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When you realize Tarantino is mocking other directors 

Lancelloti
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#ingloriousbasterds #tarantino #onceuponatime
In this video essay, we delve into the concept of metacinema through Quentin Tarantino's masterpiece, 'Inglourious Basterds'. Explore how Tarantino's unique cinematic style transcends traditional storytelling, blending historical fiction with bold narrative choices and self-aware filmmaking techniques. Discover the layers of cinematic homage, genre subversion, and cultural commentary that make 'Inglourious Basterds' a prime example of Tarantino's unparalleled vision and the transformative power of metacinema in modern filmmaking.

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1 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 316   
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
I hope you enjoyed my third video. Just started this channel, subscribe pls! (So you can say you were here from the start) I have many videos prepared for the upcoming days :) follow me: twitter.com/LancellotiFilms/with_replies
@chuckstehney2783
@chuckstehney2783 2 месяца назад
Operation Kino
@rukeyser
@rukeyser Месяц назад
You a jewel .
@damjanbabic6768
@damjanbabic6768 25 дней назад
What's there to enjoy about a clickbait, misleading video? Genuine question
@rukeyser
@rukeyser 25 дней назад
@@damjanbabic6768 i hate clickbait titles, but this guy aint that. He *is* prepared to go deep and way back in his analysis of the subjects he chooses. I go heavy deep & real on *my* informed passions, so that's fine w me. When someone like that is looking at Tarantino - who is also a heavy & deep film fan - that means Lancelloti is gonna see more than i do. When he's discussed things i *do* know well, it's been good - so altho i dont know Tarantino that well, Im happy to listen to someone who does.
@tangibleblockofwisdom6386
@tangibleblockofwisdom6386 12 дней назад
Thankyou very much
@klimbamimbs8934
@klimbamimbs8934 3 месяца назад
I'm not sure how this video ended up in my recommended section, but I'm genuinely impressed. It was a very good watch, and I hadn't even realized how new this channel is. Great content
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
Thanks! You have no idea how crucial it is for us new channels to get feedback like this. I'm stoked you enjoyed my video :)
@deezovaries4263
@deezovaries4263 Месяц назад
I subbed too !
@willdenoble1898
@willdenoble1898 13 дней назад
Subbed as well
@ExtremeFilmEnthusiast
@ExtremeFilmEnthusiast 3 месяца назад
Great analysis. For me the biggest role reversal in "Inglorious Basterds" is the basement scene. Nazi Major is actually portrayed as admirable and extremely brave. After Fasbender's character points 3 fingers wrong, Major realizes that there is something cheesy, but does not choose the safe approach - calling the backup and confronts the basterds to the end. Even takes the inevitable death with dignity.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
Thanks, bro! you are my first comment ever haha. I love that scene because essentially it's Tarantino playing with our expectation of what we should see in a character like that.
@frankfort4717
@frankfort4717 2 месяца назад
@@lancelloti.first comment you had wow this will be history
@ExtremeFilmEnthusiast
@ExtremeFilmEnthusiast 2 месяца назад
@@lancelloti. congrats, bro, just now realized that your channel kinda blew up 😀great work and keep more incoming!
@MajorCoolD
@MajorCoolD Месяц назад
True, though one could argue wheter it was brave or foolish though. :) However I DO like the fact that Terentino did try to portray the 'bad guys' as more than just two dimensional cardboard cutouts. I myself was a bit stunned how some of my american friends seemed to lack any self-reflection and failed to see how the Basterds arent really 'the good guys', considering that by their very actions they are war criminals in every sense of the word and by the Geneva Convention(s). And the fact that killing prisoners of war is always bad even if it can be 'justified' (and all sides historically DID engage in that to some extent or another, afterall 'take no prisoners' is technically an order for a Warcrime, but sometimes you simply CAN'T take any prisoners [either due to being behind enemy lines, having no manpower to spare or having no facilities to house said prisoners] and it DID historically happen. War makes Beasts of Men, no matter what flag they are fighting for. However it's even worse if the supposed Soldiers do it for 'sports', like with our Jew Bear. Beating an unarmed prisoner to death with a baseball bat (while his armed buddies around make sure he cant fight back or flee) is pretty barbaric no matter who does it against whom.
