@@ptaramson1553he is as much as a musical artist making music with samples. Meaning he pays homage, sublimes and brings back older references to a modern time. Not making copy cats
To me,Once upon a time in Hollywood is his best since Pulp Fiction and it gets better with each viewing. When you watch it ,it really makes you feel like you are back in 1969 Hollywood hanging out with his characters. His enthusiasm and love for this era is all over the movie and you can see his eyes just light up every time he talks about it!
Thank you for mentioning that! After each viewing the movie experience just gets more amazing! You just want to be a part of the movie, you want to be with Brad and Leo in ”Ricks” house, drinking beer and watching tv!
John Rigs watched OUATIH-extended version last night in theatres just because. Currently on a mission to complete my list of all of the Academy Award noms before Feb 9, and was planning to watch 1917 or Parasite, which I’ll get to, but there is something so simple and nostalgic about Once Upon A Time. I wasn’t even born in that era, but I am so gravitated to it. And as I watch these interviews it adds yet another layer of understanding to the film. I’ve only seen it 9 times, but last night after watching QT in this video, I watched it from a child’s perspective-how an adult nowadays might describe or depict their childhood, and how QT shared that the driving in LA scene with the camera panning up was his vantage point as a boy...wow. Just wanted to share that!
Stephanie Moran Thanks for sharing that! I was born in 1964 so I do have some memories of that era and definitely those movies and television shows-which he captures PERFECTLY! Now -you saw an extended version?! I didn’t even know that was available -that’s awesome!
This is why Tarantino's movies are so good. Cos he loves what he's doing. No idiot studio types getting their mucky hands on his work, and interfering.
@Kelp Farming How is Historical Fiction a bad thing? And also I think you missed the point of the final scene. Just because you don't like two things doesn't mean that the movie itself is a bad movie.
I love listening te Quentin nerd out about cinema lol. Many people might disagreee, but Once Upon a Time has become one of my favorite Tarantino films, in a 3-way tie with Reservoir Dogs and the Hateful Eight. I think it will be more fully appreciated within his filmography as the years go by.
I think inglorious bastards is the most satisfying one for me. The chills it sent to my spine when Nazis got massacred at the end is on another level. Then there's django unchanged
Its a love letter to hollywood and film making. I hope he starts being a go to director for other major properties and giving them cool treatments. Like how James Gunn operates. He can do 10 films but losing him directing is a tragedy. I would watch a Star Wars/Trek, Marvel/DC, Blade Runner/Aliens movie he directed in a heartbeat.
This guy is so good talking about movies it breaks my heart that he hasn't done a DVD commentary for any of his own movies except for True Romance which is probably the best DVD commentary ever.
he loves this shit! im huge QT fan, he loves talking about movies can hear it in the tone of his voice and how he gets out of breath and hardly takes a breath to talk!
1986. Seems like yesterday I was working with QT on Sam Shepard's 'True West' at Allen Garfield's Acting Workshop in West Hollywood. Happy for the man and his success. TRUE ARTIST. Without question 'Once Upon A Time In Hollywood' is the film he was born to make.
@@montybane6002 Absolutely. Allen LOVED Quentin. One of the first people to recognize his talent, especially his gift as a writer. Those were some memorable nights in AG class. As I mentioned, seems like yesterday...
Greatest filmmaker of our time and I find it hard to see a director as brilliant and passionate as him about movies in the future. He’s like a product of some of the most crucial years of Hollywood, he seen it all, and put all that knowledge into his movies. He’s someone you can truly say is doing it because he loves it.
Fantastic interview! I'd love to see a full series of Tarantino talking about film. He has such insight and passion for the medium, you can't help but be inspired.
youarehere0 the atmosphere, the acting, the characters, the music, the direction, the whole shebang. I think QT said it best here- the movie didn’t need any plot getting in the way of the story. It really gave the movie room to breathe and be free flowing- it felt like anything could happen at any moment. Nothing narratively speaking was tying it to the ground. Best film I’ve seen in a long long time. 🙌🏻
@@JDobbsy79 I find it revealing that you didn't mention the story, which makes sense. I found it to be a movie that went nowhere due to the lack of a poignant story. There seemed to be no point. The only part in the entire movie that had interest was the ending, but by then I had spent two hours looking for a storyline that wasn't there.
