One of the things I've Loved about Quentin Tarantino's films is the way in which he has respected some of the older actors that are out there. Even to the effect of helping to resuscitate their careers.
He's such an awesome guy! You can feel his love for cinema in every single word and that's rousing and catching me up. Never get tired of listening to him. F****Ing genius man.
Seriously. I hate when talented cool people.....retire. I mean...I get it I guess. But if you really love something....why stop? idk....I just hope, for selfish reasons, that his retirement from directing will be like when Jay-Z retired from music.
You guys never worked in a 42street movie theater in the 70s. Everyone yelled at the screen, threw things, stomped feet, The contacted high! A good time was had by all!!
What I like is the fact that Tarantino can have such a sophisticated taste in Cinema such as Truffaut or Godard, utilize Post-Modern storytelling without being Pretentious. Very few can pull that off.
@@cizia69 It's the style he'd pay homage to, but put his own spin on it, even going as far to have a character called Jules, but he obviously loved the French New Wave and films like Shoot the Piano Player.
@@cizia69 They are. In the world of Godard everyone foams at the mouth over Marxism. I just like the Pop Art Style and bizarre editing. The plots are non-existent.
@@jonasabry9099 You might find some esthetic pleasure in Godard's absurdities, but I doubt you get much entertainment value from it, whereas Tarantino's opus is pure entertainment doubled with high esthetics; the capitalist unicorn...
"At first I'm a little trepidatious about it all" - I love the word trepidatious, it means the same thing as trepid so it's redundant, but it sounds way more sophisticated.
@@cactaceous That's what he was mentioning on Club Random... Hopefully he doesn't retire like Brady then come back & f*** ** his legacy. 😂😂😂 (laughing at Brady).
Used to take my daughter to the black movie theater when she was little (both of us white). She loved to yell at the screen whenever a character did something stupid, or a bad guy was really bad. Nobody ever spoke a bad word to us. It was great!
I’ve NEVER seen an unenjoyable or irrelevant Tarantino film… (except maybe the crappy Richard Rodriquez-directed “From Dusk ‘til Dawn,” in which he only acted in that one…
@@morbidone88I don't know, I've rarely seen him state the films we usually associate with New Hollywood as influences. Rather, the films that most influence him were the low budget exploitation films that tended to play in smaller theaters as double features such as the example he gave in the interview, which is essentially what he's been making his entire career (except with much bigger budgets and better writing/acting). His films don't really have that much in common with New Hollywood.
We are lucky that Tarantino is still young and healthy and enthusiastic! Some people think that he is some kind of a long gone imaginary legendary icon. That is how much huge this man is!
OMG, after Tarantino leaves, the other two guests seemed so dull and commonplace. His stories about going to black movie theaters when he was younger was pretty cool! Seems very memorable :D .
I swear to God, Arceus, Primus and Belldandy if I could have just one hour long conversation with Quentin Tarantino, THAT would be the defining highlight of my life!
EVERYTHING About "Cinema Speculation" Is Pure Gold. From The Ever So COOL Cover Shot Of Peckinpah And McQueen To The Various Chapters Within. It's A Fun Ride. Much Like "Pulp Fiction" It's An Experience Where You Can Start At The Beginning Or Jump To The Middle And Back (Or Forward) Again. Quentin's Gift For Storytelling Is An Artform. I'm So Happy For The Guy. Highly Recommend. Thanks QT For Your Passion, Humor And Love.
If I could ever sit down and have a Conversation with Quentin Tarantino over Coffee, I'd like to talk to him about my brother River Phoenix and his films and how he prepared for acting. I could never go on Live TV, but would love a personal conversation over Coffee. I'd need at least 4 hours. 😄
It would be so cool if Quentin could include Jim Brown in his next film. Especially if it is actually going to be his last movie. One of the things I've Loved about Quentin's films
Tarantino’s The Bus is Coming story is a reminder Twitter has always existed, it used to be out in public until the tech giants captured it and put it online.
