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The fact that he has a stutter actually says a lot about his character. It indicates that he’s a much better actor than he gives himself credit for. Controlling a bad stutter takes a lot of voice training and concentration. Rick may constantly put himself down or belittle his career, but he’s got a lot more skill than he realizes.
My Uncle who I loved (God rest his soul and may I see him again one day) was a Korean War Vet and talked just like this pair. He would have been 39 in 1969 and he said "EYE-talian" all the time. My Aunt he married was EYE-talian. I keep his flag in my livingroom and I sure miss him every day.
@@igotvaccinated2816This is an outtake they decided to leave in. Leo cried to his friend Brad about growing old and only hired by Italian directors (Scorsese, Tarantino)
@@willsk7068 Nice! Haha I was called "Big Pimpin" but for the worst reason. I had major acne everywhere on my face including my neck. Someone called them "Pimps" short for Pimples & than just my name became "Big Pimpin" it was terrible but I never folded when being called that Lol
The "don't cry in front of the Mexicans" line was a sign of respect. Mexicans generally are very macho and manly, and would think less of seeing man cry, especially in public. Cliff wanted to help Rick keep his dignity in the eyes of people he considered to be real men.
Exactly! Some people considered that line as “racist” (big shock) but it’s actually the opposite. He knows Mexicans are very macho and would lose respect for Rick if they see him crying on another man’s shoulder.
@Skante Warrior, Ese. I don't find this line offensive but at first i really tought he said that caus he was racist (no that i give a shit racist characters make me laugh)
One thing I love is how these two live completely different lifestyles and it never becomes an issue, it's never hinted that it was an issue, and it's never brought up or mentioned by anybody else throughout the movie
Tarantino has said the seed for the relationship between Rick and Cliff (actor and stuntman) came during the filming of The Hateful Eight when he would sit back and watch Kurt Russell and his stuntman interact between takes. Burt Reynold/Hal Needham was another actor/stuntman pair Tarantino drew a lot of inspiration from
Brad's character works for Leo's though. He's his flunky; he only gets jobs because of him. You try to frame it as true friendship but it's more like earning your keep for the boss. He says it himself, "I'm your driver, your gopher."
I think my one major complaint with this movie is I wish Rick and Cliff had like an hour more of scenes together. They barely get 15 minutes together in the whole movie.
Exactly. Tarantino said it was like Paul Newman and Robert Redford yet there are no scenes of them having a reason to be friends especially when Cliff Boothe is Rick's bitch. The part where they drink Margaritas would be a good scene but it gets glossed over.
I just realized the sign behind them says “oldest in Hollywood” sort of reflects Rick realizing he’s old and his glory years are behind him. Fuck I love this movie
Gosh, I love that car. From start to finish, I just kept staring at it. Such a fantastic film. I love Leo's character and how he doesn't give a shit and continues to carry on. That's true strength. 2:11 gets me everytime.
I especially love the white Buick Riviera at 2:39. What a beauty! I remember seeing one for the first time in the fall of 1962 and having my nose glued to the showroom window on my way to school. American car design was at its absolute peak in the sixties, but, for reasons beyond me, took a horrible turn for the worse in the mid-seventies.
As a Mexican kid, who grew up in a Mexican gang neighborhood, who was sent to Mexico to live....never cry in front of Mexicans. We eat weakness for sustenance.
@@ftnsbcsk8t it's toxic bruh. Don't get me wrong, I grew up under that, but id never raise my kid that way. I'll teach him how to be tough, but not gonna put up with that culture. Mainly because everyone I've fought whose had that superiority complex has lost, then that's when the weenies start pulling guns on you.
"Take me home Cliff, just take me home"😂😂 True compassionate buddy! Mrs. Robinson playing while cliff glared at pussycat was a slight nod to the movie, the graduate. Older women with a younger fella. 😎✌️🌻
Being a African- American man who grew up in south central Los Angeles where there is a lot of Mexicans and Mexicans-Americans or Salvadoran or Guatemalans etc they look at that as weakness .. That’s why he said not to cry infront of them ..
@@imnotcreativeenoughtothink9011 that’s what I was thinking, like how far did we stray from alpha concepts that now crying is seemed as weakness in certain cultures. That’s every damn culture besides the lgbt one I think cause even in the feminist groups it’s seemed as a sign of weakness that they ESPECIALLY want to keep away from men. The fact that he says Mexicans just adds that natural inner culture controlled competitive racism that isn’t really bad but funny because everyone’s got it. If they were white the joke wouldn’t have hit as hard, like it would have been seen more as a friendly thing than more of a friendly funny thing. To me it just gives it that little extra edge of “we cant give them anything for them to cling to”, as if they can use the crying as a weapon in the future or something or maybe even for typical dinner conversations 😂
Since i can't see your phenotype I can't assume that you are actually an African american like zimbawns or kenyans. A large percentage of ppl of color that live in the Americas are from the Americas .Link to my 2nd channel is non my channel.