Time flies by in a heartbeat when Tarantino is talking. Could have listened für 3 more hours and wouldn't have looked at my phone for a second. Thanks for the interview and just letting him talk without annoying interruptions. Greetings from Germany! :-)
Tarantino also reminds me of Jeff Goldblum's character from the fly when he gets his new powers, and is super enthusiastic, and hyped up. So much energy.
What he was saying about that particular camera angle of being in the car with his Dad, is what I remember too from that time. It's great that he got to capture the exact feeling for us all to share. I think I'm going to call my Dad and thank him .
I wanna see more deleted scenes I know they have em ;) there’s one I saw of this one where Manson freaks out in front of a ice cream truck and cliff sees it (sorta directed at him) and it’s chilling! I love this movie the soundtrack etc.. :)
one of the best movies I have ever seen. For the most of the runtime I forgot that I was watching a film. I think this is as close as my generation gets to feeling the vibes of that era.
My favorite director. It's his films and watching things of him talking about film in general that really inspire me. People always talk shit, but it's people like him that keep what's real alive. Some of you will understand.
As someone who gives presentations regularly, 37 minutes is a good length to be standing up and talking. Long enough to talk about a bunch of cool stuff, but it doesn't get tiring if you aren't disabled or elderly. Standing gives you a different energy than sitting. They know what they're doing
@@preslove I don't think Its convinicing.. Its not TED. QT came to Jerusalem Festuval.. They gave him a chair for 15 mn talk. With a center like yours sounds not reasonable enough. Will you want to see Ben Kingsley also standing 40 min,. Its not about about healthy person its about respect. When people sit and talk the all preception of yourself as an interviewer chage. But hey... Life is life Iguess any way.
What I love most about this is the fact that it shows there are directors out there who put their whole hearts and souls into their films, do their homework, flesh out every detail, care about their work,--not necessarily the bottom line--and are not interested in slapping together a flimsy piece of shit that will die out in two weeks. By its very nature, this film should have tanked at the box office, but look where it is....sitting high atop a pile of nominations. I am in heaven.
I bought the soundtrack CD and left it in my pickup's player most of the Summer. The Summer of '69 was the Summer before my senior year in high school. I listened to the radio constantly. Even at my Summer job. I was confused about how some of the soundtrack songs were new to me. Thanks for clearing that up, QT.
Never thought of the movie like that til now... Rick is the guy who pretends to be a badass for a living. And Cliff is the guy who IS a badass for a living.
Quentin was right on the money about the "Bounty Law" episode. The authenticity is amazing, you could easily mistake it as a real show. No cutting corners there.
What a genius...when he explained that the scenes looking slightly up from inside the car were from his perspective as a kid growing up driving around in LA, and what he saw from there...that’s just artistic nuance and genius
I appreciate how much he respects how personal and emotional a movie like Roma is. Hearing him talking about once upon a time in Hollywood makes me think it’s worthy of the distinction of this being one of the best movies of the year
I want to see a conversation between Tarantino (Pulp Fiction 1994, Kill Bill 2002-03), Fincher (Se7en,The Game, Fight Club, Zodiac, The Social Network), Nolan( Memento, TDK, Inception, Interstellar), and Scorcese (Taxi Driver, Last Temptation, Good Fellas, The Departed, The Irishman)! Make it happen! EDIT* I thought of more directors that should be here. Sam Mendes (American Beauty 1999, 1917 2020) Michael Mann (Heat 1995, Collateral 2004) Bryan Singer (The Usual Suspects 1995) The Wachowskis (The Matrix 1999) James Cameron (Aliens 1986, and T2:JD 1991) Ridley Scott (Blade Runner 1982, Alien 1979)
I guess this is a list of directors I wish to see back in their prime . It saddens me to say this but I don't think we'll ever get another movie experience like "The Matrix" or "Pulp Fiction".. imagine seeing these movies back when they first came out in theaters... I was to young to have been there myself... But man.. thats gotta be one of the greatest experiences ever. I think Hollywood needs to step up their game. Everyone has forgotten what a great film looks like.. I know that it's all subjective but just look at those movies I mentioned above.. those movies are all spectacular. We need more movies like those. Not this Marvel crap.
