Tony Scott and Denzel was one of the all-time great actor director collaborations
@dixonhill110810 ай бұрын
I thought crimson tide was great but the whole scenario was so unrealistic. Then Putin "went for it" instantly became one of my favorite movies of all time.
@terrellgrant157012 күн бұрын
Definitely
@geraldmixer9 ай бұрын
I worked on a few Tony Scott movies and I loved the guy. He was so excited, so prepared, and so much fun.
@leob4403Ай бұрын
So why do you think he got depressed
@geraldmixerАй бұрын
@@leob4403 I wasn't that close to him. There were rumors that he was sick possibly dying.
@sallyspitsАй бұрын
Did you butthole hurt after?
@01bigtrev10 ай бұрын
Man on fire. All time classic
@stephenoleary56279 ай бұрын
Great script, good performances ruined by terrible overly stylistic, filtering sunbursting directing.
@achilleskormentzas19725 ай бұрын
favorite denzel movie… well maybe fallen!
@El_Cattivo19883 ай бұрын
is trash
@Euphoriasmotion20112 ай бұрын
Child lusting after a drunk nugger. Creepy. Sorry......Creasy.
@neill30409 ай бұрын
Crimson tide is one of the most brilliantly directed films I’ve ever seen.
@vladimirhorowitz6 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's a fantastic movie.
@ggtjr410 ай бұрын
Also, Tony Scott arguably is the best director of a Tarantino script
@acidgroove10110 ай бұрын
I Much preferred both “Reservoir Dogs” and “Pulp Fiction”, the first two Tarantino-directed Tarantino scripts.
@robovac355710 ай бұрын
Me too @@acidgroove101
@zaziou7119 ай бұрын
@@acidgroove101 Me too. By far
@mattmiller48219 ай бұрын
Pulp fiction is the pinnacle of 90s. My all time fave. And I love reservoir dogs. It's awesome. But gonna put out an unpopular opinion.....true romance is awesome. I enjoy watching it more then reservoir dogs
@christofferjenzen789 ай бұрын
True romance being awesome is far from.an unpopular opinion,it's a universal fact. And I feel like you but not,I put it above Pulp fiction but reservoir dogs is hard to beat. @@mattmiller4821
@lanolinlight10 ай бұрын
Directors who truly love movies and keep watching them with a fan's enthusiasm and a critic's discerning eye rather than focusing only on their own standing in the marketplace... are the shit.
@nope565710 ай бұрын
That's why I'd rather listen to filmmakers wax lovingly about film than critics - filmmakers, usually, can and do love it all and see the value and art in cinema critics often dismiss or don't see. Like, Scorsese cites Frankenstein Created Woman as one of his favorites...fucking chad move right there. That movie is incredible. Now all of a sudden "critics" are re-evaluating things like that film all because Scorsese repped it when horror and exploitation fans knew the score from the get-go, lol. I'm not one of those "fuck all critics" types, but I don't spend a lot of time on them like seemingly every other film fan online does. There are some I follow and like hearing from, but it's a small pool. And I do enjoy the occasional well written, passionate review/analysis. But you know what I could do with the time film fans waste on reading critics reviews? Watch more movies.
@gokhanersan85619 ай бұрын
Unstoppable was terrific.
@jamilshekinski9 ай бұрын
Enemy of the State is the reason why I got involved in the world of IT. I have watched almost every T.S. movie at least 15 times each. I just love Crimson Tide, underrated True Romance, Revenge and of course - Man on Fire! Tony will always be my favorite director!! God I miss him so much! Rest in Peace, Maestro! ♥♥
@Bl00dwerK9 ай бұрын
The Last Boy Scout is criminally underrated.
@sepsism1389 ай бұрын
One of the GOATs for me. True Romance too.
@brandonryder58739 ай бұрын
Yes, The Last Boy Scout is so awesome
@matthewwalker3929 ай бұрын
What does it rate on the finger scale?