Unfortunately, the Internet made it toxic by introducing two elements that it didn't have before, isolation and anonymity. Suddenly there were no social consequences for your behavior. I think that has a lot to do with where we have ended up today. Remember when Quentin said he yelled at the screen and then looked at his host to see if his behavior was "okay"? That's gone now.
@@BigRalphSmith okay, I think it’s a big misconception to push “the internet” as a stand-alone entity rather than an extension of humanity that always existed but only recently got such a large outlet. Isolation didn’t spontaneously spring into existence, and people were far more anonymous before social media when no one had such a reason to self-identify to the public as we are now monetarily incentivized to do. The difference between Quentin’s childhood and now is not that the sense of decency has disappeared, it’s gone from a localized community self-regulating its own behavior to an open platform where anyone can chime in from anywhere, meaning you’re seeing clashes between different tolerances to different kinds of behavior. It’s essentially a shift in sampling bias from a localized areas to a random sample.
@@BigRalphSmith no, “the internet made it toxic” isn’t true, I don’t agree with scapegoating abstract concepts such as “the internet” for what humanity does. Edit: I’d say humanity failed to adapt the ability to self-regulate at scale with technology (the internet)
@@YawaruSan _" 'The internet made it toxic' isn’t true"_ and _"humanity failed to adapt the ability to self-regulate at scale with technology (the internet)"._ appear to be statements that conflict in the context of this exchange. So, I don't agree? Either that or you aren't doing a very good job at making the point you are trying to make. Again, hard to tell. But, I have gleaned enough to understand that you think I'm wrong. Got it.
I remember my father took me to see inglorious bastards opening night sold out and it was amazing honesty..I'm glad my dad took me to see movies like that and hostel 2 and watchmen. Basically formed my taste of movies
Speaking of doing things you weren’t supposed to do as a kid: I somehow manage to dupe my parents into renting Pulp Fiction for my 10th birthday. It was all fine and dandy and me plus the 5-6 buddies I invited were glued to the TV, enjoying all the adult stuff we shouldn’t really be viewing. Then my mom suddenly started watching it too, probably curious to see what kinda weird movie her son had rented. Unlucky for us it was just as that scene with the gimp and the samurai sword happened and our forbidden session came to an abrupt ending. She ripped the tape out of the VHS and declared my birthday party over :(
In some movies, some of the times you get lines that are zingers. In Tarantino's movies the whole movie, every one of his movies is just one continuous line of ZINGERS. His characters' dialogues are second to none.
Love Tarantino. I have watched all of his movies repeatedly. But, there are no messages within his films. They reflect our times. Nihilistic is a word that comes to mind.
That is simply not true. There’s some nihilism in some of his films, but there is clearly ideology in Inglorious Basterds and Django which are masterclass in how to kill an ideology. Cinema isn’t all about preachy messaging. Cheers.
@@acetofresh1 And, as the ideology, it kills itself in both examples in a preachy in your, face way. Tarantino writes with no subtext. His words, not mind. He avoids it. You get in-your-face gore in a fantasy land of Testosterone Filled Driven Horror. It's OK and very entertaining. But, it's nothing to live your life by. My point keeps getting made. But his stuff is, without question, masterclass material. If only people would watch more of the Asian, French, and Italian flicks from which Tarantino gets a lot of his material. But that's too hard.
@@garymazeffa6819 Disagree. Not all films need to be subtle or subtext, and i'm familiar with all those film movements. Nice pretentious patronizing though.
QT is my dude! I'm a middle-aged man that also grew up in the 1970s. I'm also a HUGE Jim Brown fan as well! This cat was the embodiment of masculinity and coolness during that time. I also grew up watching those great films during that time with other cats like Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson, James Caan, Fred Williamson, Burt Reynolds, Bruce Lee, Sly Stallone, and Robert Deniro. This was not only a great period for films, but it was also a decade when boys were boys, and men were men! It's a damn shame and disgrace that today, they would refer to these men as having"toxic masculinity." I'm almost done with reading Cinema Speculation, and it's a very entertaining and informative book! It's an excellent period piece for anyone that grew up in the 1970s thru the early 1980s. I highly recommend it!
