Rare filmmakers have the tendency to eclipse the content of their work, both in style and public recognition. Quentin Tarantino arrived at that status long before he re-modernized the western-film genre with his 2012 all-around critical and commercial success, Django Unchained. Tarantino laces up his cowboy boots once again with his latest entry, The Hateful Eight, a film that almost never happened after Tarantino vowed to abandon the project when its script was leaked all across the internet. But despite his rigid and reactionary declaration, cooler heads prevailed and Tarantino returns to deliver another fine addition to his well-rounded filmography.

Bounty hunter John “The Hangman” Ruth (Kurt Russell) is transporting his prisoner, Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh), to the town of Red Rock, Wyoming where she stands to be hung for crimes committed. But when a blistering winter storm forces him and a band of untrustworthy fellows to take shelter in a stopover along the way, tensions begin to mount. And with a steep $10,000 reward on Daisy’s head, The Hangman will operate under any means necessary to ensure that he survives the storm and that justice prevails.

Hateful1

The Hateful Eight surfaces as another rare and bold story from an Oscar-winning mind unlike any other. This time around Quentin Tarantino uses a western backdrop as a bit of an homage to the classic stage play. The film incorporates an exceptionally-timed intermission to divide Tarantino’s newest irregular story into two fully different subsections. The first of which is used as an introductory to our eight mysterious characters. But throughout the second half of the film, the characters reveal their true colors culminating in a bloody and gruesome showdown that’s to be expect from Tarantino. As always, it’s the film’s absorbing dialogue and the director’s keen eye for camera work that turns a nearly three hour story into a wildly engaging thrill ride. The Hateful Eight never tries to mask a valuable life lesson or tell some profound, insightful message. It’s an experience created simply to entertain, and it achieves that with unburdened ease.

Hateful2

Despite the feature’s stylish successes and Oscar-caliber screenplay, The Hateful Eight reveals a few weaknesses. For starters, the cleverly implemented intermission is a foregone necessity. Without this brief separation from the story, The Hateful Eight would have been a far less enjoyable one-sitting watch. Furthermore, Tarantino has long ditched the normal tendencies of screenwriting. As a result, this time around he decides the characters are of much less importance than the wildly epic tale he aims to construct. Consequently, any strong emotional attachment to the movie is out of the question. Instead, the audience is expected to sit back, relax and enjoy the twisted and perverse concoctions of a storytelling genius.

Quentin Tarantino’s latest effort falls shy of his highly regarded, Django Unchained. However, The Hateful Eight is still a strong piece of filmmaking in its own right. Tarantino continues to deliver superb direction in support of a brilliantly crafted set of characters brought to life by a gift team of performers. Even if Jennifer Jason Leigh stands as the most likely cast member to receive an Oscar nomination, it’s Samuel L. Jackson who steals the show with an onslaught of hilarious one-liners. You should expect to literally laugh out loud, a lot. And if you can stomach another gory finale from Tarantino, then The Hateful Eight is something you should savor.

GRADE: 4/5

Visit MCDAVE’s host site for other movie lists and write-ups

In honor of the Academy Award Nominations which will be announced on Thursday January 10th, I give you my personal 2012 year-end movie awards. 2012 proved to be an extraordinary year in cinema (view my top ten films of 2012), one that will certainly leave its mark in history. Having seen nearly 100 new releases over this past calendar year, here’s my top 5 picks for each of the 6 major races:

Notable films I missed in 2012: AmourBeasts of the Southern Wild, Skyfall and Rust and Bone

 

Best Supporting Actress

#5 Sally Field – Lincoln

#4 Amy Adams – The Master

#3 Helen Hunt – The Sessions

#2 Pauline Collins – Quartet

and the winner is …

#1 Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables

 Much like the Academy is sure to do in late February, I reward Anne Hathaway with the Best Supporting Actress role of 2012. For all of the focus on Jean Valjean’s character in Tom Hooper’s Les Miserables, it’s Anne Hathaway who serves as the film’s heart and soul. Her emotionally-crushed rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” will live on as a Hollywood highlight reel forever, making her the clear cut winner here.

