The real Inglorious Basterds link is that one of the Italian films Rick does is directed by Antonio Margheriti, the alias Eli Roth used at the movie premiere.
Antonio Margheriti was a real Italian director of that era (as was Sergio Corbucci, who is also name-checked in Once Upon A Time), so the Eli Roth character's use of that name is actually a tip of the hat to a real director who wouldn't be prominent for another 20+ years, but who had real relevance in 1969. Kind of an inside-out reference/callback.
Brad Pitt is truly remarkable. I had the privilege of meeting him privately last week, thanks to my support for his poverty alleviation foundation through Radiant Reservation. I was deeply impressed by his kindness towards the press and his attentiveness to his fans.
After watching "Babylon," my interest in meeting the co-stars grew. During my research, I came across an interview where Brad mentioned his interaction with dedicated fans through Radiant Reservation. This piqued my curiosity, as I had numerous questions about Hollywood that I wanted to explore.
During my research, I uncovered an exclusive club facilitated by Radiant Reservation. As a select member of this club, you are afforded a rare chance to interact with your desired celebrity. Brad Pitt allocates time at the conclusion of each month to directly engage with participating club members who actively support his foundation and are investors in his associated movie franchises.
I discovered the Radiant Reservation community, which specializes in coordinating arrangements between celebrities/public figures and private organizations. Their exceptional support makes them a valuable resource for these types of collaborations.
That sounds truly fascinating! I'm genuinely interested in the possibility of joining the club. Thank you so much for sharing this information with me. Indeed, it offers an exceptional opportunity for fans like us.
Something you missed: Timothy Olyphant, playing James Stacy, riding away on a motorcycle after shooting Rick’s guest spot on Lancer. In real life, Stacy was in a motorcycle accident that killed his girlfriend and cost him his left arm and leg. There can be no doubt Tarantino included that scene with the motorcycle as foreshadowing of that tragedy.
The first time I went and saw this movie I didn't like it that much. I grew up knowing who Sharron Tate was and what happened to her. When I saw this movie in the theater the whole time I was filled with this sense of dread, since I "knew" how it was going to end. When the movie ended with the new history of Sharron surviving this huge sense of relief washed over me. A couple of days later I went back to the theater and watched the movie again. This time I loved it as the sense of dread was gone.
The best Tarantino movie since Pulp Fiction (and according to him his very best)! Also it was the last truly GREAT Hollywood movie before the death of Hollywood after 2019 - fitting epitaph to movie industry.
It's interesting that Tarantino cast Bruce Dern in this movie and also included the Stones song 'Out of Time'. The reason I think it's interesting is because Dern starred in the late 70's movie 'Coming Home' with John Voight and Jane Fonda and that movie also featured that Stones tune. I'm sure Tarantino did this on purpose.
I think Bruce Dern was a replacement for another actor. Also the stones song lyrics “baby you’re out of time “ could refer to Sharon Tate’s unborn baby
@@tonyhill6300 except that in Once Upon a Time Tate's baby survives. Anyway, I think it would be highly unlikely that the selection of the song was accidental.
I just now noticed that Rick Dalton has a giant photo of himself at the end of his driveway, lol. 10 seconds in and I’ve already learned something I hadn’t noticed before. Good video so far!
The one thing I know about this film is that it's based on Quentin Tarantino's personal memories he talked about the cars, the feel, and the look. So I personally feel this film wasn't made for the audience it was him trying to capture a specific moment in time and give a happy ending to a tragic story for his children to see what inspired him. He made a film for himself at his own pace, so I believe he sees this as his greatest work for different reasons.
There are several QT films i can't stand, but here he hits the jackpot. This one's the best movie I've seen since the Gladiator. Thanks for all the tidbits!
@@Jasmine-tl6yr possibly, but when Popeyes came to my town, everyone was referring to it as "new" for years, even though it'd been established in the state for a decade. "You try the new Popeyes yet? The spicy chicken sandwich is amazing!"