I love movies. For about 70 years now. And, l love QT. He helped resurrect many careers like Pam Grier, John Travolta and others. His movies reflect his love of Cinema. Hats off to our local South Bay hero. And, this appearance on RTime was hilarious. I've watched it over 10 times. As an African-American, l can relate to the theater cultural commentary that's a performance of it's own. Fun during comedies but l have to pass on more serious movies.
I remember learning all the great swear words at the movies, and going to school the next day to overuse and misuse them with my friends until some teacher overheard us.. fun fun.
I have to agree with Tarantino about the experience of seeing a film in a theater with other people. These is nothing quite like it. I basically have a theater in my home including a theater style popcorn machine for added authenticity. I have watched many movies down there including the last two Halloween movies and it just wasn’t the same. I saw the 2018 Halloween in a theater with a crowd and it was a blast. Now unfortunately going to the movies has gotten so expensive until I understand why people prefer streaming but there is nothing like the theater experience. I can’t imagine having seen films like Star Wars, Alien, The Lost Boys or Terminator 2 on just a large flat screen. I would be missing the visual and audio power of these films. It just ain’t the same.
I love Quentin. He has been/still is so real & HIMSELF. AN ARTIST of the HIGHEST CALIBER- a Colt45! Out of the gate, a 9mm along the way…I’m awaiting his Tommy Gun pacing…! Just love his phrasing & vision! 🎉❤❣️
🌲☄🌲400pages,First Hardcover for the man:)Can't wait to pick up & read Cinema Speculation!For Real.OUATIH paperback was gift to fans,went full Elmore Leonard in supplementary materials&package.Welcome to Quentin Tarantino,the family man years.God Bless & Always Be Well,B.M.&Q.T.:)Hey Quentin,Junior Bonner will forever be my fave Peckinpah-McQueen flick!:)🌲☄🌲
Just wanna say how good Quentin has been looking lately. Seems like he’s lost a few pounds, he looks tremendous as always in black suits and seems very chill. Great guy
The Original Athlete Turn Star was Johnny Mac Brown from the early 20th century. I won’t go into details as you can Google him but I will say Roll Tide!
Once again, a guest ends his promo week at RTWBM and we get to hear the exact same stories he told on Colbert, Kimmel or Meyers. Tarantino is a God, but I wish he'd gone to another level on HBO.
@QuentinTarantino #RealTime I love everything u do, all the way to Samuel realizing that John needs to clean the brain parts out of the car, as he 'accidentally' did homicide. Can u please tell us, that ur final movie will be the finale of Pulp Fiction , and let us know whats in the briefcase. (Which we already assume is the same briefcase that Mr. Pink acquired from Reservoir Dogs in the pre-qual) Plz, we LOVE U
Would say Johnny Weismueller was one of the 1st big ones. Plenty of others as well in that Era. But I suppose Brown was more a modern actor, and an actor who could act
Uhhhhhm Bill John Wayne was a football player, Athletes turned actors actually was always pretty common. Nat Pendleton was a wrestler, C Aubrey Smith was a cricket player, it's a big list
my parents let me see reservoir dogs when i was 10... they thought that shit was perfectly fine going from transformers smurfs gi joe and care bears ...haha..
Quentin's passion for cinema is so endearing. I relate with it so much.
One of the things I've Loved about Quentin Tarantino's films is the way in which he has respected some of the older actors that are out there. Even to the effect of helping to resuscitate their careers.
Yes, he does what Pet Shop Boys does for older musicians
I love his passion for cinema.
he has made some very enjoyable movies, so what happened to his latest borefest then? also no real ending
Agree. He’s smart as hell too. Brain is firing on all cylinders.
