Hi everyone! Promoting our films is as difficult task as creating them. So, we want to ask you that, if you like our documentaries about cinema, please, help us by sharing them on your social networks, writing a comment and subscribing to the channel. Okolo Kino will be eternally grateful to you and will reward you with more quality content! If you want to go one step further, you can subscribe to our patreon or become part of our community of sponsors on RU-vid. Patreon: www.patreon.com/okolokinotube If you like the music of our film and you are also a creator who wants to improve the quality of your work, you can also help us by subscribing to an audio library by following the links below to be able to use music without fear of being banned due to copyright problems . Music by Epidemic Sound and Artlist www.epidemicsound.com/referral/rk02yz artlist.io/LCT-322572
I have just done so, how you are not a massive channel already is beyond me. I will be sharing you to all the RU-vid content creators I know too, so they can give you a boost on their communities. You need 'blowing up' in the better sense of the modern vernacular 😁
What does your name for the channel mean? I think your channel name might be setting people back. Just my view. I'm not trying to be rude in anyway. It's just that your work is so well done, and I watched hours of it before I subscribed, because I don't understand what the name means. Don't change the name, just give a 3 second thing at the beginning telling what in means. I see Kino alot, but I have no clue what it means, and Okolo is new to me as well. I'm sorry if I offend from my ignorance, I am only trying to help. You can delete my comment if you like.
It's so awesome that, from the very start, Quentin is easily recognizable as the Quentin we know today. The power of just being yourself and never quitting is inspiring.
"Being yourself" can be as brutal as it is rewarding. This is why it's critical to surround oneself with people with similar goals, if not completely different paths to arrive there.
Plain and simple, Tarantino is just my favorite. It’s partly generational, but he makes movies you want to watch. Fun, funny, clever, exciting, impactful.
****EDIT**** Some people think I meant this comment to be sarcastic. I honestly didn't. I am a QT fan, and it was cool hearing about Jackie Brown from this perspective. Here is my original comment: "That's fascinating. I had no idea that the black community had an affinity for that movie. That is so cool. You've taught me something I didn't know."
@@johndalton3180 I sense sarcasm? Jackie Brown is literally a love song to black cinema, starring the Queen herself miss Foxy Brown. Of course the movie was very popular with black people.
@@johndalton3180 You don’t need to be so damn rude. The commenter is simply expressing how beloved the movie was by the black community… your petulance and sarcasm is not needed.
@@Paul-sl9zm Forget that idiot. He’s another clueless white person who takes issues when black people have the nerve to talk about anything black-related.
For a lot of creatives, me included, Quentin is more than just a film director. He's an artist that made his dreams come to life in an industry where most ppl dont get to live their dreams out. Ironic. Yes. Stoned. Yes.
I'm not even halfway through this video yet but I can say that your work is masterfully done. You're editing is incredible and you do small things that many viewers may not even notice but make a huge difference
Tarantino is easily one of the best if not one of he is THE best director still going today. He has it all. Visuals, character depth, dialogue and the best soundtracks. Love this guy and really hope he doesnt retire at 10 movies.
What makes QT, Scorsese, and Guy Richie my 3 favorites of all time is their writing. Their dialog is so natural, yet surreal at the same time, which most of the more exciting time's of our everyday lives are. Their movies feel like real life that's being watched my an omniscient audience.
I swear to the 'lil christmas baby Jesus....those 3 are my EXACT top 3. (I like Fuqua a lot as well & probably John Witherspoon my 'wild card' fav (if i had to choose an "alternate" for this dream team, id have Nolan on the bench - lol) I've went back & forth on this, but QT is DEF in my #1 spot #2-4 = Scorsese, Ritchie, & Fuqua (interchangeable) #5 Witherspoon *alternate = Nolan
Richie co wrote his best movies with Matthew Vaughan , and you could really see the difference when they went their own ways and Richie had a whole string of duds (swept away, revolver , rocknrolla) where Vaughan had hit after hit. I think Ritchie must have skills, cause the gentleman was a return to form but vaughan definitely helped him in a big way in the early days.
I drove out in a snowstorm to see Django on opening day in the UK. If Quentin Tarantino has anything to do with a film, my butt is in the seat. This documentary is amazing!!
I watched all 3 parts of your documentary and I LOVE IT! This is the definitive Tarantino doc! You nailed it! I've seen so many QT docs, but none of them compare to this beautiful masterpiece. Congrats!
Thank you, Jon, for your warm words! This work was very special for us since we are true QT fans! If you enjoyed our doc, it would be great if you could share it with your friends in your social networks. We just have not any idea about how to make it viral, but still hoping that it will happen some day ;)
Quentin is the greatest ever. His story is incredible. He did all of this by himself, and of course with the love an d support of his mother. It was smart to move to L.A. too.
I think your journalistic and concise documentaries are a breath of fresh air, in a space filled with "media production". It took me 8 hours of viewing. Not a moment wasted. Thank you.