I could listen to QT talk about his craft all day long. The way he tells it is as if it’s something that any of us could do (it’s not, it’s really bloody hard)!
What I absolutely love about Quentin is that when he does a retelling of events it is solely about how he truly felt, saw, heard & he doesn’t care how someone else interprets his retelling because it’s true to him. That is a rare gift to be smart enough to move beyond how you’re accepted & to just emit your reality.
Have fallen a little obsessed with this film. I'm getting the book. Surprised there is a book. Love Rick and Cliff. But always more intrigued by charismatic characters that don't speak too much.
Yes, I remember those shows as a kid and when I saw that scene, I started to think back. I grew up watching these shows. I thought I must have missed this Dalton guy and show. Very authentic! The KHJ stuff, I listen to the sound track because it takes me back. These were indeed THE best years! Still innocent, a time when we dreamed!
Quentin is amazing. His passion and his personal thought habits within Movies and Entertainment. I think we can all learn something about approach and detail from him. Thinking in and outside of the box and then creating a box.
I grew up in southern calif in the 60's, went to hawthorne high (home of the beach boys), the 60's was WILD !! this flick could have easily been 10 hrs and still only scratched the surface, Hollywood blvd was our cruise blvd's, head, hippie, black light shops, nite clubs, crazy shit 24/7 !!!
The movie gets even better after a couple or more viewings, he has a way of getting the best performances out of every actor, a genius masterpiece that's the only positive thing that was spawned from those tragic murders in the summer of 69 . Can't wait for the director's cut , the only scene in the whole movie I didn't like was the fake rat ( redundant, the place was full of the two legged kind :-).
im fascinated with this. the part when he explains about the prose chapters and says that there is one telling what happened on the boat with Cliff and his wife made me so ansious to know WTFHAPPENED. god quentin.
Gaaawd Daaaamn! How fucking seriously is self-aware this man!!!??? The final point he makes on himself probably not being the right person for writing from scratch a really good horror movie story is amazing!!! You need to be really really really down to the earth and emotionally connected to everything in order to speak like that. This guy is at the top of the world and yet he's so lucid and knows what the fuck he's doing.
14:28 that was definitely obvious. More of the Bounty Law stuff could've been cut but it was obvious Tarantino didn't want to kill his baby, as it were. That said, it would be nice to see extended content with more of that footage (or just more footage in general. I'm sure there's a lot of gems.)
Love or hate his movies…I love them all…there is no question QT is a genius! He is definitely on the list of the greatest writers and directors of all time.
Thanks for sharing. I love the passion Quentin has for his, well, passion of movies. I wish I could grab a big bag of popcorn with him and Kevin Smith just talking. It would be a massive verbiage onslaught where the ears & brain better be ready to listen lol
I absolutely loved Once upon a Time in Hollywood...but there was a Christopher Reeve seeing the shiny 1979 Penny in 'Somewhere in Time' (1980 ) moment, when Margot Robbie walks up to the Theater ticket booth, and the up above the person in the ticket booth in plain view is a modern day white plastic security video camera that someone in the set design team forget to hide or remove, to keep the audience's minds planted firmly in late 1960's Hollywood ...it snapped me right back to present day ...I can't believe Quentin didn't notice that little camera with it's L.E.D. lights up there in the corner of that theater booth , when he was working on the movie in the editing room.
When Quentin says, you know you're in good hands, concerning the character's backstory, I think he sums it up. That's ultimately how I feel about Quentin's characters. Although I don't know their story, he and his actor does, in a very detailed, intimate way. His characters just have depth and layers that far outreach the story about to unfold. I can feel this within seconds of a scene.
At 7:00 pay close attention and Quentin spills his coffee cause he's full of energy and so passionate about his art. That's why he's my favorite director!
Once Upon A Time in Hollywood is my favorite film in years. My late mother remembered the Tate stuff and the rest. Talked about it all the time. Would have loved this too
My man Quentin looking like he's about to slap a paparazzi cameraman.
Deep referece .. love it
They kinda deserve it
"What is this? What is this??"
"What's going on here?! ... What's going on here?!!! Can you- can you NOT talk to me?"
“What’s going on here?”
His enthusiasm is infectious
COCAAAAAINE MY GEEEEEE!
@Kelp Farming What ? Really !!??
Totaly agree.
