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Why I Love Inglourious Basterds
dronkmunk | 11:43 PM on 08.24.2009 6 comments




Ever since the age of 12 when I tricked my grandmother into taking me to the theater to see Pulp Fiction, I have
been a fan of Quentin Tarantino; however plagued I have been with doubts about his actual talent level ever
since its follow-up, Jackie Brown. While that film has only appreciated with age, when I first saw it I
wondered if he would ever be able to attain the greatness of Pulp Fiction ever again. The Kill Bill films and
Death Proof were dumb fun, and never aspired to any higher goal than that, but to me they lacked what I
would call The Tarantino Charm (Kill Bill 2 had its moments for me, though). This is why I am beyond thrilled to
report that his latest film, a revisionist World War II shoot-em-up called Inglourious Basterds, is indeed a
glorious return to form for the greatest director to emerge in the last 15 years.

I don't know what it is about his style, but Tarantino's movies always make me feel like I am watching
something that was made 30 years ago, and in a good way. I think it has to do with the lighting that he uses,
as well as tricks such as the accidentally-on-purpose film blemishes that were found throughout Grindhouse.

The trademark dialogue is back too; the characters don't necessarily talk like real people, however they do talk
like characters in movies should. He even finds a way to show off his genius by shoehorning in a few
references to 1940's pop-culture, reminiscent of the table full of gangsters sitting around ruminating on
Madonna in Reservoir Dogs. As a matter of fact, if Inglorious Basterds recalls any of Tarantino's earlier work,
it would be that film.

Basterds opens with a French peasant farmer chopping wood in an idyllic farmland while his daughter dries
clothes on a nearby clothesline. She is alerted by the sound of an approaching Nazi Caravan, and from then
forward the film achieves a level of tension that does not relent until the beginning of the next chapter, of
which there are five. This tension often returns though, and is rampant throughout Basterds. It is most thick in
scenes that have the involved characters sitting at tables and speaking quietly; voices, for the most part, are
raised only in the films few moments of celebration.



Tarantino continues the fascination with blondes he's seemingly had since Jackie Brown, centering the film
around the sublimely beautiful Melanie Laurent. Laurent plays Shoshana Dreyfus, an escaped Jew living under
an assumed name in Nazi-occupied France, and whose movie theater the Nazis want to use for the climatic
premiere of their latest propaganda film Nation's Pride. In another subplot that converges with all of the others
that the film offers up, Shoshana is relentlessly courted by the film's star, Fredrick Zoller, who happens to also
be a Nazi war hero himself.

The character of Shoshana is more central to the plot even than the eponymous Nazi-hunting Basterds (led by
an hilariously scene-chewing Brad Pitt as Aldo "The Apache" Raine), who get sort of get shuffled off the side
and are barely tangential to the plot. This works however because it turns Inglorious Basterds into a very
different movie than you expect going in, and the results are a pleasant surprise to say the least.
Consequently, when the Basterds are on screen, they quite literally steal the show.



Christolph Waltz portrays the film's most repulsively alluring character, Nazi detective Col. Hans Landa, with a
terrifying smugness. His presence on screen will cause many to shift in their seats; no matter how pleasant
his demeanor or how much he smiles, he has an underlying menace that simply cannot be concealed.

QT even sneaks in some effective stunt casting: see if you can identify who is behind the two disembodied
voices heard in the film. Also amusing is the cameo by Mike Myers, playing a British Officer (imagine a rejected
Austin Powers character) who briefs Michael's Fassbender's film critic-turned-spy while Winston Churchill
sits in a corner and looks on silently. It is a very effective scene that, like many in Inglorious Basterds (and
Tarantino films in general), stop the story completely without slowing the film down. All in the name of
providing exposition to give the following scenes more meaning.

And Basterds is Quentin Tarantino's most meaningful and sophisticated film yet. Nation's Pride is a film-within-
a-film that seems to consist of nothing but a Nazi sniper in a tower taking head-shot after head-shot at
defenseless American Soldiers. The fictional audience simply laps up the display of gratuitous violence, not
unlike the audience that I sat in the theater with did during the film's ultra violent feel-good climax. It's at this
moment that Inglourious Basterds poses a question about violence-as-entertainment that seems like it's barely
meant to register; don't blame yourself for having too much fun to think about it.

Grade: A



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5 comments | showing # 1 to 5
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Samuel Dillinger's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/24/2009 23:50
Samuel Dillinger
All you needed to write that it is awesome because they shoot Hitler's face off
Hamza CTZ Aziz's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/25/2009 00:52
Hamza CTZ Aziz
Basterds was fucking fantastic. Everyone needs to see it
ajaxender's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/25/2009 03:48
ajaxender
I loved this movie. That being said, I kind of feel that a few characters deserved another scene or two. I dont think its a spoiler to say that most of the characters end up pretty dead, since it is a Tarantino film, but I just felt like some of them had potential for more. Regardless, awesome awesome movie!
Knivy's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/25/2009 04:33
Knivy
I loved it... i and I haven't even watched it yet!
RonBurgandy2010's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/25/2009 06:34
RonBurgandy2010
Please tell me that isn't your computer in the header.
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