Foolish. He said that the 13 year that was raped by that Roman Polański was a party girl that wanted it
@@jtbukkinbronko except for his support of Roman Polański
@@CoolCoyote I actually didn't like that movie but you can't win them all..
My father took me to all the films Quentin mentioned, and then some, since I was 6 years old. I am very thankful that he did so.
6?
Uhh...
I saw pulp fiction when It came out and I was 7. Guess what I k ew then what I know now…it’s just a movie!
@@Bubbles99718 Yeah looks like that’s what he said. Why?
@@navagnaes4225 6, a Tarantino flick? Language, gore, violence.
Bit much for a 1st grader, no?
So that's why Quentin is the way he is. It all makes sense now.
He's such an awesome guy! You can feel his love for cinema in every single word and that's rousing and catching me up. Never get tired of listening to him. F****Ing genius man.
Saw Anaconda in a black theatre. Everytime ice cube was on the screen someone yelled out “you go cube!”
Man I hope Tarantino makes more movies.
1 more lolz
I just realized Tarantino has made more movies than James Cameron (9 vs 8)
@@eec589 I suppose that happens when you only make a movie ever 12 years or so!
Seriously.
I hate when talented cool people.....retire. I mean...I get it I guess. But if you really love something....why stop?
idk....I just hope, for selfish reasons, that his retirement from directing will be like when Jay-Z retired from music.
I hated all of his movies. The use of the n word over and over. And his lame jokes about jews. Wtf is his problem?
You guys never worked in a 42street movie theater in the 70s. Everyone yelled at the screen, threw things, stomped feet, The contacted high!
A good time was had by all!!
His ability to write dialog is prodigious.
Elmore Leonardesque which is why Jackie Brown is my fave Tarantino film!&True Romance:)
@@ryangettig274 I recommend True Romance whenever and to whoever I can. The dialogue is amazing.
@@S1X.S1X.S1X Amen on That:)
Reservoir Dogs!
Your ability to spell is…whatever is the opposite of prodigious.
What I like is the fact that Tarantino can have such a sophisticated taste in Cinema such as Truffaut or Godard, utilize Post-Modern storytelling without being Pretentious. Very few can pull that off.
When it comes to Godard (and some of Truffaut), sophisticated and highly unentertaining...
@@cizia69 It's the style he'd pay homage to, but put his own spin on it, even going as far to have a character called Jules, but he obviously loved the French New Wave and films like Shoot the Piano Player.
@@jonasabry9099 I agree with Tarantino being influenced by the New Wave, but I find Godard's film simply boring and pretentious.
@@cizia69 They are. In the world of Godard everyone foams at the mouth over Marxism. I just like the Pop Art Style and bizarre editing. The plots are non-existent.
@@jonasabry9099 You might find some esthetic pleasure in Godard's absurdities, but I doubt you get much entertainment value from it, whereas Tarantino's opus is pure entertainment doubled with high esthetics; the capitalist unicorn...
"You are simply a visitor in this theater... I was forged in it!"
"At first I'm a little trepidatious about it all" - I love the word trepidatious, it means the same thing as trepid so it's redundant, but it sounds way more sophisticated.
We need more Tarantino films and less mindless Marvel movies
We are going to get only 1 more. Then he is retiring.
That's because there r more stupid people out there, than intelligent ones,the idiot masses r really excited for the next black panther,
@@cactaceous That's what he was mentioning on Club Random... Hopefully he doesn't retire like Brady then come back & f*** ** his legacy. 😂😂😂 (laughing at Brady).
We do not need either.
@@richarddecredico6098 less marvel crap,
Used to take my daughter to the black movie theater when she was little (both of us white). She loved to yell at the screen whenever a character did something stupid, or a bad guy was really bad. Nobody ever spoke a bad word to us. It was great!