Given the existence of McDonalds' and Burger King within the film, I'd say that it's possible that Big Kahuna Burger may have been squeezed out for a time, and is making a return to relevance by the events of Pulp Fiction. In which case, Jules could be unfamiliar with the restaurant's past presence in the area, and may have incorrectly identified it as new. However, Jules is also purposely messing with Brad and Flock of Seagulls during the conversation, so he might also be misidentifying the chain as new on purpose.
@@eldorados_lost_searcher good point, there is a high chance he was just messing with Brad to see if he'd "correct" him by saying it'd been there a year or two
FUN video. One note: Columbia Pictures was not actually a "Massive" studio during the Golden Age of Hollywood, at least not by the standards of the industry at that time. Yes, it was one of the Eight 'Major' studios -- the ones that produced and distributed their own films, and also owned their own theaters -- but Columbia was physically small, created less output than the bigger studios, and it only owned small number of theaters. Columbia, Fox and United Artists were known as the 'mini-Majors': Columbia was bigger, more impressive, and more important than the dozens of smaller studios of the era, but not merely as large or influential as the so-called "Big Five" studios MGM, Paramount, Universal, Warner Bros, and RKO (the last of these being almost a mini-Major in its own right).
I always feel like Tarantino movies are (what if) fantasies. Priceless cinematic style and a superhuman sense of texture, ambiance and flawless and surprising casting choices ; nobody writes better dialogue than Tarantino ! BRAVO
Very entertaining synopsis. I just watched the movie for the first time tonight. I especially liked hearing about the cars from Reservoir Dogs and Kill Bill. The hip injury from the book and later in the climactic scene was also a cool catch. I actually thought the music/soundtrack from this movie fell way short from other Tarantino films I’ve seen, especially with the great time period of music to choose from, but learning that all the radio play was genuine somewhat appeased. One observation I made myself was Kato in this film and Cato, the buffoonish yet skilled martial arts character in the Pink Panther films of the ‘60’s. Maybe Cato was a caricature of Green Hornet’s Kato to begin with, but in any case I’m sure Tarantino is familiar with both franchises.
Allegedly, the LA cops found home sex movies Roman made of Sharon that were pretty disgusting of what he made her do. He may be a great director, but, he's a POS.
I have a copy of Lie. I inherited it from a genius friend who made his living as a journalist who wrote studies of cults, Hollywood, and dark literature. He would have loved this movie. QT, David Lynch, Truman Capote, and Hunter Thompson were his idols.
I had thought I had been to the Spahn ranch as a kid. But, after doing research probably not. There were a number of movie ranches out in that area for quite awhile. The ones I was taken to had some sort of tour around the property and had gun fights in their western town. There was a pond where they said some Tarzan movies were filmed.
Another car used in the film, was the 1953 MG TD the one that Roman takes Sharon in to the Playboy Mansion. While not in the Tarantino-verse of films, the car was used in a 1969 film Model Shop, a film that shows the car being driven all over Tarantinos beloved L.A. Tarantino loves using quotes and props from other films, so I don't think this was just a coincidence.
Wow that is so totally and completely not at all interesting in any way. We truly couldn't care any less what you've seen or how many times this is not all about John
@@slowery43 AND we have no interest in your rudeness whatsoever....geez...get a life....yes John we do care how many times you have watched the movie, this shows a true dedication to the film...as for you "slowery43"....take a hike and get a life somewhere else besides seeking out others who do enjoy their lives and attempting to belittle them because you are a sad individual...
The Actual movie props location is unclear - but makes for some fascinating online reading, in particular check out the Vanity Fair article - but it is pretty clear the one Decaprio owns was made from the original mold for a 1975 movie.
Up until the mid '70's or so, the Playboy mansion was in Chicago. Seriously. The Rolling Stones used it as a anything goes 'base' on the top-of-their-game '72 tour - Keith Richards and Bobby Keys started an unintentional small fire there, lol. Don't think there was a 'grotto' there - you know, the weather thing.