@kaivaughn37829 ай бұрын
The opening scene with Billy Blanks is the greatest scene in the history of cinema
@dsa5138 ай бұрын
Absolute fave
@liadcohen83278 ай бұрын
I love his use of that over-saturated almost cross-processed film look. Best example is Domino.
@Psilocybin7710 ай бұрын
Tony Scott made the best Tarantino movie, and it's a hill I will die on....hopefully from old age.
@stevem232310 ай бұрын
One of the best for sure.
@jeffcunningham03898 ай бұрын
I mean no but its still fantastic and a classic
@DashingPunkSamurai7 ай бұрын
Oliver Stone made the worst Tarantino movie.
@ashleyjankowski21037 ай бұрын
100 percent agree. You won’t die alone on this hill.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
@@DashingPunkSamurai Incorrect
@arroberson879610 ай бұрын
Tony Scott always been the guy. Rest Easy beloved. You're missed
@Purple1984Rain9 ай бұрын
I love how QT name drops Douglas Sirk with Tony Scott. He is a walking encyclopedia of film history. Revenge is my favorite Scott film.
@1ron0xide10 ай бұрын
Tarantino talking about Top Gun is making me laugh harder than ever. Super hard. Rock hard. Im basically inverted
@PurushaDesa10 ай бұрын
Crimson Tide is my pick for greatest Tony Scott film. It’s tremendous and tense and morally compelling.
@stuco8110 ай бұрын
Incredibly prescient in the current climate. (especially the opening premise, involving the nationalist President desperate to re-establish Russia as a great power)
@Cybertron-cs7sk9 ай бұрын
I'm a huge Tony Scott fan always famous for sunsets and smoke filled rooms I have every one of his movies on Blu-ray truly a sad moment to lose him in the way we lost him in his prime of movie making R.I.P.
@ericfurst609110 ай бұрын
The Last Boy Scout is a great action movie.
@Moveplaylift10 ай бұрын
and riddled with great lines...
@ericfurst609110 ай бұрын
@@Moveplaylift and they are not P.C. and I love it.
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
Agreed, it's just so damn entertaining, great dialogue, a real "guilty pleasure". It doesn't pretend to be "deep", it's just a great popcorn flick, sort of underrated if that's possible.
@ratbastard27089 ай бұрын
@@MoveplayliftWritten, of course, by "Lethal Weapon" scribe Shane Black.
@dave210yt9 ай бұрын
was waiting for the sequel for 20 years
@elchuy1112 ай бұрын
Tony Scott was one of my favorites directors ever,. The style the action. I miss him a lot !
@daymanfighter10 ай бұрын
I love Quentin's enthusiasm about film's and flim makers I can listen to a podcast about him breaking down each film and filmmaker style and approach
@edkiely27129 ай бұрын
True Romance, Man on Fire, and Spy Game to me are criminally underrated! Scott definitely had some amazing shooting techniques and vision. Unfortunately, we didn't get anymore films from him. He must have been in a lot of pain to end his life as he did. Very unfortunate! RIP Tony!
@TheGeneralDisarray10 ай бұрын
Alien is obviously a masterpiece, but Tony Scott has made more movies I love, and he never became a hack. Man on Fire and True Romance especially are two of my absolute favourites.
@starwarsroo244810 ай бұрын
Alien is Ridley Scott
@TheGeneralDisarray10 ай бұрын
@@starwarsroo2448 yeah I know. I didn't make it very clear. I meant that Ridley Scott made Alien, which is fantastic, but Tony has made more movies I enjoy.
@lucasm387910 ай бұрын
True Romance is one of my favourites, and I can’t imagine anyone else making that film look as good as it did. It was the perfect combination of Tarantino’s gritty script full of sleazy characters and Scott’s visual flair.
@mk-ultramags110710 ай бұрын
Ridley is more about "Grandiose" filmmaking. It's almost like he's going thru his own version of what Tony did before his unfortunate passing. I absolutely love Ridley's late career resurgence we are in right now, even though the box office doesn't agree.
