Watch the full documentary about Quentin Tarantino here: Vol.1 ua-cam.com/video/8VS5OEzVqGs/v-deo.html Vol.2 ua-cam.com/video/lGlWvpEsAO0/v-deo.html Vol.3 ua-cam.com/video/JYmu5IZsVHM/v-deo.html
I miss the days when filmmakers saw making movies as a passion project and not just a cash grab. Kill Bill is one of my favorite films and you could see the love put into making it.
Dude there’s always been filmmakers that see movies as a cash grab and filmmakers that make movies out of passion for the art. Take off your nostalgia glasses
Agreed I don’t get when I meet people and they say they don’t like it I mean I get it if you’re not into gore but if you like horror movies and thrillers what’s not to love about this it’s done so well !
especially since she kept her mouth closed about that bad accident. Thats offensive. instead of talking, she never ever brought it up. How many roles did she turn down because of holding on to that pain in silence? Sad. I love this movie.
@@andreasarmiento1999 in the last scene of the last movie she is driving in black and white, and her car is moving crazy… well on that scene, she crashes that car and she was begging Tarantino to use a professional stunt double but he kept telling her she could do it. That was the accident I was talking on.
Same with Zoë Bell. The pronunciation is literally spelled out with the accent marks lol. How does one not do the research to know how to pronounce these people’s names?
agree with Inglorious and and Django, Once Upon Time In Hollywood is probably my least favorite. I hope he goes back to his classic film techniques in his next project. @@j2bigd590
Yes it is. Mine too. Tarantino makes manga like comics and asian blood fountains to Hollywood and tona great mainstream audience and doing his own thing with it...and remain the emotion and charactar development
Gordon Liu, who played the character Pai Mei, is best known for his leading role in The 36th Chamber of Shaolin (1978). So when I first found out that little trivia, I admired Tarantino more for his cinema passion. In The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Gordon was playing a character who flees to the Shaolin temple and acquires extensive training in kung fu to seek revenge. In Tarantino's Kill Bill, that student from Shaolin becomes the master and trains another student, the Bride, who only seeks for revenge.
Another thing to note is that the actual character (and historical figure) of Pai Mei was already an established villain in classic Hong Kong martial arts films, sort of like Hattori Hanzō was an established character in japan. The character can be seen in Executioners from Shaolin, Abbot of Shaolin, and Clan of the White Lotus. Gordon Liu is actually also in Executioners from Shaolin and Clan of the White Lotus, playing roles in which he fights both for and against Pai Mei. Much like we see in Kill Bill, Pai Mei is a powerful, arrogant, and utterly ruthless master who takes great pleasure in humiliating his opponents.
Also mispronounced Zoe Bells name and said that QT cast his “favorite stunt woman” even tho Kill Bill was the first project they did together, so she wasn’t his favorite at the time.
Sure, but it was a commercial failure. It's nice when a movie becomes a cult favorite and I am sure directors like to hear this, but if a movie is a commercial flop that supersedes any anecdotal accolades.
Like the narrator says, too much dialogue. What makes it worse is that the dialogue is mostly condensed into either plot exposition or "planning" the heist. All of that is fundamentally uninteresting to the audience. The heist is the plot, it's not part of the story. So to have a dialogue-heavy film mostly consist of plot exposition is a bad idea. Now, to make it clear, the problem isn't so much that there is a LOT of dialogue in the film. Tarantino is known for that. The problem is the inherent quality of said dialogue. Two movies stick out as sore thumbs in this regard. Jackie brown, and the hateful eight (I haven't seen deathproof yet, so I won't comment on it.), with the latter constantly repeating the same trick of having one character explain the backstory of another character, while being generally cocky and belittling. It got old fast. Too much of a good thing, really, and it also creates timing issues. If dialogue is funny, serves a purpose to showcase character, moves the plot along, develops a character, it's usually considered quality dialogue. In Jackie Brown, too much of it is spent explaining what is about to happen or what needs to happen or what has happened. While there is no doubt that the film has some cool moments and great visual filmmaking, it manages to lack the "oomph" that a lot of tarantino's fans seek, myself included. There is also the general issue with the villain. Samuel's character (I've forgotten his name, it's been a while since I saw the film) lacks something essential for all movie villains: the power to be considered a threat. He's clearly a psychopath, and manipulative for that matter, but we never get to see just how scary he really is, other than a single cold-hearted shooting of the guy in the trunk. Moving forward, he gets belittled by jackie and