This is less things that can be missed, and more like things most people wouldn't ever notice or care about. I clicked this video thinking it would be little hidden story plots or fine details that have to do with the actual movie. Change the name to 20 things that relate to, or were used in other movies.
99% of the references of this movie were lost on me. I've never been to LA, I barely knew who Sharon Tate was beforehand... and so on. I just wanted to watch it for the Tarantino-ness... which I didn't really get until the murder scene at the very end, to be honest. All that care and time he took, right over my head. haha
i enjoyed your video, but geez do you have to put an "a" after the last wore in every other sentence? Starting to sound like a teenage girl.:LOL. Oh my gosha, why are you doing thata.
At one point Brad Pitt is shown driving the car at one time you cxn see the speedometer at zero. It must be on a ramp being driving around by the production team.
I'm trying to buy a VW karmanguia for years in my country. It's quite common there but they are now expensive. Never found a conversible there and all are red, but still, I want one! Another thing that annoys ppl is that my ex gf looks exactly like the hippie blue eyed girl - not only physical but also in moves and ways. We were together for 9 years and broke like 20 years ago. She is now on her 40's and I had lost contact totally, and I'm thankful for that. Oh and she had an amazing perfect body at the time.
As an almost ghastly parallel, I dated a hot slim brunette in my youth. She looked quite the same as the Pussycat girl - and she shared the first name with Ms. Qualley...
The most obvious “musical foreshadowing” in the film has Sharon Tate going about her business on that fateful day to the tune of the Stones’ “Out of Time.”
The one thing I missed about Once Upon a Time a Time in Hollywood was the point. Although my least favorite o fTaritino”s movie, I now have a greater appreciation of Jackie Brown.
okay smarty pants, you missed the leo's character already have the spaghetti western poster in his driveway even before his carrier in hollywood is declining
It has a very brilliant end fight scene... Pitt shined and all his scenes.. It was nice to see Tate captured... but besides that. It was a typical cliche movie. Leo was very blah and boring in this.
The rewatchability of this film is insane. Cinematic masterpiece.
My favorite QT movie by far. I love all his stuff, but this one is just SOO SOOO good and rewatchable. GREAT flick.
I can't wait to see the longer version! The ambiance of the movie is so great!
You should check out pulp fiction sometime, it's pretty good
Particularly great if you lived in La at this time!
I have yet to watch it.
@@ebayerr It's interesting, but I'm thinking that most people like seeing the Manson family turned into charcoal briquettes.
Holy crap. I never noticed that Rick Dalton’s car was Mr. Blonde’s car.
"Rick Dalton"
"Mr. Blonde"
Isn't that redundant?
:)
The real Inglorious Basterds link is that one of the Italian films Rick does is directed by Antonio Margheriti, the alias Eli Roth used at the movie premiere.
I was going to mention this as well, I loved that nod to Inglorious Basterds
Antonio Margheriti was a real Italian director of that era (as was Sergio Corbucci, who is also name-checked in Once Upon A Time), so the Eli Roth character's use of that name is actually a tip of the hat to a real director who wouldn't be prominent for another 20+ years, but who had real relevance in 1969. Kind of an inside-out reference/callback.
Yup! I remembered the name because the fake Italian cameraman was told to repeat it over and over to try and sound more Italian!
Hollywood needs the old-school auteurs like Tarantino more than ever
Brad Pitt is truly remarkable. I had the privilege of meeting him privately last week, thanks to my support for his poverty alleviation foundation through Radiant Reservation. I was deeply impressed by his kindness towards the press and his attentiveness to his fans.
Wow, that's truly incredible! I can't believe you got to meet him. How did you manage that?
After watching "Babylon," my interest in meeting the co-stars grew. During my research, I came across an interview where Brad mentioned his interaction with dedicated fans through Radiant Reservation. This piqued my curiosity, as I had numerous questions about Hollywood that I wanted to explore.
