Tarantino, Quentin
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Quentin Tarantino Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino at San Diego Comic Con International in 2015.
Birth name: Quentin Jerome Tarantino
Date of birth: March 27, 1963 (1963-03-27) (53 years old)
Place of birth: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
Citizenship: USA USA
Profession: film director, screenwriter, actor, film producer
Career: 1983 present.
time
Direction: Independent American cinema
Awards:
"Oscar" (1995, 2013)
"The Golden Palm Branch" (1994)
Golden Globe Awards (1995, 2013)
«BAFTA» (1995, 2013)
"Cesar" (2011)
IMDb: ID 0000233
Quentin Tarantino on Wikimedia Commons
Quentin Jerome Tarantino (English: Quentin Jerome Tarantino, MFA: [ttærənətinono]; b.
March 27, 1963 (19630327), Knoxville, Tennessee, USA) is an American film director, screenwriter, actor, film producer and cinematographer.
One of the most prominent representatives of postmodernism in cinema.
Tarantino's films are distinguished by the nonlinear structure of the narrative, the reinterpretation of the cultural and historical process, the use of ready made forms and the aestheticization of violence[1][2].
He became world famous after the film "Pulp Fiction" (1994), which brought him the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival[3], as well as the Academy Awards[4] and the Golden Globe for Best screenplay[5].
His works also include "reservoir dogs" (1992), "Jackie brown" (1997), "Kill bill" (in two parts, 2003-2004), "death Proof" (2007), "Inglourious Basterds" (2009), "Django unchained" (2012) and "Disgusting eight" (2015).
For the screenplay for "Django unchained" was again awarded the "Oscar" and "Golden globe".
In 2004, he was the chairman of the jury of the main competition program at the Cannes Film Festival[6].
In 2010, Tarantino was appointed chairman of the jury of the main competition of the 67th Venice Film Festival[7][8].
Content
1 Life and career 1.1 Early years 1.2 The beginning of a career 1.3 "Pulp Fiction" 1.4 Meeting Robert Rodriguez 1.5 "Jackie Brown" and "Kill Bill" 1.6 Recent works
2 Chairmanship at film festivals 3 Unrealized projects and plans for the future 3.1 Unrealized projects 3.2 Prequels and sequels "Kill Bill" 3.3 Other ideas 3.4 Plans for the end of the director's career
4 Director's handwriting 5 Criticism 6 Personal life, hobbies, hobbies, interests and tastes 7 Filmography 8 Awards and ratings 8.1 Ratings 8.2 Awards and nominations
9 Notes 10 Bibliography 11 References
Life and career[edit / edit wiki text]
Early years[edit / edit wiki text]
He was born out of wedlock to a sixteen year old nurse Connie McHugh from actor and musician Tony Tarantino.
Connie was born in Knoxville and has Irish and Cherokee roots.
Tony is an American of Italian descent, born in Queens[9][10][11][12].
Quentin's mother was a gifted student, graduated from high school at 15 and married Tony only to become an independent woman.
But the marriage failed, they broke up.
Connie found out that she was pregnant after the divorce, but she never tried to contact her ex husband, and Quentin himself did not make any further attempts to find his biological father[13].
Connie first wanted to give the child the name Quint in honor of Quint Asper, the hero of the cowboy series "Smoke of Shooting" performed by Burt Reynolds, but later decided to name him Quentin in honor of the hero of the novel "Noise and Fury" by William Faulkner Quentin Compson[14].
When Quentin was two years old, he and his mother moved to south Los Angeles, to Torrance, and later to neighboring Harbor City.
He spent his childhood in Los Angeles, went to Fleming Junior High School in Lomita and took drama lessons[13].
My mother remarried a local musician Kurt Zastupil.
Kurt adopted Quentin when he was two and a half years old, and gave him his last name.
In fact, only after graduating from high school and deciding to become an actor, Quentin returned to the more suitable name for the stage of his biological father — Tarantino.
As Connie made a successful career in the field of pharmacology, the family built their own house.
Connie worked all day and Kurt worked at night, so Quentin spent a lot of time with his stepfather and his friends.
The only child among adults, Quentin spent many hours in front of the TV, endlessly watching various series and television shows.
The family constantly went to the movies, it was their favorite vacation.
At an early age, he watched such films as" The Knowledge of the Flesh "and" Deliverance", the viewing of which is not recommended even in our time for people under the age of 16[14].
And his favorite movie as a child was "Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein" [15].
I hated school.
School depressed me.
I wanted to be an actor.
Everything I'm not good at, I donot like.
And I just couldnot concentrate on school.
I have always loved to read and was interested in history.
The story was like a movie.
But many of the things that people learned easily, I was given with difficulty.
I was never good at math and spelling, I didnot know how to ride a bike until the fifth grade, I didnot know how to swim even in high school, I didnot understand how to find out the time until the sixth grade.
Quentin Tarantino[14]
When Quentin was eight years old, Kurt and Connie divorced.
The boy's interest in cinema was only growing, and he played out a lot of scenarios with his toy characters.
Although Quentin was a talented child, he began to have problems with school.
He attended Narbonne High School in Harbor City.
Tarantino did not like the fact that he studied at a private, paid Christian school, so he began to skip classes.
At the age of 15, with the forced consent of his mother, he left school on the condition that he would find a job.
His mother wanted him to understand that life without education is not a continuous holiday.
Tarantino found his first job as an usher in one of the cinemas in Torrance, where porn was played; his mother knew that he worked in a cinema, but did not even know that pornography was shown there[14].
Later, Quentin said:
Most teenagers think: "Cool, I'm in a porn theater!
— But I didnot like porn movies.
I liked real movies, not this one nasty and cheap[14].
In the evenings, he began attending James Best acting classes.
The claims that Quentin starred in the films "Dawn of the Dead" and "King Lear" are not true.
Quentin falsely wrote these statements in his resume many years ago, in order to compensate for the lack of experience[14][15].
But despite this step, the roles did not fall on him from the cornucopia.
In January 1981, at the James Best Center, he met for the first time with screenwriter Craig Haymann, who became a friend and colleague of Quentin in those distant days.
In 1984, Heymann introduced Tarantino to Catherine James, who later became Tarantino's manager during the filming of Pulp Fiction.
At the age of 22, Tarantino got a job at the Video Archive, a video rental point on Manhattan Beach, which has since turned into the" Taxi Riviera " with an even more overgrown store that moved a couple of miles away.
Its owner, as in those old days — is the friendly Lance Lawson[14].
Tarantino met Roger Avery at a video rental store.
They spent the whole day together, discussing films and recommending them to clients[16].
Quentin himself calls the work in the "Video Archive" the best job of all that he received until he became a director[14].
He paid attention to what films people liked, and used this experience in his subsequent career.
At some point, he wanted to become a novelist.
I even tried to write two chapters about the time when he worked in a video rental.
Now we can see that the fictional methods of narration are also characteristic of his films[14][15].
The beginning of a career[edit / edit wiki text]
Producer Lawrence Bender, whom Tarantino met at a Hollywood party, convinced him to start writing scripts.
Tarantino's first script, written in 1985, was called "Captain Peach and the Anchovy Bandit", but was not implemented[14][15].
After that, Tarantino spent several difficult years offering studios his first creations (he intended to put them on his own) and receiving constant refusals[17].
Soon he, along with his friend Roger Avery, began shooting an amateur film "My Best Friend's Birthday".
The last thirty minutes of the film were destroyed by a fire that broke out in the laboratory during editing, and it remained unfinished, but its script served as the basis for the script for the film "True Love"[14].
After that, he also appeared on television in the first and third seasons of the show "Golden Girls", where he played the role of an Elvis Presley lookalike[18].
The script of Tarantino's first full fledged film - "Mad Dogs" - was written in three weeks.
Quentin was ready to shoot this film with minimal funds, even with a 16 mm camera on black and white film, but after the famous actor Harvey Keitel became interested in the script, the budget of the film increased significantly, as the project received financial support from Live Entertainment[19].