in a single instant, he loses the general threatening aura you need for a good villain. He becomes a laughing stock. Now maybe that's intentional on Tarantino's part, but "intentional" does not mean "satisfying" or "entertaining". So if the threat is seen as a joke by both Jackie Brown and the audience, the threat essentially evaporates. Compare this to how tarantino filmed Hans Landa, Marcellus Wallace, Bill and his assassin squad, etc... and you can see the problem. Now you may disagree with all of this in terms of your personal enjoyment. And that's fine, it's subjective as to what exactly a person likes in terms of dialogue and filmmaking in general. However, this IS likely what happened in terms of reception, and it probably is what Tarantino had to reconsider for his further career. For that matter, I consider Kill Bill (both volumes) to be the absolute best film he's ever made, both in terms of concept and execution. That said, it may also be his most "stolen" film, if conceptual ideas for entertainment can even be stolen to begin with. Not much of the bride's story or plot or setting is particularly original, but it really doesn't have to be. What IS original, is the way Tarantino connects all of these "stolen" elements into one cohesive, satisfying and constantly entertaining viewing session, and how the bride can still manage to be a unique character in the midst of it. Like tarantino said, the best filmmakers are action filmmakers (I don't neccesarily agree with that statement wholesale), and seeing as Tarantino might have made the best action film, or at least one of the best, he might just be tooting his own horn here. But there is a truth to his statement regardless. If you film action well, you keep the audience entertained despite all the visual noise of blood, guts and fast-moving limbs. It's the most pure form of visual filmmaking. If you suck at filming action, it's just a whole lot of movement with not a lot of entertainment. Tarantino knew this, and delivered excellently. Jackie Brown and Kill Bill are definitely different genres, so what works for one may not neccesarily work for the other. However, in terms of dialogue, Kill Bill wins for me all the same. There is less of it, but what is there is worked to perfection. Every sentence is interesting, every word is important, everything has a purpose, drives the plot or the characters forward, and if these things aren't there, the dialogue is at least entertaining on a more campy level. (In general, movies have lost the art of campy humor in contemporary times, and that's a horrible shame.) So if an action film has better dialogue than a film whose entire point is supposed to centre around the dialogue, you have a problem, don't you? Again; You may enjoy Jackie Brown all the same, and that's fine. It is by no means a bad movie. But Tarantino knew that arguments of subjectivity are ultimately meaningless if you want to see the art of filmmaking as something more than just arbitrary rules. There is a reason Kill Bill works, and Jackie Brown seemed not to work for a great deal of people.
Bladerunner was a commercial "failure" at the time but eventually garnered cult status. recouped its investment, makes money and has a sequel. Jackie Brown deserves better.
this is my favorite QT Movie. The story is so inspirational, the actors are perfect and i think it is still underrated. This is truly one of the top movies ever.
Since I was kid this was my all time favorite film and the reason I love so many Quentin tarratino films, I love the filming style of grind house films. The noir style of sin city the iconic film pulp fiction inglorious bastards once upon a time in Hollywood. But there was something about kill bill from the fighting to the music score to even the outfits created my love for films such as that
Thank you! Actually this is our secondary channel. The main one contains our feature documentary films. If you like our clips, you'll enjoy our longer works 😉
Respected every actor, everyone gave 100% such an amazing, iconic movie. Solidified Tarantino as a bonefide hit maker and visionary. Wouldve never thought a few years latter he would spit out Inglorious bastards and Django... An amazing film maker!! Story teller! Too many hits from him to count.
By the way the scene at the Brothel in vol 2 is the very last scene filmed for Uma in the bride role. The guy running the brothel she talks to was also the guy in volume 1 that gets called by his son to the church after the massacre. Michael parks i think his name is.
Yes its him. Michael Parks played a dual role the Crime Scene Investigator with his son no.1 and Esteban, Bill's father figure. Michael Parks and the actor who played son no.1 also reprised their role in the double movie feature titled GRINDHOUSE PRESENTS: DEATHPROOF starring Kurt Russel and PLANET TERROR starring Rose McGowan. On the movie PLANET TERROR you will see that besides son no. 1 he also has anothe chilsd which is the lady doctor/nurse that uses syringe as guns against the zombies.
Great video. Honestly I thought Tarantino had disappeared up his own ass with this one. It was only years later that I understood he’d been up there all along.