@immanuelcunt7296
@immanuelcunt7296 Месяц назад
​@@MajorCoolD Sometimes "good guy" is relative
@dustinwatkins7843
@dustinwatkins7843 Месяц назад
Clickbait, all you're doing is yapping about meta cinema - not how he "mocks" other directors.
@fannepak
@fannepak 25 дней назад
Yeah. Fine analysis on meta cinema. Not getting the roasting angle.
@ivarmh
@ivarmh 21 день назад
Thanks for the warning.
@kobiianardo
@kobiianardo 20 дней назад
thaank you for your service 🫡
@menso3852
@menso3852 19 дней назад
agreed, what exactly does cinema gaining "deeper self-awareness" mean anyway?
@dougdouglass6126
@dougdouglass6126 17 дней назад
Thanks for the heads up. Saved me from wasting any time on this video or this creator.
@danielrafferty4108
@danielrafferty4108 Месяц назад
some great points and analysis here. Even though the title Inglorious Basterds is cribbed from another movie from the seventies one of the things I love about Quentin Tarantino's movies is that they are about exactly what it says on the tin. A reservoir Dog is someone who rats on the police, pulp fiction gives you the definition of the word and structures the story around this, Jackie Brown is about Jackie Brown, Kill Bill is about trying to kill Bill etc. reminds me of going to see The Hateful Eight with my then girlfriend and she was almost nauseous with the inertia of all their bad actions saying: "Did every single character have to be so vicious and evil?" I thought, well yeah. The title spells out for us from the start 😅
@MajorCoolD
@MajorCoolD Месяц назад
I mean you can argue that the soon to be Sheriff is technically not evil and rephrensible by himself, though he was brought up a southern boy and lives in the early post-civil War period. So naturally... well you know? XD
@98loud
@98loud Месяц назад
@@MajorCoolD weird that you give the justification to the literal racist but the black colonel getting revenge against the people who put him and his people in chains doesn't get a pass
@Prikense
@Prikense Месяц назад
@@98loud well, his revenge was very extreme and he still murders people for his own selfish interests either way
@ab4845
@ab4845 Месяц назад
"Jackie Brown is about Jackie Brown, Kill Bill is about trying to kill Bill" You've really uncovered some very deep truths there... No wonder Tarantino's bullshit impresses you...
@wjzav1971
@wjzav1971 Месяц назад
English is not my native language but I think Kill Bill is actually a double meaning. On the one hand, its about Killing Bill. But Kill Bill is also a coloquial term for a hit list. As in, Kiddo works through a list of people she wants to kill.
@MC-bh8ph
@MC-bh8ph Месяц назад
Tarantino is my favorite director but even I suspect that much of what he does is simply because it looks cool or is an homage to something that came before, not everything is a sophisticated meta commentary
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
I think you downplay just how genius these people are at their craft. It takes a VERY learned person to craft these movies in the way that they do. Tarantino lives and breathes cinema, maybe even more than any director ever has.(as proven by his insistence in not only making films, but making his films ABOUT films) If anyone would have a meta commentary on Hollywood and cinema, it would be him.
@Jehosaphet
@Jehosaphet 28 дней назад
This is where I'm at...way perceptive analysis, thoughtful and provocative, but ultimately I think its reaching.
@ryuk5673
@ryuk5673 28 дней назад
​@@lockekappa500 he's not downplaying. And you arent' neccessarily wrong, but I would have to agree that this video did not do a good job at explaining it. Video got close, but overall was making confusing points. And yes, some were reaching... Its not hard to see the metaphor of an audience watching movie within the movie. Clever yes..Genius? not really..in fact i would say its more preditable than clever given Tarantino's history. Satire , yes....sophisticated? not really.
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
@@ryuk5673 I dunno, I think there's as much genius in Tarantino's work as the best directors out there. I don't think anyone else can make the same movies he does.
@ryuk5673
@ryuk5673 28 дней назад
​@@lockekappa500oh sorry, there absolutely 100% is genius in his movies. That i agree! I just meant not in the way the uploader was saying though. Tarantino's genius imo is his seemingly unique ability to transform a relatively normal looking scene of 2 people eating breakfast into some of the most amazing dialogue you've ever heard.