Best Supporting Actor

#5 Benicio Del Toro – Savages

#4 Philip Seymour Hoffman – The Master

#3 Sam Rockwell – Seven Psychopaths

#2 Ezra Miller – The Perks of Being a Wallflower

and the winner is …

#1 Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained

Quentin Tarantino’s Spaghetti Western Django Unchained stood out as one of the year’s funnest movie experiences. The film’s most lovable character was Dr. King Schultz, played by Academy Award Winner Christoph Waltz. While I am starting to feel as though Waltz will be the odd man out in the Best Supporting Actor category when Oscar nominations are announced on Thursday (read about my 2013 Oscar Nomination Predictions), it would be a shame for the Academy to omit his transcending performance.

Best Actress

#5 Helen Mirren – Hitchcock

#4 Naomi Watts – The Impossible

#3 Zoe Kazan – Ruby Sparks

#2 Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook

and the winner is …

#1 Jessica Chastain – Zero Dark Thirty

After storming onto the scene in 2011 with a handful of unforgettable roles, it seemed like a forgone conclusion that Jessica Chastain was a star in the making. Taking home my 2011 Best Supporting Actress Award for Take Shelter, Chastin raises the bar again with her phenomenal portrayal in Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty. Chastain’s character transforms throughout the feature and her development becomes a valuable aspect of the narrative. Although she finds worthy Oscar competition from my runner-up, Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook), Chastain gives the most decisive female performance of the year.

Best Actor

#5 Bradley Cooper – Silver Linings Playbook

#4 Denzel Washington – Flight

#3 Joaquin Phoenix – The Master

#2 John Hawkes – The Sessions

and the winner is …

#1 Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln

This race feels like the biggest “no-brainer” to me. For as many brilliant lead actor performances as there were this year (and believe me there were a TON), none of them were even in the same stratosphere as Daniel-Day Lewis’ once in a life time portrayal of Abraham Lincoln. Every chance I get to watch Day-Lewis deliver groundbreaking role after groundbreaking role, it becomes more apparent that I’m experiencing greatness. Steven Spielberg’s Best Picture contender, Lincoln, survives solely on the shoulders of the actor’s performance. There’s no question who deserves this win.

Best Director

#5 David O. Russell – Silver Linings Playbook

#4 J.A. Bayona – The Impossible

#3 Quentin Tarantino – Django Unchained

#2 Kathryn Bigelow – Zero Dark Thirty

and the winner is …

#1 Ben Affleck – Argo

The Best Director race was the most difficult for me to decide. The Kathryn Bigelow/Ben Affleck debate becomes very difficult to dissect. The direction’s outstanding in both Zero Dark Thirty and Argo, but the difference-maker was Affleck’s ability to conjure up a multi-dimensional movie experience. Bigelow’s feature is more of a character based journey, while Affleck focuses on bringing a remarkable true story to life. Distinct opposites in approach, both films are premier examples of modern day filmmaking. However, I just happened to enjoy Argo slightly more than Bigelow’s gripping manhunt tale.

Best Picture

#5 Perfect Sense

#4 The Sessions

#3 Zero Dark Thirty

#2 The Impossible

and the winner is …

#1 Argo

No one can question the abundance of top tier films released in 2012. It was a difficult decision and very close, but I’m going with Argo as the Best Picture of 2012. A roller coaster ride of emotions, Ben Affleck’s Argo interweaves between espionage thriller and comedy. The pacing and tone is perfect, making Argo the most enjoyable film of the year. Its Oscar hopes are still very much alive, despite a major December-long onslaught of competitive releases. Affleck continues to solidify himself as a bonafide filmmaker and gives us Argo, 2012’s Best Picture.

*** Where am I right and where am I wrong? Leave a comment and spark a debate. You can view other work by MCDave at Movie Reviews By Dave

2012 was a strange year at the movies. While comic book movies, remakes and sequels continued their multiplex dominance, there was an entire wealth of indies, festival films and curiosities that made 2012 a pretty diverse year. Even now that it has come to an end, I can’t produce a confident list of 2012’s Best Films… and I saw almost everything (sorry, Cloud Atlas).

So instead of Best (as Matt Kelly provided after seeing only 15 films all year), here’s my list of ‘The Films I Enjoyed The Most of 2012;. It’s a wide-ranging, mixed list, appropriate for a pretty wide-ranging, mixed year. Yes, these are the ones that I got the most out of in my own selfish, film-loving way.