Violence is one of the cinematic techniques.
Quentin Tarantino[2].
At many screenings of "Mad Dogs", some viewers left the hall right in the middle of the session because of the scene with the cutting off of the ear of a captured policeman, but in general, the film collected a good box office and was highly appreciated by critics.
It was shown at the Sundance Film Festival and became an important milestone in the history of independent American cinema, although it was really noticed and appreciated after the success of Pulp Fiction[14].
One of the executive producers of this film was Monte Hellman, the director of Quentin Tarantino's favorite western "Escape to Nowhere" [15].
Soon two films were released, shot according to Tarantino's scripts: "True Love" by Tony Scott and" Natural Born Killers " by Oliver Stone.
Stone subjected Tarantino's original script to a significant revision, and Quentin demanded that his name be removed from the credits, but, in the end, agreed to the wording: "According to the plot of Quentin Tarantino"[20].
By the way, Tarantino sold these two scripts even before "Mad Dogs" (for the filming of which he used the proceeds), since he could not find investors to make these films on his own[19].
"Pulp fiction"[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: Pulp Fiction
My lyrical hero is very simple to describe: he appears, gives everyone a kick in the ass and leaves.
Quentin Tarantino[15]
Together with Lawrence Bender, Quentin's company "A Band Apart" [14] (he named it after the film "Outsiders" (fr.
Bande à part) (1964) directed by Jean Luc Godard, to whose films there are many references in Tarantino's paintings[15]) began to produce music, focusing mainly on music from movies, but the main purpose of the company is film production.
Tarantino became famous in 1994 after the release of "Pulp Fiction", in the production of which "A Band Apart" also participated.
The film has won several prestigious awards and many fans.
Already in" Pulp Fiction", Tarantino's style has developed, the signs of which are showing scenes not in chronological order, splitting the film into "chapters", branded "Tarantino" dialogues (the characters can talk for a very long time on completely abstract topics — like the true meaning of Madonna's song "Like a Virgin" and the names of French hamburgers), references to pop culture and borrowings from old, often little known and second rate films on which Tarantino grew up[21][22].
The film was a turning point in the career of many actors.
Uma Thurman, whom Tarantino compared to Marlene Dietrich and called "his Clint Eastwood"[23], and Samuel L. Jackson became one of the leading actors in Hollywood, and John Travolta returned there after the unsuccessful 80s for himself.
All three were nominated for an Oscar.
Bruce Willis was already a superstar, but all his recent films were unsuccessful.
Agreeing to a supporting role in a film with a small budget, he went to reduce his usual fee and risked his star status, but this strategy was fully justified: Willis not only received millions of dollars as interest from fees, but also ceased to be perceived only as an action hero[24].
In addition, Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth from "Mad Dogs"played in the film.
After "Pulp Fiction", Quentin works on television, where he plays the role of Desmond in "American Girl", and also stars in episodes of the 20th and 21st seasons of the show "Saturday Night Live".
It was originally planned that Tarantino would shoot one of the episodes of the X Files, called "Never Again", but this was not allowed by the Directors Guild of America.
There was also a role of Johnny Destiny in the movie "Destiny turns on the radio".
Introduction to Robert Rodriguez[edit / edit wiki text]
Tarantino met the aspiring director Robert Rodriguez at the Toronto Film Festival, where he presented "Mad Dogs", and Rodriguez — "The Musician".
The directors quickly realized that they had a lot in common, and decided to cooperate.
Subsequently, they became close friends[25].
Their first joint project was the film "Four Rooms".
It consists of four parts, united by the place of action (the hotel) and the main character (the porter Ted, played by Tim Roth), shot by four directors — Allison Anders, Alexander Rockwell, Rodriguez and Tarantino.
The basis of the Tarantino episode, filmed in just two days, was the story of Roald Dahl "A Man from the South"[26].
Critics and the audience met the film coolly, although reviewers with a plus sign distinguish from the four short stories exactly the one that Quentin shot[27][28].
In 1995, Tarantino played a cameo role in Rodriguez's film "Desperate" — the sequel to "The Musician".
After that, Quentin still managed to finalize the dialogues in the Tony Scott film "Crimson Tide"in 1995[14] and to shoot an episode of the TV series "Ambulance" called "Motherhood", which was shown on May 11, 1995.
I write films about tramps, people who spit on the rules, and I donot like films about people who destroy tramps.
Quentin Tarantino[15]
By this time, Tarantino had one unrealized scenario left — about criminal brothers who, fleeing from justice, take a family of three hostage and successfully cross the Mexican border, but stop for the night in a bar teeming with vampires.
Initially, Tarantino planned to direct this film independently and play one of the main roles in it, but later, focusing on finalizing the script and his role, he gave way to Rodriguez as director.
The film titled "From Dusk to Dawn" was released in 1996, Quentin played his most significant role in it — the psychopathic paranoid Richie Gekko[29].
After that, Quentin appeared in an episode of Spike Lee's film "Girl # 6".
"Jackie Brown" and "Kill Bill"[edit / edit wiki text]
Tarantino's third film was " Jackie Brown — - an adaptation of his favorite novel "Rum Punch" by Elmore Leonard with the movie star of the 70s Pam Grier in the title role.
The film was a little less successful with critics[30] than the previous two[31][32], and significantly less successful with the audience than "Pulp Fiction" [33].
The film was first prepared for a quiet release on the screens, the director gave only one interview and appeared in several talk shows on television[34][35].
After that, Tarantino practically left the cinema for the next six years, doing only producing sequels to "From Dusk to Dawn" and playing small roles in minor films or on television.
For example, the role of a crazy blind preacher of the apocalypse in the comedy "Nikki, the devil Jr." and the role of Mckenas Cole in the TV series " Spy " in 2002.
And earlier, in 1998, he drew attention to Broadway productions, where he played in Wait Until Dark.
I am a fan of all genres from spaghetti westerns to samurai movies.
Quentin Tarantino[15]
Tarantino's return took place in 2003, when the first part of the film "Kill Bill" was released — a highly stylized bloody action film, shot according to a script developed by Tarantino together with Uma Thurman (she also played the main role) during the filming of "Pulp Fiction"[36].
The shooting of "Kill Bill" was postponed due to her pregnancy[15].
The film reflects Tarantino's passion for wuxia (a genre of Chinese fantasy with an abundant demonstration of martial arts), spaghetti westerns and Italian thrillers in the genre of "giallo".
On the set of the second part of "Kill Bill", in which, compared to the first, there were more dialogues and fewer combat scenes, Tarantino used the music of Rodriguez, paying him a symbolic fee of one dollar.
The debt was repaid a year later, when Tarantino shot a small episode in the Rodriguez film "Sin City"for the same amount[37].
Recent works[edit / edit wiki text]
In April 2004, Tarantino filmed one of the episodes of the show "Jimmy Kimmel Live".
Before embarking on his next major project, Tarantino managed to visit the role of writer and director of the last two part episode of the fifth season of "C. S. I.: Crime Scene", which was called "Grave Danger" (Grave Danger) and was shown on May 19, 2005.
In this episode, Quentin described in detail the situation from the second part of "Kill Bill".
Nick Stokes is captured and buried alive, while the webcam transmits it all to CSI headquarters (in "Kill Bill", the Bride (Uma Thurman) was also captured and buried alive).
In the original TV show, two episodes of the episode were named "Volume 1" and "Volume 2", which also resembles"Kill Bill".
Some elements: a pile of guts in the role of bait, the suicide of Walther Gordon and the black and white autopsy scene that Nick imagines, as well as the non — linearity of the narrative all this brings thoughts of "Kill Bill" and other Quentin films[38].
This double episode was released on DVD, on October 10, 2005.
For this work, Tarantino was nominated for an Emmy Award as the best director of a dramatic television series.
Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino at the premiere of the film "Grindhouse"
The next joint creation of Tarantino and Rodriguez was the film "Grindhouse", consisting of" Planet of Fear "by Rodriguez," Proof of Death " by Tarantino and trailers for several non existent films.
The films recreate the atmosphere of cheap cinemas of the 70s and are something like lovingly made parodies of low grade horror films of those years.
A couple of years later, Robert Rodriguez expanded one of the trailers - "Machete" - to a full length film.
Despite the fact that "Planet of Fear" and "Proof of Death" are different films, they are plot related they have several common characters, and the location of the action partially coincides.
Chronologically, "Proof of Death "precedes" Planet of Fear".
The main role in "Proof of Death" was played by Kurt Russell[39].
In the American box office, which began on April 6, 2007, "Grindhouse" was a resounding failure.
The fees amounted to just over $ 25 million with a production budget of 67 million[40].
Therefore, the company of Bob and Harvey Weinstein, which is engaged in the distribution of the film, decided to divide the picture and release each of its parts independently.
Tarantino and Rodriguez rewired their tapes to a two hour format, and in this form they were released in European rental, in particular, in Russia[39].
In November 2012, in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Tarantino called "Proof of Death" his worst film, but at the same time noted that although the film was shot clumsily, it is not so bad[41].
Financial failure did not prevent "Grindhouse" from winning high marks among film critics.
The recognition of the film among professionals can be, in particular, the fact that Quentin Tarantino's "Proof of Death" was included in the main competition of the prestigious Cannes Film Festival[42].
After that, he had a small role as Ringo in the film "Sukiyaki Western Django".
The next film of the director was "Inglourious bastards".
The director spoke about his plans to make a film in 2001.
The media reported that the main role in the film will be played by Michael Madsen, who starred in Tarantino's "Mad Dogs", and the release will take place in 2004.
However, by 2002, Tarantino found that the production of the film would take much longer than planned, and switched to shooting the film "Kill Bill"[43].
As a result, the release of "Inglourious Bastards" took place only in 2009.
In the film, Tarantino offers the audience an alternative outcome of the Second World War and plays off many stereotypes: in particular, among the heroes of the film is a squad of American Jews who brutally kill Nazis and take their scalps.
The film was received very ambiguously in different countries.
Here's what the director himself told:
So, in Israel.
The whole theater is literally drowning in applause, not at the moment when Hitler is killed, but when Shoshanna says: "This is the face of Jewish revenge" — I think two guys started it, but then everyone jumped up from their seats.
And, you know, it was cruel.
It was scary.
There was some cruelty in that joy.
It didnot sound like a happy greeting from "Indiana Jones".
There was something terrifying about it.
The original text (English)
So now, in Israel, I’m watching the film, and we get into the theater sequence.
And literally, not when Hitler gets killed, but when you hear Shoshanna’s voice say, ‘This is the face of Jewish vengeance,’ the whole theater just erupted in applause.
I think there were two guys that started it, but everyone jumped in.
And you know something?
It was violent.
It was scary.
There was violence in that cheer.
It wasnot like cheering Indiana Jones.
There was something bloodcurdling about it.
- Quentin Tarantino in an interview with NY Magazine about the premiere of "Inglourious Basterds" in Israel
In recent years, Tarantino has used his influence in Hollywood to give foreign films more attention than they would have received in the United States.
Such films are usually labeled "Quentin Tarantino presents".
The first such film in 2001 was the Hong Kong martial arts film "Iron Monkey", which collected $ 14 million in the United States, which was 7 times the budget of the picture.
In 2004, Tarantino presented the Chinese film "Hero" in the United States, which became the first number at the box office with an amount of 53 and a half million dollars.
In 2006, Quentin produced the film "Hostel", which collected more than 20 million in the first weekend.
In the same year, he exposed the Thai martial arts film "Honor of the Dragon" to the American public, which collected almost $ 12 million at the box office in the United States and another $ 20 and a half million in DVD sales.
In 2007, Tarantino produced "Hostel 2", in 2008 - "Hell Ride".
The 2005 Hong Kong film "Elections" is not included in the "Quentin Tarantino Presents" series, but Tarantino liked this film so much that it helped the DVD release: his quote "The Best Film of the Year" is on the cover of this film in the United States[44].
In 2011, Tarantino announced the beginning of the creation of the spaghetti western "Django Unchained", the plot of which tells about the slave Django, who is at large and is looking for his slave wife[45].
(In April 2007, Quentin said that he would like to explore something that has not yet been intelligently explored by anyone: "I want to make a film about the terrible pages of American history related to slavery, and I want to do it in the "spaghetti western"genre.
I'll try to deal with what America has never worked, because she is ashamed of this, and others do not talk about it, because I think that it is not entitled to it"[46].)
As recognized actor Franco Nero, who played Django in the film by 1966, the working title of the film "the angel, the bad, the wise" — a kind of allusion and homage to the Sergio Leone film "the Good, the bad and the ugly"[45].
Filming of the film started in January 2012 and ended in June of the same year in the state of California[47].
The main roles in the film were played by Jamie Foxx (Django) and Christoph Waltz (Dr. King Schultz), with whom Tarantino previously worked in the film "Inglourious Basterds" [48].
For writing the script for the film, Tarantino was awarded the second Golden Globe statuette, and the second Oscar statuette.
Chairmanship of film festivals[edit / edit wiki text]
In 2004, he was the chairman of the jury of the main competition program at the Cannes Film Festival[6].
That year, the festival's "Palme d'Or" was awarded to Michael Moore's controversial documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11", which contained harsh criticism of US President George Bush and pointed to the latter's long standing ties with Saudi millionaires, including" terrorist No. 1 " Osama bin Laden[49].
Commenting on the jury's choice, Tarantino, however, specifically stated that it was not due to political considerations[50].
In 2010, Tarantino was appointed chairman of the jury of the main competition of the 67th Venice Film Festival[7].
The Golden Lion was awarded to the daughter of Francis Ford Coppola for the film "Somewhere", which tells about the relationship between the actor's father and the teenage daughter against the background of Hollywood film production.
As the chairman of the jury of the festival, Quentin Tarantino, noted when announcing the winner, the victory was given to Sofia Coppola unanimously.
Unrealized projects and plans for the future[edit / edit wiki text]
Unrealized projects[edit / edit wiki text]
Tarantino planned to shoot a film called "The Weekend" in Serbia.
Sharon Stone, Michael Madsen and Dennis Hopper were to star in the main roles[51].
Tarantino openly expressed his intention to shoot "Casino Royale "about James Bond, but this initiative was not supported by the producers.
Moreover, the very idea of making a movie "Casino Royale "belongs to Quentin Tarantino.
He also wanted Pierce Brosnan to star in the main role[52].
In 2008, Tarantino decided to make a remake of Russ Meyer's black and white film "Piss, piss them, pussy!"
(English Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!).
The plot of this film was based on a car race in the desert of three strippers[53].
But none of these projects was ever implemented.
Prequels and sequels of "Kill Bill" [edit / edit wiki text]
At the international annual convention of fans of film, television and comics Comic Con in San Diego, Tarantino said that he wants to make a prequel to "Kill Bill".
Since the original was released in "two volumes", two prequels are also planned.
The first part should tell about the past life of Bill (David Carradine) and his relationship with the swordsman Hattori Hanzo (Shinichi Chiba).
The second part will highlight the activities of the Bride (Uma Thurman) as an assassin when she was in the "snake" team.
Tarantino also hinted that, if everything works out, both prequels will be anime like the episode with O Ren Ishii from the first "Kill Bill".
However, Quentin did not specify any deadlines or producers[54].
In addition to the prequel, Quentin is going to shoot a sequel - "Kill Bill 3".
Even before the release of the second film, Tarantino said in a pre premiere interview that he was going to shoot a continuation of the bloody story in 10-15 years.
The director said that the Bride, whose role in the first two parts is played by Uma Thurman, will not be the main character of the third part.