HAHaha Clooney had already acted in movies. He was a HUGE star already at the time because he was the lead in the highest rated drama on primetime TV on NBC for almost a decade beforehand.
@@robertfrost8264 ER Premiered in 1994 and from dusk till Dawn came out and 96.. a decade ? 🤣🤣🤣 and before that he did small TV movies and shows that never took off.. big Tv star maybe by 96 but not until dusk til dawn was he a leading man in Hollywood pictures.. please know what your talking before you make a know it all comment that’s completely and stupidly wrong 🤣🤣🤣
This is unequivocally, and without doubt, the BEST Quentin Tarantino documentary on RU-vid. That's my opinion. We watched this twice last night with friends who are all fans of this genius work. Me personally, I could never get enough of From Dusk Till Dawn [part 1], and RDogs, and if I was given a choice having somethings to take if stuck on an deserted island - shipwrecked, I would choose a selection of his movies and a portable player to watch them on. So both thumbs up, and much respect for a this, your really superb insightful documentary, which gave a great look at how he made his way and left his mark.
Dusk Til Dawn was EVERYTHING to me in highschool. Came out when I was in 9th grade; had everything. Borrow, comedy, action, drama... VAMPIRES.... Still on my top 25 favorite movies !
One little note is that quentin says he didnt have writer’s block on inglorious basterd’s before kill bill he just said he wrote too much and didnt have a structure so wrote kill bill to get more grounded back into a story he understood
who, or what is Okolo Kino? please share. Earlybird3 is aka as Phil Early a real person. I see 1. you have made a number of documentaries, Scoresese being one of your subjects. In those do you pronouce his his name correctly Score sez ee? I've not watched your part two of Tarantino doc, but right off the bat I have wondered if Tarantino and Um Thurman had a thing, sex. Doesn't matter if they did or not as they would have been *consenting* adults. What Tarantino has done his films matter, and he is a fascinating genius level person. So once again thank you for your work.
Wow, thank you for for your nice words. I hope you will enjoy the second and third volume of this documentary too. If you do, please, give us a favor sharing it with friends you think would like it also. Thank you again, and will wait for your comments under other biographies too!
Damn! Pulp Fiction, Shawshank Redemption, and Forrest Gump in the same year... Those were the days. I guess people now prefer to watch soap operas on Netflix instead of good movies....
@@cshepard09 It sure does seem like all the big hit movies these days all come from comic book superhero stories. The decline of popular music is even more egregious though, where the tools to make music is better than ever yet is mainly used to produce lowest-common-denominator junk.
It's a damn good thing his mother never listened to those teachers who wanted to put him on sedatives. He's got a form of ADHD, and he's brilliant. One of my film heroes. I hope he starts writing novels after he's done with his last film. It's gonna be weird not expecting him to make any more movies. QT's 10th and final film "The Film Critic" should be incredibly bittersweet. Edit: Great documentary! Can't wait to watch the other 2 volumes now.
Thanks for your words of support! That we have more subs is a matter of work, persistence, and great viewers who share our films on their social networks ;)
I dont get how such well put up documentary has so few views. It is what RU-vid documentaries should be accurate well made and entertaining just pure kino.
Thank you for your comment, stay with us and watch for updates! who knows, maybe you will witness the growth of our channel! If you want to support us, join our Patreon or become a sponsor on RU-vid. Any feedback is important for us!
When I turned on the video I expected a 10-20 minute filler for my day, and I realized this to be a full fledged documentary in 3 parts! Wow, I went through the 1st episode with fascination, definitely will load up the next ones as soon as I have an hour to spare, thank you for your hard work!
Love Tarantino. The post-post modernist writer/director who never tries to convince you you're watching anything but a movie. 'Pulp' and 'Django' are two of my favorites. And you know when a film (or tv show episode) is classic when you can rewatch it at least once a year or so and still enjoy it.
Thank you Andrew! If you like our works, do not hesitate to support us on Patreon or become a sponsor on RU-vid! It helps us to create the better docs! Stay tuned and watch for updates
You have just put in a super entertaining video (and in a very Quentinesque way) everything that I have gathered over the years following every detail of Quentin in his early years. Keep up the great work man! I have to share this!
As someone who absorbs everything about any auteur director, this video has some footage I've never found before. Kudos. And thanks for giving me new adventures to hunt down.
Tarantino's mother, however, and Pam Grier and every other woman she voices, does not have that accent. So she's probably great in the sack, though, I don't know that it's good enough that she should be the one to do these voices.
Can you make one of these documentaries series on James Cameron? He had a similar rise to fame in the late 70s and early 80s. Like Tarantino, Cameron never went to film school. Was just a naturally gifted dude meant to make movies! Awesome video by the way!
It would be so hard to do one on Cameron that didn’t have a ton of accusations. It’s like a lawsuit waiting to happen. The guy makes great work but has been accused of being like a certain brutal dictator.