The List:

#1 – Life of Pi – Ang Lee has been one of my favorite filmmakers for about fifteen years. Strange that his one film that you’d think was made for me was the one I enjoyed the least (Hulk). Luckily, this year’s Life of Pi more than made up for it as my favorite moviegoing experience of the year. I bemoan most 3D films, as I should, because most 3D films look pretty bad and suffer from the 3D not being fully thought out. It becomes more of a distraction than attraction. Here, with Ang Lee’s careful integration of digital effects and visual care, is the best 3D film I’ve ever seen. Even in the quiet moments, the movie jumps with energy. And during the big visual crescendos the movie erupts. Life of Pi, both on the script and on the screen, is a complete celebration of storytelling. I loved every moment of it.

#2 – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey – Last January, I thought this movie would be on this list, and here it is. I just didn’t know that I’d try and experience it several times just to see it in different formats. Peter Jackson and company pulled off a Herculean task in bringing Middle Earth to the screen, both as The Hobbit and its integration into The Lord of the Rings. Yes, there was some awkward shoe-horning in the film (and where the hell did Radagast go!?!) but still, making a six-part film series of this level of quality can only be celebrated. I love being in Peter Jackson’s Middle Earth and am excited to return next year, regardless of frame rate.

#3 – The FP – I probably saw this movie more than any other film in 2012 and I’m proud that Geekscape was the product pusher through which many of you discovered it for yourselves. Of any film on this list, if The FP were a living, breathing person, it would be the one you’d most want to hang with. It’s equal parts everything you loved about the movies you grew up with plus the addition of video games and attitude mainlined right into its twisted brain.

#4 – The Raid: Redemption – Everyone’s lumping this film in with Dredd. I’m not going to do that. Beyond the tower assault storyline, and the large amount of violence, these movies are pretty different. Watching The Raid at SXSX in March was the loudest and craziest I’ve ever seen a theatrical audience. They were ready to rip the seats out of the Paramount Theater and start hitting each other with them. Unlike the bullet-charged explosiveness of Dredd, The Raid is a pretty hardcore martial arts film. The pain it inflicts is more personal and visceral than Dredd’s machine gun violence. In my interview with The Raid director Gareth Evans last spring, we spoke about how the silat fighting discipline was sort of the joke of the martial arts world before he filmed The Raid (and its predecessor Marantau). It says a lot about the film that no one is joking about it today. It’s just 100% bad-assery.

#5 – John Dies At The End – This is the craziest movie I saw this year. Of all the films from 2012, John Dies At The End is probably the one I think most Geekscape readers will appreciate the most. It’s equal parts science fiction, monster and occult film… but told through a narrative that is just as slapstick as it is intelligent. Really, John Dies At The End is almost impossible to describe, especially if I want to avoid spoiling it for you (I really do)! Every time that you think the movie is going in one direction or is about one specific thing, it pulls a complete 180 on you and pursues a wilder and more satisfying direction. And just when you think you can contain this movie, it spills out and becomes about something much larger than you can imagine. Really, the most impressive thing about this already impressive movie is its ability to articulate some pretty complex ideas about our own existence in a fun and exciting way. This is one destined for cult status among us geeks.

#6 – Les Miserables – This was an impressive production. Just on a technical level, Les Miserables had some of my favorite shots of any film I’d seen this year. Director Tom Hooper’s visual communication with an actor’s performance was second only to the work I saw in The Master or Holy Motors (which was probably the best performance I’ve seen this year). In many of the film’s one take masters, the focal depth on the actor’s performances was almost razor thin, leaving little room for the performer to move. Then they both start moving. It’s pretty impressive to watch both the performances of the actor’s and the camera. I’m not a big fan of musicals so it’s hard for them to make my list. Les Miserables did it pretty easily.

#7 – Dredd 3D – This is my favorite comic book movie of 2012. It didn’t have the loose plot threads and “what the fuck logic” of The Dark Knight Rises or the multiple personality complex of The Avengers first act that completely took me out of loving the movie the first time I saw it. And I’m not even going to elaborate on the heartbreak that was The Amazing Spider-Man for me. You can listen to the linked podcasts for those. What I will say is that Dredd 3D is the most faithful adaptation of the 2000AD source material that you’re ever going to see on-screen. Everything about the movie was spot on and completely drenched in kerosene from beginning to end. The non-stop violence. The broken world. The breakneck pace. Much like 2000AD, mainstream American audiences weren’t ready to accept this movie into their theaters. This isn’t Spider-Man. It isn’t Batman. And it isn’t The Avengers. It’s just pure adrenaline. I can’t wait to see it over and over.

