We have FULL LENGTH REACTIONS on our Patreon and EARLY ACCESS to Django Unchained, AND THE FIRST 3 TWILIGHT FILMS! ▶ www.patreon.com/c/raggedypack Come hang out in our Discord! ▶ discord.gg/HQFtGkCf37
In case you are still wondering, the Bear Jew is played by Eli Roth. Known mostly for directing Cabin Fever and Hostel and also suspected of looking alot like Zachary Quinto of AHS and Star Trek fame.
some of my favourite dialogue in this movie is easy to miss if you don't speak French. Right before the Dreyfus family is killed, Landa says "adieu" which is used specifically when you don't expect to see someone again, its a more permanent goodbye. As Shosanna is fleeing he says "au revoir" which is more like saying "see you soon". Really creepy and very telling that yes, he does enjoy the hunt. and good catch that he switched to English because he knew the Dreyfus family did not speak it (or at least suspected). He used the excuse of having limited French but that was a blatant lie, his French sounds just as fluent as his English.
Christoph Waltz’s straight-faced stare in the opening interrogation scene, and at the restaurant with Shosanna over strudel, and while fitting von Hammersmark’s shoe, is absolutely menacing. He won the Oscar not for the boisterousness or multi-language line reads-all certainly amazing-but for his choices while quiet, when he completely compels you to sit on the edge of your seat for whatever’s gonna happen next.
Churchill was 70 in 1944. He's played here by Rod Taylor, a movie star (who should have been even bigger, imho) of the 1960s who came out of retirement to play the part at QT's request.
QT did not think he could make this movie until he found Christoph Waltz to play Landa. So perfect for the role. Major Hellstrom AKA "King Kong" in the basement (August Diehl), was Gestapo. They were the ones who flogged Sgt. Hugo Stiglitz (Til Schweiger)
Christoph Waltz won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for his role in the movie. Also David Lynch, Director of DUNE 84, The Elephant Man, Muholland Drive and Inland Empire, as well as being the creator of Twin Peaks, has passed away at 78
@@itsreeeshaaa7560 - David Lynch's "The Straight Story" (1999), is a must watch. G Rated, based on a true story. The first movie I can remember that treated "Midwesterners" with dignity.
Landa showed himself to be a serial killer at heart when he strangled Bridget von Hammersmark, because he knew he could get away with it. Aldo gave him a good red flag for any future exploits.
My parents wanted to, so we went and saw this in theatres with my uncle when I was just shy of starting high school and my younger sister had just turned 12. Mom and her brother are fluent in German (including additionally their immigrant parents' regional dialect), and somewhat conversant in Italian and French because my grandparents were fluent in those, I was learning German in school, my sister French, and my dad had studied some German. One of the first things we talked about post film was Christoph Waltz's performance as Lando and his impressive language skills. He deserved the accolades he got for this film. I think Igli touched closest to it, in that he brought tension to every scene he was in (part of that was definitely aided by direction- after all, there was equal tension in the pub scene he wasn't in, but he still did phenomenally). Also, my grandmother had taught my sister and me the counting with the thumbs since childhood, so that scene just landed for us immediately (honestly, no idea how Fassbender's character didn't know that, unless he just forgot in the heat of the moment). It did suck that Shoshanna died that way. Truth be told, my first time seeing it, I felt like Daniel Bruhl's character attempting to assault her came out of nowhere, and it took getting older to see how pushy he had always been. Shoshanna was just doing like a lot of women and making an allowance for a guy because she still had empathy, especially after she thought she had killed him when he was finally showing some remorse for his actions in war. That being said, she was dying regardless (both groups, I think- everyone in them planned to die), so I think she also just wasn't that invested in preserving her life (and arguably, dying before the explosion might have been less suffering for her). And from QT's perspective as a filmmaker, I felt like it was him saying "they won't give you any quarter, don't waste your sympathy on them"- this film relished the violence (Hitler's body shot to bits) and felt like a repudiation of certain groups who with time (or even immediately) have tried to minimize the atrocities of the Holocaust, and this was also present with the Nazi soldiers the Basterds leave alive getting scarred- they will always be marked and can't hide their complicity. It's not entirely a worldview I endorse, but it's certainly a hard line in this film.
Any movie with Christoph Waltz in it... is worth a watch. Even though the movie itself might not be a masterpiece... but Waltz is always captivating and an absolute joy.