The plot of the sequel will unfold around Nikki the daughter of Vernita Green (Vivica Fox).
The bride in the first part of the film kills her mother in front of Nikki and tells the girl that when she grows up, she will be able to take revenge on her.
All of Bill's money, according to Quentin, will go to Sophie Fatal (Julie Dreyfus).
She will raise Nikki, and the girl will begin to take revenge on the Bride for the murdered mother[55].
In June 2007, the executive producer of the first two films, Bennett Walsh, said that, it turns out, the first version of the scripts "Kill Bill 3" and "Kill Bill 4" has already been written, and at the first opportunity Quentin Tarantino will go to China to start shooting.
The producer also said that in the third part, two of the "88 rabid" will take revenge on the Bride, who lost their eyes and hands in the first part due to her fault.
In the fourth part, the daughters of Beatrix Kiddo (Uma Thurman) and Vernita Green, who was killed by her, will enter into a fight with each other[56].
And in October 2009, after "Inglourious Bastards" died out in cinemas, the project "Kill Bill 3" was finally announced.
The premiere was then scheduled for 2014.
The director explained such a long time as follows: "First of all, Uma and I need to rest, because "Kill Bill" was very difficult to shoot.
And secondly, I adore Beatrix Kiddo!
I think she deserves to spend 10 years with her daughter! "
[57].
In December 2012, at a press conference about the film "Django Unchained", Quentin Tarantino said that he had lost interest in the sequel: "I do not know if the film will have a third part.
We'll see.
But most likely not"[58].
Other ideas[edit / edit wiki text]
On the eve of the release of Inglourious Basterds in the UK, Tarantino said that he would like to make a film based on the spy trilogy by writer Len Deighton, author of the Ipcress Dossier and other action packed bestsellers.
We are talking about the trilogy "Game in Berlin"[59][60][61] — "Set in Mexico City"[59][60][61] — "The Match in London" (Berlin Game, Mexico Set and London Match), united by one hero — an elderly intelligence officer named Bernard Samson, working in a fictional Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) in the last years of the Cold War[62].
Plans for the completion of the director's career[edit / edit wiki text]
On July 12, 2016, the director said in an interview with Variety that he would shoot only two more films, after which he would retire.
According to him, during his entire career, he planned to make 10 films, 8 of which are already ready, and therefore there are only two left.
Although, he noted that perhaps at the age of 75 he will come up with the idea to make another film, but this will not affect the 10 existing ones.[63]
Director's handwriting[edit / edit wiki text]
Unlike previous generations of American directors, Tarantino studied his craft on his own, as a clerk in a video store.
His cinematic taste developed under the influence of the original fusion of pop culture and arthouse cinema[19].
All Tarantino's films have a special handwriting, thanks to which it is impossible to confuse his films with the works of other directors.
First of all, his films are distinguished by a nonlinear structure (often uses unconventional narrative, for example, the return to past events in "reservoir dogs"[64][65], the nonlinearity of the narrative in "pulp fiction"[22][65] or a narration Chapter by Chapter, in the "Kill bill" and "Inglourious Basterds", "Disgusting eight"[66]), the aestheticization of violence and long dialogues[19].
They also contain a huge number of references to films that are iconic for Quentin himself[67].
Almost all of his films (except for "Proof of Death", but including "True Love") contain "Mexican Dead End", a scene in which three or more characters point weapons at each other at the same time[68].
The films have well imitated scenes with cutting off parts of the characters ' hands in extremely close ups, there are also drugs, as well as cruelty and violence, most of which is behind the scenes.
Although Tarantino uses these elements in his films, in real life he can not stand violence[1].
Tarantino sometimes resorts to using a long close up of a person's face while someone else is talking off screen.
He uses pseudonyms and nicknames in almost all of his films.
The heroines often wear a black and white pantsuit.
He often creates fictional brands because of his dislike of advertising in movies.
For example, in most of his films there are cigarettes "Red Apple"[69].
The main character of his films has committed at least one major crime (most often — murder, in some films — robbery) (with the exception of the episode in the film "Four Rooms").
The characters often have a conversation somewhere in a cafe or in a restaurant, while talking again about food[15].
In his stories, scenes of the murder of parents of young children regularly slip through.
For example, in" Mad Dogs", a policeman asks: "Donot kill me, I have a small child!", and then he is shot in cold blood.
In" Kill Bill", Beatrix kills Vernita Green in front of her young daughter Nikki, the parents of Oh Ren Ishii, when she was a child, were also killed in front of her.
In" Inglourious Basterds", Brigitte von Hammersmark kills the newly made father of baby Max[15], and in" Django Unchained", Django, being a bounty hunter, kills a wanted criminal in front of his son.
The director himself says that all his films have one thing in common, with the help of which he has won many fans around the world — all his films have a special sense of humor that makes the audience laugh at things that are not a priori funny[70].
Most often, Tarantino works with such actors as Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Uma Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson.
Also, in each of his films, with the exception of "Proof of Death", someone from those actors who played in the Martin Scorsese film "Evil Streets"plays[15].
Almost all of Tarantino's films contain close up shots of women's feet ("Pulp Fiction", "Jackie Brown", "Kill Bill", "Death Proof", "Inglourious Bastards") or actions directly related to them (a conversation about foot massage in "Pulp Fiction", a scene with Salma Hayek dancing in "From Dusk to Dawn", the loss of Cherry Darling's leg and her subsequent "prosthetics" in "Planet of Fear")[71].
Brad Pitt
Collaboration with actors Actors Mad Dogs
(1992) Pulp Fiction
(1994) Four rooms
(1995) Jackie Brown
(1997) Kill Bill.
Movie 1
(2003) Kill Bill.
Movie 2
(2004) Proof of death
(2007) Inglourious Bastards
(2009) Django Unchained
(2012) The Abominable Eight
(2015) Samuel L. Jackson X X X X X X Lawrence Bender X X X X Michael Madsen X X X X Michael Parks X X X X Tim Roth X X X X Zoe Bell X X X Michael Bowen X X X Michael Bacall X X X Venessa Valentino X X X Julie Dreyfus X X X Harvey Keitel X X X James Parks X X X Uma Thurman X X X Steve Buscemi X X Christoph Waltz X X
Walton Goggins
X X Kathy Griffin X X Dan Gourrier X X Bruce Dern X X Keith Jefferson X X Omar Doom X X Paul Calderon X X Helen Kim X X Linda Kaye X X David Carradine X X Jonathan Loughran X X Lucy Liu X X Belinda Ovino X X Stevo Pola X X Kurt Russell X X Christina Rodriguez X X Eli Roth X X Craig Stark X X Rich Turner X X Bruce Willis X X Daryl Hannah X X Lee Horsley X X Sid Haig X X
Collaboration with producers Producers My best friend's Birthday
(1987) Mad Dogs
(1992) Pulp Fiction
(1994) Four rooms
(1995) Jackie Brown
(1997) Kill Bill.
Movie 1
(2003) Kill Bill.
Movie 2
(2004) Proof of death
(2007) Inglourious Bastards
(2009) Harvey Weinstein X X X X X X Lawrence Bender X X X X X X Bob Weinstein X X X X X X Erica Steinberg X X X X
Criticism[edit / edit wiki text]
Some world film analysts called Tarantino one of the most successful, recognized by film critics and not deprived of attention of young directors.
In the 90s, he appeared in the cinema, brought his own aesthetics and a certain charm, created a number of bright and memorable images and made films that observers and journalists allocated a separate place in the cinema.
Nevertheless, Tarantino's activities have been seriously criticized at various times and for various reasons.
Moreover, he has both an army of fans and a crowd of haters[72].
Tarantino was criticized for being too disrespectful to other cultures in his films.
For example, many phrases that the heroes of his films say can be perceived as racist.
Especially in this regard, such expressions as "nigger" and "nigger"stand out and are most often found in paintings.