I watch these two movies every single time they come on the television. The only thing I do though is fast forward through a lot of David Carradine‘s lengthy Gabbing. Lol
Very nice, thank you very much for this video. I actually got goose bumps when I recognised the one-second reference at 9:45 "SF: Episode One" - SF stands for Samurai Fiction and I got it on DVD. Excellent film. Of course I got Kill Bill, too, and I love it. :))
I got the opportunity to live in Tokyo for a year. The location of the Crazy 88 fight scene is a real restaurant called Gonpachi. If anyone gets the chance to go to Tokyo... DEFINITELY go. They have all you can drink liquor and great food!
At its release, I think I ruined a potential relationship I liked and laughed at this movie so hard. I don't think he was pleased.🤣To this day, I love Kill Bill Vol. 1!♥ Also, Pai Mei is THE ABSOLUTE BEST scenes for me! It was like a tv episode in the middle of a movie! I loved it!
No worries, it's not artificial intelligence. The voice you heard was actually from a professional voice-over actor. Glad you found it enjoyable! Thank you for your kind words and sub!
I really enjoyed Kill Bill, I don't think there was a single orginal idea in the whole movie and that's why I love it so much, it's the largest basket of Easter Eggs ever seen on the silver screen!
Excellent film. Well, if you count them as one. I love both volumes anyway. They’re terrific, and if I had to separate them and rank them in my top 20 films of all time, Volume 1 is my 17th fav film of all time, and Volume 2 is my 14th fav film of all time. They’re my top Tarantino movies, alongside Jackie Brown and Django Unchained. Reservoir Dogs is also awesome.
Kill Bill is my all time favourite movies 🔥🔥 superficially it looks like action crime but underneath a great emotional love deciet trauma combined in melancholic tale 💛 Tarantino is legendary filmmaker 🙏 uma Thurman deserves oscar for her great portrayal of Beatrix she was absolutely phenomenal in this role no one can play the bride other than uma 🔥
2:30 “he desperately needed to resurrect his career.” Don’t know if there are any fans of “Best of the Worst” - bad movie review show - here; his 80s/90s films are featured quite often there, including such gems as: Future Force, Future Force 2, and Karate Cop.
In his book The Kill Bill Diary, David Carradine tells many details about the development of his character, and the shooting of the film. Several of the things that appear in Bill's home, belonged to Carradine.
@@AC3handle He tells about the shooting of the film's scenes in China, specifically when Bill takes Beatrix to Pai Mei, and also about a scene long prepared and effectively shot, which involved Bill defeating a character played by Michael Jai White and friends; that scene was not included in the final cut. The campfire scene was shot in China and reshot in studio, later, for sound and script reasons. The shooting of this film was indeed international. In case your question was not about this film, but just a expression of bad taste and morbid curiosity about the alleged way in which the actor died, let me inform you: His death happened in Bangkok, and to this day the Thai police has not delivered the results of the investigation. Don't believe me? Look for the final autopsy reports yourself, in Thai. Everything you believe you know was the American media misrepresenting the opinion of a Thai pathologist, Dr. Rojanasunan, who didn't participate in the investigation as "Thai authorities ruled this," misrepresented interviews to one ex-wife, Gail Jensen, who consistently denied what the media said she confirmed (also, she died from alcoholism less than a year after, so her mind state is a mystery), and another ex-wife, Marina Anderson, whose "divorce papers" were misrepresented by a sensationalist website by leaking sealed accusations thrown during a post-divorce litigation for money. That same lady, one year later, changed her testimony and now says he was murdered, *because psychics told her so.* And the cherry on the cake, "he was wearing a wig and fishnet stockings," came from a blurry photo (likely a fake), published by a tabloid, imaginatively interpreted by another tabloid, and not a forensic report. If course, nobody cared about the professionalism of a forensic investigation which leaked the autopsy photos. Go look for those ones, the National Enquirer published them. Hope they make you happy. You can believe whatever your tastes and interests tell you; to this day the case remains unsolved. Another victory of gossip media over boring facts. And, if finally the forensic reports appear and confirm his so far alleged manner of death, so what? Who is anybody to throw stones at him?
@@MariaMartinez-researcher thank you for this comment, David was my uncle and it was hard to watch how the media portrayed his death. Nobody in our family believes for a second that he killed himself.
