Tag Archives: quentin-tarantino

SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: The All Remastered Classics Edition 3.29.16

This week’s big release, Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight, was female nudity free, but there are plenty of remastered films making their high def debuts today!… read more

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SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: The All Remastered Classics Edition 3.29.16

SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: The All Remastered Classics Edition 3.29.16

This week’s big release, Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight, was female nudity free, but there are plenty of remastered films making their high def debuts today!… read more

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SKINcoming on DVD & Blu-ray: The All Remastered Classics Edition 3.29.16

6 Reasons We Need ‘Kill Bill: Vol. 3′ To Happen

Quentin Tarantino says that “Kill Bill: Vol. 3” is still a possibility which means we have a wish list.

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6 Reasons We Need ‘Kill Bill: Vol. 3′ To Happen

Quentin Tarantino Joins #RiseUpOctober Rally in NYC [VIDEO]

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Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino joined protesters, including Dr. Cornel West, in New York City’s Washington Park to escalate awareness about police brutality around the country. Calling…

Quentin Tarantino Joins #RiseUpOctober Rally in NYC [VIDEO]

The First Teaser Trailer For Quentin Tarantino’s ‘The Hateful Eight’ Is Here And It’s Bloody

The first teaser trailer for Quentin Tarantino’s ‘The Hateful Eight’ is released.

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The First Teaser Trailer For Quentin Tarantino’s ‘The Hateful Eight’ Is Here And It’s Bloody

Quentin Tarantino Sues Gawker Over Script Leak

Quentin Tarantino is suing celebrity gossip site Gawker following the leak of his script for The Hateful Eight, which he is no longer making into a movie. The famed director filed suit accusing the blog of the following: “Blatant copyright infringement by the promotion and dissemination of unauthorized downloadable copies of the leaked unreleased complete screenplay.” “There was nothing newsworthy or journalistic” about it, Tarantino alleges. Quentin Tarantino Script Leak He is seeking damages reportedly in excess of $1 million for the action. Furthermore, while Gawker did not post the script to its own site, Tarantino says it would not have been widely accessible if Gawker had not linked to it. Often. Gawker turned down repeated requests to remove links to download the script, the complaint charges. A Gawker post offering links to it is still online. The celebrity gossip site did not respond to a request for comment. The Hateful Eight is/was a Western, the same genre as Tarantino’s 2012 hit Django Unchained , which won him an Academy Award for writing. After the script leaked online, Tarantino’s spokesman told CNN that the director was furious, and shelving plans to produce The Hateful Eight himself. He told Deadline that he had given the script to only six people, including actors Michael Madsen, Bruce Dern and Tim Roth. Somehow, it got out. Instead of directing the film himself, Tarantino is expected to sell the script and will instead take into production a second script he was working on. Here’s hoping he gets to the bottom of this. In the meantime, don’t bother trying to download it while there’s legal action pending against Gawker. Just watch Pulp Fiction online instead . Quentin would be okay with that.

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Quentin Tarantino Sues Gawker Over Script Leak

“Django Unchained” Wins Best Original Screenplay And Other Oscar Highlights [VIDEO]

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After months of infighting amongst the black community over 2012′s most controversial movie, Quentin Tarantino was the clear winner when he walked away with an…

“Django Unchained” Wins Best Original Screenplay And Other Oscar Highlights [VIDEO]

Quentin Tarantino Goes OFF on Reporter, Refuses to Address Debate on Violence

Quentin Tarantino is sick of discussing the violence in Django Unchained . And he’s especially sick of discussing the violence of Django Unchained in relationship to real-life violence, such as the recent Newtown, Connecticut shooting . Watch the interview below to see him go off on reporter Krishnan Guru-Murthy, who broaches this topic and is met with a response that includes: “I refuse your question. I’m not your slave and you’re not my master. You can’t make me dance to your tune. I’m not a monkey.” Quentin Tarantino Explodes at Reporter Django Unchained was includes yesterday among the 2013 Best Picture nominees , but has also faced a rash of criticism. Most recently, Al Sharpton’s organization called out the Django Unchained action figures for being offensive to African-Americans. Watch the interview now and react to Tarantino’s reaction. Warranted or unwarranted?

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Quentin Tarantino Goes OFF on Reporter, Refuses to Address Debate on Violence

WATCH: Werner Herzog Takes On Siberia In ‘Happy People: A Year In The Taiga’ Trailer

Fittingly, the trailer for Happy People: A Year in the Taiga opens with Werner Herzog ‘s hypnotic voice introducing a land that is more than worth a visit — if even via the courtesy of a filmmaker’s lens. Herzog returns to nature in the ode of Cave of Forgotten Dreams and Encounters at the End of the World , which captures life in the remote village of Bakhtia along the Yenisei River in the Siberian Taiga. “It is one-and-a-half times the size of the United States,” Herzog booms out. Co-directed by Dmitry Vasyukov, Music Box Films will release the film packed full of dreamlike scrapes of tundra, ice and pristine expanses January 25th. It is “A mesmerizing Walden-like ode,” noted Variety. Escape the day for a few moments with the trailer below. Official log-line: Happy People: A Year in the Taiga, Werner Herzog takes viewers on yet another unforgettable journey into remote and extreme natural landscapes. The acclaimed filmmaker presents this visually stunning documentary about the people living in the heart of the Siberian Taiga. Deep in the wilderness, far away from civilization, 300 people inhabit the small village of Bakhtia at the river Yenisei. There are only two ways to reach this outpost: by helicopter or boat. There‘s no telephone, running water or medical aid, The locals, whose daily routines have barely changed over the last centuries, live according to their own values and cultural traditions. With insightful commentary written and narrated by Herzog, Happy People: A Year in the Taiga follows one of the Siberian trappers through all four seasons of the year to tell the story of a culture virtually untouched by modernity.

