Quentin Tarantino: Directing Brad Pitt Is Like ‘Watching a Movie,’ He’s a ‘Different Breed of Man’
For Tarantino, trying to sum up the “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” Oscar winner is “like describing starshine.”
For Tarantino, trying to sum up the “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” Oscar winner is “like describing starshine.”
With one project left before Quentin Tarantino says goodbye to feature filmmaker, IndieWire looks back at the many unmade ideas the director has cooked up over the years.
DiCaprio is back in the awards mix for his turn as a flustered astronomy professor in “Don’t Look Up.” Here, look back on his 11 best performances.
“There’s a lot of feet in a lot of good directors’ movies. That’s just good direction,” Tarantino said.
Quentin Tarantino’s teachers viewed his screenwriting as “a defiant act of rebellion” in class.
Tarantino might not be ready to show movies like “Pulp Fiction” or “Inglourious Basterds” to his one-year-old, but “Kill Bill” could be an option a few years down the line.
Tarantino’s interviews have been obnoxious. And they’re a disservice to his excellent book.
“I’m really fucking tired of white men in Hollywood trying to tell me who Bruce Lee was,” Shannon Lee writes.
Tarantino understands why Bruce Lee’s daughter, Shannon, is upset with “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.” But she’s the only valid critic.
Tarantino isn’t even thinking about his last movie right now because he’s “doing other things.”
Some of the mysteries surrounding Brad Pitt’s stuntman Cliff Booth are cleared up once and for all.
Dakota Fanning landed the “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” part Tarantino originally eyed for Lawrence.