@@plokoon4 Greetings. I researched this subject for Wikipedia. The edition wasn't accepted because is original investigation and it requires the citation of tabloids, which Wikipedia doesn't accept no matter the reasons (oh, the irony). So, I am preparing a paper for a scholarly journal. I am a librarian and bibliographic researcher; I have evaluated sources, papers and dissertations for decades, first time I'll write one. Wish me fortitude and good luck. ✌
Watch the full documentary about Quentin Tarantino here:
Vol.1 ua-cam.com/video/8VS5OEzVqGs/v-deo.html
Vol.2 ua-cam.com/video/lGlWvpEsAO0/v-deo.html
Vol.3 ua-cam.com/video/JYmu5IZsVHM/v-deo.html
How many scenes of Quaranteenos movies weren't "inspired"?
How many scenes of Quaranteenos movies weren't "inspired"?
Thank god Quentin didn’t go ahead with playing Pai Mei.
It would’ve been a completely different character but I honestly would’ve enjoyed his take on an invincible sensei
@@gabrielklushkan2438 Go watch his Australian character in Django Unchained and think about it.
You got that right!
@@Mardy1801 lol
GOD yes!
I miss the days when filmmakers saw making movies as a passion project and not just a cash grab. Kill Bill is one of my favorite films and you could see the love put into making it.
Dude there’s always been filmmakers that see movies as a cash grab and filmmakers that make movies out of passion for the art. Take off your nostalgia glasses
@@joserea4019 yeah I agree. I think OP just doesn't like what they've been watching lately.
@@jimmyeng663 yea the "triple A" movies nowadays are so CHEAP both story & production wise and feel like such a waste of time :(
right! now everything is a soulless reboot that ruins the memory of a great movie
Agreed I don’t get when I meet people and they say they don’t like it I mean I get it if you’re not into gore but if you like horror movies and thrillers what’s not to love about this it’s done so well !
If there was any justice in this world, Uma Thurman would have an Oscar for playing the The Bride.
especially since she kept her mouth closed about that bad accident. Thats offensive. instead of talking, she never ever brought it up. How many roles did she turn down because of holding on to that pain in silence? Sad.
I love this movie.
the The? It's a good performance but not Oscar worthy
@@Disco_Biscuit_Xit’s worthy Oscar hater that whole cast shits on movies nowdays🤡💯✌🏽
@@TheQuota2001what bad accident?
@@andreasarmiento1999 in the last scene of the last movie she is driving in black and white, and her car is moving crazy… well on that scene, she crashes that car and she was begging Tarantino to use a professional stunt double but he kept telling her she could do it. That was the accident I was talking on.
"Quentin wasn't going to make the same mistake twice?" Jackie Brown was a masterpiece along with Kill Bill and Pulp Fiction.
Meh
Agreed. I love Jackie Brown.
Jackie Brown's not my favorite but it was better than once upon a time in Hollywood.
agree - can't count how many times I watched it and I got it on DVD. Actually, all three you mentioned. :)
@@Astrochronic nah once upon a time was awesome. not nearly as good as Django or Inglorious but still great
The rapper R. Z. A.
This dude been cappin the whole video. pronounce rizza, one syllable word.
Two syllables
RZA pronounced “Rizz-Ah” 2 syllables, Wu tang forever 👐🐝
@@danielminerva I hear they are for the children.
RZA aka Bobby Digital
Same with Zoë Bell. The pronunciation is literally spelled out with the accent marks lol. How does one not do the research to know how to pronounce these people’s names?
Kill Bill 1&2 are my all time favorite movies. Quite frankly a masterpiece. Also why I love Tarintino films
Me too
Yep, that was Peak Tarantino. Went downhill from there.
@@xandr13you even seen django or inglorious bastards? Or once upon a time in Hollywood?
agree with Inglorious and and Django, Once Upon Time In Hollywood is probably my least favorite. I hope he goes back to his classic film techniques in his next project. @@j2bigd590
Yes it is. Mine too. Tarantino makes manga like comics and asian blood fountains to Hollywood and tona great mainstream audience and doing his own thing with it...and remain the emotion and charactar development
honestly... i love the black and white scene .. its just weird and fits so good ... the brutality gets almost more brutal in a way
Gordon Liu, who played the character Pai Mei, is best known for his leading role in The 36th Chamber of Shaolin (1978). So when I first found out that little trivia, I admired Tarantino more for his cinema passion. In The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, Gordon was playing a character who flees to the Shaolin temple and acquires extensive training in kung fu to seek revenge. In Tarantino's Kill Bill, that student from Shaolin becomes the master and trains another student, the Bride, who only seeks for revenge.
36th camber is also a big inspiration for wu tang, rza mustv been excited
Also why RZA (Wu Tang: 36 Chambers) contributes to the soundtrack.
Perfect, intricate arch.