@ivandejesusalvarez9313
@ivandejesusalvarez9313 3 месяца назад
Your analysis of the Bear Jew scene where he beats the Nazi officers head in was superb. You pretty much give me a new perspective on the title of the movie, because you show how very inglorious the Bear Jew is, especially how unheroic his whole angry baseball rant. And your analysis of the cinematic language is spot on. Keep the videos coming, i am glad to subscribe :)
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
Thanks bro! Im glad yoy enjoyed my analysis and got something out of it. Your comment means a lot, especially during these early stages of building this channel. Greetings to you, and I sincerely hope you continue to enjoy my content!
@Angel-Otk
@Angel-Otk 2 месяца назад
Especially his voice cracks when he’s screaming😭🤣it just adds to how phony his grandeur is
@BigUriel
@BigUriel Месяц назад
I think there may be a bit of over-analysing there. The Basterds are not in it for justice or morality, or even to end the war. They are there for revenge. Aldo says so with his introduction, he's specifically looking for Jews to carry out this mission, and his goal is to kill Nazis, not on the open field in large numbers to turn the tide of the war, but in brutal, guerrilla tactics style to make the Nazis *fear* them. That's the whole point, to come across as so sadistic that the Nazi soldiers will have nightmares about being caught by them. The Bear Jew's assault is pure catharsis - for him, for the rest of the Basterds, and largely for the audience who sometimes get a little tired of nuanced villains with strong motives that make us question whether they really are bad people or just making the best they can out of a bad situation, and often get away without truly answering for their crimes - Tarantino gives us the simple satisfaction of seeing a bad guy get brutally beaten to death with a baseball bat.
@BigUriel
@BigUriel Месяц назад
I think there may be a bit of over-analysing there. The Basterds are not in it for justice or morality, or even to end the war. They are there for revenge. Aldo says so with his introduction, he's specifically looking for Jews to carry out this mission, and his goal is to kill Nazis, not on the open field in large numbers to turn the tide of the war, but in brutal, guerrilla tactics style to make the Nazis fear them. That's the whole point, to come across as so sadistic that the Nazi soldiers will have nightmares about being caught by them. The Bear Jew's assault is pure catharsis - for him, for the rest of the Basterds, and largely for the audience who sometimes get a little tired of nuanced villains with strong motives that make us question whether they really are bad people or just making the best they can out of a bad situation, and often get away without truly answering for their crimes - Tarantino gives us the simple satisfaction of seeing a bad guy get brutally beaten to death with a baseball bat.
@BigUriel
@BigUriel Месяц назад
I think there may be a bit of over-analysing there. The Basterds are not in it for justice or morality, or even to end the war. They are there for revenge. Aldo says so with his introduction, he's specifically looking for Jews to carry out this mission, and his goal is to kill Nazis, not on the open field in large numbers to turn the tide of the war, but in brutal, guerrilla tactics style to make the Nazis fear them. That's the whole point, to come across as so sadistic that the Nazi soldiers will have nightmares about being caught by them. The Bear Jew's assault is pure catharsis - for him, for the rest of the Basterds, and largely for the audience who sometimes get a little tired of nuanced villains with strong motives that make us question whether they really are bad people or just making the best they can out of a bad situation, and often get away without truly answering for their crimes - Tarantino gives us the simple satisfaction of seeing a bad guy get brutally beaten to death with a baseball bat.
@okcomics1635
@okcomics1635 Месяц назад
One of the things I like the most about Inglorious Basterds is that it also constitutes a huge F-you to the American reticence to watch movies with subtitles.
@mk-ultramags1107
@mk-ultramags1107 Месяц назад
It should've won the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay too but those said subtitles seem to turn voters off and it's BS. It's as if they thought QT did it simply to be "clever."
@grantapamplecrap
@grantapamplecrap 2 месяца назад
please make more of these, video essays are my jam
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
more are coming soon!
@craigrussell3062
@craigrussell3062 23 дня назад
Practically every Tarantino movie from Kill Bill is built around a pretty simple formula: establish a villain who is so evil, the audience is willing to revel in them receiving the most sadistic torture (a rapist who sold rides on a female coma victim, a guy who goes around hunting women in a deathproof car, Nazis, slaveowners, the Manson family). But because Tarantino's films are so rewatchable, you inevitably realize that the real message is that both the hero and the audience are capable of becoming as evil as the villain; the real evil is in dehumanizing your enemy.
