Brad Pitt's bad Italian accent wasn't supposed to be like that, it was supposed to be decent and passable. But he did that at the table read for a laugh and Tarantino couldn't get it out of his head.
@skylinerunner1695Күн бұрын
One of his worst performances ever, in a career full of poor performances.
@maximillianosaben23 сағат бұрын
@@skylinerunner1695 - Glad you enjoyed it.
@aledjango3 күн бұрын
Casting someone fluent in German, French, Italian and English, who is also an amazing actor, was *almost* impossible
@BrandonPhilipps-r9b2 күн бұрын
"The Improbable Mr. Waltz"....I daresay he'd rather enjoy being known by such a sensational title.
@RuggeroBelloniКүн бұрын
Sir Christopher Lee could have pulled it off but was too old at the time. Vigo Mortersen comes to mind. The fake Italian accent is still based on Chico Marx who was funny without being offensive.
@domingocurbelomorales86353 күн бұрын
The performance of Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa, is one of the greatests ever. What an amazing character. Terrific, classy and smart as hell.
@BabyNoah223 күн бұрын
Of course noting that he won an Academy award for best supporting actor, along with Tarantinos Django Unchained as well. ( just for the people who did not know)
@JohnDoe-bz4yl3 күн бұрын
He's in my top 5 movie villain's of all time
@BabyNoah223 күн бұрын
@ who are your other 4?😀
@JohnDoe-bz4yl3 күн бұрын
@@BabyNoah22 Hannibal Lecter. Darth Vader, Nurse Ratched (from one flew over the Cuckoo's nest) and Anton Chigurh (from no country for old men)
@BabyNoah223 күн бұрын
@ wow that’s actually a great list 👍
@RoGueNavy3 күн бұрын
Only Tarantino could incorporate a 1982 David Bowie song into a WWII action epic, and have it work perfectly. "Oui, Shoshana." That sends chills through me, every time. And the scene with Shoshana's laughing face projected on the billowing smoke...haunting!
@LordVolkov3 күн бұрын
From one of the strangest movies too 😅 Cat People is a weird one.
@dolf3702 күн бұрын
@@LordVolkov And Cat People (the remake from the 80s) is also an excellent movie.
@alexg17783 күн бұрын
"Well if this is it old boy... I hope you don't mind if I go out speaking the King's." Is one of the best lines ever written, reinforced by Fassbender's brilliant acting.
@nunyabizness53913 күн бұрын
"There's a special rung in hell reserved for people who waste good scotch."
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
Also the response to "down with Hitler" - "All the way down!"
@joels51507 сағат бұрын
The basement bar scene is one of the best in cinema. There are multiple analyses of how meticulously thematically well constructed it is. And it’s epically rewatchable.
@hollownation3 күн бұрын
The opening scene is one of Tarantino’s best and one of the best examples of Alfred Hitchcocks suspense scenario in action which of course Tarantino utilises over and over but it never gets tired
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
Yes, great tension in that and the scene in the bar up to the British spy slipping up. Definitely reminds me of Hitchcock. It's a pity the film did not at the very last act live up to the great tension-building that Tarantino does throughout most of it. Minus maybe the last 10 minutes, Tarantino almost created a masterpiece.
@hollownationКүн бұрын
@ agreed but I feel with Tarantino it’s the journey that counts not the destination
@stephenbull20263 күн бұрын
A small detail. At the beginning, when Landa holds the daughters arm, he is feeling her pulse to see if it is elevated.
@carlosspeicywiener70183 күн бұрын
The whole scene was a study in reading body language. Flushing of the skin, involuntary pupil dilation, Voight/Kampf stuff.
@jusan75853 күн бұрын
“What does he do? What would I do?” THAT is the THE question 👍
@maximillianosaben3 күн бұрын
P.S Aldo's Raine's neck scar is because he survived a lynching (hanging).
@MattyNoNose3 күн бұрын
This is Tarantinos masterpiece. All his movies are excellent, but this one (and maybe Django) are top.
@BabyNoah223 күн бұрын
Agrred.
@emultra7592 күн бұрын
Agreed. It's a meme to say that Pulp Fiction is his best, but he is clearly much more skilled and experienced in this one. As impressive as his early work is, his mid-career films make the early stuff look a bit sophomore.