During my research, I uncovered an exclusive club facilitated by Radiant Reservation. As a select member of this club, you are afforded a rare chance to interact with your desired celebrity. Brad Pitt allocates time at the conclusion of each month to directly engage with participating club members who actively support his foundation and are investors in his associated movie franchises.
I discovered the Radiant Reservation community, which specializes in coordinating arrangements between celebrities/public figures and private organizations. Their exceptional support makes them a valuable resource for these types of collaborations.
That sounds truly fascinating! I'm genuinely interested in the possibility of joining the club. Thank you so much for sharing this information with me. Indeed, it offers an exceptional opportunity for fans like us.
I love this movie so much. I think it’s Tarantino’s most under-appreciated.
I'd say that's probably the Hateful 8, but this movie is certainly underappreciated
@@seandpizzle Good point. That’s one of my favorite Tarantino films. Definitely underrated.
I think Jackie Brown is also in this conversation.
It is s-l-o-w and not good. Jackie Brown is 10 times the movie this is.
@@johnnydripp People come to see revisionist history in the form of the Manson family being barbecued, & stay for everything else.
Something you missed: Timothy Olyphant, playing James Stacy, riding away on a motorcycle after shooting Rick’s guest spot on Lancer. In real life, Stacy was in a motorcycle accident that killed his girlfriend and cost him his left arm and leg. There can be no doubt Tarantino included that scene with the motorcycle as foreshadowing of that tragedy.
I noticed that too .😁
The first time I went and saw this movie I didn't like it that much. I grew up knowing who Sharron Tate was and what happened to her. When I saw this movie in the theater the whole time I was filled with this sense of dread, since I "knew" how it was going to end. When the movie ended with the new history of Sharron surviving this huge sense of relief washed over me. A couple of days later I went back to the theater and watched the movie again. This time I loved it as the sense of dread was gone.
I was the same way about the ending. Every time they showed Sharon's characters my heart ached a little bit
The best Tarantino movie since Pulp Fiction (and according to him his very best)! Also it was the last truly GREAT Hollywood movie before the death of Hollywood after 2019 - fitting epitaph to movie industry.
You forgot to mention Zoë Bell’s appearance in Django Unchained. She wears a bandana over her face the entire time
Fun Fact: One of the Maltese Falcon Statues is now worth more then the Actual Statue that the movie is about
It's got a lot more history with it.
This movie had, hands down, one of my favorite endings in a movie, ever.
It's interesting that Tarantino cast Bruce Dern in this movie and also included the Stones song 'Out of Time'. The reason I think it's interesting is because Dern starred in the late 70's movie 'Coming Home' with John Voight and Jane Fonda and that movie also featured that Stones tune. I'm sure Tarantino did this on purpose.
I think Bruce Dern was a replacement for another actor. Also the stones song lyrics “baby you’re out of time “ could refer to Sharon Tate’s unborn baby
@@tonyhill6300 except that in Once Upon a Time Tate's baby survives. Anyway, I think it would be highly unlikely that the selection of the song was accidental.
Burt Reynolds was the actor, but he sadly died before filming begsn.
I just now noticed that Rick Dalton has a giant photo of himself at the end of his driveway, lol.
10 seconds in and I’ve already learned something I hadn’t noticed before. Good video so far!
Only narcissists wud notice. Jk 😜
FYI It's pronounced "Hollywood", not "Hollywoodah"
And it's not a "Coupay DeVille".
😂
His vocal fry is insufferable and ruins an otherwise interesting video.
@@anthonyjennaway9831Nah...its sufferable...
It's a verbal tic of his. Hollywoodah, Karmann Ghia-ah, Heffner Mansionah, etc. It's quite irritatingah. He might need speech therapyah.
@@anthonyjennaway9831 I was enjoying the video but the narration killed it. Had to cut it off halfway through
The one thing I know about this film is that it's based on Quentin Tarantino's personal memories he talked about the cars, the feel, and the look. So I personally feel this film wasn't made for the audience it was him trying to capture a specific moment in time and give a happy ending to a tragic story for his children to see what inspired him. He made a film for himself at his own pace, so I believe he sees this as his greatest work for different reasons.