As an example, we can cite a scene from "Pulp Fiction" in which the hero Jimmy Dimmick, played by Tarantino himself, entered into a conversation with the hero of Samuel L. Jackson, Jules Winfield, who took the corpse of a black man who had just been killed to his house.
Jimmy asked Jules if he had seen a sign on his house: "dead niggers warehouse".
In the future, the characters of the film used this word many times[73].
In an interview with Variety, Spike Lee said: "I'm not against these words, and I use them, but Quentin, it seems, is just passionate about them and obsessed with them.
What does he want?
Does he want to be made an honorary black man?"[73]
In his interview with Charlie Rose, Tarantino replied as follows:
As an author, I have the right to write every character in my world the way I want.
I have the right to be them, I have the right to think like them and I have the right to tell the truth about what they are, donot I?
And to say that I canot do it because I'm white, and the Hughes brothers can because they're black, that's racism.
This is the very essence of racism, isnot it?
And I donot accept it.
The part of black society that lives in Compton, lives in Inglewood, where the events of Jackie Brown unfold, who live in Carson, they really talk like that.
I'm telling the truth.
This would not be questioned if I were black, and I provoke doubt because I am white.
I have the right to tell the truth.
I have no right to lie.[74]
Later, on the Howard Stern show, Tarantino also stated that Lee would have to kiss his ass while standing on a chair[75].
Samuel L. Jackson, who starred in the films of both directors, sided with Tarantino.
At the Berlin Film Festival, where "Jackie Brown" was shown, Jackson responded to Lee's attacks by saying:
I donot think this word is offensive in the context of this film...
Black artists believe that they are the only ones who are allowed to use this word.
This is nonsense.
"Jackie Brown" is a good film and does not offend black people in any way [76].
According to an article in Premiere magazine, actor Denzel Washington also accused Tarantino of using racial slurs in his paintings, noting that Quentin is a master of his craft[77].
And the film "Django Unchained" was criticized for the fact that Tarantino made this film precisely under the black President of the United States[78].
Tarantino is often criticized for excessive violence in films (for example, Lee Siegel of The Daily Beast called it "absurd")[79].
However, some critics say that if you observe more carefully, you can understand that films often only point to violence.
They believe that violence is used by the director as a means of storytelling, and as a result, Quentin demonstrates the moral, which is that violence never solves anything, but only generates more new problems.
He uses cruelty to evoke strong feelings in the audience[80].
There are often accusations that his films contain too much dialogue.
Tarantino answered this in an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda:
Fucking dialogues are my thing, donot you see?
This is what I do!
I respect people's opinions, but to come out of my film and say, "Too much dialogue" is as stupid as saying it after watching a play by Tennessee Williams or David Hare, mother of them.
You canot be my fucking fan and not love my dialogues.
By the way, each of my films was criticized for having long boring dialogues in them.
Except perhaps the first part of "Kill Bill", where it's all mochilovo [81].
Some critics call Tarantino's films "low" and "frivolous".
The director himself says the following about this:
I've been invited to the Cannes Fucking Festival for 16 years, because, in your opinion, I make frivolous films?
Someone calls them "low", but not me.
For me, making a film about blondes in prison is no less respectable than adapting the novels of Henry James.
With the only difference: I donot like the film adaptations of the novels of Henry James at all, but films about blondes in prison are wonderfully good!
And I want to shoot exactly such pictures.
I return the" low", half forgotten genres (such as spaghetti Western) the respect they deserve.
And a modern sound, your mother!
And I do it in the style of "crazy Quentin", which means that they are not like anyone or anything.
Except, of course, fucking Quentin, because it's me!"[81]
Tarantino has been included in the lists of the best directors of recent times several times: for example, Paste magazine included him in the top ten living directors, and The Guardian newspaper placed Tarantino on the 17th place in the list of the 40 best directors in the world[82][83].
Quentin Tarantino took part in a protest march against police brutality and brutality in New York[84], for which the US police called on all their employees to boycott his films.[85]
Personal life, hobbies, hobbies, interests and tastes[edit / edit wiki text]
Tarantino's favorite movies
"Good, Bad, Evil" "Apocalypse Today" "Obnoxious Bears" "Carrie" "High and confused" "The Big Escape" "His Girlfriend Friday" "Jaws" "Pretty Girls, stand in a row" "Thunderclaps" "Sorcerer" "Taxi Driver"
Sight & Sound Survey (2012)[86]
Quentin has had romantic relationships with many famous women, including actress Mira Sorvino[87], directors Allison Anders and Sofia Coppola[88], actresses Julie Dreyfus and Cher Jackson and comedians Kathy Griffin and Margaret Cho[89].
There were also rumors about his relationship with Uma Thurman.
However, Tarantino denied these rumors, saying that they only have a platonic relationship.
Quentin has never been married and has no children.
The director stated:
I am not saying that I will not get married and have children until I am 60 years old, but for now I have made exactly this choice and will go down the same road, because this is my time to make films[90].
A few years later, the director spoke more categorically[91]:
Understand, I gave up too much in life in order to make a movie.
I have no wife, no children.
I made these sacrifices with a clear goal in mind.
And I'm happy.
- Oleg Sulkin's conversation with Quentin Tarantino.
According to the New York Post, Quentin once rode a bus filled with women and alcohol, and seemed to enjoy it.
Then he placed everyone in a mansion in the Hollywood Hills, where he sat on a sofa surrounded by women [92].
One of Tarantino's closest friends is director Robert Rodriguez.
They have collaborated on many projects.
Of the most notable are "From dusk till dawn" (the script was written by Tarantino and directed the film rodríguez), Four rooms (they both wrote the script and directed every episode of the film), "Sin City" and "Grindhouse".
It Tarantino Rodriguez advised to call the final part of his trilogy "the Musician" — "Once in Mexico", as an homage to the name of "Once in the Wild West" and "Once in America".
They are both members of the band A Band Apart, which also includes John Wu and Luc Besson.
In 2004, having arrived in Moscow for the XXVI Moscow Film Festival, Tarantino visited the grave of Boris Pasternak in Peredelkino.
Tarantino's translator said that Pasternak is the director's literary idol, who influenced his work[93][94].
Tarantino also calls the singer Madonna and Uma Thurman close friends, whom he sometimes elevated to the status of his muses.
The director has been collaborating with Uma Thurman for almost his entire career[95].
He considers Paul Thomas Anderson, Jennifer Beals and Sofia Coppola to be among his best friends[15].
Quentin admitted that he is prone to foot fetish (sexual attraction to the feet)[96][97].
Quentin collects old board games related to such TV series as I Dream of Jeannie (1965)," Dukes of Hazzard "(1979), "The A Team" (1983).
In addition, he is a big fan of the acting trio and The Three Stooges film series.
Tarantino also loves the computer game Half Life very much and is considering the possibility of a film adaptation of this shooter[15].
In 2009, he called the film "Battle Royale" by Japanese director Kinji Fukasaku his favorite film of those that were released in the period from 1992, that is, from the moment when he became a director[98].
In August 2007, during the 9th International Film Festival in Manila, he named Filipino directors Cirio Santiago, Eddie Romero and Gerardo de Leon as his personal idols of the 1970s[99].
To rumors about his high IQ of 160, Tarantino replied that his mother mentioned it in an interview, and he does not know if it is true[100].