@houdin654jeff3 күн бұрын
Everyone (including me) laughs at seeing Landa’s pipe in the opening sequence. It was only later I realized what it is. He’s smoking a pipe similar to a famous detective, Sherlock Holmes, to hint to the audience that he knows everything and is always a step ahead of everyone… right up until the end when he doesn’t see his eventual fate coming. Such a brilliant performance by Christoph Walz.
@RoGueNavy3 күн бұрын
The British Officer who briefed Lieutenant Hickox on Operation Keno, was played by Mike Meyers, AKA Austin Powers!
@thenerdycollector5013Күн бұрын
you mean aka wayne Campbell ;-)
@Britton_Thompson14 сағат бұрын
Hans Landa wasn't lying. He really was a great detective. So good that he was able to deduce from the clues that by this point in the war, Germany couldn't possibly win. Consequently, he would also be tried for crimes against humanity for his role in the Holocaust when Germany surrenders. So he did the only rational thing. He got out in front of it and switched sides when the opportunity arose.
@RightTurnClyde3 күн бұрын
Absolutely no spoilers here, but before watching Once Upon A Time In Hollywood you should do a bit of research on Charles Manson and his Family, if you're not familiar with them. It will enhance your enjoyment and appreciation no end
@GetMeThere13 күн бұрын
Regarding the pastry scene...I've watched a lot of reactions to this film. In one, a person commenting (who was more culturally aware than I) noted that an offer to eat pastry with cream was often used as a "Jew test," because pastries were usually made using lard, and mixing animals products with dairy products is forbidden. If the subject was reluctant, then a Jew had been identified.
@foljs58583 күн бұрын
A Jew trying to save their life would not appear reluctant, they'd gulp it down. And a big chunk of German Jews at the time were quite secular to begin with and wouldn't care in the first place
@alexg17782 күн бұрын
@@foljs5858 you're both right. It would've undoubtedly worked on some, even if they relented in the end their initial reluctance could be grounds for further investigation. However if I was in that position I would indeed swallow my pride and the pastry in one.
@GetMeThere12 күн бұрын
@@foljs5858 Yet, the scene makes sense when viewed in the light I provide. Recall how he insisted that she wait to include the cream. Further, even if it's not considered a "test," it might merely be a "degradation" enjoyed by the blatantly sadistic Landa.
@LordVolkov3 күн бұрын
In the opening, before switching back to French, Hans Landa says 'masquerade' which alerts Shoshanna to his ruse and allows her to escape. Later, it is Landa who plays along with her masquerade as Emmanuelle. Just an interesting parallel.
@bradfry54033 күн бұрын
Very well done for spotting Harvey Keitel aka Winston Wolfe on the radio.
@Britton_Thompson15 сағат бұрын
In the basement bar room scene when they're playing the card game, it helps to know that King Kong was the biggest film in the world in the 1940s. King Kong was the original Star Wars or Avatar of Hollywood's golden age. So it's not really a reach that the Gestapo officer was able to solve it so fast.
@Andy-wl6xy3 күн бұрын
"Ooh, ya bugga!" 😆😆😆
@JSBIRD693 күн бұрын
Sgt. York and Grapes of Wrath should be on your list. Amazing films.
@edpublic3 күн бұрын
@@JSBIRD69 To Kill a Mockingbird,,,,,,Something Wicked This Way Comes,,,,🍺
@toddmaginn40763 күн бұрын
“Everyone lost their balls!”…funniest quote of yours EVER 😂
@kowalski37693 күн бұрын
Sergeant York is really One Of The Best Movies EVER!! It's a fantastic film. Can't recommend it enough. Gary Cooper is awesome in this one. It also stars one of your favorites..Stumpy (Walter Brennan) from Rio Bravo. It's a must see movie. One of the Greats!
@michaelceraso19773 күн бұрын
she will LOVE THAT film, IM not sure if any of my regular follows has seen that OSCAR winner by G Cooper
@beeman18853 күн бұрын
@@michaelceraso1977I love that movie. Usually try to watch it every Memorial Day.
@zedwpd3 күн бұрын
Great movie no one reacts to. True story and has a love interest too.
@philmakris85073 күн бұрын
"Why would Italians be there???" Seriously Detective Dawn???
@zackgallardo3 күн бұрын
😂
@DominationRotation3 күн бұрын
She's a simpleton.