@YohanceToye
@YohanceToye 2 месяца назад
love the subtle transistion at 1:00
@bonder3643
@bonder3643 2 месяца назад
this is a well written video, i hope you continue to upload. you have potential:)
@alloyrocker
@alloyrocker 2 месяца назад
You're definitely reading into this too much. Agreed that these movies subvert your expectations but I don't think Tarantino 'mocks' these films the way you're suggesting. It's merely showing them a mirror. You said Tarantino does this so as to avoid the glorification of war but I'd argue his stylistic violence does exactly that in Inglorious Basterds. The forced comparison with a movie like 1917 which came out years after IB does feel like reaching a bit.
@bastianeilks3899
@bastianeilks3899 Месяц назад
I agree. Inglorious Bastards is all about the joy and vindication of killing people as evil as the Nazis. The Bastards are not portrayed as small and uminpressive to make them less heroic, but rather to make their achievements seem even greater. These aren't some super professional spies, these are just some all-american boys ready to fight evil.
@marqc.9904
@marqc.9904 Месяц назад
Mocking might have been the incorrect term, but I do think that QT is holding a mirror up to the audience at times regarding their interest in war films as propaganda (while still making a "propaganda" esque war film of his own). The film's Bear Jew introduction as well as the ridiculous situation the Basterds find themselves in by the of the film are great examples of this. It's almost like if you remove the soundtrack from a Rocky movie--it's just a bunch of grunting and sweating.
@ab4845
@ab4845 Месяц назад
Are you seriously expecting common sense and logic from a Tarantino fanboy/stan?
@Rongez
@Rongez 28 дней назад
@@ab4845 What fanboy are you talking about? The creator of the video? If that is who you meant, then you don't understand what 'fanboy' means.
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
Tarantino doesn't need to know the exact scene that 1917 will have. He knows that movie will come out already, and already has come out. It's not a stretch if it's within our predictable nature to make movies like this.
@darco3130
@darco3130 2 месяца назад
amazing video, Great editing, not overly long, good pacing, and good argument. You got yourself a new subscriber.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you so much, bro! I'm glad you enjoyed the video, and I hope you continue to enjoy my content :)
@davidbeddoe6670
@davidbeddoe6670 28 дней назад
I find it offensive that someone would compare a WWI film to a WWII film.
@LOBOTOMINIZER
@LOBOTOMINIZER 2 месяца назад
great video essay. I hope you keep making these. great editing.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you! more videos are coming soon
@timewave02012
@timewave02012 19 дней назад
I still like the theory that the film within the film is the commentary, because Inglourious Basterds _didn't_ subvert expectations. It actually captures the 2000s zeitgeist well. See also Downfall (2004) or Valkyrie (2008).
@EnriqueC71
@EnriqueC71 Месяц назад
Did Eli Roth "bear jew" do a tribute to "Hostel" in the tunnel scene in the Bastards? Hmm
@rammisalami
@rammisalami Месяц назад
It wasn’t just any regular degular audience in that theater but the most wealthy and powerful elites of the military and ruling class.
@user-zh2dj9xm9s
@user-zh2dj9xm9s 17 дней назад
quentin: oh really? i don't know that. that's interesting
@googeluser7098
@googeluser7098 2 месяца назад
How long are your arms to make such a reach
@soaphustler
@soaphustler Месяц назад
Bot
@joelhalli
@joelhalli 3 месяца назад
This is really good bro, like seriously impressive I beg you to keep going, you'll one hundred percent find a big audience
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
Thanks bro
@jonathanhill6064
@jonathanhill6064 12 дней назад
I have to agree. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was amazing, but Inglorious Bastards was his masterpiece of film.