Tarantino is a f#@cking legend. Few Directors show such love and care for the craft they practice.
Fracking legend?
Well, I think ALL directors show love and care for their craft, only not in such a passionate way as Quentin.
I’ve NEVER seen an unenjoyable or irrelevant Tarantino film…
(except maybe the crappy Richard Rodriquez-directed “From Dusk ‘til Dawn,” in which he only acted in that one…
Too much violence.
It is obvious that Tarantino has autism and it shows the best way possible in his films.
Lol world class man. He Is what we need in Hollywood, no joke
His passion for cinema is the greatest thing!
I've seen all Quintons' movies. Genius.
Condolences.
@@richarddecredico6098 Cringe
Found it fascinating that Tarantino started seeing movies right when New Hollywood and the great directors started their careers.
It at least makes sense lol
@@morbidone88I don't know, I've rarely seen him state the films we usually associate with New Hollywood as influences. Rather, the films that most influence him were the low budget exploitation films that tended to play in smaller theaters as double features such as the example he gave in the interview, which is essentially what he's been making his entire career (except with much bigger budgets and better writing/acting). His films don't really have that much in common with New Hollywood.
@@matiasmartinez8809 you havent seen many of his interviews then he talks about 70s cinema in so many interviews he worships that era.
Love both these guys!
QT films are on another level, seriously his writing in Pulp fiction, dialogue script call it what you want is cinematic poetry!
'The Bus Is coming' sounds like a euphemism for ...
this year's elections, with the woke, left wing, lunatic liberals getting run over by the big red bus, with the header ,' common sense' on it.
"quick, find higher ground!"
The King of 🎥 Movie Making What He writes & Directs 💯
We are lucky that Tarantino is still young and healthy and enthusiastic! Some people think that he is some kind of a long gone imaginary legendary icon. That is how much huge this man is!
Truth.Being a family man now will only give him more strength & heart.:)
He's 58, and will only make 1 more movie. Count on that to be true.
@@Shaki123 58 is not old for a director
OMG, after Tarantino leaves, the other two guests seemed so dull and commonplace. His stories about going to black movie theaters when he was younger was pretty cool! Seems very memorable :D .
I swear to God, Arceus, Primus and Belldandy if I could have just one hour long conversation with Quentin Tarantino, THAT would be the defining highlight of my life!
EVERYTHING About "Cinema Speculation" Is Pure Gold. From The Ever So COOL Cover Shot Of Peckinpah And McQueen To The Various Chapters Within. It's A Fun Ride. Much Like "Pulp Fiction" It's An Experience Where You Can Start At The Beginning Or Jump To The Middle And Back (Or Forward) Again. Quentin's Gift For Storytelling Is An Artform. I'm So Happy For The Guy. Highly Recommend. Thanks QT For Your Passion, Humor And Love.
I love his trip down memory lane!
We still do double features in Upstate NY... at the drive in!
If I could ever sit down and have a Conversation with Quentin Tarantino over Coffee, I'd like to talk to him about my brother River Phoenix and his films and how he prepared for acting. I could never go on Live TV, but would love a personal conversation over Coffee. I'd need at least 4 hours. 😄
It would be so cool if Quentin could include Jim Brown in his next film. Especially if it is actually going to be his last movie. One of the things I've Loved about Quentin's films
Is Jim brown alive?
@@karllager2214 yes. Jim Brown is 86 years old.
@@RAYMONDFORCHIONFILM awesome
Just saw Quentin last night in NYC Town Hall.. awesome 🌟
Tarantino’s The Bus is Coming story is a reminder Twitter has always existed, it used to be out in public until the tech giants captured it and put it online.
Unfortunately, the Internet made it toxic by introducing two elements that it didn't have before, isolation and anonymity.
Suddenly there were no social consequences for your behavior. I think that has a lot to do with where we have ended up today.
Remember when Quentin said he yelled at the screen and then looked at his host to see if his behavior was "okay"? That's gone now.