The opening scene is the single most tense scene in a non-horror movie I've ever seen. The thing is, I'm sure a lot of people would agree that it's not the best QT movie. It's good though. And Christoph Waltz is absolutely incredible and it's completely worth watching.
Can’t believe you guys skipped the part where Hans left and Shosanna gave that sigh of relief and almost broke down. Thats a pretty important part of the scene right there.
I love this movie. The biggest cultural impact of this film, outside of its excellent directing and cinematography, is the jokey way so many people say "nazi." It's so unserious.
It is a favourite of mine of QT’s catalogue, and it’s a film you can watch over and over again. QT uses Once Upon A Time… in a couple of films to let you know it’s entering QT’s Fantasy Universe. Even if you didn’t quite like every aspect of the film on first watch, it will hook you on second or third watch.
How could anyone like it the least!! That’s wild to me. It’s his best movie imo and in my top 5 movies of all time. The acting, the instant character build, the SCRIPT, the cinematography, everything! It’s so unique and perfectly acted. Quite disappointed you weren’t all in shock at how incredible this was! Was so looking forward to this reaction 😫
3:21 Close. Beethoven. It's not Fur Elise, though. Just the beginning few note clusters that Ennio Morricone used in his score for 1966 cowboy movie The Big Sundown. Tarantino reused it here.
Emil Jannings was the biggest star in Nazi cinema. He'd been a star in Hollywood during the Silent Era but his accent hampered him with the transition to Sound.
Michael Fassbender was born in Germany, and obviously is of German descent. Pretty sure he is lifelong bilingual. The glass boot is just the Boot. I forget the exact volume or if it's still available but it was a real option for serious beer drinkers in the former times.
Quentin was gonna cancel the whole movie until they found christoph waltz cuz they couldnt find a good actor who can speak german , italian , french and english
I think these guys have a hard time recognising themselves in a mirror! They’d be like “hang on, you look like someone from that show but not that show, the other show”
“I learned that in third grade” more like scrolling on instagram memes.😂 also I know that’s Eli Roth in here but I think chads played by Spock form the newer Star Trek movies, also Robot in invincible
This is me coming up with a witty way to recommend Jackie Brown. You could also do Sin City since QT directed a scene. Literally one scene. And it's great.
for a good few years i was puzzled by Hermann's role in this. then it struck me that he is Landa's secret boyfriend. at least that's my take on it. Easier i assume to live out thier days as a happy couple in Nantucket and he could foresee that Germany was going to go down regardless
Me QT rank goes: #1 Kill Bill vol. 1 #2 Inglorious Basterds #3 Django Unchained #4 The Hateful Eight #5 Pulp Fiction #6 Kill Bill vol. 2 #7 Reservoir Dogs #8 Jackie Brown #9 Once Upon a Time in Hollywood To this day I just don't get all the love Pulp Fiction gets. I do think it's good, but that's about it 😭
I liked this movie, but Igli is right. Pulp Fiction is Tarantino’s juggernaut. It is so fixed into our society and that’s the reason why everyone knows all the quotes. In my opinion, PF is his best!
Every one knows you shoot to kill. Shoshanna was not a killer. I love Christoph Waltz. Ever since Reservoir Dogs, Quentin films have gotten better. I can't pick a favorite. The movie I have watched the most is Pulp Fiction, because it blew me away, but Jackie Brown is probably next in line
tarantino films are A LOT to take in on one viewing. you kinda have to sit with them for a while and let them marinate and come back to them again. this film and hollywood i was luke warm on when i first saw them but i kept coming back and having to watch them again and they got better every time.
Blake, you've officially been downgraded from the hate list! This guy, even looking at him smirking for a second will get you... Nvm and you know who I'm talking about 😁
Yes his accent is crazy weird for a German, that would hit your ears at once Source: I am german - oh and...I actually use that Gesture for 3. Guess I m an alien here :(
Yeah this is my least favorite QT movie. But it’s still a high 5 star. Tarantino and Nolan are my two favorite directors. So this being my bottom QT film is still 100 times better than most films. This movie is fun as hell when it’s having fun.. but the rest is less intriguing. People drag me for it but I have Death Proof ahead of this because it’s always fun and more rewatchable
I can tell u guys not understanding what is happening in the movie and i bet u couldnt tell the langagues apart and blake seemed a little uninterested but ita okay ill take that
We have FULL LENGTH REACTIONS on our Patreon and EARLY ACCESS to
Django Unchained, AND THE FIRST 3 TWILIGHT FILMS!