Filmography[edit / edit wiki text]
Year Film Director Screenwriter Producer Actor The role of K. himselfTarantino 1983 Love birds in captivity Y
Y
Y
1985 Golden Girls Y Elvis Presley Impersonator 1987 My Best Friend's Birthday Y
Y
Y
Y Clarence 1992 Mad Dogs Y
Y
Y Mr. Brown 1991 After midnight Y
1992 Eddie Presley Y Madhouse worker 1993 N real love y
1993 Iron Monkey Y
1993 Kill Zoey Y
1994 Pulp Fiction Y
Y
Y Jimmy Dimmick 1994 American Girl Y Desmond 1994 Natural Born Killers Y
1994 Sleep With Me Y Sid 1994 The One Who's In Love Y Bartender 1995 Destiny Turns On The Radio Y Johnny Destiny / The Devil 1995 Desperate Y Joke Teller (cameo) 1995 Dance With Me While We Love Y
Y The Groom 1995 Four rooms Y
Y
Y
Y Chester Rush 1995 From Dusk till Dawn Y
Y
Y Richard Geko 1996 Girl No. 6 Y Director No. 1 in New York 1996 Dried blood Y
Y
1997 Jackie Brown Y
Y
Y voice on Jackie's answering machine (voice acting) 1998 The Lord said ha!
Y
1999 From Dusk till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money Y
2000 From Dusk till Dawn 3: The Executioner's Daughter Y
2000 Nikki, the Devil Jr.
Y The Blind Priest 2001 Spy Y Mckenas Cole 2002 The Adventures of Modesty Blaze Y
2003 Kill Bill Y
Y
2004 Kill Bill.
Movie 2 Y
Y
2005 Daltrey Calhoun Y
2005 Hostel Y
2005 "Danger from the Grave" Y
Y
2006 The Fury of freedom Y
2007 Planet of Fear Y
Y Rapist No. 1 2007 Proof of death Y
Y
Y
Y Bartender Warren 2007 Hostel 2 Y
2007 Sukiyaki Western Django Y Piringo 2008 Hell Ride Y
2009 Inglourious Bastards Y
Y
Y scalped German soldier / soldier on the tower in the film "Pride of the Nation" 2010 Come home Y
2012 Django Unchained Y
Y
Y employee of the company LeCointa Dickie / Robert, a member of the Big Daddy gang 2015 The Disgusting Eight Y
Y
Y Narrator (voice acting)
Awards and ratings[edit / edit wiki text]
Ratings[edit / edit wiki text]
Tarantino in Paris at the presentation of the film award "Cesar" in 2011
Tarantino received 37 awards and participated in 47 more nominations.
In 2007, the magazine Total Film (English)Russian.
I put his name on the 12th place in the list of the best directors of all time[101].
And in 2008, IMDB compiled a rating of modern directors who have shot at least 4 full length films, based on the average rating of the film, where Tarantino took the first place with a rating of 8.12[102].
Six of his films are included in the list of the "100 best films of all time" according to the magazine "FHM": "Pulp Fiction" (No. 1), "Mad Dogs" (No. 11), " Kill Bill.
Movie 1" (No. 25), " Kill Bill.
Film 2" (No. 26), "From Dusk to Dawn" (No. 73), "True Love" (No. 75) [15].
He took the 81st place in 2004 in the list of the hundred most influential figures compiled by Premiere magazine[15], and the 8th place in 2005 in the rating "The Greatest Directors of All Time" compiled by the British magazine Empire[103].
As of the end of 2007, he closed the list of "100 geniuses of our time" [104].
2004 Officer of the French Order of Arts and Literature.
2013 Commander of the French Order of Arts and Literature[105].
On December 21, 2015, Tarantino became the owner of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame[106].
In addition to fans, many actors and colleagues came to congratulate the director, including Zoe Bell, Walton Goggins, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tim Roth and his long time friend and colleague, Samuel L. Jackson[107].
Awards and nominations[edit / edit wiki text]
Year Title Award Category Result 2015 "The Disgusting Eight" "Golden Globe" "Best Screenplay" BAFTA Nomination "Best Original Screenplay" Nomination 2012 "Django Unchained" Hollywood Film Award "Best Screenplay"[108] Victory "Critics ' Choice" "Best Original Screenplay" Victory "Golden Globe" "Best Director's Work" Nomination "Best Screenplay" BAFTA Victory "Best Director's Work" Nomination "Best Original Screenplay" Oscar Victory "Best Original Screenplay" Saturn Victory "Best Screenplay" Victory 2009 "Inglourious Basterds" "Oscar" "Best Original Screenplay"[109] Nomination "Best Director"[110] Nomination "BAFTA ""Best original screenplay" [111] Nomination " Award to them.
David Lin for Best Director"[112] Golden Globe nomination "Best Screenplay" [113] Nomination "Best Director"[114] Nomination "Cannes Film Festival""Palme d'Or for Best Film" [115] Nomination "Saturn""Best Director" Nomination "Best Screenplay" Nomination 2007 "Proof of Death" "Cannes Film Festival" "Palme d'Or for Best Film" [116] Nomination 2006 "C. S. I.: Crime Scene"(episode "Serious Dangers") "Edgar Allan Poe Award" "Best Episode of a TV Series"[117] Emmy nomination "Best Director of a Dramatic Television Series "Nomination 2004" Kill Bill.
Film 2 ""Grammy ""Best Soundtrack" Nomination "Saturn" "Best Screenplay" Nomination Best Director "Nomination European Film Academy Award Screen International Award Nomination 2003" Kill Bill.
Film 1" "Saturn" "Best Director" Nomination "Best Screenplay" Nomination "Sputnik" "Best Original Screenplay" Nomination 1998 "Jackie Brown" "Berlin Film Festival" "Golden Bear for best Film"[118] Nomination 1996 "From Dusk to Dawn" "Saturn" "Best Screenplay" Nomination "Best Supporting Actor" Nomination "Golden Raspberry" (anti award) "Worst Supporting Actor" Nomination 1994 "Pulp Fiction" "Oscar" "Best Original Screenplay"[4] Winning "Best Director"[119] BAFTA nomination "Best Original Screenplay" [120] Win "Best Film" [121] Nomination " Award to them.
David Lean for Best Director"[122] Nomination "Cesar" "Best Foreign Language Film"[123] Nomination "Cannes Film Festival" "Palme d'Or for Best Film"[3] Victory "David di Donatello" "Best Foreign Film"[124] Victory "Edgar Allan Poe Award" "Best Film"[125] Victory "Golden Globe" "Best Screenplay"[5] Victory "Best Director"[5] Nomination "National Council of Film Critics USA" "Best Director"[126] Victory "Independent Spirit" "Best Director" Victory "Best Screenplay" Victory 1993 "True Love" "Saturn" "Best Screenplay" Nomination 1992 " Mad Dogs "Maria Award" International Film Festival in Catalonia ""Best Director"[127] Win "Best Screenplay" [127] Win "Toronto Film Festival ""FIPRESCI Prize (International Critics' Prize) " Win "Independent Spirit" "Best Director" Nomination "Best Debut Film "Nomination" Sundance Film Festival "Drama Film" Nomination
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ 1 2 Victoria Karmanets.
A fanatic of cinema art and an aesthete of violence (Rus.).
kinopokaz.tv.
Checked on November 7, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 1 2 Michaela Latham.
Interview Quentin Tarantino (English).
BBC.
Checked on November 9, 2009.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 1 2 Award 1994 (English).
Cannes Film Festival (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Writing (Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen) (English).
Oscar (1995).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ 1 2 3 The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995).
Golden Globe (1995).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Quentin Tarantino President of the jury (English).
Cannes Film Festival (2004).
Checked on October 24, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 1 2 Plakhov, Andrey.
Russia passed the competition in Venice (Russian).
Kommersant (July 30, 2010).
Verified on August 30, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
Ven Venezia 67 (English).
Venice Film Festival (2010).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Quentin Tarantino Biography (1963 -) (English).
filmreference.com.
Checked on October 24, 2010.
Fac Faces of the week (English).
BBC (May 14, 2004).
Checked on October 24, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 3 Quentin Tarantino (English).
Entertainment Weekly (December 30, 1994).
Verified on October 24, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ The Man and His Movies, New York: Harper Perennial, p. 12. ↑ 1 2 Quentin Tarantino Biography (English).
Yahoo!
Movies.
Checked on October 24, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23 2011.
↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Jeff Dawson.
Tarantino.
Biography.
Translated from the English by E. V. Vinogradova.
