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Quentin Tarantino:2015 films are to safe and boring.
Quentin Tarantino says Kill Bill was the last kick ass movie and the one I made.He hates the why Hollywood has became hand and hand with media,and putting out bullshit like Magic Mike and Looking to Fox News for good reviews.At Comic Con he says modren films have became to safe and boring bland scripts that have been,done and over again.Plus films don't focus on reality like what happening in American right now,too afraid to push the envelope,in case it offend people and the critics.Plus I hate digital I like when movies were classic 9mm made they will never be disposable.
Does anyone agree with him.
Does anyone agree with him.
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I found this one-
http://uk.ign.com/articles/2015/07/11/comic-con-2015-quentin-tarantino-schools-comic-con
Plenty of info on Hateful Eight and the 70mm film process etc, but cannot see any comments re state of Hollywood, Magic Mike etc.
He's saying pretty much what most people would say about Hollywood these days, regarding the churning out of mindless blockbuster fodder.
But yet interesting, original films still manage to get released, like Whiplash, Birdman, Nightcrawler etc, to name but 3 in the last year alone. I don't think its as bad as you make out.
And I really don't get the notion of returning to 70mm film presentation...why? Digital/IMAX/4K etc film presentation is excellent, both on the big screen and small. And it has enabled many older films to be preserved and restored to their former glory in a digital format. Film deteriorates and will eventually rot after so many years, so why would you champion a return to that format?
Secondly. how many cinemas does he think even have the capability to show film reels these days...and 70mm at that? The vast majority converted to digital years ago. So who is going to show these 70mm presentations?
If you want to have a select number of screens built for this purpose to showcase this type of presentation, fine. But if you want to release a new film and have it seen by as many people as possible, then it needs to be exhibited digitally.
I'm pretty sure in reality Tarantino will probably just strike a small number of 70mm prints for roadshow exhibitions to make a point, but the film will be available for normal screenings everywhere also, ie digitally.
Frankly, the financial and technical logistics in insisting that exhibitors around the world return to old-fashioned film reels are just not remotely feasible.
I suppose that he's right that Hollywood doesn't do the interesting films, but the Indie companies are the ones who do them nowadays.
I love those movies!
I really loved Pulp Fiction, Resevoir Dogs and True Romance(yes I know he only scripted but it's him through and through)
but was not keen on either of them JB and IG
have not yet seen Death Proof, or Django Unchained
though everyone keeps telling me to see Django
One could try and be a bit more diplomatic about the whole film v digital debate like Scorsese has been, Spielberg and even Nolan (and equally staunch supporter of celluloid).
Popular films have always been like this, the majority of it is "safe", cookie cutter stuff that will appeal to the widest audience possible, for maximum returns, with the occasional exception coming out every now and then.
If Hollywood tried to churn out unique, higher risk, complicated films all the time then the chances are that most people wouldn't entertain them, let alone buy them.
The comparison to TV is also rife with discrepencies. The likes of Breaking Bad* etc have to hook you in for a season's worth of episodes, so it's a slightly different kettle of fish. A film - even one heavily franchise connected - has to do its thing in two hours. You're right to highlight audience commitment as the issue - especially these days - but they're two very different sorts.
*And here we have television that doesn't live up to the hype.
PMSL you don't like Quentin do you?
I think he's a talented film-maker but he has more often than not come off as really obnoxious in interviews. He seems to think the entire industry is against him. Film is having a tough time of course but digital cinematography has come into its own in the last few years. So saying things like 'digital is the death of cinema' is kind of silly when so many of the best looking movies of recent years were digital.
But with regards to his own filmography, I think he's made some really good movies. But there's only so many bloody Tarantino shootouts I can sit through now. I can already see how The Hateful Eight will pan out