@@BigRalphSmith okay, I think it’s a big misconception to push “the internet” as a stand-alone entity rather than an extension of humanity that always existed but only recently got such a large outlet. Isolation didn’t spontaneously spring into existence, and people were far more anonymous before social media when no one had such a reason to self-identify to the public as we are now monetarily incentivized to do.
The difference between Quentin’s childhood and now is not that the sense of decency has disappeared, it’s gone from a localized community self-regulating its own behavior to an open platform where anyone can chime in from anywhere, meaning you’re seeing clashes between different tolerances to different kinds of behavior. It’s essentially a shift in sampling bias from a localized areas to a random sample.
@@YawaruSan While your reply wasn't very clear, I'm pretty certain that everything you said doesn't change anything I said. So, I agree?
@@BigRalphSmith no, “the internet made it toxic” isn’t true, I don’t agree with scapegoating abstract concepts such as “the internet” for what humanity does.
Edit: I’d say humanity failed to adapt the ability to self-regulate at scale with technology (the internet)
@@YawaruSan _" 'The internet made it toxic' isn’t true"_ and _"humanity failed to adapt the ability to self-regulate at scale with technology (the internet)"._ appear to be statements that conflict in the context of this exchange.
So, I don't agree?
Either that or you aren't doing a very good job at making the point you are trying to make. Again, hard to tell.
But, I have gleaned enough to understand that you think I'm wrong.
Got it.
Not a hardcore QT fan. It is however interesting to hear him share his thoughts and experiences in interviews.
I remember my father took me to see inglorious bastards opening night sold out and it was amazing honesty..I'm glad my dad took me to see movies like that and hostel 2 and watchmen. Basically formed my taste of movies
Ahh, The bus is coming 🤠😆😆😆😂😁🤣🍿
This was hilarious. I remember those days. I saw Caligula at the age of 10. Thanks sis!☹️
Speaking of doing things you weren’t supposed to do as a kid:
I somehow manage to dupe my parents into renting Pulp Fiction for my 10th birthday. It was all fine and dandy and me plus the 5-6 buddies I invited were glued to the TV, enjoying all the adult stuff we shouldn’t really be viewing. Then my mom suddenly started watching it too, probably curious to see what kinda weird movie her son had rented.
Unlucky for us it was just as that scene with the gimp and the samurai sword happened and our forbidden session came to an abrupt ending.
She ripped the tape out of the VHS and declared my birthday party over :(
at least you could play some samnmax afterwards? :D
@@guybrushthreepwood4758 haha yep. I just changed pfp after replaying it BTW. Still amazing.
4:10..." Fuck going camping. " Being a videophile, you always need electricity anyways.
Great interview 👍
Theaters in the 70's were just amazing! Waiting for hours to see Star Wars was one of the greatest things ever!
It’s a comedy film if audiences react like that to a film. We need more audience participation.
Bill almost mentioned OJ as the next athlete that became a movie star lol
Lol, the guy did make his share of movies after football...
Yes he was good, he killed as an actor.
@@jonathancruz5716 lol... I hear he even did some live theater; every time someone said "break a leg", OJ did- except it was someone else's.
@@jonathancruz5716 LOL I see what you did there!
Joe Namath did a few in the early 70s.
Great Director 🎃
Quentin is a movie machine.
"Doctor Detroit" in a theatre in Oakland was like that and the most fun I'd ever had up that point already age 19.
Coincidentally both "The Bus is Coming" and "100 Rifles" are available in full on YT. Time to crack open a few cans . . . 😝
In some movies, some of the times you get lines that are zingers. In Tarantino's movies the whole movie, every one of his movies is just one continuous line of ZINGERS. His characters' dialogues are second to none.
Now, if you had David Lynch on your show, my brain would blow up.
Jackie Brown is both underrated and possibly Tarantino’s best.
For real, an MST3K-style show with random black audience commentary on nothing but 70’s films would be incredible.