@@cosmicbaggy no way, he's just a massive film nut and has the privilege to talk about what he cares about the most in the world every day of his life
not to the moderator interviewing him apparently. After the end of a very enthusiastic answer by Quentin. "Soo ummm" what an energy drop
This guy is a legend. Such a great director. It's stupid how much love he has for the art.
Indeed. Remember Tarantino's detractors early on? "Tarantino is a hack, ripping off other movies!"
@@jonanjello i mean he is
@Kelp Farming I enjoyed it. And I'm not even a Tarantino fan.
@@ptaramson1553he is as much as a musical artist making music with samples. Meaning he pays homage, sublimes and brings back older references to a modern time. Not making copy cats
He's one of the lucky human beings. He earned everything. Pure.
To me,Once upon a time in Hollywood is his best since Pulp Fiction and it gets better with each viewing.
When you watch it ,it really makes you feel like you are back in 1969 Hollywood hanging out with his characters.
His enthusiasm and love for this era is all over the movie and you can see his eyes just light up every time he talks about it!
John Rigs agreed!!
Thank you for mentioning that! After each viewing the movie experience just gets more amazing! You just want to be a part of the movie, you want to be with Brad and Leo in ”Ricks” house, drinking beer and watching tv!
Jesper Lindberg absolutely!!!!
John Rigs watched OUATIH-extended version last night in theatres just because. Currently on a mission to complete my list of all of the Academy Award noms before Feb 9, and was planning to watch 1917 or Parasite, which I’ll get to, but there is something so simple and nostalgic about Once Upon A Time. I wasn’t even born in that era, but I am so gravitated to it. And as I watch these interviews it adds yet another layer of understanding to the film. I’ve only seen it 9 times, but last night after watching QT in this video, I watched it from a child’s perspective-how an adult nowadays might describe or depict their childhood, and how QT shared that the driving in LA scene with the camera panning up was his vantage point as a boy...wow. Just wanted to share that!
Stephanie Moran
Thanks for sharing that!
I was born in 1964 so I do have some memories of that era and definitely those movies and television shows-which he captures PERFECTLY!
Now -you saw an extended version?!
I didn’t even know that was available -that’s awesome!
This is why Tarantino's movies are so good. Cos he loves what he's doing. No idiot studio types getting their mucky hands on his work, and interfering.
Gary MacLaren yeah Weinsteins hands were busy
Kelp Farming how was it horrible
@Kelp Farming How is Historical Fiction a bad thing? And also I think you missed the point of the final scene. Just because you don't like two things doesn't mean that the movie itself is a bad movie.
No there are definitely still mucky hands interfering, he cuts like at least 30 minutes of every movie he makes
no one cares what you think get a life idiot
I could listen to Quentin all day! Can someone please, please give him a TV show where he can talk about movies for four hours every day?!!!
UA-cam?
Yes. He has a masters level knowledge of movies. He’s a FOUR Star cinephile
or a podcast. he would have more freedom to talk about what he wants to
This would be the BEST gig for him after his 10th movie.
He has a blog. He writes movie reviews almost everyday
I sometimes think half of IMDB was Quentin literally staying up late nights typing it all out.
I love listening te Quentin nerd out about cinema lol. Many people might disagreee, but Once Upon a Time has become one of my favorite Tarantino films, in a 3-way tie with Reservoir Dogs and the Hateful Eight. I think it will be more fully appreciated within his filmography as the years go by.
I think django and hollywood are the best idgaf
For me it has always been reservoir dogs, pulp fiction and inglorious bastards. I have yet to see this one though, looking forward to it!
I think inglorious bastards is the most satisfying one for me. The chills it sent to my spine when Nazis got massacred at the end is on another level. Then there's django unchanged
Its a love letter to hollywood and film making. I hope he starts being a go to director for other major properties and giving them cool treatments. Like how James Gunn operates. He can do 10 films but losing him directing is a tragedy. I would watch a Star Wars/Trek, Marvel/DC, Blade Runner/Aliens movie he directed in a heartbeat.
That's my top 3 as well
would love a full episode of bounty law
Hell yeah, that would be fantastic. He should shoot a special for the summer!