@heiker1351
@heiker1351 Месяц назад
This first hero scene ... when the "hero" comes out of the tunnel into the light .... ahem ... who is sitting right next to him, eating once again? 😂 At least he stops when the madness starts. I really enjoyed your video, I think this meta-thing is an important subject. How many people think their TV talks to them when they first experience the metaverse of movies? It can be overwhelming, frightening even. It takes some practice and getting used to to watch several layers at once. They don't teach us that at school. Multitasking 2.0. 😂 Tarantino, like Fincher, uses so many layers, so many references, they know all the tricks. It's impossible to get them all in one go. I have no idea how they do it. It must be magic. A movie is made by a large team of people, they all have to work together to create master-puzzle-pieces like that. I love them, I could spend hours to piece it all together. I loved puzzles as a child, too. The satisfaction when the image finally emerges. I never wanted to see the picture before and I hated that they all show you the picture from the start. I wanted the surprise, the suspense. With these films you get exactly that. Did you get the reference with the scalping? This is Tristan, the bear who is a native, diguising as a cowboy, who loses it when he fails to protect his little brother. He goes full native warrior and brings home the scalps of the enemies and the heart of his brother. And he loses control over his inner beast, the bear who is his brother in blood. They marked each other. I'm not that fond of this concept, because it's actually not what the bear stands for in native culture. He is a teacher, a healer who knows all the plants and people learned from him to hole up in warm and cozy caves during winter, to gather food during summer and fall and to preserve energy. Medicine men often have the bear as their spirit animal. But he is also fierce if somebody challenges him or disturbes his sleep. Maybe Tristan should have put his knife out of reach. Much easier than what he did . Men ... why take it easy if you can complicate things endlessly. 😂 But that's a very small part of bear nature. I'm not really surprised that this culture is so fixated on this part. I remember reading something about the jewish bear in your video. Another hint, but I have no idea what this is about. Mother Russia is the bear. Nobody ever survived a confrontation with mother bear, not Napoleon and not that pathetic gnome with the hilarious thing under his nose everybody seems to be wearing at that time - and his rabid mutts of war. They still live under the bridges. Nowadays we call them trolls. Sometimes they feel brave and roam the streets in numbers. But I'm hopeful that more and more people see them as what they are. Pathetic cowards who hide if their numbers are not at least three to one and they're armed to the teeth. They only pick the weekest ones for a fight, that's all they can do. When they are alone one strong move silences them. Their dream is over, no matter what they believe. They don't even understand the signs they use. Two suns don't mean double power. Two suns will just make barbeque. Way too hot to survive. It will end in a desert, in scorched earth. I'm german, by the way. 🤣
@lmb888
@lmb888 2 месяца назад
He has a wicked sense of humor. Runs hotter than most.
@leifjensen4314
@leifjensen4314 Месяц назад
Haven't watched the video yet but the excessive narration at the end of once upon a time in Hollywood is spot on to so many Wes Anderson films
@aarushsingh2219
@aarushsingh2219 2 месяца назад
Wow really well editted, man! Very good script too
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thanks bro
@BaldPerspective
@BaldPerspective 14 дней назад
Tarantino also bears his soul in his films, as evidenced in the scene you showed from One Upon a Time . . . in Hollywood, where he puts Margot Robbie's dirty bare feet front & center of the frame. I love him so much.
@CrniWuk
@CrniWuk Месяц назад
What I really love about Tarantino is that he has two levels of violence. The most obvious display is Django. You have the "violence" that Django causes, like to the slavers which is incredibly "entertaining". And then you have the violence of "slavery" which is extremely disturbing. And yet, on the surface it's all violence. But it does not have the same effect on the audience.
@judsongaiden9878
@judsongaiden9878 28 дней назад
Q-man would never make fun of Sam Raimi, though. One of his main inspirado-mongers from whom he derived inspirado with great relish. Even if there were no feet for him to ogle. Ever notice how Q-man's movies, especially his more recent ones, have a pattern to them? If one of them has a German villain, the next one will have a German hero. If one has a Southern villain, the next one will have a Southern hero. And if not a "hero," per se, then at least a sympathetic character. Or even the mentor to the main hero (which is still a kind of heroic Sage archetype).
@nice_petr
@nice_petr 28 дней назад
How are first two scenes similar?
@homekat
@homekat Месяц назад
Amazing video!!