Another thing to note is that the actual character (and historical figure) of Pai Mei was already an established villain in classic Hong Kong martial arts films, sort of like Hattori Hanzō was an established character in japan. The character can be seen in Executioners from Shaolin, Abbot of Shaolin, and Clan of the White Lotus. Gordon Liu is actually also in Executioners from Shaolin and Clan of the White Lotus, playing roles in which he fights both for and against Pai Mei. Much like we see in Kill Bill, Pai Mei is a powerful, arrogant, and utterly ruthless master who takes great pleasure in humiliating his opponents.
Yooo I didn’t peep that, such an underrated gem the 36 chambers is dope af 💯💯💯
My dude really said “rapper R Z A” 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I was legit so annoyed!😅😅😅
Also mispronounced Zoe Bells name and said that QT cast his “favorite stunt woman” even tho Kill Bill was the first project they did together, so she wasn’t his favorite at the time.
Uma spanking the kid, "Go home to your mother" is an easter egg from the Seven Samurai
"That's what you get for f***ing with YAKUZAS!!! GO HOME TO YOUR MOTHER!!!"
What mistake did he make with Jackie Brown? That movie is absolutely amazing.
Sure, but it was a commercial failure. It's nice when a movie becomes a cult favorite and I am sure directors like to hear this, but if a movie is a commercial flop that supersedes any anecdotal accolades.
His best IMO
His worst film i dont blame him after deathproof ofc
Like the narrator says, too much dialogue.
What makes it worse is that the dialogue is mostly condensed into either plot exposition or "planning" the heist. All of that is fundamentally uninteresting to the audience. The heist is the plot, it's not part of the story. So to have a dialogue-heavy film mostly consist of plot exposition is a bad idea.
Now, to make it clear, the problem isn't so much that there is a LOT of dialogue in the film. Tarantino is known for that. The problem is the inherent quality of said dialogue. Two movies stick out as sore thumbs in this regard. Jackie brown, and the hateful eight (I haven't seen deathproof yet, so I won't comment on it.), with the latter constantly repeating the same trick of having one character explain the backstory of another character, while being generally cocky and belittling. It got old fast. Too much of a good thing, really, and it also creates timing issues.
If dialogue is funny, serves a purpose to showcase character, moves the plot along, develops a character, it's usually considered quality dialogue. In Jackie Brown, too much of it is spent explaining what is about to happen or what needs to happen or what has happened. While there is no doubt that the film has some cool moments and great visual filmmaking, it manages to lack the "oomph" that a lot of tarantino's fans seek, myself included.
There is also the general issue with the villain. Samuel's character (I've forgotten his name, it's been a while since I saw the film) lacks something essential for all movie villains: the power to be considered a threat. He's clearly a psychopath, and manipulative for that matter, but we never get to see just how scary he really is, other than a single cold-hearted shooting of the guy in the trunk. Moving forward, he gets belittled by jackie and in a single instant, he loses the general threatening aura you need for a good villain. He becomes a laughing stock.
Now maybe that's intentional on Tarantino's part, but "intentional" does not mean "satisfying" or "entertaining". So if the threat is seen as a joke by both Jackie Brown and the audience, the threat essentially evaporates. Compare this to how tarantino filmed Hans Landa, Marcellus Wallace, Bill and his assassin squad, etc... and you can see the problem.
Now you may disagree with all of this in terms of your personal enjoyment. And that's fine, it's subjective as to what exactly a person likes in terms of dialogue and filmmaking in general. However, this IS likely what happened in terms of reception, and it probably is what Tarantino had to reconsider for his further career.
For that matter, I consider Kill Bill (both volumes) to be the absolute best film he's ever made, both in terms of concept and execution. That said, it may also be his most "stolen" film, if conceptual ideas for entertainment can even be stolen to begin with. Not much of the bride's story or plot or setting is particularly original, but it really doesn't have to be. What IS original, is the way Tarantino connects all of these "stolen" elements into one cohesive, satisfying and constantly entertaining viewing session, and how the bride can still manage to be a unique character in the midst of it.
Like tarantino said, the best filmmakers are action filmmakers (I don't neccesarily agree with that statement wholesale), and seeing as Tarantino might have made the best action film, or at least one of the best, he might just be tooting his own horn here. But there is a truth to his statement regardless. If you film action well, you keep the audience entertained despite all the visual noise of blood, guts and fast-moving limbs. It's the most pure form of visual filmmaking. If you suck at filming action, it's just a whole lot of movement with not a lot of entertainment. Tarantino knew this, and delivered excellently.