I read that he is going to do a five episodes TV show eventually
@@zcyberia yea, but he's doing 5 episodes about rick dalton, not of bounty law itself
@leo other way around
@@leonardozumaeta4354 Nope
It's not about Rick Dalton
It's Bounty Law
This guy is so good talking about movies it breaks my heart that he hasn't done a DVD commentary for any of his own movies except for True Romance which is probably the best DVD commentary ever.
Ironically, a Movie he didn't Even Direct
he loves this shit! im huge QT fan, he loves talking about movies can hear it in the tone of his voice and how he gets out of breath and hardly takes a breath to talk!
you can see that when someone asks him off topic question not movie related in any way and he is not so eloquent.
1986. Seems like yesterday I was working with QT on Sam Shepard's 'True West' at Allen Garfield's Acting Workshop in West Hollywood. Happy for the man and his success. TRUE ARTIST. Without question 'Once Upon A Time In Hollywood' is the film he was born to make.
Well put Jimmy Alan was a big influence on QT !! Alan pushed him towards directing !!
@@montybane6002 Absolutely. Allen LOVED Quentin. One of the first people to recognize his talent, especially his gift as a writer. Those were some memorable nights in AG class. As I mentioned, seems like yesterday...
Quentin lives and breathes movies. He clearly loves what he does and was destined to be a director. Lucky man.
Quentin Tarantino and George Lucas just cutting it up. Classic.
Chris D'Avanzo 🤣😂 I thought the same thing!
Ayyyy limao
Quentin is that cool uncle that lets you do whatever you want.
@Dexter Lee i don't know him but something tells me he'll be a great dad
...so long as you let him do what HE wants...
Oh, not that kind of uncle 😞
I feel like if he will ever start to write novels, they would be 5k pages each.
Andrea Bruson I would not be opposed to that!!!!
@@stephisteti me too!
He might be even more verbose than Stephen King, but it sure would be fun.
You know that screenplay rule is generally page-per-minute? That means his longest script is about 300 pages.
@@widM_ yes and that is only what we see on the screen. imagine how much it's cut out every time!
Seeing Quentin in that Jacket reminds me of Stanley Kubrick on the set of The Shining or Full Metal Jacket wearing a very similar big Jacket
You can’t deny the guy on stage sounds like Morty from Rick and Morty.
Holy shit haha he does “Oh Jeez Quentin, do you think that you’re going to make more than 10 movies?”
😂 he does
Holy shit
Was about to comment the same thing, then I thought "someone might've noticed"... :D
OMG LMAO 🤣
Greatest filmmaker of our time and I find it hard to see a director as brilliant and passionate as him about movies in the future. He’s like a product of some of the most crucial years of Hollywood, he seen it all, and put all that knowledge into his movies. He’s someone you can truly say is doing it because he loves it.
at half speed quentin sounds like the drunkest guy ranting at the bar
This is incredible! Lol
Thank you for this gem
Lmao
Holy shit! I'm dying! 😂🤣
At .75 speed he just sounds a little tipsy.
Fantastic interview! I'd love to see a full series of Tarantino talking about film. He has such insight and passion for the medium, you can't help but be inspired.
Lookie here: ua-cam.com/video/DMOxxYpBbeE/v-deo.html
Or check out the recent episodes from the Rewatchables podcast from The Ringer.
i love this movie, just below pulp fiction. Cliff Booth is my favorite character!
nah, this one's a notch above Hateful, a notch below Death Proof. :/
Muther Goose I agree 101%. Pulp Fiction will never be topped for me but this is easily QT’s second best.
I'm dying to know. What exactly did you like about this flick? I thought it was almost as disappointing as the Irishman. Truly a borefest.
youarehere0 the atmosphere, the acting, the characters, the music, the direction, the whole shebang. I think QT said it best here- the movie didn’t need any plot getting in the way of the story. It really gave the movie room to breathe and be free flowing- it felt like anything could happen at any moment. Nothing narratively speaking was tying it to the ground. Best film I’ve seen in a long long time. 🙌🏻
@@JDobbsy79 I find it revealing that you didn't mention the story, which makes sense. I found it to be a movie that went nowhere due to the lack of a poignant story. There seemed to be no point. The only part in the entire movie that had interest was the ending, but by then I had spent two hours looking for a storyline that wasn't there.