There are several QT films i can't stand, but here he hits the jackpot. This one's the best movie I've seen since the Gladiator. Thanks for all the tidbits!
In pulp fiction Jules refers to Big Kahuna as that new Hawaiian burger joint I thought. Not very new if ads were showing up 25 years earlier
New location. Its a chain
But they're both in California. So, if it was a chain, they would be spread out there. And he did say it was new.
@@Jasmine-tl6yr possibly, but when Popeyes came to my town, everyone was referring to it as "new" for years, even though it'd been established in the state for a decade. "You try the new Popeyes yet? The spicy chicken sandwich is amazing!"
Given the existence of McDonalds' and Burger King within the film, I'd say that it's possible that Big Kahuna Burger may have been squeezed out for a time, and is making a return to relevance by the events of Pulp Fiction. In which case, Jules could be unfamiliar with the restaurant's past presence in the area, and may have incorrectly identified it as new.
However, Jules is also purposely messing with Brad and Flock of Seagulls during the conversation, so he might also be misidentifying the chain as new on purpose.
@@eldorados_lost_searcher good point, there is a high chance he was just messing with Brad to see if he'd "correct" him by saying it'd been there a year or two
Hey Gareth! Looking like Claudio Castigniolli in this video!
FUN video. One note: Columbia Pictures was not actually a "Massive" studio during the Golden Age of Hollywood, at least not by the standards of the industry at that time. Yes, it was one of the Eight 'Major' studios -- the ones that produced and distributed their own films, and also owned their own theaters -- but Columbia was physically small, created less output than the bigger studios, and it only owned small number of theaters. Columbia, Fox and United Artists were known as the 'mini-Majors': Columbia was bigger, more impressive, and more important than the dozens of smaller studios of the era, but not merely as large or influential as the so-called "Big Five" studios MGM, Paramount, Universal, Warner Bros, and RKO (the last of these being almost a mini-Major in its own right).
I always feel like Tarantino movies are (what if) fantasies. Priceless cinematic style and a superhuman sense of texture, ambiance and flawless and surprising casting choices ; nobody writes better dialogue than Tarantino ! BRAVO
It was good that you mentioned the famous Wilhelm Scream but maybe you shouldn't talk over it so people could hear it.
"The Hateful Coffee Pot" was #8.
I see what you did there...
Very nice, but I'm still a bit bothered by 'Bruce Lee' losing the fight, even if he was channeling Kato.
Whenever I here Kato's name I immediately think of Peter Sellers and the Pink Panther movies
*BIGGEST THING I MISSED about "Once Upon a Time in Hollyweird"*
*The whole movie.*
Very entertaining synopsis. I just watched the movie for the first time tonight.
I especially liked hearing about the cars from Reservoir Dogs and Kill Bill. The hip injury from the book and later in the climactic scene was also a cool catch. I actually thought the music/soundtrack from this movie fell way short from other Tarantino films I’ve seen, especially with the great time period of music to choose from, but learning that all the radio play was genuine somewhat appeased.
One observation I made myself was Kato in this film and Cato, the buffoonish yet skilled martial arts character in the Pink Panther films of the ‘60’s. Maybe Cato was a caricature of Green Hornet’s Kato to begin with, but in any case I’m sure Tarantino is familiar with both franchises.
You had me at Madsen‘s Cadillac
I liked this movies ending a whole lot better than the reality of that night.
That was a hot mess!
Roman Polanski didn't deserve a woman like Sharon Tate.
Allegedly, the LA cops found home sex movies Roman made of Sharon that were pretty disgusting of what he made her do. He may be a great director, but, he's a POS.
Love is blind and passion even blinder.
I remember LA '69 quite well, especially all the hitch-hikers (male & female).
It was somewhat of a historical turning-point in southern California.
Also some ppl don't know that Margaret Qualley ( Pussycat ) was also little BB in Kill Bill Vol 2
little BB was NOT margaret qualley, she was a 4yo from brazil, i think...