@FayezButts9 ай бұрын
Domino is pretty terrible
@christianlopez51899 ай бұрын
Man on Fire is criminally underrated, and is the best saving child from kidnappers type movie ever.
@Wallyworld308 ай бұрын
The first Taken was better. Liam Neeson crushed that role.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
@@Wallyworld30 Taken was pretty silly.
@jekw239 ай бұрын
He might not have made the best movies ever but his movies really epitomized and defined 80’s and early 90’s cinema. A lot of what you see now originates with him.
@doric_historic10 ай бұрын
Days of Thunder always draws me in with that sunrise over Daytona opening...
@butchersrespawn10 ай бұрын
You goddamn right it does. The best of Tony’s and my all time favorite Tony/Cruise film.
@doric_historic10 ай бұрын
Unfortunately that movie for some will always be buried in horse manure.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Some people get all smug and look down on that movie. Sure, it's cheesy in some ways and the love story is a little weak but it's a damn fun movie.
@rickybe10 ай бұрын
His BMW short film with James Brown, Gary Oldman and Clive Owen is so good.
@stuco8110 ай бұрын
Mr Brown, get out of the car....
@rickybe10 ай бұрын
@@stuco81 mannn I thought we had a deal!…
@StillTheVoid10 ай бұрын
When Tony Scott died, many of us in the film community were heartbroken and wondered: why? Was it because he felt overshadowed by his brother Ridley or Michael Bay thinking their filmmaking surpassed his frequency? Of all the accomplishments and hard-work he's done with Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer, was it all for nothing? What I had always envisioned during the late 2000s was that someday The Scott Bros. would've directed their first film together; two minds joined as one. Who knew what we could've received? But such enthusiasm now is left in the dust. Tony's films alike Ridley's welcome the new wave of sophisticated stories with that pinch of gothic principal photography With the help of great producers and a valuable and dedicated cast & crew, these films are now timeless classics and what Hollywood in America used to be. RIP Tony Scott and Don Simpson...thank you for redefining Blockbuster movies! 💐
@kdscool153610 ай бұрын
I don't think he was overshadowed by Bay.
@jfb.874610 ай бұрын
Cancer or some degenerative disease. Look it up
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
@@kdscool1536 I don't either, I don't think anybody seriously believes Bay is a better film maker than Tony Scott, to me it's laughably preposterous.
@andrewhudson710810 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly, Tony always had a reputation for being clinically depressed, even in the eighties. I don’t think there was any main motivation or silver bullet to cure it. Some people just have an imbalance, sadly.
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
@@andrewhudson7108 I know it's a cliche, but it seems like artists are predisposed more to mental illness than typical "civilians". I think that's a price some pay for their genius. Many of them are hypersensitve and egotistical, and those are hard characteristics to keep on a leash for "creatives".
@jeffhunt27789 ай бұрын
I know a cameraman who worked with Tony Scott a great deal. He loved Tony Scott. He loved working with Tony Scott.
@beyounglove627810 ай бұрын
Thank you universe for this channel 😍
@chrisparkes10 ай бұрын
It’s always frustrated me that Ridley’s status overshadows Tony’s when Tony is the better of the two; more exciting, more artistic, more human and more consistent.
@deankruse289110 ай бұрын
Hard to compete with Gladiator, pretty human aand artistic
@chrisparkes10 ай бұрын
@@deankruse2891 but it’s such an outlier in his filmography, Ridley’s so inconsistent
@deankruse289110 ай бұрын
@@chrisparkes i think ridley's films are all visually exceptional.
@kayreghabi202310 ай бұрын
Well said
@MaximilianXXX9 ай бұрын
The guy who made Blade Runner is always going to be the better of the two.
@JimmyDawson101310 ай бұрын
Everything he made was so much fun to watch. RIP T Scott.
@vladimirhorowitz6 ай бұрын
Enemy of the State isn't nearly respected enough. That's such a great film that still holds up. "You have something they want!"