▶ www.patreon.com/c/raggedypack
Come hang out in our Discord!
▶ discord.gg/HQFtGkCf37
It needs to be said frequently that Christoph Waltz earned his Oscar as the cruel and charismatic Hans Landa. He’s so good in that performance.
In case you are still wondering, the Bear Jew is played by Eli Roth. Known mostly for directing Cabin Fever and Hostel and also suspected of looking alot like Zachary Quinto of AHS and Star Trek fame.
some of my favourite dialogue in this movie is easy to miss if you don't speak French. Right before the Dreyfus family is killed, Landa says "adieu" which is used specifically when you don't expect to see someone again, its a more permanent goodbye. As Shosanna is fleeing he says "au revoir" which is more like saying "see you soon". Really creepy and very telling that yes, he does enjoy the hunt.
and good catch that he switched to English because he knew the Dreyfus family did not speak it (or at least suspected). He used the excuse of having limited French but that was a blatant lie, his French sounds just as fluent as his English.
Christoph Waltz’s straight-faced stare in the opening interrogation scene, and at the restaurant with Shosanna over strudel, and while fitting von Hammersmark’s shoe, is absolutely menacing. He won the Oscar not for the boisterousness or multi-language line reads-all certainly amazing-but for his choices while quiet, when he completely compels you to sit on the edge of your seat for whatever’s gonna happen next.
The transformation in Waltz's characters between this and Django is wild. He knocked them both out of the park! Deserved his awards for both roles.
yup i hope that when QT decides upon his last movie that there is a spot for good ol Christoph in it
He hated his basterds character so wanted play his opposit e
"You can't park there." I'm dead. LMFAO
im just gonna give my flowers to the underrated Marcel (shoshanna's assistant). What a friend, holy shit. "Oui, Shoshanna."
Churchill was 70 in 1944. He's played here by Rod Taylor, a movie star (who should have been even bigger, imho) of the 1960s who came out of retirement to play the part at QT's request.
QT did not think he could make this movie until he found Christoph Waltz to play Landa. So perfect for the role.
Major Hellstrom AKA "King Kong" in the basement (August Diehl), was Gestapo. They were the ones who flogged Sgt. Hugo Stiglitz (Til Schweiger)
Christoph Waltz won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for his role in the movie.
Also David Lynch, Director of DUNE 84, The Elephant Man, Muholland Drive and Inland Empire, as well as being the creator of Twin Peaks, has passed away at 78
Blue Velvet was the first David Lynch movie I ever saw and was hooked on his work after that. Such an innovative mind.
@@itsreeeshaaa7560 - David Lynch's "The Straight Story" (1999), is a must watch. G Rated, based on a true story. The first movie I can remember that treated "Midwesterners" with dignity.
Landa knew they were losing the war so he made a deal to save his life and not go before a Jewish Tribunal like he said.
Landa showed himself to be a serial killer at heart when he strangled Bridget von Hammersmark, because he knew he could get away with it. Aldo gave him a good red flag for any future exploits.
My parents wanted to, so we went and saw this in theatres with my uncle when I was just shy of starting high school and my younger sister had just turned 12. Mom and her brother are fluent in German (including additionally their immigrant parents' regional dialect), and somewhat conversant in Italian and French because my grandparents were fluent in those, I was learning German in school, my sister French, and my dad had studied some German. One of the first things we talked about post film was Christoph Waltz's performance as Lando and his impressive language skills. He deserved the accolades he got for this film. I think Igli touched closest to it, in that he brought tension to every scene he was in (part of that was definitely aided by direction- after all, there was equal tension in the pub scene he wasn't in, but he still did phenomenally). Also, my grandmother had taught my sister and me the counting with the thumbs since childhood, so that scene just landed for us immediately (honestly, no idea how Fassbender's character didn't know that, unless he just forgot in the heat of the moment).
