Szlia
Member
Damn... I have seen all Tarentino movies (except Django who is not out yet around here) so you leave me with an unpleasant alternative! I'll go with another option though: I presented my point with unnecessary venom because I let myself be trolled (after all the claims I was rebuking were that Lee is not a filmmaker and that all he made after Do The Right Thing was "complete and utter shit").you're either trolling, you've never seen a QT movie, or you're a fucking moron. it's one of those 3.
I don't question Tarentino's love of movies, his love of watching them and making them. His enthusiasm is there for all to see. The problem though is that love, passion even, and good intentions do not automatically make good movies. Just like him, I saw and enjoyed many kung-fu movies with Gordon Liu, I saw Sonny Chiba's Street Fighter, I loved the serie of Female Convict Scorpion with Meiko Kaji and still (or maybe because of that) I find Kill Bill a lot less satisfying than the movies it pays homage to. In a way, Tarentino's greatest strength, this juvenile energy that allows him to make a refreshingly iconoclast WWII movie, is also his greatest limitation. Ultimately, he is making in reality the movies he made in his dreams during his youth, fusing together the many movies he saw during the day: He is using his phenomenal movie culture to make teenage fantasies. It has its regressive charm (and it would be hypocrite of me to say that I don't enjoy seeing Rosario Dawson prance around and Mary Elizabeth Winstead in a pom pom girl outfit), but I am not a teenager anymore, so I ask a little more of movies to call them great (like the 25th Hour).
To say it differently, the object of Tarentino's films is not reality, it's other films. Being twice removed from reality, they cannot address the world we live in, and being products of pure adoration, his movies don't even try to comment, analyze or creatively betray the fictions that inspires them. Enjoyable, well crafted but ultimately empty and sterile labors of love.
On a side note, to this day I think my favorite Tarentino movie is still Pulp Fiction and it might owe it more to Avary's sense of choral structure than to Tarentino's flair for dialogues.