@ResistanceQuest10 ай бұрын
The Hunger is really interesting also, if for no other reason than for seeing how the Scotts influenced one another
@czaleo100fuegos9 ай бұрын
The last boy-scout is an absolute MASTERPIECE .
@paulanthonytully10 ай бұрын
Beverly Hills Cop 2 is fantastic. First was is a classic, but BHC 2 with Tony directing is such a well shot film
@roadbeef10 ай бұрын
yes!!! it is exceptionally well shot
@SalemGhassanHanna7 ай бұрын
Almost everything is better in the sequel except Murphy's own performance as the lead.
@roadbeef7 ай бұрын
@@SalemGhassanHanna the follow your dick radar scene makes up for a lot of it, lets be honest :D
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Both great moves but I think that I actually like the 2nd movie a little more.
@samiam734210 ай бұрын
its frightening how much Quentin know about film......going all the way back to the 50's.....he would be the ultimate film school professor....
@zaziou7119 ай бұрын
He would be the ultimate film school prefessor I agree, not only because of his knowledge but because he's into so many different genres that he would not try to bend you to his own vision but help you to achieve your own style without being condescending, it's a very rare quality. And I'm not even talking about his enthousiasm.
@SharkWhosFondOfBond6 ай бұрын
Especially since he hated the 50s era of movies 😂
@YeLizardLords10 ай бұрын
Man on fire is his Magnus opus
@Ericboy11455810 ай бұрын
I could listen to Tarantino gush about movies all day
@azulsimmons10409 ай бұрын
Tony Scott was a great director. Loved so many of his movies growing up.
@RibbonRailProfuctions8 ай бұрын
1 thing about Tony’s movies, that nobody notices is that, when a scene involves characters talking, the camera is fixed in place, it’s not hand held or on someone’s shoulder, it is fixed to the ground and in doing so, you get a small bouncy up and down effect, but the camera is still in place, and even in the action scenes, Tony still used camera shots that were fixed to the ground. Also, Tony’s filming style, progresses over the years, in the late 80’s and 90’s, there would be some shots that were turned at an angle, then from 2001 to 2010, Tony would use zoom ins and zoom outs for certain scenes, but would still have the camera fixed to the ground, which he always used for scenes close up to the action or the characters. Tony’s filming style, was its own entire thing, literally no other director filmed movies like Tony did, and that style progressed with time, it evolved. I enjoy every single one of Tony’s films, there’s something about them, that I can’t help but love. We miss you Tony Scott, and we love you
@buzzfunk9 ай бұрын
Tony was one of the greats. His death is tragic and it makes me sad that we'll never see a new Tony Scott movie. His brother has fallen on my radar ever since the turd called Prometheus. Alien and Blade Runner are still in my top 5. But True Romance, Top Gun, Crimson Tide, The last boyscout, The Fan, Man on Fire etc. Just an epic list of bad ass movies. RIP my man!
@MrBernad0910 ай бұрын
It's such a shame to have lost Tony Scott might very well be my favourite director Top gun, Unstoppable, Man on Fire and Crimson tide are some of my favourite movies of all time and i watch them regularly. Even though they didn't need remaking i read he had the rights To The warrior's and the wild bunch remakes i think he could have nailed both if given the chance.
@robvegas93549 ай бұрын
Unstoppable is a masterpiece. Amazing movies Crimson Tide, Man On Fire, Top Gun, Days of thunder, True Romance etc. Tony Scott was brilliant. Definitely a director when you see his name on the poster or dvd cover it is like 'hellyeah i'm watching that'
@brysimm40410 ай бұрын
Honestly my favorite Tony Scott movie IS True Romance, although Crimson Tide is pretty great too.
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
Same, I think those movies especially are his two damn near perfect movies.
@ggtjr410 ай бұрын
Tony is unsung
@fuferito10 ай бұрын
04:20 I don't know if Quentin Tarantino meant to say, _kaleidoscope_ of characters and just settled for "calliope" (he does talk fast), but I think it works either way.