- Moscow: Vagrius.
— ISBN 5-7027-0859-8.
↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Biography for Quentin Tarantino (English).
IMDb.
Checked on November 11, 2009.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
K Ken P.
An Interview with Danny Strong (English).
May 19, 2003.
movies.ign.com.
Checked on October 24, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
Би Biography of Quentin Tarantino (Russian).
Russian fan site of Quentin Tarantino.
Checked on January 12, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ "The Golden Girls" The Complete Fourth Season DVD Review (English).
Aaron Wallace (February 14, 2006).
Checked on November 10, 2009.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 1 2 3 4 Quentin Tarantino (English).
MTV.
Verified on November 9, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Fuller Graham.
Graham Fuller/1993 // Quentin Tarantino: Interviews / Peary, Gerald..
— University Press of Mississippi, 1998.
— P. 57–59.
— ISBN 1578060516.
Сергей Sergey Polotovsky.
"Pulp fiction" (Rus.).
Sovetnik.ru (April 1, 2005).
Verified on January 29, 2010.
↑ 1 2 Alex Exler.
Pulp Fiction (Russian).
Exler.ru (June 7, 2004).
Checked on January 29, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Rocio Ayuso.
"Thurman is my Clint Eastwood", says Tarantino (rus.).
Tape.
<url> (April 30, 2004).
Checked on November 7, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Jeff Dawson.
Quentin Tarantino: The Cinema of Cool.
- Applause Theatre Book Pub, November 1995.
- P. 148 — - ISBN 1-55783-227-7.
Сергей Sergey Rakhlin.
Tarantino&Rodriguez: Ministers of Worship (rus.).
Your leisure (June 14, 2007).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Man Man From the South (English).
roalddahlfans.com.
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Alex Exler.
Review of "Four rooms" (Rus.).
Exler.ru (July 22, 2004).
Checked on November 7, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ John Silver.
Review of "Four rooms" (Rus.).
kino.orc.ru.
Checked on November 7, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
Вит Vitaly Shishikin.
Retrospective "From dusk to dawn" (Rus.).
Videodrome.
The World of Fiction (June 7, 2011).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Jack Jackie BrownJackie Brown (1997) (English).
Rotten Tomatoes.
Verified on October 4, 2012.
↑ Pulp Fiction (1994) (English).
Rotten Tomatoes.
Verified on October 4, 2012.
Reservoir Dogs (1992) (English).
Rotten Tomatoes.
Verified on October 4, 2012.
Jack Jackie Brown (English).
Box Office Mojo.
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Gerald Pirie.
Quentin Tarantino: An interview.
- St. Petersburg: Azbuka klastika, 2007 — - 336 p. ↑ Lynn Hirschberg.
The Two Hollywoods;
The Man Who Changed Everything (English).
The New York Times (November 16, 1997).
Accessed October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Tri Trivia for Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (English).
IMDb.
Checked on January 29, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011 .
Tri Trivia for Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (English).
IMDb.
Checked on January 29, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ CSI Special: Tarantino's Grave Danger reviewed by Jack Foley.
Checked on November 10, 2009.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ 1 2 Grindhouse (English).
IMDb.
Checked on January 30, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Grindhouse (2007).
Box Office Mojo.
Checked on November 9, 2009.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Quentin Tarantino Says DEATH PROOF Is the «Worst» Film He’s Ever Made ↑ Valery Kichin.
The Cannes Film Festival showed glimpses of a criminal look (rus.).
Rossiyskaya Gazeta (May 24, 2007).
Checked on January 30, 2010.
Tri Trivia for Inglourious Basterds (English).
IMDb.
Checked on January 30, 2010.
Archived from the original source on August 23, 2011.
↑ Election DVD (English).
bs (November 11, 2007).
Checked on November 10, 2009.
Archived from the original source on 23 Aug ста 2011.
↑ 1 2 Мэтт Голдберг.
Quentin Tarantino’s Next Film Is a Spaghetti Western Starring Christoph Waltz (англ.).
Collider (28 февраля 2011).
Проверено 17 марта 2012.
↑ Quentin Tarantino: I'm proud of my flop (англ.).
The Daily Telegraph (27 апреля 2007).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Тим Сэндл.
Django Unchained: new Tarantino movie begins shooting (англ.).
DigitalJournal (27 января 2012).
Проверено 17 марта 2012.
↑ Майк Скотт.
Quentin Tarantino's 'Django Unchained' will shoot in New Orleans, city confirms (англ.).
Nola (23 августа 2011).
Проверено 17 марта 2012.
↑ Тарантино, Квентин (рус.).
Лента.ру.
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Moore film 'won Cannes on merit' (англ.).
BBC News (23 мая 2004).
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Stone to join Tarantino for "Weekend"?
(англ.).
Liz Smith (18 мая 2009).
Проверено 9 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Киностудия не доверила Квентину Тарантино съёмки «Джеймса Бонда» (рус.).
Утро.
Ру (26 марта 2007).
Проверено 9 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Тарантино переснимет лесбийский триллер (рус.).
Лента.
Ру (18 января 2008).
Проверено 9 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Как ляжет фишка Тарантино (рус.).
Film.ru (18 августа 2006).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Тарантино собирается снимать третью часть «Убить Билла» (рус.).
Lenta.ru (13 апреля 2004).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ «Убить Билла 3»: месть — это блюдо, которое нужно подать ещё раз (рус.).
Film.ru (27 июня 2007).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Tarantino Teases Kill Bill Volume 3 (англ.).
MrDisgusting (4 октября 2009).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Квентин Тарантино утратил интерес к продолжению "Убить Билла" | Новости.
Новости дня на сайте Подробности ↑ 1 2 М.Хоста, А.Верховский.
Шпионский роман.
Попытка краткого обзора ↑ 1 2 Квентин Тарантино: Интервью ↑ 1 2 Квентин Тарантино планирует экранизировать английские детективы ↑ Квентин Тарантино признался в любви к английским детективам (рус.).
Russian Fun Site (20 августа 2009).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Keslassy, Elsa.
Quentin Tarantino Says to Expect Just Two More Films.
Variety (12 июля 2016).
Проверено 13 июля 2016.
↑ Алекс Экслер.
Рецензия на «Бешеных псов» (рус.).
exler.ru (12 марта 2004).
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 11 августа 2011.
↑ 1 2 Сергей Кудрявцев.
Рецензия на «Бешеных псов» (рус.).
Мегаэнциклопедия Кирилла и Мефодия (2006).
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Алекс Экслер.
Рецензия на "Бесславных ублюдков" (рус.).
Exler.ru (14 декабря 2009).
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Джефф Доусон.
Квентин Тарантино (рус.).
qtarantino.h11.ru (1995).
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Mexican Standoff (англ.).
tvtropes.org.
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Quentin Tarantino's trademarks (англ.).
tarantino.info.
Проверено 7 ноября 2010.
↑ There is a sense of humour in all of my movies.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Брэд Бревет.
Tarantino: Brevet (англ.).
RopeOfSilicon.
Проверено 17 марта 2012.
↑ The 50 Most Influential Directors of the Century (англ.).
Brainz.
Проверено 18 марта 2012.
↑ 1 2 Allen Taylor, J. Douglas New Word Order.
Metroactive.com (9 апреля 1998).
Проверено 23 октября 2008.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Quentin Tarantino defends himself against Spike Lee for criticizing him in using the 'n word'..
CharlieRose.com (December 26, 1997).
Проверено 30 января 2011.
↑ Schnakenberg, Robert Secret Lives of Great Filmmakers: Spike Lee.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Samuel L. Jackson blasts Spike Lee for criticizing him for using 'n word' in 'Jackie Brown.'
. Jet(недоступная ссылка — история).
Findarticles.com (9 марта 1998).
Проверено 23 октября 2008.
Архивировано из первоисточника 10 июля 2012.
↑ Denzel Washington.
Celebrities Pictures.
Com.