It did suck that Shoshanna died that way. Truth be told, my first time seeing it, I felt like Daniel Bruhl's character attempting to assault her came out of nowhere, and it took getting older to see how pushy he had always been. Shoshanna was just doing like a lot of women and making an allowance for a guy because she still had empathy, especially after she thought she had killed him when he was finally showing some remorse for his actions in war. That being said, she was dying regardless (both groups, I think- everyone in them planned to die), so I think she also just wasn't that invested in preserving her life (and arguably, dying before the explosion might have been less suffering for her). And from QT's perspective as a filmmaker, I felt like it was him saying "they won't give you any quarter, don't waste your sympathy on them"- this film relished the violence (Hitler's body shot to bits) and felt like a repudiation of certain groups who with time (or even immediately) have tried to minimize the atrocities of the Holocaust, and this was also present with the Nazi soldiers the Basterds leave alive getting scarred- they will always be marked and can't hide their complicity. It's not entirely a worldview I endorse, but it's certainly a hard line in this film.
Any movie with Christoph Waltz in it... is worth a watch. Even though the movie itself might not be a masterpiece... but Waltz is always captivating and an absolute joy.
The opening scene is the single most tense scene in a non-horror movie I've ever seen. The thing is, I'm sure a lot of people would agree that it's not the best QT movie. It's good though. And Christoph Waltz is absolutely incredible and it's completely worth watching.
Who’s most people
Can’t believe you guys skipped the part where Hans left and Shosanna gave that sigh of relief and almost broke down. Thats a pretty important part of the scene right there.
16:18 small Better Call Saul spoiler
That is Werner Ziegler, I never noticed that
Christoph Waltz was absolutely amazing in this movie, everyone done such a great job in this one! 10/10 movie!
Inglorious Basterds is amazing, the acting, writing and direction is fantastic.
I love this movie. The biggest cultural impact of this film, outside of its excellent directing and cinematography, is the jokey way so many people say "nazi." It's so unserious.
I would say the three bar scene was super impactful too, kinda changed how writers did those type of scenes in movies
4:17 I just made a glass of milk and this popped up in my feed lol
2:39 I think Igli was thinking of “The Expendables”
It is a favourite of mine of QT’s catalogue, and it’s a film you can watch over and over again.
QT uses Once Upon A Time… in a couple of films to let you know it’s entering QT’s Fantasy Universe. Even if you didn’t quite like every aspect of the film on first watch, it will hook you on second or third watch.
"We got us a German here who wants to die for his country, Obliiiige him" favourite line
How could anyone like it the least!! That’s wild to me. It’s his best movie imo and in my top 5 movies of all time. The acting, the instant character build, the SCRIPT, the cinematography, everything! It’s so unique and perfectly acted. Quite disappointed you weren’t all in shock at how incredible this was! Was so looking forward to this reaction 😫
3:21 Close. Beethoven. It's not Fur Elise, though. Just the beginning few note clusters that Ennio Morricone used in his score for 1966 cowboy movie The Big Sundown. Tarantino reused it here.
Hands down, my favorite QT film. Christopher Waltz is a wonder to behold.
Some get surprised when they see Michael Fassbender but then ignore that he's talking to Mike Myers in the same scene.
Adam Sandler was suppose to play the bear jew.
Oooohhh Corey's hair is down ❤ happy to watch just for that 😊
Emil Jannings was the biggest star in Nazi cinema. He'd been a star in Hollywood during the Silent Era but his accent hampered him with the transition to Sound.
This is my favorite QT movie and Christoph is such a great villain!
I was just wondering if you have Django and Basterds reactions and here you are! How wonderful ❤
Michael Fassbender was born in Germany, and obviously is of German descent. Pretty sure he is lifelong bilingual.
The glass boot is just the Boot. I forget the exact volume or if it's still available but it was a real option for serious beer drinkers in the former times.
Quentin was gonna cancel the whole movie until they found christoph waltz cuz they couldnt find a good actor who can speak german , italian , french and english
He learned Italian for the role.
Once upon a time in Hollywood !! Let’s Go!!
Why doesn't anyone recognize Mike Meyers 😮
I think these guys have a hard time recognising themselves in a mirror! They’d be like “hang on, you look like someone from that show but not that show, the other show”
Great review guys
This is one of his best. 9/10
Austin Powers talking to David Prometheus
Shrek talking to Steve Jobs
“I learned that in third grade” more like scrolling on instagram memes.😂 also I know that’s Eli Roth in here but I think chads played by Spock form the newer Star Trek movies, also Robot in invincible
This is one of my favorite movies. I love it.