@TheGeneralDisarray10 ай бұрын
i noticed that, wasnt sure if he got caught between kaleidoscope and panoply. I know a calliope as a WWII Sherman tank with a bunch of rockets on top.
@_scabs666910 ай бұрын
4/20
@CocodreamBLM10 ай бұрын
I dont feel like movies are made as good as they used to be the quality has gone down
@kurtwpg10 ай бұрын
One of the great things about Unstoppable is all the risks he took with Chris Pine's character. He comes in as this young punk who was gifted a position he doesn't deserve. Then, once he's made you like the guy anyhow, he reveals an issue with violent jealousy when it comes to his girlfriend. That's a detail that didn't have to be there but it results in maintaining a perception of fallibility as he's attempting all these things to save the day.
@arnaud.lancelot9 ай бұрын
"Unstoppable" for me.
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
The film of his that gets lost a bit because IMO it's not quintessentially in his oeuvre is the masterpiece Spy Game. It's brilliant on so many levels and it's almost totally forgotten. I love that film, but again, it's not going to grab you by the throat with over the top, obvious visuals. What a filmmaker that guy was, Top Gun, Last Boy Scout, Spy Game, Crimson Tide are my Tony Scott favorites. Days of Thunder wasn't half bad, either. Man, that guy knew how to make a film.
@One21Jiggawatts10 ай бұрын
I’ve always thought Spy game feels more Ridley and Thelma and Louise feels more like Tony.
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
@@One21Jiggawatts That's a very fair comment. I think Spy Game might be the most underrated film of all time, so many moments of brilliance in it. The film score is incredible, such an eclectic mix of music. And the visuals are unforgettable, there are several scenes that are so uniquely brilliant. The rooftop scene with Redford & Pitt, the way it zooms out at the end, and the scene in the car in East Germany when Pitt throws the defector out of the car and you see him "shrink" from the car perspective as it pulls away. I mean, who thinks of stuff like that? That's off the charts, the guy was a visual genius.
@zoomalfunction10 ай бұрын
Spy Game is a bit incoherent though when you break it down. The woman was an admitted terrorist. China had every right to imprison her. Redford agreed too. He also had a hard policy of abandoning assets. Yet he suddenly decides to invert his values for a guy he's not seen in a decade (who is completely to blame for his own circumstances) throwing away his life savings, risking life in prison, and war with China? Pitt's allies get left behind too, and a bunch of innocent prison guards are murdered. All to save a guilty terrorist!? I'm with the CIA on this one. She deserved to be in that cell, and rescuing a rogue asset who screwed up on a personal mission is not worth sacrificing other lives, or risking dragging the nation into war.
@jaykay638710 ай бұрын
@@zoomalfunction They were operating from emotion, outside of their normal duty "protocols", which made it compelling as a film for me. It was a story of redemption. Sure, if you want to analyze it from a strictly logical standpoint, you can blow it up, but this is a film about humans, and they don't always follow the script.
@vamseemk6 ай бұрын
Spy Game...was such a stylish movie, and then it had the Stylish Redford and Pitt too!
@lg.20007 ай бұрын
Huge underrated director in my opinion- stilly today ! Love nearly any of his movies 🔥
@peabody30009 ай бұрын
i was definitely a tony scott disser back when it was cool like quentin says, and i still kinda gotta look down on his more popcorny flicks, but i always had full respect for true romance!
@mretrain9 ай бұрын
I always figured Quentin was on the set of True Romance every day because the whole thing has such a Tarantino feel, but I guess that’s just the strength of his writing. That makes me respect Tony Scott as a director all the more because he obviously understood what QT was going for and delivered in spades.
@jvladcliff40837 ай бұрын
The Hunger is my favorite Tony Scott movie
@halsinden10 ай бұрын
great to watch, but i'm honestly SO gutted there's no mention whatsoever of 'the hunger'. i realise it was panned by the critics and even some of the people making it, but it remains in my top 10 ever films and i'm absolutely prepared to defend it in a 'what about' angle.
