i read in an interview that he apparantly refuses to explain it.
I have to stick up for Tarantino here. I think he get's a bad rap.
What exactly is your gripe? Are you pissed that QT doesn't continue making the same movie over and over again? Or you expecting every QT movie to have the same revolutionary impact that Pulp Fiction had?
Secondly, yes, Pulp Fiction was a masterpiece. But have any of you actually watched Resevoir Dogs lately? If you haven't, trust me, it's not as good as you remember. I saw for the first time in about 10 years recently and I thought there were huge flaws in the script, the acting, and the directing.
Why am I saying this when I'm supposed to be defending QT? Because I don't really buy this argument that QT was better in the old days. Sure Pulp Fiction prolly beats anything else he's done. But IMO, if you took his last three movie versus his first three, I'd take his last three.
But have any of you actually watched Resevoir Dogs lately? If you haven't, trust me, it's not as good as you remember. I saw for the first time in about 10 years recently and I thought there were huge flaws in the script, the acting, and the directing.
I don't really buy this argument that QT was better in the old days... IMO, if you took his last three movie versus his first three, I'd take his last three.
i was laughing, i was crying and my dick was hard as a rock.

i found the trailer did misrepresent the movie but it certainly wasn't a problem. the rest of the movie contains plenty of stuff for which tarantino is famous: quirky and often hilarious dialog; beautifully shot scenes; comical violence; etc.I've heard that the trailers totally misrepresent the film and that it isn't actually full of baseball-bashed Nazi sculls and racist, borderline retarded US army colonels.
totally. there are a couple of scenes (the opening scene which sets up the story and the scene in the basement bar) which are, for the most part, nothing more than dialog. the basement bar scene in particular had me uncomfortably on the edge of my seat until the denouement.Does anyone like the lengthy, subtitled, non-violent sections?