@Julian123356
@Julian123356 Месяц назад
Almost watched them all 😎 Gonna recommend your channel to friends of mine 🤙 Keep your great work up man and continue your journey to success 👑💜
@rukeyser
@rukeyser Месяц назад
WHOA - 7 minutes left me wanting a LOT more!!❤❤❤
@aliasstudio8414
@aliasstudio8414 2 месяца назад
Interesting thinking here. Instant subscription. Thank you for your effort, will look forward to more from you. All the best!
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you! i appreciate those kind words
@yoshilovesyoshi
@yoshilovesyoshi 20 дней назад
Man I was not prepared to see the actual scalping scene in a video on RU-vid. At least we know now he does not do this for money.
@pinkthom4871
@pinkthom4871 2 месяца назад
The production and quality of the video is quite a surprise. Good luck with your channel's future endeavors.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
Thank you very much!
@marqc.9904
@marqc.9904 Месяц назад
Honestly, this video is way too short. I don't know that I've seen anything from this channel before, but you could've easily tacked on another 5-7 minutes and I would've stayed hooked. Basically what I'm saying is: well done, but do more!
@JasonHitzert
@JasonHitzert Месяц назад
Actually the bullets and aiming at the audience was an homage to Sam Fuller, director of the Big Red One, that used that device in his film. He said the only way you could make a truthful war film was if you had someone behind the screen shooting at the audience. I didn't realize this until you pointed out.
@ZrankFappaH
@ZrankFappaH 3 месяца назад
Officially here from the start! Let’s goo!
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 3 месяца назад
Welcome aboard! Hope not to disappoint :)
@treasonabledoubt7251
@treasonabledoubt7251 13 дней назад
It's a shame that Tarantino did not keep the scene where Donny (Bear Jew) went around his Boston neighbourhood and got Jewish neighbours to sign his bat with the name of a family member in Europe they're worred about, or something along those lines. I remember reading the script and thinking it's very powerful. A fun fact: you can still see the writing on his bat.
@orangewarm1
@orangewarm1 Месяц назад
When you realize Tarrantino has made a living out of copying great directors. And their scripts.
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
And doing it better than they did.
@yewtewbstew547
@yewtewbstew547 28 дней назад
The irony is this comment itself is copied, and yet has never in the history of the internet been followed up by a compelling example. It's a baseless narrative drummed up by people attempting to justify their personal dislike for Tarantino, for reasons unrelated to his films, in a way that they think will be more palatable to people only concerned with his films. Except nobody ever actually buys it.
@davidfernandez8515
@davidfernandez8515 2 месяца назад
Great video. Definitely keep at it!
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you bro! more videos are coming soon
@tatsuki3994
@tatsuki3994 Месяц назад
Just here to let everyone know that I was here before you blew up, because with your video quality you most certainly will in the future. I was really surprised when I saw that you didn't have more than 500k subs
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. Месяц назад
thank you so much
@diredier
@diredier Месяц назад
Brilliant analysis!
@jefflebowski3784
@jefflebowski3784 Месяц назад
Nice analysis
@PIngMedinaTV
@PIngMedinaTV Месяц назад
Great analysis! Subbed 💪
@handsomeDRAC
@handsomeDRAC Месяц назад
Excellent observations
@louisegrimhelm3041
@louisegrimhelm3041 Месяц назад
The "Jewish Bear' as it was phrased was at one point intended to be played by Adam Sandler
@lerenardlibre4434
@lerenardlibre4434 Месяц назад
Very good video! I'm coming from the Andy Serkis one and now i'm decided to watch them all :)
@danortega6307
@danortega6307 Месяц назад
are you the carbon? Because you looks so similar and the edition is similar, anyway amazing job
@CosmicPhilosopher
@CosmicPhilosopher Месяц назад
Solid video. I think Funny Games by Haneke is another one that challenges the audience and other filmmakers. I've only seen the original, not his own remake, but that movie definitely had me squirming and questioning myself.
@kauaandrade4098
@kauaandrade4098 Месяц назад
"Activar Windows" at the bottom of the screen is how i know you're a real one
@michahcc
@michahcc 27 дней назад
Probably no, but it is his twist. Reference Jack rabbit slims footwork.
@Ssiluetaz
@Ssiluetaz Месяц назад
very well done man
@biterface03
@biterface03 Месяц назад
It’s like rap beef in subtle film form.