@philmakris85073 күн бұрын
@@DominationRotation how dare you. She's a lovely lady..And she still has the record out of all the reaction channels for figuring out Usual Suspects quickest. She can't help it if the Scottish schools didn't do right by her. I'm also being somewhat sarcastic. Probably would have come to her that Italy was in the axis if she wasn't so excited by the movie.
@joeconcepts55523 күн бұрын
You’d be surprised how few people realize Italy was on the same side of the war as the Nazis.
@alexg17782 күн бұрын
@@joeconcepts5552 yeah, they got off pretty lucky too in the grand scheme of things, compared to Germany anyway.
@ThomasReeves-s7u2 күн бұрын
The saying something akin to "But if Hitler's there their plan fails as he didn't die that way." Then surprise! It's secretly an Alternate History Movie.
@jfish07233 күн бұрын
“I didn’t know this is what id be watching!” It’s a World War II movie directed by Quentin Tarantino…. what did you expect? 😂😂😂
@michaeldavid62843 күн бұрын
Rainbows, unicorns, and puppies. Well...laser rainbows that melt faces, unicorns gushing blood, and exploding puppies.
@canaisyoung36013 күн бұрын
Just be glad that Quentin Tarantino never made a Biblical movie with the same type of violence. There was a Saturday Night Live sketch called "Djesus Uncrossed" that was basically this. I would have expected something like this from MADtv, but MADtv ended in 2009 (tried to come back in 2016, but no one noticed or cared) and SNL, despite its ups and downs, does turn out hilarious sketches to this day.
@bobkilla4303 күн бұрын
Brads throat scar was because of a hanging he survived. Seeing chapter 1 at the theaters was one of, if not the most intense & suspenseful scenes in a movie I've watched. The taverb n scene was very suspenseful, too.
@Daveincc3 күн бұрын
Hans Landa is one of the best villains ever !
@billverge78223 күн бұрын
Tarantino wrote the "Bear Jew" for Adam Sandler to play....but he was working on another film @ the time.
@idiot_city54443 күн бұрын
That would have been hilarious and incredible
@aleksisuuronen59693 күн бұрын
He was signed to do Funny People and since it's a lead, Apatow was on a high rise (even tho most of the best stuff in 40 Year old and Knocked Up was improvised and Rogan wrote a lot for both without credit) and it kinda was written for Sandler so he did do that movie. It's okay.
@BabyNoah223 күн бұрын
@@idiot_city5444 In my opinion it would have sucked....I cant take that guys seriously. Eli Roth is more menacing with that face....and by far more talented than Sandler.
@AW11-e4h3 күн бұрын
Can’t wait for Hateful 8 ✌️
@ThePartisan133 күн бұрын
"Jesus Christ... That door's a whore"
@AW11-e4h3 күн бұрын
@@ThePartisan13 Marco ain’t worth a peso
@MarcoMM13 күн бұрын
Great reaction Marie like always love this movie, there are some fun-facts about it, in the beginning of the movie when Landa is meeting the entire family he does something sneaky, when he is shaking their hands of the daughters , but if you look closer at his hands what he is really doing is checking their pulse to see who be nervous, this little details are awsome. Since puff pastries (what strudels are) during WWII were made with pig lard (not Kosher) due to wartime butter shortage, Landa's choice of dish for Shosanna could be seen either as a test to see if she's Jewish (as she'd normally reject the food) or he knows who she is and is forcing her into eating non-kosher. The scene where Landa speaks Italian flawlessly and Aldo’s Tennessee accent radiates “Not Italian At All” energy is not how it was scripted. He was written to be extremely fluent and competent at it, but Brad Pitt convinced Tarantino to let him try it that way. In the end, Tarantino agreed that he shouldn’t blend in because, as he put it, “the plan they cobble together is fucking dumb.” It only succeeds because Landa wants it to succeed, it should not work… and the accent just rams home just how dumb the plan is. The character of Hans Landa was a stumbling block for him to get the movie made in the first place. He thought he’d written a character that no actor could play. He has to speak, in order, French, English, German, and Italian fluently, be charming and terrifying at the same time, and appear to be a brilliant detective, a nazi version of Sherlock Holmes (that’s why he has the large pipe in the first scene, it’s a reference to Holmes’ pipe). Thank goodness for Christoph Waltz who steals every scene he’s in. Keep up the good work.