Time flies by in a heartbeat when Tarantino is talking. Could have listened für 3 more hours and wouldn't have looked at my phone for a second. Thanks for the interview and just letting him talk without annoying interruptions.
Greetings from Germany! :-)
I could literally listen to Tarantino all day
Hes such a detailed person and prob the biggest movie buff. Knows everything. Love his passion
Tarantino also reminds me of Jeff Goldblum's character from the fly when he gets his new powers, and is super enthusiastic, and hyped up. So much energy.
What he was saying about that particular camera angle of being in the car with his Dad, is what I remember too from that time. It's great that he got to capture the exact feeling for us all to share. I think I'm going to call my Dad and thank him .
I wish QT would publish all this extra work. Would absolutely love to see it.
I wanna see more deleted scenes I know they have em ;) there’s one I saw of this one where Manson freaks out in front of a ice cream truck and cliff sees it (sorta directed at him) and it’s chilling! I love this movie the soundtrack etc.. :)
Another 30 minutes will be added to the show once they find a chair
one of the best movies I have ever seen. For the most of the runtime I forgot that I was watching a film. I think this is as close as my generation gets to feeling the vibes of that era.
My favorite director. It's his films and watching things of him talking about film in general that really inspire me. People always talk shit, but it's people like him that keep what's real alive. Some of you will understand.
Him describing the Hippy cult ranch sequence is spot on. I was on the edge of my seat the whole time.
Couldn't they afford a chair for Quentin?
same what I wrote than I saw you wrote it too. Agree
Ikr, It's really unconfortable to watch :S
As someone who gives presentations regularly, 37 minutes is a good length to be standing up and talking. Long enough to talk about a bunch of cool stuff, but it doesn't get tiring if you aren't disabled or elderly. Standing gives you a different energy than sitting. They know what they're doing
@@preslove I don't think Its convinicing.. Its not TED. QT came to Jerusalem Festuval.. They gave him a chair for 15 mn talk. With a center like yours sounds not reasonable enough. Will you want to see Ben Kingsley also standing 40 min,. Its not about about healthy person its about respect. When people sit and talk the all preception of yourself as an interviewer chage. But hey... Life is life Iguess any way.
I'm assuming it's just so QT can stretch his legs after that marathon of a film
What I love most about this is the fact that it shows there are directors out there who put their whole hearts and souls into their films, do their homework, flesh out every detail, care about their work,--not necessarily the bottom line--and are not interested in slapping together a flimsy piece of shit that will die out in two weeks. By its very nature, this film should have tanked at the box office, but look where it is....sitting high atop a pile of nominations. I am in heaven.
No matter what he's talking about, I'd honestly listen to Tarantino go on talking for like a whole day
same here
I bought the soundtrack CD and left it in my pickup's player most of the Summer. The Summer of '69 was the Summer before my senior year in high school. I listened to the radio constantly. Even at my Summer job. I was confused about how some of the soundtrack songs were new to me. Thanks for clearing that up, QT.
It was a crap soundtrack. Many of the songs were not even in national charts.They are in the movies because they were cheap to buy Rights to use them.
QT is awesome but props to the interviewer! Some really well thought out, intelligent questions. Thanks for this!
Never thought of the movie like that til now...
Rick is the guy who pretends to be a badass for a living.
And Cliff is the guy who IS a badass for a living.
I never get tired of listening to QT.
What an awesome interview, seemed like he wanted to stay longer.
Can’t help but imagine myself up there one day.
Quentin was right on the money about the "Bounty Law" episode. The authenticity is amazing, you could easily mistake it as a real show. No cutting corners there.
I could listen to Tarantino talking about movies all day, every day.
What a genius...when he explained that the scenes looking slightly up from inside the car were from his perspective as a kid growing up driving around in LA, and what he saw from there...that’s just artistic nuance and genius
I appreciate how much he respects how personal and emotional a movie like Roma is. Hearing him talking about once upon a time in Hollywood makes me think it’s worthy of the distinction of this being one of the best movies of the year
I want to see a conversation between Tarantino (Pulp Fiction 1994, Kill Bill 2002-03), Fincher (Se7en,The Game, Fight Club, Zodiac, The Social Network), Nolan( Memento, TDK, Inception, Interstellar), and Scorcese (Taxi Driver, Last Temptation, Good Fellas, The Departed, The Irishman)! Make it happen!