@bobsonny
@bobsonny Месяц назад
"Inquire" rhymes with "wire", not "here", just fyi
@anothercomposer7118
@anothercomposer7118 Месяц назад
Ooohhh, like the masterpiece that is the HBO show.
@swtorJayho
@swtorJayho 27 дней назад
You are reading way too much into this. And ascribing godlike powers of precognition to Tarantino. But I'm glad u found algorithmic success. And catnip to film snobs is a thing people want. Happy for yah
@mattydominic4219
@mattydominic4219 Месяц назад
Guess you had to see it.
@Bebop79
@Bebop79 10 дней назад
The Saving Private Ryan scene where you say they spare a mans life only for him to kill his saviour isn't true. They're different characters.
@lorenzomarquesini7136
@lorenzomarquesini7136 2 месяца назад
I just watched all of your videos not noticing you had 1,29k suscribers! Your content is amazing and i can ensure that you'll get TONS of suscribers one day to another soon. Keep up the great content!
@lorenzomarquesini7136
@lorenzomarquesini7136 2 месяца назад
Your content is amazing i think you should make more "clickbaity" thumbnails in order to get more people to watch it. It might be even worth hiring someone expert on thumbnails to update the ones in your current videos. Note. Your current thumbnails and video editing is amazing. My suggestion is to increase views
@lorenzomarquesini7136
@lorenzomarquesini7136 2 месяца назад
One extra comment. If you had say you are just 3 weeks into this channel and a suscription would help you out i think many people would do it! This is high quality content and deserves more recognition!
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
Hi bro, thank you very much for all those comments! i really appreciate those words
@andremaster
@andremaster 2 месяца назад
Just want you to know that I am one of the 32 subscribers. A masterpiece of a video, *chef kiss*.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you so much! welcome aboard :)
@wistfulgraph
@wistfulgraph 2 месяца назад
Excellent analysis. I already loved this movie but now I love it even more. Very insightful.
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
thank you! just uploaded a new video today :)
@StoneSlumber
@StoneSlumber Месяц назад
The Bear Jew was intended to be Adam Sandler, but he was unavailable. Certainly would have put an extra twist for the veiwing audience.
@spawncampe
@spawncampe Месяц назад
Very great video, new subscriber now. Also this is my personal favorite movie ever, and now I just like it more
@CreaySube
@CreaySube Месяц назад
When you realize that ElCarbon ahora tiene un canal en inglés
@MatteoCavicchioli
@MatteoCavicchioli Месяц назад
Wow what an awesome analysis! Can I ask you where do you get your sources for this? I wish to understand if your vision is the same as Tarantino's.
@ryuk5673
@ryuk5673 28 дней назад
wdym? the source is the movie. He's analyzing it. (also) it was an "good" analysis. Some of his points are just confusing though and not fully developed.
@snoookie456
@snoookie456 Месяц назад
I don't think "mocking" is the word, but he does mention in so many interviews that subversion is in fact one of his main goals. Which I don't think shows any disrespect towards the source material, but rather wants to trick his audience. And while this may sound cliche, I don't think I've seen a lot of directors actually flipping the tropes 180 with such efficiency. He is a joker. Every movie of his I watch I know I like because I can't stop laughing. I'm not laughing because the dialogue has jokes. I'm laughing because what is happening as I watch the movie I am fully aware is extremely funny. And by the way there's layers to this subversion too, because when you're used to his style turning everything into a joke, this all is an elaborate anti-joke of which the anti-punchline is the ending to OUATIH... which is an incredibly sad ending... And the reason I think he does that is like you say sincere. If you deal in arts you want to move people. But in order to move people they need to have their guard down. So in order to let their guard down, he does away with all the cliches they're conditioned to by subverting them. This way once all of that is removed, at the end what's left is the meat of it all.
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
The irony is that cliches end up undermining your own material. Has the danger of stripping them of all their nuance. And I think that's why it's so powerful to break them down and rise above them.