#8 – Django Unchained – All of Quentin Tarantino’s movies are interesting… and this is one of his more interesting ones. I still don’t know if I 100% loved it. In my book, it does the same near-fatal thing that Inglourious Basterds does. It hits a dinner table scene during which the movie’s locomotive energy runs out of steam and is only re-injected by a high octane shoot out like an adrenaline needle stabbed through a breastbone. Sound familiar? It’s almost scary how structurally similar the last acts of these movies are and you can start at the Django scene around the dinner table and the underground cafe scene in Inglorious to start your study. Both involve characters carefully masking their identities but ultimately showing their hands. They both end in those identities being revealed and the main characters forced to move their plans into action and within twenty minutes a historical building full of people is being shot to shit with almost no survivors. And ultimately, the movie ends with an ambush by the movie’s lead on the movie’s biggest sellout, whether that be a turncoat Nazi or a race traitor of a house-slave. And that’s where Tarantino’s ability to make cinematic mix-tapes saves the day. In anyone else’s hands, this would all be painfully redundant. But these aren’t anyone else’s hands. While you often get the feeling while watching Tarantino’s films that you’ve heard these songs before, damn if they aren’t arranged and cranked up in the greatest possible way here. Bring on the director’s cut.

#9 – The Master – This is a film I actually enjoyed much more after it was over. It just stayed with me for a long time. The precise camera work, the performances, the riddle of the film’s subject, everything in this movie felt done with so much care that I couldn’t dismiss it upon leaving the theater. The Master makes you work to appreciate its message, and whether it be a study of the birth of Scientology, a condemnation of the audience’s passivity or an admission of P.T. Anderson’s own insecurities, there is a lot to explore here on several levels.

#10 – The Impossible – Can you love a movie simply for its sound design? I think you can… but luckily The Impossible is a whole lot more. The incredible sound design is just the first thing you experience. I know that Zero Dark Thirty and a few other movies I experienced this year did the whole “the audience will hear our movie before they see our movie” black screen intro… but none of them did it as effectively as the opening moments of The Impossible. It really sets the mood for a film whose most intense moments exist in 360 degrees and not just on screen in front of you. J.A. Bayona’s 2007 ghost film The Orphanage made me a fan, but here his camera work is so selective and claustrophobic that it really gives you a sense of helplessness against the rushing tide. This game of visual keep away and the way that the story is told a little out of sequence to keep information from us, combines with the immersive sound surrounding you to create a movie that is as visceral as it is inspiring. Much like Danny Boyle’s 127 Hours, I realized afterwards that I’d been holding my breathe for much of the movie. Combined with two perfect tight-rope performances by Naomi Watts and Ewan McGregor (really, the entire family in the film), this is a movie that’s only going to get better as people discover it over time. From here on out, Bayona’s name should be spoken alongside the other elite Spanish speaking directors like Alejandro Iñárritu and Alfonso Cuarón (so really, it should be spoken among any elite directors period).

 Close, But No Cigar (Not that we condone smoking…)

The following are movies that I loved this year, and they’re a pretty eclectic mix, but for some reason or another they stayed out of the Top 10. In a few hours I may look back and change them again… but by then we’ll be too deep into the new year. We can only move forward!

 Argo

 Zero Dark Thirty

 Holy Motors

 Wreck-It Ralph

 End of Watch

 The Avengers

 Moonrise Kingdom

 Safety Not Guaranteed

The Imposter

Brave

If you’re a fan of Quentin Tarantino’s work, there’s no doubt you’re a fan of Inglourious Basterds. Well, while doing press for his latest film Django Unchained, the director has revealed plans for an Inglourious Basterds spin-off titled Killer Crow that will be set in 1944 after Normandy. The director told The Root:

“I don’t know exactly when I’m going to do it, but there’s something about this that would suggest a trilogy. My original idea for Inglourious Basterds way back when was that this [would be] a huge story that included the [smaller] story that you saw in the film, but also followed a bunch of black troops, and they had been f–ked over by the American military and kind of go apes–t. They basically — the way Lt. Aldo Raines (Brad Pitt) and the Basterds are having an “Apache resistance” — [the] black troops go on an Apache warpath and kill a bunch of white soldiers and white officers on a military base and are just making a warpath to Switzerland.”