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
I think the thing about the puff pastries is a bit of over-speculation. No point in such a test, plus if he knew, he would no doubt have put her in custody long before what happens later, just as a point of pride to say he finally got her. The character is ruthless but also prideful.
@PaiMei6673 күн бұрын
5:35 It's a "rope burn"
@danielmaas18272 күн бұрын
"I didn't realize this is what I'd be watching..." I knew that the moment you said "Ahhh, that's nice" at the beginning of your reaction.
@Sd3cinemaКүн бұрын
“Don’t let a stranger into your house”…..Ma’am these aren’t solar panel salesman. There was no choice.
@Elerad3 күн бұрын
This is actually my favorite Tarantino film. His ability to build tension in it is just incredible; and the characters, particularly Waltz's Hans Landa, are simply marvelous. Oh, and yes, I did see it in theaters 15 years ago. Blew my mind.
@MikeBrown7799B3 күн бұрын
Hello Dawn!😊 I figured you were not prepared for this film.😉 The British General in headquarters was Mike Myers. This was the film that made Christoph Waltz (Landa) an International star. Great reactions to this classic Tarantino film, Dawn!!!🎬👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@Erigion3 күн бұрын
Tarantino's meta commentary at the end is perfect
@johnnyhockКүн бұрын
Tarantino and the Coen Brothers = the best movie makers of all time ! I have them all on Blu-ray dvd
@ianinkster22613 күн бұрын
" Everyone...Everyone????...EVERYONE lost their ball!!!!! " Peak Dawn Marie
@SteveCoronado23 күн бұрын
I binged your Firefly/Serenity playlist today and now I’ve watched this. The way you look at things is amazing!! Best reactions ever 🤘🏻💥🔥🙏🏻💯
@foljs58583 күн бұрын
Zoller did fancy her from the start. She might be up on the ladder arranging the cinema titles, but he had seen her (and of course, being in Paris, he could have seen her earlier, at or around the Cinema). Not that it's difficult to see if a girl is pretty when they're up on a ladder. To quote the immortal words of Lt. Frank Drebin to a woman on a ladder "Nice beaver!"
@TheCrow9383 күн бұрын
I used to work at a theater and that is how the sign is changed even to this day by some theaters and it was my favorite part of the job.
@Anon543873 күн бұрын
A little chance to get away from your co-workers? 😁
@EhFrank3 күн бұрын
21:16 "*gasp* Everyone... everyone lost their balls!" 😆Quotes like that are why you're my favorite reactor
@Yora212 күн бұрын
To Germans, the fingers are actually super obvious. It looks weird. Nobody does that here. When the officer is looking at the fingers, it's immediately clear why he's looking like that.😀
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
Yup. Just one little cultural slip-up and the spy mission gets exposed. Clever way to do it.
@PopsiCOLE2 күн бұрын
Just FYI. He didnt switch to English for the audience. He switched because The jews under the floorboard didnt understand english. And he already knew they were there.
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
Yup, it becomes apparent as the scene goes along. He already knows the farmer knows English (maybe from WW1 experience), and that the family he is hiding does not. He's likely 90% sure they are hiding there before he even shows up at the farm.
@brandonmartin083 күн бұрын
Tarantino actually wanted Adam Sandler to play the Bear Jew. Would’ve been a totally different character 🤣
@TheCrazyCanuck4203 күн бұрын
That would have been quite different. I can picture how goofy the bat scene would be in the Billy Madison voice.
@teeheeteeheeish3 күн бұрын
The scar on Aldo's neck is from being hanged/lynched. When I first joined the Army I had a Sergeant Major who had been lynched. The scar was intimidating as hell. Implied he somehow survived being hanged by the neck.
@Jupiterblitz3 күн бұрын
32:00 A reference to the French movie "Le Professionel" from 1981 when Jean-Paul Belmondo reaches out the helicopter - pacing, slow motion and string based melody of his agony are pretty similar.
@FlesharrowerКүн бұрын
"He always puts those scenes in that are hard to watch but that you can't forget." Ten seconds later: "Well I've forgotten them as I try to remember them..." Classic.
@CaptainRetroStation3 күн бұрын
6:46 "Ooo, ya bugger!"
@actaeon2993 күн бұрын
Sergeant York is a GREAT movie to look at. It's a good movie, and I don't think a lot of other reactors watch it.
