I watched that one a few days ago! (it just got added this week on Netflix) Second time, just as good as the first time in cinema
Really? Maybe his stuff is worth another watch then. But mostly I thought the 'murder for the sake of gore' shoe fit, and that the language was derogatory and foul just for the sake of making some kind of pompous statement. I used to buy into Pulp Fiction quite a bit. & I like Uma Thurman. I just didn't care for what happened in either "Django Unchained" or "The Hateful Eight". I thought they were just bad. I didn't think much of "Inglorious Basterds" either. His take on the racial epithet, if you will, falls short of the mark.
You don't have to like Django Unchained, The magnificient 8 and Inglorious Bastards. That's entirely good and normal. Wanting the director of those movies to cater more to the mainstream because of it will remain unpopular because its basically nonsensical and pointless to want. A misguided craving/preference imho
Unpopular opinion: Pugs should not be bred anymore. Pugs are a walking vet bill. They have difficulty breathing at all times. They have spine and tailbone problem. When they get old, their eyeballs can bulge out of their sockets. It’s just awful and no dog should live like that. My only compromise I’d make is to breed pugs to have a longer muzzle and a stronger vertebrae
Yeah I was surprised how much I liked it. I'm not usually the biggest fan of his movies but I like period movies so I was curious. Ironically the movie seemed like it was a commentary on the whole ok boomer thing with the boomers being the young guys pushing out the establishment. Like it had something to say. It wasn't just violence for the sake of violence. And he didn't use the n word once in this movie. That was nice to not hear
Oh yeah no that still applies here. It is a Tarantino movie after all. But it had more substance than a lot of his other movies
I checked for it on Netflix, but it wasn't on there. I guess only in Netherlands? Found something else instead; a basically pornographic free-for-all called "Immoral Tales"...
Not sure it was intended but there is a subtle irony in soulcompromises's unpopular opinion of wanting Tarantino to conform to popular opinion.
And the fact that it all happens while a character is tripping balls somehow makes it more accessible and dare I say it, comical. Spoiler what was with Brad Pitts character and killing his wife? They introduced that like it was gonna come into play later and it never did. Did he do it or didn't he and regardless how was it relevant to the story? That was the only part of the movie I didn't like