So that was always going to be part of it. And I was going to do it as a miniseries, and that was going to be one of the big storylines. When I decided to try to turn it into a movie, that was a section I had to take out to help tame my material. I have most of that written. It’s ready to go; I just have to write the second half of it.”

Tarantino also added that Killer Crow would definitely be connected to Inglourious Basterds because well, the Basterds would be in it. But he made sure to point out that while they would appear the movie was still “about the soldiers.” Here’s to hoping he gets to work on that second half soon.

First, some background.

Django Unchained was the most anticipated film for me after the summer, and even during parts of it. I was rather bummed that I was unable to finish the bounty hunter game that was going on during San Diego Comic Con this year. But I digress. Not only is it a Quentin Tarantino film, but it was a western—which, if you haven’t learned by now, is my favorite genre of all time. I knew he was going to pull from spaghetti westerns and the usual late 60s, early 70s trash, including the 1966 Django, from which this movie gets its name (and the greatest theme song of all time). So, like a good fangirl, I decided–for once–I would try and prepare myself for the movie, and do some research. Over the summer and fall, I saw nearly three dozen westerns—mostly revenge and bounty killer plots—some for the first time, some for the thousandth. When I walked into Django Unchained, I was certain I was going to know every crook and cranny of this film and it was going to love me the way I was bound to love it.

I was wrong about those things. Django Unchained came at me in ways I never could have expected. It was the anti-thesis of everything I thought I wanted and expected. Granted, there was some patent Tarantino sensationalized violence and blood ridden carnage; there was also some parts that were so brutal I found myself on the verge of tears (Franco Nero‘s cameo in the parlor scene was just enough winking at the camera to help my emotional jets cool and feel safe in my seat again). While many people have and will just write this off as another pastiche, a modern day blaxploitation film, I will go on record as saying this is Tarantino’s most ideologically mature work, because for the first time he seems to actually be saying something about society rather than just waxing poetic on popular culture.

When Tarantino called it a Southern, I will admit that I did not understand what he meant. I doubt many of us going in could really understand, because that part of US history is rarely talked about with any kind of depth or maturity. When talking about the 1850-60’s, Americans can go on at length about the western expansion and the Civil War, but we always view the latter through the eyes of the North. The rare exception being if you’re from one of those rebellion States in the South (and therefore aren’t over it), but even then you tread very softly on the topic of slavery. “It’s about State’s rights.” And while that may indeed be the case, it is ignorant to suggest that the latter did not go in line with why a person might have fought so hard for those rights. Additionally, since the war was fought and won by the North, it will be impossible to prove if slavery was truly “on the way out” thanks to Eli Whitney and the Cotton Gin, as so many claim. Which brings me back to Django Unchained.

The review in brief.:

The film is set in the south just prior to the Civil War. Django (played by Jamie Foxx) is a slave on his way to auction, after having recently attempted to runaway from his former owner. He is soon purchased by a German dentist and bounty hunter, Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz), who offers him his freedom in exchange for some information on a couple of bounties. Django agrees, and soon has his freedom. When asked what he plans to do with his freedom, Django says he plans to purchase his bride, Broomhilda (Kerry Washington), give her her freedom and live happily ever-after. The name “Broomhilda” has personal significance to Schultz, who vows—as  a German—to aid Django on his quest, which eventually takes him to Candieland, the plantation run by Leonardo DiCaprio‘s character Calvin Candie.

As a movie, it serves. This is Tarantino’s first film since editor Sally Menke passed in 2010, and her presence is dearly missed. The out-of-sequence, chapter storytelling is gone, and the third act in long and out of place from the rest of the film, although it is 100% Tarantino. As usual per Tarantino, everyone is a villain, except for Broomhilda who is less a character than a prize. The violence is great, some of it shocking; between the Mandingo fight and a man being torn apart by dogs, you may want to save your Christmas Chinese for after the movie. Every actor is at the top of his and her game her. Despite the shock in casting, Jamie Foxx is fit to play the cowboy, even riding his personal horse, Cheetah, in the movie. Leonardo Di Caprio’s is exceptionally disturbing in his role as Calvin Candie, the pleasure he takes in his slaves’ plight is unnerving, and the ease in which DiCaprio seems to play him is frightening.