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WATCH: Werner Herzog Takes On Siberia In ‘Happy People: A Year In The Taiga’ Trailer

Why Quentin Tarantino Needs to Stop Deflecting The Violence Question

Quentin Tarantino probably had a vastly different idea of how the months leading up to the 85th Academy Awards would transpire for him. As he began to promote Django Unchained , he no doubt expected to spend the majority of Awards Season talking about America’s legacy of slavery, about his decision to portray it as unambiguously horrific, and how the peculiar institution has historically been treated in film. That’s how this awards season started, of course. At the beginning of December, Tarantino was explaining that his goal was to make audiences feel, viscerally, the brutality of slavery. Later in the month, he was making the very excellent point that the legacy of slavery continues to this day , in the form of America’s massive prison complex and the war on drugs. ‘Django Unchained’ & The Sandy Hook Shooting Unfortunately, just 10 days before Django Unchained premiered, the massacre in Newtown, CT happened. Making matters worse, in the weeks since Sandy Hook there have been a succession of other mass shootings.  (In fact, there was another school shooting Thursday, near Bakersfield, CA). As a result, all anyone is talking about is the influence of violent media on actual, real world violence, and unluckily for Tarantino, the conversation about slavery has been terminated and replaced with nearly constant demands to address the dubious notion that his violent films may contribute to that problem. Perhaps that’s why he’s beginning to lose his shit about the issue. Now generally, Tarantino’s responses to these questions have been measured; he’s made the excellent case again and again that, no, his movies are not responsible for societal violence. That’s changed somewhat since the beginning of the new year. Speaking to NPR on January 3, Tarantino got rather testy with Terry Gross , but that was nothing, compared to his low-temperature freak-out aimed at the U.K.’s Channel 4 news host, Krishnan Guru-Murthy. The Question About Violence In Movies That Shut The Interview Down “Why are you so sure there is no link between people enjoying movie violence and people enjoying real violence?,” Guru-Murthy asked, during an interview that aired last night. Tarantino’s response revealed, like nothing else, that he’s getting goddamned tired of talking about this. “I’m going to tell you why I’m so sure? You’re not asking me a question like that. I’m not biting. I refuse your question. I refuse your question,” he said. “I’m not your slave and you are not my master,” he continued. “You can’t make me dance to your tune. I’m not a monkey. I am saying I refuse.” Tarantino then added, “The reason I don’t want to talk about is because I’ve said everything I have to say about it. If anyone cares what I have to say about it, they can Google me and see 20 years of what I have to say about it.” It’s hard to blame Tarantino for being extremely annoyed with the whole thing. Hell, I’m annoyed with the whole thing. Django Unchained has been unfairly singled out for scorn despite hardly being unique in how violent it is, and one can’t help but feel that the conversation about it has changed less because of a sudden rediscovered concern about how violent his films are, but because people would so much rather talk about something that feels nebulous, like societal violence, rather than talk about something that remains, almost 150 years after being abolished, a very taboo subject. So it’s absolutely appropriate that Tarantino rejects the premise. However, this conversation is happening whether he likes it or not, especially after Django Unchained’ s five Oscar nominations. And outbursts like this are going to make him an easy target for stupid people who think Americans are so impressionable that we can’t watch a fictional depiction of violence without immediately running out to kill our neighbors. (Not to mention rather dishonest people who enjoy stirring up tabloid-levels of moral outrage just for fun.) Falling back on the dodge that he’s already said everything that must be said on the issue is just going to make media-concern trolls even more determined to play gotcha with him — especially when his angry outbursts contain terminology that, considering what Django Unchained is actually about, are rather… unfortunate. So if nothing is going to make the question go away, maybe the time has come for him to figure out a way to change the subject back to what it should be. I keep waiting for someone to ask him what I think is a far more interesting question about violence in America. America has a long history of pretending half the country didn’t start a war that killed nearly a million people just to keep their slaves,  The manufacturers of our popular culture also have a history of minimizing just how bad slavery actually was for the enslaved, and of course,there’s also the country’s unwillingness to discuss the continued disenfranchisement and oppression of the descendants of those slaves. Doesn’t that, more than any film ever could, contribute to a national culture that seems terrifyingly comfortable with acts of massive public violence? Maybe, maybe not, but since no one else is asking, maybe it’s time Tarantino said it for them. It might not make the idiotic conversation stop, but it makes for a better quote than the word ‘monkey.’ Ross Lincoln is a LA-based freelance writer from Oklahoma with an unhealthy obsession with comics, movies, video games, ancient history, Gore Vidal, and wine.  Follow Ross Lincoln on Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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Why Quentin Tarantino Needs to Stop Deflecting The Violence Question