dangerous. The fire grew faster and much larger than planned, and had they kept filming another 15 seconds the stage that the cast and crew were on to film the scene would have collapsed, resulting in many lives lost.
Its already been said, but i love Christoph Waltz's performance as well. He actually is multilingual speaking English, German, French and i believe some Romansh as well. Quite impressive.
2 more early early Quentin movies that he has had some hand in either writing, producing or directing..
please react to:
True Romance &
From Dusk til Dawn. Both entertaining and amazingly unique movies.
Guarantee you both will love them.
You can even watch Dusk til Dawn for Halloween.
You won't be disappointed.
No poll needed 😉💯💛🙏
The man you know as the "Bear Jew", Eli Roth is also a film director. Please check out his Horror film, Clown. A very fitting selection for October viewing. And you would be the FIRST reactors to do so.
This is my favorite role of Brad Pitt. His performance was hilarious and intimidating at the same time.
He's good in just about everything. Moneyball is pretty awesome.
27:35 ... the music that kicks in at that mark when Landa arrives is takes from an 80s supernatural horror film called "The Entity". In that movie,the same soundtrack plays when horrible things happen to the main female character,when she gets attacked by an invisible entity.
To me, this is the start of Tarantino's "mature phase". What I mean is, his films are more about the dialogue and characters now, then ultra-violence. Not that his earlier work wasn't per se, but from here he took it to the next level imo. These films are more like plays on a stage. The dialogue and performances are off the chart. Christoph Waltz is INCREDIBLE in this. Acting in French, English, Germany AND Italian fluently. Melanie Laurent is also fantastic. Her story with Daniel Bruhl (who is also an outstanding actor), is amazing. I can talk for hours about this film. This, Hateful 8 and OUATIH are ALL masterpieces imo. (OUATIH is my personal fav Tarantino).
On another channel I repeated what I overheard from a veteran who said in Germany if you are in crowded noisy tavern and want one beer, just give a thumbs up. If you hold up your index finger, it will be counted as two. Someone commented who said he was German and said that was not true. I figure this may be a generational thing, as the guy I first overheard this from was a Boomer. Maybe a regional thing, not sure. I just know I had no reason to believe vet, who I knew, was pulling anyone's leg.