It is a movie I recommend, as to be expected; but I do so for its social commentary rather than it being the cream of the grindhouse crop.

The review at length (plus some unexpected soapbox).:

There is an element lacking among the characters here that is present in the rest of Tarantino’s films and that is respect. Usually in his movies, the parties involved respect each other; those who don’t typically die unnecessarily (I am looking at you, Vince Vega). In this movie, no one respects anyone (with the exception of Schultz—who may very well be Tarantino’s apology to the Germans for Waltz’s character in Inglourious Basterds) and that lack of respect is very important to the story telling and also what makes me believe there is more to this flick than just grindhouse, blaxploitation “fun.”

“Nigger” is said 115 times (plus or minus 5, as I did not have a pen or paper ready while I was tallying). Many will say and have said that this is offensive and only done to piss off Spike Lee or defend it as being historically accurate. I will do neither. What I will say (and why I brought up the number to begin with) is this: Tarantino has used the word liberally in his other works, but there is something about it this time that makes it different. The source from which it is said.

In Pulp Fiction, for example, it is said either by a person of color or a person very close to a person of color (you may or may not recall that Tarantino makes a point to show that Bonnie, the wife of his character Jimmie, is black), and therefore may be able to have a “pass” at using the word. Here, however, the word is only used with hatred. To hurt and belittle; show ones place of superiority over another. Truth be told, I cringe and cower like a child every time I hear the word, no matter the context, but this time I felt it was being delivered at me rather than to a character. And this is why I believe this may be Tarantino’s most mature work in terms of social commentary. I may be giving Tarantino too much credit, but since Obama’s election (and re-election), the United States has become increasingly racist (the reactions to Rue in Hunger Games or the introduction of Miles Morales as Ultimate Spider-Man should be proof enough) and Django Unchained pretty much just lays it out for you in a way that can be pretty hard to watch. It’s like rubbing a dog’s nose in its own shit to try and teach it to stop crapping on the floor, or forcing a child to smoke an entire carton of cigarette when caught smoking one. If you want to do something, know what the hell it is you think you’re doing, and know what it’s like to do it all the time before you allow yourself to build a tolerance. But for the betterment of yourself and society, just don’t do it. This doesn’t apply just to Whitey McSlaveowner Candie, but also to head slave Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson) and our hero Django.

Racism is a theme present in the original Django, as well. Like Foxx’s character,  Nero’s Django finds himself fighting the KKK and dealing with racists. In that film non-KKK members comment on the silliness of how a person can be judged by the color of his skin (that movie was made towards the end of the African-American Civil Rights Movement, two years before Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., from whom Schultz no doubt gets his name, was shot), while here we actually have a plantation owner explain how it is a white man evolutionary superiority that allows him to rule over another person, especially a negroid. The latter would seem laughable and out of place in the 21st century, if I didn’t recall someone telling me a similar tale four or five years ago while I was a college student in Texas.

Django Unchained is the movie America deserves, if not the one we want. While I do not believe it is the role of the son to pay for the sins of his father, it is his job to learn from them. If we continue to perpetuate the kind of racial hatred that forces the Master of Trash to momentarily grow up and put out a movie as painful and soul crushing as this, then we have a lot of growing as a nation.

Yet another new trailer has been released for Quentin Tarantino’s latest, Django Unchained. Let’s be honest, this trailer really isn’t needed because we’re all going to see this one. But, it has been released so check out the final trailer for the film below.

Django Unchained hits theaters on December 25th.

Source: Yahoo

Jam packed full of new footage, check out the final trailer for Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained starring Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio and Christoph Waltz. Remember, the D is silent.

Django Unchained gets dirty in theaters on December 25th.

Source: Yahoo Movies

Quentin Tarantino is a man who needs no introduction. He’s one of Hollywood’s hottest directors, and each project that he touches ends up being more anticipated (and often more successful) than the last. Tarantino is just 40 days from the release of his latest work, Django Unchained, and he recently gave Playboy and extremely interesting and revealing interview.