I'm very pleased to find out there's two more parts to this documentary. I thought it was a definitive work on Tarantino and a very enjoyable watch. Never did care for NATURAL BORN KILLERS and now I know why. I always loved TRUE ROMANCE which was from his earlier days with an unforgettable fight scene in a motel room but surprised it was directed by Tony Scott who did MAN ON FIRE with Denzel, his finest performance IMO. Scott was a very fine director and I'm pleased he had that connection to Tarantino. The writing just leaps off the screen.
this is a great piece. the only thing I don’t care for is the QT impression, which feels a bit hyperbolic-but that’s a stylistic choice, so that’s just my preference.
I don't think anyone could be complemented more than the author saying his rewrite of his book is great FYI I love to spend a night with Tarantino and his music library he as got some great taste
Finally I get to be in the first group of ppl to subscribe to a channel that is amazing and will surely be 1M someday soon..great job and awesome voice over brother
@@OkoloKino thank you for your amazing attention to detail and the immense amount of research you must have done, and again the voice over commentary is really quality brother , I can honestly say that I think Quentin Tarantino himself would appreciate this video just on the passion you two obviously share or whomever wrote this and did the research... Thanks again for this man watching for more stuff from you in the future
@@mattketchabaw3907 Thank you so much! Yes, it would be great to get some feedback from Quentin. The research, script, editing, etc. is 100% made by us. The 4th, definitive volume, will be done just if and Tarantino wants it because we will need his participation. So, if someone knows how to contact him, welcome to help us =)
@@OkoloKino I would LOVE to see that come to fruition brother... I know that basically the number of your views/subs dictates who will do an interview with a RU-vidr , which is understandable but u are criminally under rated, if only u could somehow get someone in his circle to just see the sheer love and respect and research and appreciation for his life/work, if he knew I'm sure he would give you the time with him to make this series about Quentin Tarantino himself the BEST documentary/bio that has ever been made .. it's already amazing and informative and very watchable with not one complaint from me who is a die hard fan of the man , if u get that interview, I really feel that you have done the perfect series on the subject but even if you don't I would recommend this and have to everyone I know that has even seen one of his movies , your truly an amazing team over there and as I said before , Quentin would love this love letter to his life and work.. PLEASE!! if anyone reading this can get his attention, make it happen ... This channel deserves it and clearly loves films like only ppl like Quentin can and do!! Cheers and I will always be looking for that conclusion to make it 11 out of 10 rating, and a 6th star thanks for all your hard work again Okolo Kino
All 3 of these are so well made that even my brother watched it , he’s not a fan of documentaries he liked it a lot as well , the opening to this is very cool as well you kept it plain simple but yet filled with good information
How is this amazing channel only at 8k subs when 250k ppl have seen this? Anyone who viewed this and is reading this right now who hasn't subbed should be ashamed for knowing how amazing this content is and yet can't be bothered to support this channel for subbing even tho it doesn't cost a penny to do so.. and to the creator of this content I say.. you are truly a blessed and gifted person/team and please don't quit your channel and thank you so much for your amazing eye to detail and your gifted commentary
What a crock...4 rooms was fantastic....seen it a thousand times. QTs section was great...no doubt about it but the entire movie is carried by Tim's over the top animated performance.
I wish that samuel L jackson would've gotten that part for reservoir dogs... If you go back and listen to the guy lines that got the part they sound like perfect lines for sam and in my opinion samuel L would've delivered better. And it would've been nice to see tarantino's number 1 guy in tarantino's very first movie
Nah, I think it’s better that we were introduced to him working with Tarantino as a main character in Pulp Fiction. Their collaboration started with a bang.
I think the point is, Reservoir Dogs wasn't a star studded cast. The success and skill of Tarantino helped the popularity of those actors in which they became stars later. Anyone in a Tarantino film, because it was a Tarantino film, helped make an actors name well known and got them more work. 31:21 Peter Gabriel music from the movie Birdy.
Well, you can’t say they were nobodies either. Don’t forget that Tarantino wasn’t the Hollywood legend he is today. Today he can make a call and get anyone, hell, big actors and Oscar nominees call him now to check if they can be in his next film. Back then, he was little Quentin, trying to make his first movie. Young directors with no significant credits, can’t easily get anyone above an acting school. So no matter where Keitel’s career was at, he was still a star and probably not easy to impress. Roth wasn’t huge, but he was a BAFTA Nominee with ten movies on his belt by then, Buscemi had twice as many, and while everyone involved benefited, they were still way beyond Tarantino’s reach at the time. For a first time director, scoring one good actor with a good filmography is a huge deal, let alone this many.
@@alexman378 You're right. I wasn't thinking of Harvey as much as the other guys, but they weren't first time actors eithers, as you mentioned. I just think they weren't "stars", but being in a Tarantino movie helped them becomes known as "stars". Even though this was Tarantino's first film, it was the quality of the script that attracted good actors to it, with the help of Harvey of course and established that Tarantino was going to be known as the talent he is.