For a second I thought the middle guy in the thumbnail is Cojo , but then I wonder why he holding a 🔪 like serial killer 😲
Brad Pitt is from the "Mizzoura" part of Missouri, so I'm sure he can revert to a down-home inflection.
This is me coming up with a witty way to recommend Jackie Brown. You could also do Sin City since QT directed a scene. Literally one scene. And it's great.
If you haven't seen Django yet, you all should.
I'm unashamedly in love with Daniel Bruhl in this movie (I already was, TBH).
for a good few years i was puzzled by Hermann's role in this. then it struck me that he is Landa's secret boyfriend. at least that's my take on it. Easier i assume to live out thier days as a happy couple in Nantucket and he could foresee that Germany was going to go down regardless
Can't wait for you guys to do Hateful Eight !
Me QT rank goes:
#1 Kill Bill vol. 1
#2 Inglorious Basterds
#3 Django Unchained
#4 The Hateful Eight
#5 Pulp Fiction
#6 Kill Bill vol. 2
#7 Reservoir Dogs
#8 Jackie Brown
#9 Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
To this day I just don't get all the love Pulp Fiction gets. I do think it's good, but that's about it 😭
Did yall not clock Mike Meyers as the English military guy or did I miss it
I'm not 100% sure they're old enough to know who Mike Myers is
Jackie Brown? another QT banger.
The German soldier is Zemo from Civil War
This movie is so damn good.
I liked this movie, but Igli is right. Pulp Fiction is Tarantino’s juggernaut. It is so fixed into our society and that’s the reason why everyone knows all the quotes. In my opinion, PF is his best!
I absolutely love this movie, but I might have to jump in on the Patreon for Django.
Every one knows you shoot to kill. Shoshanna was not a killer. I love Christoph Waltz. Ever since Reservoir Dogs, Quentin films have gotten better. I can't pick a favorite. The movie I have watched the most is Pulp Fiction, because it blew me away, but Jackie Brown is probably next in line
tarantino films are A LOT to take in on one viewing. you kinda have to sit with them for a while and let them marinate and come back to them again. this film and hollywood i was luke warm on when i first saw them but i kept coming back and having to watch them again and they got better every time.
Happy New Year team🎉🎉
this movie feels like battlefield 5 the movie.
I'm pretty sure this is my favorite Tarantino movie
Your thinking of The Expendables I believe
You MUST watch JACKIE BROWN !!!!
Matthew is correcto ✨☑️
You guys are skipping Jackie Brown? That's the best one.
Blake, you've officially been downgraded from the hate list! This guy, even looking at him smirking for a second will get you... Nvm and you know who I'm talking about 😁
Yes his accent is crazy weird for a German, that would hit your ears at once
Source: I am german - oh and...I actually use that Gesture for 3. Guess I m an alien here :(
Yall need to wacth Django
You're Next (2011)!
this is my favorite from QT and one of my favorites of all times
😢😢😢
hai👋
Don't think Fasbender has ever phoned a film acting in .. even in a Game interpretation he was good
Why does guy #2 google the entire movie as it’s happening . Not locked in . Just script supervisor 😉☑️
My favorite QT movie.
It might help if some of you wake up before watching a movie, I thought I was watching three zombies in the intro!
Yeah this is my least favorite QT movie. But it’s still a high 5 star. Tarantino and Nolan are my two favorite directors. So this being my bottom QT film is still 100 times better than most films. This movie is fun as hell when it’s having fun.. but the rest is less intriguing. People drag me for it but I have Death Proof ahead of this because it’s always fun and more rewatchable
good movie to watch with the Trump inauguration coming up
I can tell u guys not understanding what is happening in the movie and i bet u couldnt tell the langagues apart and blake seemed a little uninterested but ita okay ill take that
The amount of ads in between videos are incredibly excessive
I didn’t see any at all
i saw this in the theater twice. wow, brad pitt's performance is really awful. i never noticed it until now.
I think that’s meant to be part of his character. Everything he says and does is over the top.
Do you people even take notice of what’s going on in the movie or are you too busy trying to work out who looks like who from what show?
Why read the plot then slowly give it away during the film. Shhhhhh…
The fact Twilight is being mentioned in the same video as Basterds is infuriating. Lol
Happy New Year team🎉🎉