Love Tarantino. I have watched all of his movies repeatedly. But, there are no messages within his films. They reflect our times. Nihilistic is a word that comes to mind.
Pulp Fiction is about choosing the righteous path... and the consequences of ignoring it.
@@mroctober3657 Perhaps you made my point for me as the “big brains on Brad” get blown out. It seems like the path is a bit twisted or nihilistic.
That is simply not true. There’s some nihilism in some of his films, but there is clearly ideology in Inglorious Basterds and Django which are masterclass in how to kill an ideology. Cinema isn’t all about preachy messaging. Cheers.
@@acetofresh1 And, as the ideology, it kills itself in both examples in a preachy in your, face way. Tarantino writes with no subtext. His words, not mind. He avoids it. You get in-your-face gore in a fantasy land of Testosterone Filled Driven Horror. It's OK and very entertaining. But, it's nothing to live your life by. My point keeps getting made. But his stuff is, without question, masterclass material. If only people would watch more of the Asian, French, and Italian flicks from which Tarantino gets a lot of his material. But that's too hard.
@@garymazeffa6819 Disagree. Not all films need to be subtle or subtext, and i'm familiar with all those film movements. Nice pretentious patronizing though.
QT is my dude! I'm a middle-aged man that also grew up in the 1970s.
I'm also a HUGE Jim Brown fan as well!
This cat was the embodiment of masculinity and coolness during that time. I also grew up watching those great films during that time with other cats like Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson, James Caan, Fred Williamson, Burt Reynolds, Bruce Lee, Sly Stallone, and Robert Deniro.
This was not only a great period for films, but it was also a decade when boys were boys, and men were men!
It's a damn shame and disgrace that today, they would refer to these men as having"toxic masculinity."
I'm almost done with reading Cinema Speculation, and it's a very entertaining and informative book! It's an excellent period piece for anyone that grew up in the 1970s thru the early 1980s.
I highly recommend it!
I love movies. For about 70 years now. And, l love QT. He helped resurrect many careers like Pam Grier, John Travolta and others. His movies reflect his love of Cinema. Hats off to our local South Bay hero. And, this appearance on RTime was hilarious. I've watched it over 10 times. As an African-American, l can relate to the theater cultural commentary that's a performance of it's own. Fun during comedies but l have to pass on more serious movies.
Dude is way more likable when he isn’t censored
Spot On Correct.
"Jim Brown was the original athlete turned star." Oh, Billy Billy Billy. You never heard of Johnny Weissmuller? You never heard of Esther Williams?
no we never heard of those obscure people, tell us more
QT is dressed up as Mr. Brown for Halloween.
Tom Laughlin’s “born losers” was my eight year old movie
I saw Phantom of the Paradise by the time I was nine
I remember learning all the great swear words at the movies, and going to school the next day to overuse and misuse them with my friends until some teacher overheard us.. fun fun.
Sergio Leone was Quintin's idol, he lived here on Maui and his family is just now building on the beachfront family lot.
Bit weird how Bill didnt bring up his thoughts on violent movies, Quentin would have given him a good answer
For the QT movies I've seen, the violence isn't gratuitous, in the sense that it doesn't have anything to do with the plot.
I have to agree with Tarantino about the experience of seeing a film in a theater with other people. These is nothing quite like it. I basically have a theater in my home including a theater style popcorn machine for added authenticity. I have watched many movies down there including the last two Halloween movies and it just wasn’t the same. I saw the 2018 Halloween in a theater with a crowd and it was a blast. Now unfortunately going to the movies has gotten so expensive until I understand why people prefer streaming but there is nothing like the theater experience. I can’t imagine having seen films like Star Wars, Alien, The Lost Boys or Terminator 2 on just a large flat screen. I would be missing the visual and audio power of these films. It just ain’t the same.
Good to see Quentin has grown up a little.
The Family Man years.
