{"id":6331,"date":"2009-08-16T16:56:07","date_gmt":"2009-08-16T15:56:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=6331"},"modified":"2009-08-16T17:05:08","modified_gmt":"2009-08-16T16:05:08","slug":"inglourious-basterds","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2009\/08\/16\/inglourious-basterds\/","title":{"rendered":"Inglourious Basterds"},"content":{"rendered":"
Imagine if Sergio Leone<\/a> and Francois Truffaut<\/a> co-directed The Dirty Dozen<\/a> after someone had sprinkled LSD on their lunchtime pasta and you’ll get a good idea of Quentin Tarantino’s latest film.<\/p>\n Set in its own alternative universe, it boldly reinvents the traditional war movie as a stylish revenge western whilst also paying deep reverence to cinema itself.<\/p>\n It will almost certainly divide audiences and critics, but this, for me, was a significant return to form for the writer and director.<\/p>\n Tarantino is one of those rare\u00a0film-makers\u00a0who became famous as a modern day auteur in the 1990s and it is worth recapping his career to date, to get a gauge of where this fits in to his career.<\/p>\n With his debut Reservoir Dogs<\/a> (1992) he exploded on to the scene with a stunning heist movie that marked him out as a major talent with a particular ear for dialogue and an appetite for shocking violence.<\/p>\n Pulp Fiction<\/a> (1994) not only built on the success of his debut but managed to become one of the defining films of the decade: it won the Palme d’Or; grossed over $200 million world wide; revitalised careers; spawned a raft of imitators and became a cultural phenomenon.<\/p>\n Jackie Brown<\/a> (1997) perhaps could never live up to the acclaim and success of Pulp Fiction but it contains some of his best and most mature work, especially the performances of Pam Grier and Robert Forster.<\/p>\n Kill Bill Vol 1<\/a> (2003) and Kill Bill Vol 2<\/a> (2004) was long, drawn out revenge epic with Uma Thurman as an assassin that featured some brilliant sequences but felt like one film spread out too thinly over two.<\/p>\n The Grindhouse<\/a> (2007) project was a double bill homage to 70’s exploitation cinema with Robert Rodriguez making the zombie horror ‘Planet Terror<\/a>‘ and Tarantino making the stalker drama ‘Death Proof<\/a>‘.<\/p>\n It flopped at the box office, which resulted in it being released as two separate films and thus ultimately defeating the point of being a double bill.<\/p>\n His work in that was mixed, with dull sequences with annoyingly verbose female characters contrasted with an underrated turn from Kurt Russell as the villain and a thrilling climax.<\/p>\n All of this brings us to Inglourious Basterds<\/a>, a project that Tarantino has been developing on and off for years, which\u00a0finally went in to production last autumn.<\/p>\n It is a World War II story (with significant chunks of history rewritten for effect) which involves a large ensemble cast of characters, who are slowly drawn into a tale of revenge.<\/p>\n There is a young Jewish woman (Melanie Laurent<\/a>) who escapes the slaughter of her family by a ‘Jew hunting’ Nazi (Christophe Waltz<\/a>); a group of Nazi-hunting commandos known as ‘The Basterds’ led by a Southern lieutenant (Brad Pitt<\/a>); a British agent (Michael Fassbender<\/a>) behind enemy lines; a Nazi war hero (Daniel Bruhl<\/a>) who has become a film star; an German actress double agent (Diane Kruger<\/a>) and the Nazi high command of Hitler (Martin Wuttke<\/a>) and Goebbels (Sylvester Groth<\/a>).<\/p>\nInglorious Basterds<\/a><\/strong> is an insane but deeply satisfying World War II spaghetti western.<\/p>\n