EDIT* I thought of more directors that should be here.
Sam Mendes (American Beauty 1999, 1917 2020)
Michael Mann (Heat 1995, Collateral 2004)
Bryan Singer (The Usual Suspects 1995)
The Wachowskis (The Matrix 1999)
James Cameron (Aliens 1986, and T2:JD 1991)
Ridley Scott (Blade Runner 1982, Alien 1979)
I'd rather see a conversation between Paul Thomas Anderson and Michael Bay.
Theres a conversation with him and nolan on UA-cam
@Parker
I can arrange that for a fair price.
Include Paul Thomas Anderson in that interview and I can die happy.
I guess this is a list of directors I wish to see back in their prime .
It saddens me to say this but I don't think we'll ever get another movie experience like "The Matrix" or "Pulp Fiction".. imagine seeing these movies back when they first came out in theaters... I was to young to have been there myself... But man.. thats gotta be one of the greatest experiences ever.
I think Hollywood needs to step up their game. Everyone has forgotten what a great film looks like.. I know that it's all subjective but just look at those movies I mentioned above.. those movies are all spectacular.
We need more movies like those. Not this Marvel crap.
Great interview. That kid did a bang-up job! National Treasure that one (Q).
I could listen to QT talk about his craft all day long. The way he tells it is as if it’s something that any of us could do (it’s not, it’s really bloody hard)!
What I absolutely love about Quentin is that when he does a retelling of events it is solely about how he truly felt, saw, heard & he doesn’t care how someone else interprets his retelling because it’s true to him. That is a rare gift to be smart enough to move beyond how you’re accepted & to just emit your reality.
Well said
Could a director's cut of Once Upon A Time include Tim Roth's cut storyline? This is one of my favorite films and more story would be a real treat.
Have fallen a little obsessed with this film. I'm getting the book. Surprised there is a book. Love Rick and Cliff. But always more intrigued by charismatic characters that don't speak too much.
Love this man! Wish I could act for him!
Yes, I remember those shows as a kid and when I saw that scene, I started to think back. I grew up watching these shows. I thought I must have missed this Dalton guy and show. Very authentic! The KHJ stuff, I listen to the sound track because it takes me back. These were indeed THE best years! Still innocent, a time when we dreamed!
Quentin is amazing. His passion and his personal thought habits within Movies and Entertainment. I think we can all learn something about approach and detail from him. Thinking in and outside of the box and then creating a box.
Is he making a reference with the winter coat and the coffee cup...?
yes
film79 whats going on here? Can you not- can you not TALK to me?!
Yeah - the message means 'its cold in here'
I grew up in southern calif in the 60's, went to hawthorne high (home of the beach boys), the 60's was WILD !! this flick could have easily been 10 hrs and still only scratched the surface, Hollywood blvd was our cruise blvd's, head, hippie, black light shops, nite clubs, crazy shit 24/7 !!!
Never stuck for something to say....what a mind he has...amazing!
But, what is he SAYING?
I could watch a whole movie of Quinton just talking about movies
I just goddamned love this man.
The movie gets even better after a couple or more viewings, he has a way of getting the best performances out of every actor, a genius masterpiece that's the only positive thing that was spawned from those tragic murders in the summer of 69 . Can't wait for the director's cut , the only scene in the whole movie I didn't like was the fake rat ( redundant, the place was full of the two legged kind :-).
Donald Duncan I've seen OUATIH seven times so far and it definitely gets better and better every time!!
what fake rat?
Honestly it seemed pretty convincing
im fascinated with this. the part when he explains about the prose chapters and says that there is one telling what happened on the boat with Cliff and his wife made me so ansious to know WTFHAPPENED. god quentin.
He is Pure! So pure as a person and movie maker.
Ask him for the correct time & he'll build you a watch. God love him. Generous.
Quentin enthusiastic as fuck drinkin that serious gourmet shit! 😆😆😆
5:50 Looks like Quentin talking to a 90s George Lucas
Gaaawd Daaaamn! How fucking seriously is self-aware this man!!!??? The final point he makes on himself probably not being the right person for writing from scratch a really good horror movie story is amazing!!! You need to be really really really down to the earth and emotionally connected to everything in order to speak like that. This guy is at the top of the world and yet he's so lucid and knows what the fuck he's doing.