@mikealvarez23223 күн бұрын
I would love to see you react to the movie SARGENT YORK. It's a great movie about another conscious objector in another war. It stars Gary Cooper which you might recall from the Western HIGH NOON. Do not forsake us oh our darling. You can react to SARGENT YORK. Do not forsake us Dawn Marie It's a great movie. We're sure you'll see Gary Cooper at his best.😊❤
@dolf3702 күн бұрын
Christoph Waltz is truly incredible, and it's a shame that he hasn't got any Oscars (as far as I know). He is in at least one other Tarantino movie (Hateful Eight or Django Unchained) and also a villain in one of Craig's James Bond movie. Every role I have seen him in, he kills it. Edit: Oups, he did get a well deserved Oscar for Landa!
@ML-lx4su3 күн бұрын
I had totally forgotten about Borat's cameo in this movie.
@zedwpd3 күн бұрын
YES! I've been asking lots of people to review/react to "Sgt York" starring Gary Cooper. No one has. It's a true story and has a love interest too.
@exile220ify3 күн бұрын
Christoph Waltz EARNED his Oscar for this performance
@TRK-up2zw3 күн бұрын
"I can't look at that!" While she's staring right at it!
@03055demery2 күн бұрын
I love how the German sergeant says Hugo Stiglitz.
@charleslee83133 күн бұрын
It's likely that Marcel got out, unless he wanted to die with Shoshanna.
@LordVolkov3 күн бұрын
I wish there was a small scene of him in the credits, smoking at a cafe and waiting for Shoshanna.
@johgu922 күн бұрын
He most certainly died
@charleslee83132 күн бұрын
@@johgu92 He barricaded the audience's doors, so THEY couldn't get out. Then he entered a back door, so he can light the film on fire. Why would he barricade *that* door? Unless... he stayed behind, and went up with the fire (and/or got smoke inhalation) I say that he left, after lighting the fire.
@johgu922 күн бұрын
@@charleslee8313 No way, it's way more poetical if he died, also there was not shown to be a back entrance.
@charleslee83132 күн бұрын
@@johgu92 It's more poetic if he died that night, but if there wasn't a back door, how did he get past (checks notes) the Nazis, on his way to the other side of the screen?
@BluesJammer693 күн бұрын
Sergeant York(1941) would be a great choice of an old war film to react to.
@MigMar-be4vw3 күн бұрын
Everytime i see the sceane at the cinema. Their itallian presentations always keep me laughing every single time! Gorlaaaaaaami! What? Gorlamiiiiiii!😂margaretti with the hand😂and the cuoco so proud of himself😂😇masterpiece
@jonmercano11383 күн бұрын
I personally thought Landa didn’t know who she actually was. But it’s ambiguous enough and he’s smart enough that I would believe it if it was confirmed he did.
@VladislavBabbitt3 күн бұрын
I think he did. He was just being mean and sadistic. Plus he ordered a fancy dessert just to extinguish his cigarette into it? A very vulgar move from an Aristocrat.
@ThobyWan3 күн бұрын
he knew, Hans Landa orders the Shosanna a glass of milk, a reference to the opening scene in the movie, implying that he knew
@nathanlindahl83363 күн бұрын
@@ThobyWanOr maybe just a coincidence
@jonmercano11383 күн бұрын
@@ThobyWan yeah but milk is also common to have with pastry
@ThePartisan133 күн бұрын
I think he did, but he's sadistic and likes the mental torture he has over her.
@travgpeters12 күн бұрын
In Germany, the way to indicate the number three with fingers is to extend the index, middle, and thumb fingers. This is different from how the British count to three, which is with the index, middle, and ring fingers
@treywatson14872 күн бұрын
I love watching your reactions to movies and such. But, like... I'd gladly fall asleep to you singing lullabies. 😅 Your voice is INTOXICATING.
@edpublic3 күн бұрын
Loquacious= Very Talkative,,,Excessive Talking,,garrulous,,,speaking expressively
@zackgallardo3 күн бұрын
Yes you'd love sgt. York!
@captainkangaroo43013 күн бұрын
You actually said don’t ask strangers into your house. You do know what Nazi occupied means don’t you?
@bigsteve62003 күн бұрын
Yes do watch Sgt. York. Gary Cooper, black and white, 1941. Excellent movie.