Interviewer Michael Flemming did a fantastic job, and it’s definitely one of the most interesting conversations I’ve read in quite some time. The pair speak of Django casting, marijuana, his controversial language choices, the Dark Knight Rises tragedy, and much, much more.

One of the most interesting points that the interview makes is one that shouldn’t be surprising at all: Tarantino doesn’t want to do this forever. He states that he’s on an artistic journey, and of course every journey needs to have an ending.

Check out some of the more interesting tidbits below, and please read the full interview at Playboy.com! If you’re so inclined, you’ll also be able to pick up a paper version when Playboy‘s December issue hits next Tuesday.

On quitting making movies while he’s ahead: “I’m on a journey that needs to have an end and not be about me trying to get another job. I want this artistic journey to have a climax. I want to work toward something. You stop when you stop, but in a fanciful world, 10 movies in my filmography would be nice. I’ve made seven. If I have a change of heart, if I come up with a new story, I could come back. But if I stop at 10, that would be okay as an artistic statement.”
On getting high while in production: “I wouldn’t do anything impaired while making a movie. I don’t so much write high, but say you’re thinking about a musical sequence. You smoke a joint, you put on some music, you listen to it and you come up with some good ideas. …I don’t need pot to write, but it’s kind of cool.”
On his ideal wife: “If I want to live in Paris for a year, what the f*ck? I can. I don’t have to arrange anything; I can just do it. If there is an actor or director I want to get obsessed with and study their films for the next 12 days, I can do that. The perfect person would be a Playmate who would enjoy that.”
On rewriting history in Inglorious Basterds and Django Unchained“You turn on a movie and know how things are going to go in most films. Every once in a while films don’t play by the rules. It’s liberating when you don’t know what’s happening next. …I thought, What about telling these kinds of stories my way – rough and tough but gratifying at the end?”

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. Again, I emplore you to check out Playboy‘s entire interview with Quentin. It’s a fantastic read.

I know how I’ll be celebrating December 25th… with a vengeance.

Honestly though, I can’t wait for Django Unchained to hit theatres. It looks stylish as hell, and it’s bound to be wildly entertaining. The new poster is a great contrast to the art we’ve seen so far. I like it.

Again, Django Unchained opens Christmas Day.

Set in the South two years before the Civil War, DJANGO UNCHAINED stars Academy Award(R)-winner Jamie Foxx as Django, a slave whose brutal history with his former owners lands him face-to-face with German-born bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Academy Award(R)-winner Christoph Waltz). Schultz is on the trail of the murderous Brittle brothers, and only Django can lead him to his bounty. The unorthodox Schultz acquires Django with a promise to free him upon the capture of the Brittles – dead or alive.

Don’t celebrate Christmas, or planning to see a movie with your family on December 25th? Django Unchained looks like fun for the whole gang!

Thirteen new images for the movie were just released, and though they don’t really reveal anything new, they’re a pleasure to look at anyways.

Check them out below, and as always, let us know what you think!

Again, Django Unchained opens on December 25th.

Source: Omlette

What a week! While I was working on our slew of Geekscape related projects, like ‘Doc of the Dead’, the Geekscape went crazy! New trailers for ‘Iron Man 3’, ‘Django Unchained’ and the ‘Evil Dead’ remake! Is Frank Grillo suiting up for Captain America 2? Ant Man starts filming in January! ‘Arrow’ steps up its game and ‘The Walking Dead’ REALLY steps up its game! Plus! What’s with soft hearted assassins? And ‘Silent Hill: Revelation 3D’ director Michael K. Bassett talks being a serious gamer!

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Quentin Tarantino’s latest flick keeps looking better and better as we get closer to the release date. This actually could be the best trailer that they’ve released yet. It’s filled with plenty of new footage, plot details, and character motivations. Check out a new international trailer for the film!

Former dentist, Dr. King Schultz, buys the freedom of a slave, Django, and trains him with the intent to make him his deputy bounty hunter. Instead, he is led to the site of Django’s wife who is under the hands of Calvin Candie, a ruthless plantation owner.

Django Unchained hits theaters December 25th!

The second bad-ass trailer for Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained has been released online and it’s full of plenty of new footage. From the looks of things this movie may be on par or even surpass Inglorious Basterds.  I know where I’ll be on Christmas day.