Проверено 5 сентября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Елена Гагарина.
Мы — не рабы, рабы — не мы: «Джанго освобождённый» // Контрабанда — 06.03.2013 ↑ Ли Сигел.
Tarantino's Hollow Violence (англ.).
TheDailyBeast (24 августа 2009).
Проверено 18 марта 2012.
↑ Quentin Tarantino — Film Maker.
BBC (4 мая 2004).
Проверено 8 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ 1 2 Стас Тыркин.
Меня тошнит от съёмок кино!.
Комсомольская правда (5 июня 2007).
Проверено 10 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 30 мая 2012.
↑ The Fifty Best Living Directors (англ.).
Paste Magazine.
Проверено 18 марта 2012.
↑ The world's 40 best directors (англ.).
The Guardian.
Проверено 18 марта 2012.
↑ ВЕСТИ.RU: Квентин Тарантино принял участие в акции протеста в Нью Йорке ↑ Полиция США разозлилась на режиссёра и призывает бойкотировать все его фильмы.
↑ Максим Лоран.
"Vertigo" D’Hitchcock, Nouveau Sommet Du Septieme Art (фр.).
ParisMatch (3 августа 2012).
Проверено 3 августа 2012.
↑ Quentin Tarantino and Mira Sorvino are history (англ.).
South Coast Today.
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Coppola and Tarantino Share Suite (англ.).
IMDb (17 мая 2004).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ I'm the One That I Want (англ.).
Stephen Tropiano (2000).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Quentin Tarantino — Tarantino Sacrificed Love For His Career (англ.).
Artist Alphabetocally (28 июля 2009).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Беседа Олега Сулькина с Квентином Тарантино («Итоги») ↑ Quentin's 'Mexican' Halloween.
New York Post (2 ноября 2010).
Проверено 9 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Ольга Рудакова.
Тарантино плакал на могиле Пастернака.
Комсомольская правда (21 июня 2004).
Проверено 6 июня 2013.
Архивировано из первоисточника 7 июня 2013.
↑ Тарантино и Пастернак.
— Видео на портале youtube.
Проверено 6 июня 2013.
↑ Готов стать козлом отпущения.
Известия (26 июня 2007).
Проверено 10 ноября 2010.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Luis Calvo.
Quentin Tarantino's Foot Fetish (англ.).
hollywoodinvestigator.com (13 февраля 2004).
Проверено 28 сентября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Tyra Banks.
Tyra Banks Show (англ.).
You Tube.
Проверено 28 сентября 2012.
↑ Quentin Tarantino's Top 20 Favorite Films.
Проверено 5 сентября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Constantino Tejero.
Tarantino raves over Pinoy B movies, Philippine Daily Inquirer (12 августа 2007).
↑ Лиз Браун.
Quentin Tarantino talks Inglourious Basterds on The Howard Stern Show (англ.).
Examiner (17 августа 2009).
Проверено 17 марта 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Greatest Directors Ever - Part 2 (англ.).
Total Film (20 августа 2007).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Рейтинг современных режиссёров от imdb (рус.).
Tarantino News (5 марта 2008).
Проверено 10 ноября 2009.
Архивировано из первоисточника 23 августа 2011.
↑ Greatest Film Directors (англ.).
Empire.
filmsite.org.
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Top 100 living geniuses (англ.).
The Daily Telegraph.
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Lien web: Quentin Tarantino reçoit le prix Lumière 2013 ↑ Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Проверено 3 октября 2015.
↑ Квентин Тарантино получил звезду на голливудской «Аллее Славы» ↑ Марк Джонсон.
The Awards Season Kicks Off With The Hollywood Film Awards (англ.).
Awards Circuit (23 октября 2012).
Проверено 25 октября 2012.
↑ Writing (Original Screenplay) (англ.).
The 82nd Academy Awards (2010) Nominees and Winners.
Оскар (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Directing (англ.).
The 82nd Academy Awards (2010) Nominees and Winners.
Оскар (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Original Screenplay 2009 (англ.).
Awards Database.
BAFTA (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Director 2009 (англ.).
Awards Database.
BAFTA (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Best Screenplay - Motion Picture (англ.).
The 67th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2010).
Золотой глобус (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Best Director - Motion Picture (англ.).
The 67th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2010).
Золотой глобус (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Official Selection 2009 (англ.).
Канский кинофестиваль (2009).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Official Selection 2007 (англ.).
Канский кинофестиваль (2007).
Проверено 2 октября 2012.
Архивировано из первоисточника 15 октября 2012.
↑ Edgars Databa se (English).
Vinctori 2006.
Edgar Allan Poe Award (2006).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Competition (English).
Berlin Film Festival (1998).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Direc Directing (English).
The 67th Academy Awards (1995) Nominees and Winners (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Original Screenplay 1994 (English).
Awards Database.
BAFTA (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ Film 1994 (English).
Awards Database.
BAFTA (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Dav David Lean Award for achievement in Direction, The 1994 Awards Database.
BAFTA (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Pal Palmares 1995-20 eme Ceremonie Des Cesar (French).
Cesar (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
M Miglior Film Straniero (Italian).
Vinctori 1995.
David di Donatello (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Ed Edgars Database (English).
Vinctori 1995.
Edgar Allan Poe Award (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
Best Best Director (English).
The National Council of Film Critics of the USA (1994).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 15, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Award " Maria honorífica” (English).
25ed.
Festival Internaciona de Cinema Fantàstic de Sitges (2/10-11/10).
International Film Festival in Catalonia (1992).
Checked on October 2, 2012.
Bibliography[edit / edit wiki text]
Quentin Tarantino: Interview / Comp.
J. Pirie;
Translated from the English by Z. Abdullayeva, V. Klebleyeva, M. Terakopyan, N. Tsyrkun.
- St. Petersburg: "Abc classics", 2008 — - 336 p.
Greene, Richard and K. Silem Mohammad, editors.
Quentin Tarantino and Philosophy.
Chicago: Open Court Books, 2007.
ISBN 0-8126-9634-4 Jeff Dawson.
Quentin Tarantino: The Cinema of Cool.
November 1995, Applause Theatre Book Pub, ISBN 1-55783-227-7 Wensley Clarkson.
Quentin Tarantino: Shooting From the Hip.
1996.
Jerome Charyn.
Raised by Wolves: The Turbulent Art and Times of Quentin Tarantino.
New York: Thunder’s Mouth Press, 2006.
ISBN 1-56025-858-6 Jim Smith.
Tarantino.
London: Virgin Books Ltd., 2005.
ISBN 0-7535-1071-5 Wensley Clarkson.
Quentin Tarantino: The Man, The Myths and His Movies.
London: John Blake, 2007.
ISBN 1-84454-366-8 Jami Bernard.
Quentin Tarantino: The Man and His Movies.
New York: Harper Perennial / HarperCollins, 1995.
ISBN 0-06-095161-3 Gerald Peary.
Quentin Tarantino: Interviews.
Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 1998.
Paul A. Woods.
King Pulp: The Wild World of Quentin Tarantino.
London: Plexus Publishing Limited, 1996.
ISBN 0-85965-235-1
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Quentin Tarantino in Wikicitatnik Quentin Tarantino on Wikimedia Commons Quentin Tarantino in Wikinovosti
Wikinovosti on the topic of Quentin Tarantino:
Quentin Tarantino: "Raising the topic of slavery, I decided that I would become a scapegoat" (interview)
Russian fan site of Quentin Tarantino Quentin Tarantino (English) on the website of the Internet Movie Database Quentin Tarantino on allmovie (English) Tarantino, Quentin an article in Lentapedia.
2012.
The Quentin Tarantino Archives (English) Everything Tarantino (English)
Press
The documentary " Quentin Tarantino.
Professional movie hooligan " Documentary about Tarantino Izvestia: Interview with Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino's films
Director and
screenwriter
Mad Dogs (1992 • * Pulp Fiction (1994) • Je