@christopetkov416810 ай бұрын
I completely agree! The Hunger had so many stylistic elements of what later defined his style, but they were so subtle, so well tempered I actually think its his very best film, followed by Man on Fire But The Hunger is an absolute masterpiece, that is definitely in my top-10 list
@deborahrose86219 ай бұрын
Well said Tarantino!
@ruling52810 ай бұрын
The Hunger, Revenge, and True Romance are Tony Scotts best movies.
@anomalovideoАй бұрын
Tarantino gradually going back to being the video store nerd he's always been, but with one helluva reputation now
@Tepes19809 ай бұрын
This is like what happened in Italy with Sergio Leone. While he was hold in high regard internationally for his movies, in Italy, at least among the critics, he was and still is considered irrelevant.
@guntherwatson8640Ай бұрын
True Romance and Last Boy Scout are 2 classics
@villedocvalle9 ай бұрын
Tarantino loves to be heard.
@MsStevenSeagull10 ай бұрын
“Yeah” - Chris Ryan
@milkshakeinasnowstorm10 ай бұрын
CR is the king. He is letting Tarantino talk and acknowledging that he is listening. Would you have liked Simmons talking over him instead? He would have dropped a "Tony Scott and Denzel in this movie are like Tatum and Brown" comparison.
@Vaporvice84Ай бұрын
"the Taking of Pelham 4,5,6", Goddammit QT. Now I think I wanna see that movie, thanks to you saying that (I LOVE "The Taking of Pelham, 1,2,3").
@sillygoober5536 ай бұрын
Tony Scott and Michael Mann are two of the most important directors for ME, alongside QT
@michaeljamrozy42999 ай бұрын
I didn't realize how many Tony Scott movies I liked
@plissken215610 ай бұрын
Guys, whenever you're starting to get serious about a girl, show her Tony Scott's 1990 movie 'Revenge'. You're as good as 'in'.
@johnscott648110 ай бұрын
Thanks for warning,don't need to watch about unstoppable. But he was super influential. Sirk comp on point.
@TheDas95829 ай бұрын
Tony had the best style in his movies. cinematography wise.
@regularSenseAppeal6 ай бұрын
Tarantino probably couldn't have directed True Romance better than Tony. It was perfect.
@nina-x2h6k5 ай бұрын
master quentin on tony scott
@Mickey-19947 ай бұрын
I was always a bigger Tony fan over his brother. I put True Romance in my top 10 favorite movies of all time, I love Crimson Tide, Days of Thunder, The Last Boy Scout and BHC 2 were all great or a least entertaining.
@smb22659 ай бұрын
Tony Scott= LEGEND
@jeffburnett23924 ай бұрын
I love Unstoppable, I watch it once in awhile still
@djarcadian10 ай бұрын
Well, I know what movie I'm watching this weekend. 😅
@LuisDiazArtist9 ай бұрын
True Romance is amazing
@rahuljena57637 ай бұрын
He never even mentioned Spy Game??!! That was such a good film
@rancosteel9 ай бұрын
Tony Scott’s best film was 1983’s The Hunger.
@ericallie272010 ай бұрын
HOW DID I NOT KNOW RIDLEY AND TONY WERE BROTHERS UNTIL RIGHT NOW!!!???
@djarcadian10 ай бұрын
What's really amazing is that they both came into their own independently and both made iconic films (Ridley moreso). When has that happened before unless they both worked together like the Coen Brothers.
@ResistanceQuest10 ай бұрын
The Safdie brothers are a recent example I just heard about. Kind of @@djarcadian
@krisscanlon40516 ай бұрын
Scott was great...QT was dead on on this one...crazy how exact.