14:28 that was definitely obvious. More of the Bounty Law stuff could've been cut but it was obvious Tarantino didn't want to kill his baby, as it were. That said, it would be nice to see extended content with more of that footage (or just more footage in general. I'm sure there's a lot of gems.)
My boi quentin keeping the death grip on that coffee cup.
Guy on the stage looks like young George Lucas with morty voice from rick and morty
bruh
It's awesome when you just take two higher comments and morph them together because you're so desperately uncreative.
The art of looking like you 'won't be here long' with the use of only a coat and a coffee-to-go
Do not change the character, love it!
I can listen to Quentin talk all day...
6:58 he spills coffee
It's wasteful when so many people are starving for coffee in the world. So careless and very disappointing. #organic #farmersrights #coffee #feminism
@zztop3000 #berniewouldntspillcoffee #vote #resist
Genuine, honest, passionate person
man this interviewer is great!
Damn i love Quentin so damn much!
If anyone checks the recording date of the Neil Diamond song, Hot August Night, they will find it was post 1970. Yet it was played in this film.
You could hear him getting choked up when he talks about Burt Reynolds
Love or hate his movies…I love them all…there is no question QT is a genius!
He is definitely on the list of the greatest writers and directors of all time.
Thanks for sharing. I love the passion Quentin has for his, well, passion of movies. I wish I could grab a big bag of popcorn with him and Kevin Smith just talking. It would be a massive verbiage onslaught where the ears & brain better be ready to listen lol
I would prefer that he talk with Jay Bauman.
CLASS GUY CLASS INTERVIEW BRAVO!
I absolutely loved Once upon a Time in Hollywood...but there was a Christopher Reeve seeing the shiny 1979 Penny in 'Somewhere in Time' (1980 ) moment, when Margot Robbie walks up to the Theater ticket booth, and the up above the person in the ticket booth in plain view is a modern day white plastic security video camera that someone in the set design team forget to hide or remove, to keep the audience's minds planted firmly in late 1960's Hollywood ...it snapped me right back to present day ...I can't believe Quentin didn't notice that little camera with it's L.E.D. lights up there in the corner of that theater booth , when he was working on the movie in the editing room.
When Quentin says, you know you're in good hands, concerning the character's backstory, I think he sums it up. That's ultimately how I feel about Quentin's characters. Although I don't know their story, he and his actor does, in a very detailed, intimate way. His characters just have depth and layers that far outreach the story about to unfold. I can feel this within seconds of a scene.
'Quentin, we don't have a chair, how about this coffee cup instead?'
Fantastic..one of the great movies ever!
Thank you. This is a really good interview.
Awesome to see Quentin so animated. He should make a movie on himself. I wonder who he'd cast as Quentin?
I'd cast Randy Quaid.
I was expecting him to start saying "What's going on here? What's going on here put that down."
Tarantino rocking his «slapping a cameraman in front of Starbucks» look
Him riding around with his dad makes the batman radio commercial at the end make sense.
Esse parece ser um ótimo director que sabe respeitar todos a sua volta... 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
"I think I'll wear my parka on stage..."
its to keep off all the coffee he keeps spilling
that's not a parka
@@PretentiousStuff I understood what the comment was referring to. Please do not explain further
The little coffee that spilled out of his cup at 6:56 reminded me of The Hateful 8
That's the formula - you ask him a good question and then stand well back.
At 7:00 pay close attention and Quentin spills his coffee cause he's full of energy and so passionate about his art.
That's why he's my favorite director!
Not to self: Do not ask Quentin to explain movie stuff on any surface that coffee may stain. SEE: 6:59 of this conversation.
lol! props to the person who had to clean up the carpet after the show!
be so dedicated about what you're talking about that no amount of spilt coffee gets in the way
glad to see it wasn't black coffee.
Ehh it probably wasn’t that serious gourmet shit
Once Upon A Time in Hollywood is my favorite film in years. My late mother remembered the Tate stuff and the rest. Talked about it all the time. Would have loved this too
I admire him so much ❤⚘👍
I love how the interviewer is intimidated by Quentin :'D Slowly and slowly moving over to the left side of the stage.
Very cool! Thanks for posting.
2020.07.17 Thanks for the video!