2:00 will be a viral meme by next weekend🤣🤣
He said that putting athletes in movies was a "joke". Imagine if they put an actor on a basketball court. Lol
It's ridiculous! Let's put some cartoon characters around him to make it more realistic
Dude, Johnny Weissmuller was the original athlete turned movie star.
I love Quentin. He has been/still is so real & HIMSELF. AN ARTIST of the HIGHEST CALIBER- a Colt45! Out of the gate, a 9mm along the way…I’m awaiting his Tommy Gun pacing…! Just love his phrasing & vision! 🎉❤❣️
🌲☄🌲400pages,First Hardcover for the man:)Can't wait to pick up & read Cinema Speculation!For Real.OUATIH paperback was gift to fans,went full Elmore Leonard in supplementary materials&package.Welcome to Quentin Tarantino,the family man years.God Bless & Always Be Well,B.M.&Q.T.:)Hey Quentin,Junior Bonner will forever be my fave Peckinpah-McQueen flick!:)🌲☄🌲
Quentin has tiger blood enthusiasm. Winning!
Cool to see Tarantino dressed up as Mr Brown for Halloween
I love Quentin and his films.
Johnny Weissmuller was an athlete before becoming a movie star.
Yup Tarzan
And he was a joke. Tarzan?
Just wanna say how good Quentin has been looking lately. Seems like he’s lost a few pounds, he looks tremendous as always in black suits and seems very chill. Great guy
This is basically the first chapter of his new book.
The Original Athlete Turn Star was Johnny Mac Brown from the early 20th century. I won’t go into details as you can Google him but I will say Roll Tide!
Always humorous seeing Quentin speak black
Tarantino's Star Trek would have been amazing. Such a shame it'll never be made.
No thanks. Plenty of directors could make a Star Trek movie. Only one director can make Tarantino movies.
Perhaps
Quentin is a great storyteller
すごい!
Can't wait for cinema speculation to come in mail
Jim Brown is still alive.
QT IS S TRIP!!! LIKED 99% OF THE TIME!!!
We need a good QT parable on the Chump years!....
It will be a sad day when his next and last film comes out.
Every time, I see Mr. Brown from Reservoir Dogs.
How many times did Quentin say the word LIKE? 😂😂😂😂😂
I didn't..like...notice.
It's why his podcast doesn't flow.
Gotta love QT!
Once again, a guest ends his promo week at RTWBM and we get to hear the exact same stories he told on Colbert, Kimmel or Meyers. Tarantino is a God, but I wish he'd gone to another level on HBO.
@QuentinTarantino #RealTime I love everything u do, all the way to Samuel realizing that John needs to clean the brain parts out of the car, as he 'accidentally' did homicide. Can u please tell us, that ur final movie will be the finale of Pulp Fiction , and let us know whats in the briefcase. (Which we already assume is the same briefcase that Mr. Pink acquired from Reservoir Dogs in the pre-qual) Plz, we LOVE U
Jim Brown is actually still alive. He is 86.
Ah, he’s hilarious
Johnny Weissmuller was the first big sports star to become a major film star. Tarzan. Stop rewriting history.
🤣 Awesome story Quentin
I wonder who he stole it from.
Tarantino seemed a bit high... maybe he smoked a clove with Bill before the show. 🤣🤣🤣
I had to check my YT Playback Speed. Thought I needed to slow it down.
Thank you for respecting women q!
Lol Bill you blow, in many different way
Would say Johnny Weismueller was one of the 1st big ones. Plenty of others as well in that Era.
But I suppose Brown was more a modern actor, and an actor who could act
Uhhhhhm Bill John Wayne was a football player, Athletes turned actors actually was always pretty common. Nat Pendleton was a wrestler, C Aubrey Smith was a cricket player, it's a big list
my parents let me see reservoir dogs when i was 10... they thought that shit was perfectly fine going from transformers smurfs gi joe and care bears ...haha..