Set in the South two years before the Civil War, DJANGO UNCHAINED stars Academy Award(R)-winner Jamie Foxx as Django, a slave whose brutal history with his former owners lands him face-to-face with German-born bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Academy Award(R)-winner Christoph Waltz). Schultz is on the trail of the murderous Brittle brothers, and only Django can lead him to his bounty. The unorthodox Schultz acquires Django with a promise to free him upon the capture of the Brittles–dead or alive.

Django Unchained hits theaters on December 25th in the US and January 18th, 2013 in the UK.

A brand new subtitled trailer for director Quentin Tarantino’s upcoming spaghetti western, Django Unchained has been released online. The trailer features small bits of unseen footage with some previously seen.

Set in the South two years before the Civil War, “Django Unchained” stars Academy Award®-winner Jamie Foxx as Django, a slave whose brutal history with his former owners lands him face-to-face with German-born bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Academy Award®-winner Christoph Waltz). Schultz is on the trail of the murderous Brittle brothers, and only Django can lead him to his bounty. The unorthodox Schultz acquires Django with a promise to free him upon the capture of the Brittles – dead or alive.

Success leads Schultz to free Django, though the two men choose not to go their separate ways. Instead, Schultz seeks out the South’s most wanted criminals with Django by his side. Honing vital hunting skills, Django remains focused on one goal: finding and rescuing Broomhilda (Kerry Washington), the wife he lost to the slave trade long ago.

Django and Schultz’s search ultimately leads them to Calvin Candie (Academy Award®-nominee Leonardo DiCaprio), the proprietor of “Candyland,” an infamous plantation where slaves are groomed by trainer Ace Woody (Kurt Russell) to battle each other for sport. Exploring the compound under false pretenses, Django and Schultz arouse the suspicion of Stephen (Academy Award®-nominee Samuel L. Jackson), Candie’s trusted house slave. Their moves are marked, and a treacherous organization closes in on them. If Django and Schultz are to escape with Broomhilda, they must choose between independence and solidarity, between sacrifice and survival…

Written and directed by Academy Award®-winner Quentin Tarantino, DJANGO UNCHAINED is produced by Stacey Sher, Pilar Savone and Reginald Hudlin. The executive producers are Harvey and Bob Weinstein, Michael Shamberg, Shannon McIntosh, and James Skotchdopole.

Django Unchained will hit theaters December 25th!

 

Ian Kerner sat in Hall H today and in this episode breaks down all of the amazing things that he saw, from Superman to Godzilla to 13 minutes of The Hobbit! Ian did not see Marvel’s announcements at the time of this recording but you can find our breakdown here!

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Well, they had my curiosity. Now they have my attention. This trailer is definitely more Tarantino style than the last one and come Christmas day I am sure many of us will be in theaters with smiles on our faces.

Source: PromotingMovies

E3 2012 continues! Sony’s press conference snoozes! The Nintendo WiiU innovates! The return of the Pikmin! Is Star Wars 1313 the Star Wars we’ve wanted for so long? New trailers for Django Unchained and Wreck-It Ralph! New directors for Captain America 2! Is a Justice League movie coming soon? First Class 2 and Black Panther movie rumors and goodbye Mr. Ray Bradbury!

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And check out my very limited E3 photo gallery!

Empire has released a batch of new photos from Quentin Tarantino’s eagerly anticipated new movie “Django Unchained.” I’ve been looking forward to this one since I first heard the words “Quentin Tarantino is making a western,” it was music to my ear holes. Check out the stills and let us know what you think.

“Django Unchained” blazes it’s way into theaters on December 25th and stars Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Samuel L. Jackson, Kerry Washington, and Walter Goggins.

Geekscape just got sent this teaser poster for Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained”, starring Jamie Foxx as a freed slave who pursues the slavers who have his wife. Christoph Waltz plays a bounty hunter who helps him in this pursuit. I loved the script (all 1,000 or so pages of it (sarcasm)) and sitting in a seat on Christmas watching this thing is definitely what I’ll be doing this holiday season (a movie about slavery… on Christmas!?! why not!?!)! The movie also stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Sam Jackson, Walt Goggins, James Remar, Kurt Russell, Sasha Baron Cohen, Kerry Washington and Don Johnson. Need more stars? Too bad. There are none left.

Check out this teaser poster. I think it’s perfect.