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Tampilkan postingan dengan label David Carradine. Tampilkan semua postingan

KILL BILL VOL. 2: The Film Babble Blog Review

Opening today at a multiplex near you:






KILL BILL VOL. 2 (Dir. Quentin
Tarantino, 2004)










 First
off, let me start by saying that I wasn’t big on KILL BILL VOL 1. I
thought it lacked true suspense, and at best it was just superficial
entertainment pretending to be a big movie event.





Also
it bothered me that it pretentiously introduced itself as “The 4th Film By
Quentin Tarantino” in the credits. I mean who the Hell else does that? Can you
imagine: “The 17th Film By Martin Scorsese” in the opening credits of
GOODFELLAS? I didn’t think so.





But
if Spike Lee can get away with calling his films “joints” in his credits I
guess I can let it slide. What I couldn't let slide in KBV1 was the dry
humorless tone and the fact that many characters were such general pop culture
stereotypes of the sort that have already appeared multiple times in Tarantino’s
work.





Take
for example the redneck hospital orderly that whores out the Bride's comatose
body to redneck scum for $75 a pop. Didn't we already go there in PULP FICTION?
The orderly even has a tacky vehicle in the form of a souped-up pickup called “The
Pussy Wagon” that would not look out of place in the same garage as the chopper
(Zed's Motorbike) “Grace” in “The 2ndFilm By Quentin Tarantino.”





Also
the out-of-sequence chronology that characterizes Tarantino’s work, once so innovative
yet now feels like a transparent device that disguises the lack of a stronger
story arc.





Michael
Parks as a seedy but wise Texas sheriff when surveying the massacre that begins
the entire rampage remarks: “if you was a moron you could almost admire it.”





That
pretty much summed how I felt about the flick when I saw it last year. But lo
and behold, I like KILL BILL VOL. 2 quite a bit, and it even made me
re-evaluate the first one to such a degree that I have to say that it
appears to me to be much more solid as a first parter.





KBV1
resonates with a passion and power that I cynically ignored first time around.
The 4th film credit I previously bitched about now informs us that this is one
big movie that is told in 2 parts.





KBV2
doesn't label itself as “The 5th film...” and its ending credits include actors
that were only in the first film.





It
truly is the cinematic equivalent of those two part TV episodes with the “to be
concluded” caption that were done to death in the ‘70s and ‘80s. There is
plenty of the stylized violence of the first half here but what makes this work
is the back-story and genuine emotion fueling the character’s motives.





We
learn why the Bride’s fiancée and entire wedding party were slaughtered, how
Daryl Hannah’s eye-patch came to be, what connection the Bride and Bill (David
Carradine) had, and most importantly who the Bride really is - name revealed
and all.





Don't
worry,  I won't reveal any of those
spoilers here I'll just say that the dialogue while tense and filled with
proverbs is smoothly recited and intensely felt by the actors especially
Carradine.




Even with a monologue that's so Tarantino you can practically hear the director himself performing it about how Clark Kent is Superman's critique on the whole human race Carradine absolutely kills.







A
number of critics are saying that KBV2 works alone without seeing KBV1 but I
disagree. I mean none of them have actually experienced that so it seems like a
silly appraisal. I would say you should not see KBV2 without seeing KBV1 first
and since they are out the same week albeit in different formats there’s no
reason why you shouldn’t.





KILL
BILL as one big movie is a dense collection of styles and tones that will make
many treasure their own obscure pop culture interests and realize that if that
former video store clerk can make epic cinema out of lowbrow pulp why can't we
get off our ass and create something too? At least that's how I'm thinking.





More later...

Listomania: Quentin Tarantino Edition






Since Quentin Tarantino's KILL BILL VOL. 1 was released on DVD this week (review here), and KILL BILL VOL. 2 is coming to theaters on Friday, this is a Special Tarantino Edition of Film Babble Blog, a career re-cap of sorts with lists, quotes, fun facts, and other whatnot leading up to my review of his newest that will be posted tomorrow.



First up:



BASIC FILMOGRAPHY AND INITIAL GUIDE TO THIS BLOG:


RD: RESERVOIR DOGS (1992)
PF: PULP FICTION (1994)
JB: JACKIE BROWN (1997)
KBV1: KILL BILL VOL. 1 (2003)
KBV2: KILL BILL VOL. 2 (2004)






THE QUENTIN TARENTINO REPERTORY ROLE CALL:

Lawrence Bender: RD, PF 
Steve Buscemi: RD, PF
David Carradine: KBV1, KBV2
Sonny Chiba: KBV1, KBV2
Vivica A. Fox: KBV1, KBV2
Daryl Hannah: KBV1, KBV2
Samuel L. Jackson: PF, JB
Harvey Keitel: RD, PF
Lucy Liu: KBV1, KBV2
Michael Madsen: RD, KBV1, KBV2
Tim Roth: RD, PF
Quentin Tarantino: RD, PF
Uma Thurman: PF, KBV1, KBV2

TARANTINO FUN FACT FORUM:

• Michael Madsen's character in RD (1992) is named Vic Vega. John Travolta in PF (1994) plays Vincent Vega. According to interviews with Tarentino they are brothers, and has spoken of making a Vega brothers movie, but at this rate don't hold your breath.





• The criticisms of a boy club mentality of Tarantino’s early work are especially valid in RD (1992) in which there just a precious few women among the cast. Only two woman appear - there is a waitress overheard and seen in the coffee shop opening, but her face is never seen and she’s not even credited on the IMDb. The other woman is killed right in front of us by the supposed ‘good guy,’ the undercover cop (Tim Roth) trying to bust the rest of the crew. So RD is definitely the polar opposite of a ‘chick flick.’





• Samuel L. Jackson said the line “this is some repugnant shit” both in PF (1994) and JB (1997).





• These names are used in more than one Tarantino movie: Bonnie, Jodie, Koons, Marsellus, Scagnetti, and the before mentioned Vega. I'm going to assume that they refer to the same people in the world his movies exist in.





FIVE GREAT TARANTINO LINES: 

1. "Well, let's not start sucking each other's dicks just yet." - The Wolf (Harvey Keitel) PF (1994) 

2. "I might break you in, Nice Guy, but I'd make you my dog's bitch." - Mr. Blonde (Michael Madsen) RD (1992)

3. "I can tell you with no ego that this is my finest blade. If, on your journey, you should encounter God... God will be cut." - Hattori Hanzo (Sonny Chiba) KBV1 (2003)

4. "AK-47. When you absolutely, positively got to kill every motherfucker in the room, accept no substitutes" - Ordell (Samuel L. Jackson) JB (1997)

5. "What ain't no country I ever heard of. They speak English in What?" - Jules (Samuel L. Jackson) PF (1994)





FIVE MOVIES THAT RIP-OFF TARANTINO: 

(Some more call them "homages" or use phrases like "in the tradition of" but let's call a spade a spade) 
1. TIE - LOCK STOCK AND TWO SMOKING BARRELLS/SNATCH (Dir. Guy Ritchie, 1998 & 2000): Guy Ritchie's 2 smoking Tarantino borrows more like! 

2. TWO DAYS IN THE VALLEY (Dir. John Herzfeld, 1996)

3. GO (Dir. Doug Liman, 1999): When this was first was released I think I remember thinking "this week's PULP FICTION." Snap!

4. SUICIDE KINGS (Dir. Peter O'Fallon,1997)

5. THINGS TO DO IN DENVER WHEN YOUR DEAD (Dir. Gary Fleder, 1995)





Stay tuned for the Film Babble Blog review of KILL BILL VOL. 2.





More later...

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