Their acting is so loose and convincing in this scene. When Leo screams “I gotta do FUCKING Italian goddamn MOVIES that’s the FUCKING problem.” And Brads immediate reaction to the outburst is just so compelling to me I get goosebumps.
@@Lifeoftheparty8290 It's funny because Italian Westerns have aged far better when compared to its American counterpart. Hell Tarantino's all time favorite movie is a Spaghetti Western. So what does that tell you?
It was Summer, there was no Covid, a starry night down here in FL and I saw it on a Thursday night before it's release the next day, and I came out of the theater so moved I couldn't believe it. The film was filled with heart. Could not wait to see it again. Ended up seeing it 5 times at the theater and twice now at home. Funny, moving, memorable lines and characters. An all time favorite now.
As a Mexican with an extremely Mexican father, I can say with certainty that this scene says a lot of about the Machismo that is extremely prevalent in Mexico’s society. I can’t say if it’s a bad or good thing but at the very least this made me laugh a little
Don't forget that other scene where Rick comes out in his robe holding the iced margarita in a blender trying to shoo away Manson's hippie henchmen and making the tables turn 🤣
@@tyr8264 Hey, where are you from? What country, I mean!! He just meant he's a washed up, has been actor (TV star). He thinks the offer to work in Italian Spaghetti Westerns is beneath him, that's all!!
I loved seeing these two great actors on screen together. Quentin always brings the best together. Leo, Brad, Pacino, Margot Robbie, Kurt Russell, Luke Perry, Dakota Fanning, Bruce Dern, Timothy Olyphant, and Maya Hawke. Everybody comes together for Quentin, Scorsese, and Denis Vellnueve.
Tarantino captured the 70's like no one ever has and his fantasy ending was better than what really happened we don't need to be reminded of that, this was good entertainment and the acting couldn't have been better.
0:22 I just love how he said "Told me my goddamned truth that's what he told me." and then the crying 👏😭lmao I love you Leo Amazing Leo&Brad, Amazing scene, Amazing movie 😍
I really think the character relationships, scenery, the great cast and detailed writing all make this film a modern masterpiece, I haven’t seen such a Hollywood movie in so long and it’s about hollywood
Leo has gone from Wallstreet stock broker to Wilderness survivor now portraying a frustrated actor. And he does it so well. Who knew that it took a great actor to play a bad actor. That’s hilarious lol
I like the fact that Rick Dalton is complaining about being in a Italien film...but look at Spaghetti Western now. Clint Eastwood wouldn't be the same if it wasn't for Italian western.
that's an understatement. Rawhide was ending and Eastwood's career was about to stall out. Leone scooped him for the Stranger Spaghetti Trilogy and not only saved his career but turned him into a bonafied megastar.
We don't even appreciate Spaghetti Westerns though. With the exception of Sergio Leone and the Django series every Spaghetti Western is Birdemic level garbage.
@@trashboat2687 Yes but that's my entire point. Today we don't appreciate Spaghetti Westerns, we appreciate Sergio Leone films because he is a good filmmaker. The rest of Spaghetti Westerns are all huge schlock.
The strange thing about this scene is Rick Dalton seems to just disappear for the last 25 seconds of this scene, and it's just about Cliff Booth's spiritual connection with the Manson girl.
Yeah good point. I also think it’s about Cliffs sixth sense. Which I really like that Tarantino added in. Rick is worried about his own issues. But Cliff zeroes right in on them. It comes with being a vet. Cliffs a warrior. He’s killed men with his bare hands. He knew something was up with them, and then he’s sees pussycat.
You can feel the beautiful warm smog, with that golden sunlight glittering through, that was late '60s/early '70s LA before the smog got unbearable ... and started getting much better by the late 90s!
Man if I had a time machine and could go back and tell him how those I-talian westerns will reinvent not just the western but the whole film industry as well.
It was like saying, "Don't argue in front of the help." He wanted Rick to keep up his appearances of being a television star in front of the valet drivers
"How many you've seen it? One? Two?" After reading the book and learning that Cliff was a movie buff and actually seen a lot more films (specially Foreign Films) than Rick makes this scene even better now.
Brad Pitt is the coolest, smoothest, actor expanded rolls. He is the same age as me. One thing I have that he never be. At 17 years old I was in Marine Corps boot camp. Ohhhhhhh raaaaaaaaaa