@DevlinDomini3 күн бұрын
Love how u take notes. Certainly helped keeping track of all the X-Men. (lol)
@orangeandblackattack3 күн бұрын
This is my favorite QT film. Pulp Fiction #2, then a scramble for the rest.
@reheatedpizza7292Күн бұрын
you have such good editors!!!
@tubekulose3 күн бұрын
16:20 The German word "Schnaps" just means "spirit/hard liquor" in general (in contrast to the German loanword "schnapps" in English, which is more specified). So, Vodka, Whisky, rum... all of that falls within the definition of Schnaps (at least colloquially). 🙂
@mattreid80983 күн бұрын
“Once upon a time haha ….. oh” lol that gave me a chuckle
@mikeydubbs85652 күн бұрын
You skipped the best part. After Donnie made use of his Louisville Slugger, “Teddy fuckin' Williams knocks it out of the park! Fenway Park on its feet for Teddy fuckin' Ballgame! He went yardo on that one, out to fuckin' Lansdowne Street!” Made Boston proud with that one
@andreasbenning3 күн бұрын
This inspired me to rewatch my favourite WWII movies, the dutch "Black Book" and the french "Female Agents". I recommend them to anyone who sees this! Thanks for uploading! Greetings from Sweden
@dolf3702 күн бұрын
Ah, a fellow swede, help me inspire her to watch Sjunde inseglet!
@andreasbenning2 күн бұрын
@dolf370 A bit dull, isn't it? Or maybe I was too young when I tried to watch it, maybe I'd appreciate it more today? I'd rather have her watch Smala Sussie, I've sent her a dvd. 😄
@dolf370Күн бұрын
@@andreasbenning "Dull"!?!?!?! That kind of blasphemy is just the reason why people are burned at the stake . It's the best swedish movie ever made. And besides being very funny, it is also in black and white which Dawn loves.
@andreasbenningКүн бұрын
@dolf370 I'll rewatch it before saying anything about it again! 😄
@dolf370Күн бұрын
@@andreasbenning excellent idea 😈
@eddieevans66923 күн бұрын
I agree with some of your other viewers, Sergeant York is a fantastic movie to react to. I believe you will love it.
@Gabriel-zc3ef3 күн бұрын
Very fun reaction to a great movie! Also... Best hair ever! The red really suits you!
@ModeloLoveMeLongTime3 күн бұрын
I love Tarantino films and Inglorious Bastards is my favorite of them , so many great performances with amazing editing and one of favorite film endings ever.
@timmooney75283 күн бұрын
The VFX director, John Dykstra also did Star Wars: A New Hope, Star Trek the Motion Picture, and multiple Spiderman and X-Men films
@RabbiSteve1Күн бұрын
A great reaction to another great Tarantino classic. I can’t wait until you get to my absolute favorite (saw it 15 times in the theater alone, often with different friends, and then maybe another 30-50 times in DOD and Blu-Ray) Tarantino movie, ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD, which like this one, is also a “fairytale”. And that one has even more Western vibes than this one. And another great performance from Brad Pitt.
@edpedro13473 күн бұрын
I haven't watched in a while, just have to say your hair looks magnificent
@philmakris85073 күн бұрын
That pastry was usually made with cream but because of war shortages it was made with lard, pork fat and that was the reason it wasn't kosher. Bit you were close.
@timmooney75283 күн бұрын
Stolz der Nation, the film about the sniper, is on the DVD in full. Eli Roth directed it.
@BaccarWozat3 күн бұрын
1. There was a 1970s movie titled "Inglorious Bastards" which though I haven't seen it, must be better because it was spelled correctly. 2. This kind of story is very much "Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos", one of the better war comic books of the 1960s, except for all the profanity, violence, squeamishness and David Bowie songs. BTW, in Marvel Comics, Hitler was killed by the original Human Torch, which was how he came to have been set on fire. 3. The "alternate" ending only makes sense if this and all the other Tarantino movies are interconnected. It seems to create unusual cause and effect. Another interesting departure point (no spoilers) comes during "Once Upon A Time In Hollywood". Probably the only film of his not affected by this new dynamic is "My Best Friend's Birthday", but that's up for debate.