Jackie Brown and Kill Bill are definitely different genres, so what works for one may not neccesarily work for the other. However, in terms of dialogue, Kill Bill wins for me all the same. There is less of it, but what is there is worked to perfection. Every sentence is interesting, every word is important, everything has a purpose, drives the plot or the characters forward, and if these things aren't there, the dialogue is at least entertaining on a more campy level. (In general, movies have lost the art of campy humor in contemporary times, and that's a horrible shame.)
So if an action film has better dialogue than a film whose entire point is supposed to centre around the dialogue, you have a problem, don't you? Again; You may enjoy Jackie Brown all the same, and that's fine. It is by no means a bad movie. But Tarantino knew that arguments of subjectivity are ultimately meaningless if you want to see the art of filmmaking as something more than just arbitrary rules. There is a reason Kill Bill works, and Jackie Brown seemed not to work for a great deal of people.
Bladerunner was a commercial "failure" at the time but eventually garnered cult status. recouped its investment, makes money and has a sequel. Jackie Brown deserves better.
I seriously hope Uma joins Tarantino again for whatever complete epic he comes up with for his final film.
he's moved on to her daughter
this is my favorite QT Movie. The story is so inspirational, the actors are perfect and i think it is still underrated. This is truly one of the top movies ever.
Since I was kid this was my all time favorite film and the reason I love so many Quentin tarratino films, I love the filming style of grind house films. The noir style of sin city the iconic film pulp fiction inglorious bastards once upon a time in Hollywood. But there was something about kill bill from the fighting to the music score to even the outfits created my love for films such as that
the kill bill whistle scene was my phone ringtone for a good while after the films were made, good memories
lol for me to
As a film director Im so glad I found this channel today
Nothing but quality from this channel.
Thank you! Actually this is our secondary channel. The main one contains our feature documentary films. If you like our clips, you'll enjoy our longer works 😉
These are like little mini documentaries. Love em. You've got a subscriber in me after watching three of these Quentin Tarantino videos in a row.
Only Quentin could keep so many movies in his head
Nah, Edgar can too.
The quality of these videos is sublime, ty
Respected every actor, everyone gave 100% such an amazing, iconic movie. Solidified Tarantino as a bonefide hit maker and visionary. Wouldve never thought a few years latter he would spit out Inglorious bastards and Django...
An amazing film maker!! Story teller! Too many hits from him to count.
I'm really loving the breakdown of his films! This is brilliant and answers so many questions in a fantastic way!!! ❤️
In the history of cinema nobody has deserved an Oscar more than Christoph Waltz in this role. RIP Sally
He was in other Tarentino movies but not this one haha
I believe he has two and both for other Tarantino films.
Seeing that quick shot of Uma's stunt double was a surprise! So good
0:48
“Same mistake”? Jackie Brown is a fantastic film. Wtf..
By the way the scene at the Brothel in vol 2 is the very last scene filmed for Uma in the bride role. The guy running the brothel she talks to was also the guy in volume 1 that gets called by his son to the church after the massacre. Michael parks i think his name is.
Yes its him. Michael Parks played a dual role the Crime Scene Investigator with his son no.1 and Esteban, Bill's father figure. Michael Parks and the actor who played son no.1 also reprised their role in the double movie feature titled GRINDHOUSE PRESENTS: DEATHPROOF starring Kurt Russel and PLANET TERROR starring Rose McGowan. On the movie PLANET TERROR you will see that besides son no. 1 he also has anothe chilsd which is the lady doctor/nurse that uses syringe as guns against the zombies.
@@richardlara5466 the actor IS his son in real life, James Parks. He’s also O.B. in the hateful 8. RIP to Michael Parks btw.
The Rza did magic on the score .
0:45 "Tarantino was not about to make the same mistake twice"
Um, back the hell up, Jackie Brown is his best movie
All those Facts, defines Brilliantly what makes the Kill Bill Saga, A Masterpiece. 🌹💖
Kill Bill Vol 1 and 2 was his MASTERPIECE ...
Love this video so much. My favorite movie of all time.
JACKIE BROWN IS NO MISTAKE. One of his BEST movies!!!
Django, kill bill series, pupil fiction my favorite
I can't say I'm a huge fan of when the videos are super split up, but I do really love the content, and hope it helps ya to grow! Fantastic videos:)
Ya know, I just realized you have two channels. Im kinda an idiot.