@@Zelda-lj5nn google it lol look at her film credits
Also, Madeline Stowes daughter.
I thought she was And ie Mcdowell's daughter.
I have a copy of Lie. I inherited it from a genius friend who made his living as a journalist who wrote studies of cults, Hollywood, and dark literature. He would have loved this movie. QT, David Lynch, Truman Capote, and Hunter Thompson were his idols.
I had thought I had been to the Spahn ranch as a kid. But, after doing research probably not. There were a number of movie ranches out in that area for quite awhile. The ones I was taken to had some sort of tour around the property and had gun fights in their western town. There was a pond where they said some Tarzan movies were filmed.
Nobody moves like Lee. Even in a another movie. Dude was too strong and quick.
Another car used in the film, was the 1953 MG TD the one that Roman takes Sharon in to the Playboy Mansion. While not in the Tarantino-verse of films, the car was used in a 1969 film Model Shop, a film that shows the car being driven all over Tarantinos beloved L.A. Tarantino loves using quotes and props from other films, so I don't think this was just a coincidence.
Nice video. Why are you wearing that hat? Was it cold in your studio?
Did I see Austin Powers entering the Playboy mansion at 3.41
Maybe watch the movie and you will know who it is
do you really talk like that? please stop. Video info was great though.
I’ve watched it 20 times
Wow that is so totally and completely not at all interesting in any way. We truly couldn't care any less what you've seen or how many times this is not all about John
@@slowery43 AND we have no interest in your rudeness whatsoever....geez...get a life....yes John we do care how many times you have watched the movie, this shows a true dedication to the film...as for you "slowery43"....take a hike and get a life somewhere else besides seeking out others who do enjoy their lives and attempting to belittle them because you are a sad individual...
@@slowery43ok, Negative Nancy. The same goes for you!
Agreed. The rewatchability of this film is insane. Cinematic masterpiece.
@@slowery43 and it certainly is not about your rude mouth either. You must be a real peach of a person, not!
Yeah, I explained the Willhelm Scream to my Lady the other day. ✌️🤠
For me, no movie could ever top Inglourious Basterds, but this one got within reach.
Kurt Russell should have played Stuntman Mike from Death Proof.
Im stull stuck on a Cyoupay. The Coupe? Definitely not a Coup.
Not everyone pronounces things like 'Murcah. "Coupay" is how lots of other cultures pronounce it.
Austin Powers wore Roman Polanski’s suit. Or is it the other way around
Did you guys find this in your drafts and decided March 28, 2024 would be a good release date?
I didn't miss them. 😃
Bruce Lee would never agree to losing a fight on set
That Margot wears some of Sharon's jewelry, is not something that can be "missed." It would be like missing the brand name of her shoes
Toast of London vibes from this guy.
"that's the real Maltese falcolnUGH" stoppppppp itttttt
The Actual movie props location is unclear - but makes for some fascinating online reading, in particular check out the Vanity Fair article - but it is pretty clear the one Decaprio owns was made from the original mold for a 1975 movie.
Up until the mid '70's or so, the Playboy mansion was in Chicago. Seriously. The Rolling Stones used it as a anything goes 'base' on the top-of-their-game '72 tour - Keith Richards and Bobby Keys started an unintentional small fire there, lol. Don't think there was a 'grotto' there - you know, the weather thing.
This is less things that can be missed, and more like things most people wouldn't ever notice or care about. I clicked this video thinking it would be little hidden story plots or fine details that have to do with the actual movie.
Change the name to 20 things that relate to, or were used in other movies.
Big Kahuna Burger! missed that
You sound like Robin Leach. I don’t know why!
Awesome freaking movie
I got one of those coffee pots
I kept expecting am radio by everclear to play. Every time the raido did the jingle
Never seen the movie. Now im curious.
Man, you don't know how much you're gonna trip! Amazing film!
I saw it this summer.