@YolandaAnneBrown957263 күн бұрын
The scene with Churchill? The actor playing Chruchill was Rod Talyor (The Birds, The Time Machine and Giant) while that was Mike Myers as the guy briefing Michael Fassbender.
@jeptom863 күн бұрын
Yay! Dawn is back! :) great to see ya as always!
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
"Don't let a stranger into your house unless you know what it's for." It's an SS Colonel during the nazi occupation of France. They practically invented the no-knock warrant.
@louisenglish80693 күн бұрын
My opinion, this one was Tarantino's masterpiece
@timmooney75283 күн бұрын
When Germans signal 3 fingers, they use their thumb index, and middle finger. English and American folk hold up their index, middle, and the finger in between the middle and pinky finger.
@canaisyoung36013 күн бұрын
It's the ring finger (the one between middle and pinky).
@RuggeroBelloniКүн бұрын
All Europeans use their thumb. The Anglo way always puzzled me because it creates some unnecessary tension in the hand and wrist. It matches the archaic measuring system in its lack of logic.That said, maybe training a spy would cover gestures and mannerisms.
@timmooney7528Күн бұрын
@@RuggeroBelloni I would imagine training a deep cover operative would require being meticulous with regards to cultural customs and practices. A common trope in spy films is a spy getting caught because they used a phrase wrong or slang that is no longer current.
@RuggeroBelloniКүн бұрын
@@timmooney7528 I agree.Being. norther Itialian, after two years in Cambridge,UK I spent one year in Boston. I tried the " Black like me" (movie) experiment: if I checked out a chick, for those who knew me as a "Dago" I was a pig but if I passed for a Limey (Boston lingo) I was charmingly naughty. During my 20yrs in California I fit in and was mistaken for my employer's son. As a spy I blew my cover when a girlfriend served a lasagna with cottage cheese and my horrified look gave me away.😇😊 .
@wyldhowl2821Күн бұрын
There's this one brief flash during the sequence with the theatre burning, where Shoshanna (on film) looks very smoky & ghostly. It reminds me a bit of how in Raiders Of The Lost Ark, all the ghostly spirits flew around, looking almost beautiful - right before the Nazis in that one had a real bad time. I wonder whether in this film the shot selection was done as a sort of homage to that scene.
@arfiarifazmi60033 күн бұрын
I hope you're okay, you look fatigued..rest well, eat well and take care of yourself please.. your health is the most important thing..anyway, thanks for the reaction to one of the best Tarantino's works..
@exile220ify3 күн бұрын
Most Tarantino movies, like Hitchcock movies, have a Tarantino cameo Some are longer (ie: Pulp Fiction), others are blink and you'll miss it, as is the case here: he's the dead German soldier who gets scalped
@joeconcepts55523 күн бұрын
My favorite Tarantino flick by far.
@TheTsar19183 күн бұрын
Side note: LOVE the Marx Brothers picture in the background.
@o0pinkdino0o2 күн бұрын
Tarantino movies pay homage to previous classics. That opening scene is almost beat for beat the opening of The Good, The Bad and the Ugly. The Bear Jew is played by horror director Eli Roth (Hostel, Green Inferno, Thanksgiving).
@rubroken3 күн бұрын
Quentin Tarantino, the master of alternate endings
@MadcapMatt3 күн бұрын
Originally The Bear Jew was supposed to be played by Adam Sandler.
@johnmguzman74913 күн бұрын
Where can I leave a regular comment. Guess here will have to do...Dawn ❤ the hair!!❤
@patrickrosenthal-hi2dx3 күн бұрын
you don't hold index, middle and ring fingers for three in the Rhineland. index, middle and pinkie. the confirmation of the suspicions. 'judgement at nuremburg' before 'sgt York'. peace-p
@5ilver42Күн бұрын
It is far from his best movie, but it is probably by favorite of his.
@StevenFleming-x7q3 күн бұрын
Oh Ya Burger what a film brutal & brilliant (I think you can breath now Dawn) Another great reaction
@billbryant99959 күн бұрын
Yes, quirky and awesome! Oddly satisfying? Watching Brad Pitt speak Italian was over the top! Anyway. Glad you watched this one. BTW, still hoping you'll see Sergeant York someday.
@michaelhoward66633 күн бұрын
Always glad to see Tarantino back. Glad you liked it. You really should watch the original King Kong from 1933. My favorite movie and so much fun. On to the next one!!