I dig that Rodriguez only wanted $1 and Quentin repaid the favor. Seems like they're buddies with like minds
When combined, Kill Bill is even better than Pulp Fiction.
Very cool. Some of these things I never knew. Thank you.
I am currently watching this and I am dying at the "R-Z-A" ahahahahah
Jackie Brown was incredible.
I love the Kill Bill movies!! Great casting and action!
I love kill bill. Vol 2 is my fave i saw it so many times when it came out. I like the little nod to Bruce Lee's 'game of death' suit the bride wears.
this film has it all, the whole package, my mind was blown when I 1st saw it
Great video. Honestly I thought Tarantino had disappeared up his own ass with this one. It was only years later that I understood he’d been up there all along.
Great content, keep it up
12:51 I didn't know what "dilogy" meant , so I looked it up and also learned the word that you probably meant was "duology"
I watch these two movies every single time they come on the television. The only thing I do though is fast forward through a lot of David Carradine‘s lengthy Gabbing. Lol
Very nice, thank you very much for this video. I actually got goose bumps when I recognised the one-second reference at 9:45 "SF: Episode One" - SF stands for Samurai Fiction and I got it on DVD. Excellent film. Of course I got Kill Bill, too, and I love it. :))
I got the opportunity to live in Tokyo for a year. The location of the Crazy 88 fight scene is a real restaurant called Gonpachi. If anyone gets the chance to go to Tokyo... DEFINITELY go. They have all you can drink liquor and great food!
@Kolo kino amazing, you did such a great job on this video, enjoyed, truly.
Thank you! Glad to know
Jackie brown was an amazing movie, I can’t believe more people haven’t seen it
Awesome stuff !
RZA coproducing the music in the film is crazy to me. I didn't know it but it makes perfect sense.
Dope channel mate, you got yourself a new sub.
Millones de gracias por este material azooo
I love this movie, I used to watch it as a little girl. Iconic 👏🏾
RZA pronounced “Rizz-Ah” 2 syllables, Wu tang forever 👐🐝
At its release, I think I ruined a potential relationship I liked and laughed at this movie so hard. I don't think he was pleased.🤣To this day, I love Kill Bill Vol. 1!♥ Also, Pai Mei is THE ABSOLUTE BEST scenes for me! It was like a tv episode in the middle of a movie! I loved it!
You missed the Easter egg where Thurman draws a square in the air just like she did in Pulp Fiction.
True!
A masterpiece of a film 👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️
Well done on the documentary!
Thank you for the Video.
“riza” not r-z-a but great video 👏🏻
And Zo-wee, no Zo. But those are nitpicks, the videos are still great.
Shit made me spit out my morning arsenic.
GRAAAAVVEEDIIIIGGAAZZZZ
Had to immediately pause the video to make sure this comment was here. 👍🏽😂
Are zee aye
5:13
R Z A 😂
It’s “Rizza”. Hahahah
Still my all time favorite movie.
I really want Uma Thurman in Tarintino’s last film. It would be so poetic
Did he call Jackie Brown a mistake?
I legit had no idea that Darryl Hannah played pris in blade runner. Coolest tidbit in the video for me. I never would have guessed that was her. 🤷🏻♂️
i really enjoy the narration. (please don't tell me it's AI.) plenty of details put into a relatively short video. a well done. new sub.
No worries, it's not artificial intelligence. The voice you heard was actually from a professional voice-over actor. Glad you found it enjoyable! Thank you for your kind words and sub!
Watching "Lady Snowblood" from 1973 will make you know everything there is to know.
8:55 For me was one of the most memorable small parts and funniest.
Fav movie of all time! Saw it tripping for the first time lol
I really enjoyed Kill Bill, I don't think there was a single orginal idea in the whole movie and that's why I love it so much, it's the largest basket of Easter Eggs ever seen on the silver screen!
THAT's why you love it so much?
@@DaveRCollins1 Indeed, not a single original idea! A classic Hollywood film.
Excellent film. Well, if you count them as one. I love both volumes anyway. They’re terrific, and if I had to separate them and rank them in my top 20 films of all time, Volume 1 is my 17th fav film of all time, and Volume 2 is my 14th fav film of all time. They’re my top Tarantino movies, alongside Jackie Brown and Django Unchained. Reservoir Dogs is also awesome.
This is one of my favorite movies. Love it.
9:03 did Madsen know that the club owner was gonna say that line?
he could just be acting, but his facial response looked like a genuine
suprise.