@patricktilton53778 ай бұрын
I would love to see a Quentin Tarantino cut of TRUE ROMANCE, where the scenes are put into the order they were written in the screenplay, which was done like RESERVOIR DOGS and PULP FICTION -- out-of-sequence -- yet they all tied together by the end. The theatrical release version of TRUE ROMANCE is terrific -- don't get me wrong -- but when I read the screenplay, it really made me want to see a cut of the film that followed Tarantino's scene-by-scene out-of-sequence method. Maybe, if Tarantino himself doesn't seek out an option to do this, maybe some clever Editor out there in KZbinLand can do a 'fan-edit' of it . . . ?
@David_71713 ай бұрын
I didn’t even know Ridley had a director brother
@shootinputin63329 ай бұрын
Love a lot of Tony Scott's movies. But Crimson Tide is probably #1 for me.
@landofthesilverpath582310 ай бұрын
Come on! No mention of The Hunger!?
@jb82804 ай бұрын
I always had a soft spot for Deja Vu. Just up my alley. Wasn’t Tony prepping a remake of The Warriors before he died? Set in LA? I would have loved to have seen that. If anyone who loves Tony hasn’t seen his BMW short film “Beat the Devil” with Gary Oldman….you might want to check it out. It’s on KZbin. Part of the BMW “The Hire” series.
@christopetkov416810 ай бұрын
not mentioning ‘the hunger’ and ‘man on fire’ is a travesty
@dwc196410 ай бұрын
The bit about _Crimson Tide_ left out Tarantino's contribution to that movie - the argument over which Silver Surfer was the "true" Silver Surfer (Kirby vs Moebius) with a cute callback during the climactic action. Nice bit of script punch-up.
@geoffhoutman15574 ай бұрын
Yes, some very well paid ghost writing there. A Jurgen Prochnow reference too from memory?
@stephensullivan18795 күн бұрын
I looooove Domino
@sabojezles9 ай бұрын
I love DOMINO!
@viperatech5 ай бұрын
80% of QT's brain is inundated with the most obscure film references.
@blindnumber6 ай бұрын
That top gun stuff IS good..right boss
@creasefold19869 ай бұрын
Revenge was 💥
@nope565710 ай бұрын
Tony Scott was a legit filmmaking genius imo. His films are absolute paintings. Dismiss them as action/thriller schlock all you want, but nothing out of Hollywood today looks as gorgeous as say, the opening football in the rain scene of The Last Boy Scout. Thrillers are hardly ever as honed and taut and slick as Crimson Tide. Revenge-O-Matics are hardly ever as soulful and human as Man On Fire. Gothic horror is hardly ever as melancholy and tragic as The Hunger, etc. I'm also a fan of Bay, but Scott is Bay with a human soul. Bay is cynical, which is why I find him so appealing. They're like yin and yang - stylistic brothers but tonal opposites.
@MabDarogan22 ай бұрын
Crimson Tide is an excellent film. And it's not about periods.
@s4mp_founder9 ай бұрын
Deja Vu is his greatest film. Man On Fire second
@geoffhoutman15574 ай бұрын
Seen it before
@raheemhamilton862414 күн бұрын
To be honest I like Tony over Ridley. If I was an Actor of the late 80s early 90s I would work more with Tony Scott. I love his work in film amazing action film director.
@darj6177 ай бұрын
They should rename the bridge he jumped off after him.
@geoffhoutman15574 ай бұрын
Its in the opening of HEAD, that Monkees? flick
@jackbryan46765 ай бұрын
Time has proven that Tony was the genius and Ridley is a hack. And if you can only see one Tony Scott movie see Revenge (1990). It's both brutal and emotionally devastating.
@freebornjohn26879 ай бұрын
If Tarantino decides to stop making films I'd love him to do a detailed multipart documentary on the history of film explaining why in his opinion what was great about the periods and the individual films. I can't think of another person who has the experience, love and enthusiasm for movie making.
@TheOtherKine7 ай бұрын
Why did Tony commit suicide by jumping off that bridge??? Why won't anybody talk about it?
@THEJAM-EATERS9 ай бұрын
Quentin "alllright" Tarantino
@carsonpeterson7582 ай бұрын
I would like to se Tarantino give his thoughts on Michael bay