The 14 fists of McCluskey Easter 🐣 was a bit of a reach
99% of the references of this movie were lost on me. I've never been to LA, I barely knew who Sharon Tate was beforehand... and so on. I just wanted to watch it for the Tarantino-ness... which I didn't really get until the murder scene at the very end, to be honest. All that care and time he took, right over my head. haha
i enjoyed your video, but geez do you have to put an "a" after the last wore in every other sentence? Starting to sound like a teenage girl.:LOL. Oh my gosha, why are you doing thata.
At one point Brad Pitt is shown driving the car at one time you cxn see the speedometer at zero. It must be on a ramp being driving around by the production team.
That sweater would make anybody else look less white
I'm trying to buy a VW karmanguia for years in my country. It's quite common there but they are now expensive. Never found a conversible there and all are red, but still, I want one!
Another thing that annoys ppl is that my ex gf looks exactly like the hippie blue eyed girl - not only physical but also in moves and ways. We were together for 9 years and broke like 20 years ago. She is now on her 40's and I had lost contact totally, and I'm thankful for that. Oh and she had an amazing perfect body at the time.
As an almost ghastly parallel, I dated a hot slim brunette in my youth. She looked quite the same as the Pussycat girl - and she shared the first name with Ms. Qualley...
Yep. . . all those people who go around missing Wilhelm Screams.
The most obvious “musical foreshadowing” in the film has Sharon Tate going about her business on that fateful day to the tune of the Stones’ “Out of Time.”
They did Bruce Lee wrong. His family was mad about it, too.
Also the Tarantino dog food!
"Good food for mean dogs"
I don’t trust any art piece that mysteriously shows up after 50 years.
50% of Madsen getting hired was his car.
Well, I got about half of them in the first viewing or so.
Reviewer is a bit too common for film analysis.
You saying it’s pretty cool takes away the coolness of it.
2:00 coo-pay? I don’t think so
I think it was Paul Newmans watch but not sure
Check out the Rolex Brad Pitt is wearing driving the Cadillac classic leather band
is that actress the girl from Maid?
W thumby lol that’ll get em
Your narrative style is annoying. Couldn't finish watching the video.
The one thing I missed about Once Upon a Time a Time in Hollywood was the point. Although my least favorite o fTaritino”s movie, I now have a greater appreciation of Jackie Brown.
21. Sydney Sweeney and her amazing ( ๏ 人 ๏ ) played the part of Manson Girl Snake.
I wish you weren't in my face.
Everything else perfect.
Bits and pieces of this movie were great but to many useless fillers. Would have been better if more depth and time on the Manson angle.
Important to mention- the real life Mason cult was way nastier and more dysfunctional than this movie portrays.
clicked on this cos i enjoyed the film clicked off it cos of the presenters infuriating delivery.
hate is a strong word but...damn.
Some interesting pieces, but his vocal fry is unbearable.
It's fiction, it didn't happen, especially the Bruce Lee scene.
God bless.
‘Jango Unchained’?
At least pretend to try, guys. 🙄
Not 1997 for Roman Polanski fleeing U.S. It was 1978.
okay smarty pants, you missed the leo's character already have the spaghetti western poster in his driveway even before his carrier in hollywood is declining
Not Without my
Dudes accent slaughters the names of things in California among other things👎🏽
I guarantee I missed nothing because I never finished it. 15 minutes of NOTHING happening killed this film for me.
The little mermaid might be more appealing for you .
You missed everything.
The film was happening and you missed a lot
I recently watched this movie after passing on it during it's release. I can only say that I should have passed on it again. What a waste of time.
I don’t know about others but I am not a Margo Robbie fan, she overacts every role I have ever seen her in.
So true it was annoying to watch
It has a very brilliant end fight scene... Pitt shined and all his scenes.. It was nice to see Tate captured... but besides that. It was a typical cliche movie. Leo was very blah and boring in this.
Most of these numbers he talks about are mind freaking and .n speaks English like indians pronounce 😂
Aldo Raine, "Nope".
Cliff Booth, "Nope".
I wish I missed the whole movie, it was a C- if that .