That scene when the bride is chopping up the japanese in black and white....one of the greatest scenes ever
Jump scare @ 2:51
Greatest movie ever made change my mind
Kill Bill is my all time favourite movies 🔥🔥 superficially it looks like action crime but underneath a great emotional love deciet trauma combined in melancholic tale 💛 Tarantino is legendary filmmaker 🙏 uma Thurman deserves oscar for her great portrayal of Beatrix she was absolutely phenomenal in this role no one can play the bride other than uma 🔥
2:30 “he desperately needed to resurrect his career.” Don’t know if there are any fans of “Best of the Worst” - bad movie review show - here; his 80s/90s films are featured quite often there, including such gems as: Future Force, Future Force 2, and Karate Cop.
One of his best action movies
7:12 and he did
Yes, one of the greatest fight scenes *of all time!*
All hail the magnificent Zoe Bell. What a human she is !
Amazing channel!
This is my favorite film, ever.
Ugh, my absolute favorite!!
He is definitely a great director!
He is a great director with a great sense of humor
That was amazing
In his book The Kill Bill Diary, David Carradine tells many details about the development of his character, and the shooting of the film.
Several of the things that appear in Bill's home, belonged to Carradine.
Did they ever follow the book up with what happened to him in china?
@@AC3handle He tells about the shooting of the film's scenes in China, specifically when Bill takes Beatrix to Pai Mei, and also about a scene long prepared and effectively shot, which involved Bill defeating a character played by Michael Jai White and friends; that scene was not included in the final cut. The campfire scene was shot in China and reshot in studio, later, for sound and script reasons.
The shooting of this film was indeed international.
In case your question was not about this film, but just a expression of bad taste and morbid curiosity about the alleged way in which the actor died, let me inform you:
His death happened in Bangkok, and to this day the Thai police has not delivered the results of the investigation. Don't believe me? Look for the final autopsy reports yourself, in Thai. Everything you believe you know was the American media misrepresenting the opinion of a Thai pathologist, Dr. Rojanasunan, who didn't participate in the investigation as "Thai authorities ruled this," misrepresented interviews to one ex-wife, Gail Jensen, who consistently denied what the media said she confirmed (also, she died from alcoholism less than a year after, so her mind state is a mystery), and another ex-wife, Marina Anderson, whose "divorce papers" were misrepresented by a sensationalist website by leaking sealed accusations thrown during a post-divorce litigation for money. That same lady, one year later, changed her testimony and now says he was murdered, *because psychics told her so.* And the cherry on the cake, "he was wearing a wig and fishnet stockings," came from a blurry photo (likely a fake), published by a tabloid, imaginatively interpreted by another tabloid, and not a forensic report. If course, nobody cared about the professionalism of a forensic investigation which leaked the autopsy photos. Go look for those ones, the National Enquirer published them. Hope they make you happy.
You can believe whatever your tastes and interests tell you; to this day the case remains unsolved. Another victory of gossip media over boring facts.
And, if finally the forensic reports appear and confirm his so far alleged manner of death, so what? Who is anybody to throw stones at him?
@@MariaMartinez-researcher
Thank you for answers to all the questions I had, and even some I didn't.
@@MariaMartinez-researcher thank you for this comment, David was my uncle and it was hard to watch how the media portrayed his death. Nobody in our family believes for a second that he killed himself.
@@plokoon4 Greetings. I researched this subject for Wikipedia. The edition wasn't accepted because is original investigation and it requires the citation of tabloids, which Wikipedia doesn't accept no matter the reasons (oh, the irony). So, I am preparing a paper for a scholarly journal. I am a librarian and bibliographic researcher; I have evaluated sources, papers and dissertations for decades, first time I'll write one. Wish me fortitude and good luck. ✌
Hope there is a part3
Even what he thinks is his worst is still some of the best cinema ever put on film. Period.
Superman was born a superhero.
Superman's costume is Clark Kent
wait is that where this line originated from???
Larry Bishop, as the club owner who hates Buds hat, sounds very much like David Proval, who played Richie Aprile in the Sopranos.
I didn’t know SZA would make one of the best songs ever based on the film
Anyways.
@@SuperDannyBoy95ntm cuz Doja fake ahh ain turn in her verse
Ikr??😚
He better put some respect on Miss Vivica !
Wait, who was the music done by?
i think tarentino chose Bill so well!
I'm excited for the new S.Z.A. album. We had to wait so long for her to comeback.
Underrated reply 😂
Imo he is a top ten director of all time maybe top 8 even
The whistle is still my ring tone almost 20 years later 😂