@markadams8041
@markadams8041 Месяц назад
So I don't like star wars, just like Freddy Mercury said in the bicycle/ Fat Bottom Girls song. I do love the ending of star wars. The hacker's dream of the kill switch. Inglorious Basterds is the Quentin Tarantino version of Star wars
@fromthemoonraccoon
@fromthemoonraccoon 27 дней назад
Fascinating! I'm very interested to learn if you see the same metacriticism in his older films, mainly b/c Inglourious (psst, you misspelled your hashtag) Basterds was the first QT film I wasn't completely sold on. With your explanation, I can see why this and OUATIH are heralded as brilliant, but I wonder if it's a factor in why I don't find them as entertaining as Jackie Brown, Death Proof, and everything preceding IB.
@tor4523
@tor4523 Месяц назад
Amazing analisis!
@DamianSzajnowski
@DamianSzajnowski 27 дней назад
Good one! I'd enjoy some longer form content, too. I've been here from the start! 😅
@DelightLovesMovies
@DelightLovesMovies 2 месяца назад
Very nice. I subbed you.
@janhommer
@janhommer 2 месяца назад
Great analysis! I know this may seem pretty random at first glance, but I'd like to take this opportunity to bring up which is probably my ultimate pet peeve, the ending of Game of Thrones and how unfairly (!) I think it is being treated (yes, you've read that right! 😁I'm aware it's an unpopular opinion...) (I mean, I'm aware that some people "only" complain about how it's executed, which I also disagree with to a certain extend, but not completely; many DON'T seem able to distinguish between what happens and how it happens, though, not to mention the latter is connected to apparently not really getting the point...). You see, I keep saying that Game of Thrones has been doing something very similar to Tarantino, including what you describe here, pretty much from the beginning and not just because both are obviously very violent (the infamous "killing off beloved characters", for example didn't shock me nearly as much, because Tarantino had already "desensitized" me to it through what he did to poor Shosanna 😄) and that understanding that is the key to being able to appreciate its "oh so terrible" ending (which many still deny could possibly be the author's own, so again, it's NOT "just" about how it's executed). So, long story short, I guess my question is, what do you think about that (and would you be interesting in watching the (not very professional, mind you; also, please don't hold being German against me, I didn't become one on purpose 😄) video(s) I made on the subject? In which I don't actually mention Tarantino, but still...) (A hint for understanding what I mean by that, might be, among other things, what Quentin said about the "Joker" movie... But I can (!) also elaborate in a different comment, of course...)
@ThunderbackOG
@ThunderbackOG Месяц назад
One of the things Tarantino likes to make fun of is people overanalyzing his movies. He would love this Video.
@ryuk5673
@ryuk5673 28 дней назад
little confusing in some parts but nice video
@Trolololyoulose
@Trolololyoulose 2 месяца назад
Great video man, also handsome 🥵 i love good video essays and you deliver it well. $ubscribed dawg
@lmb888
@lmb888 2 месяца назад
Subversion sweetly offered with such slight.
@carlozgabrielllucaz951
@carlozgabrielllucaz951 2 месяца назад
great video & immediately subscribed, keep it up! greetings from indonesia
@lancelloti.
@lancelloti. 2 месяца назад
Thanks bro!
@Damzified
@Damzified Месяц назад
6:40 On Howard Stern's he said OUATIH was his best work...
@lockekappa500
@lockekappa500 28 дней назад
Well, OUATIH didn't exist in 2009, so it would have been hard for him to think that.
@TfB12
@TfB12 2 месяца назад
they aren't the same people in saving private Ryan is not the same its a misconception so that is not a good example..one is an infantryman and the other is an ss solider, you make valid points tho
@AnselDuke
@AnselDuke Месяц назад
I always forget Mike Myers is in this film
@tacticalmattfoley
@tacticalmattfoley Месяц назад
When he finally quits movie making for good, we're going to look back at him as a genius we didn't fully appreciate or fully understand.....
@johnbroskey2547
@johnbroskey2547 Месяц назад
I don't think he's mocking it. I think he's really good at using different perspectives and filming styles along with good story telling.
@jomigloy3968
@jomigloy3968 17 дней назад
why he do's. I can't unhear that at the end.
@samrosenberg5934
@samrosenberg5934 Месяц назад
Bro did you just say the Jewish Bear lmaoooo
@bs-calrissian2023
@bs-calrissian2023 24 дня назад
The title of this video is 100% just clickbait
@soprubix
@soprubix 14 дней назад
thank you for saving my time
@technicaldeathmetalhead
@technicaldeathmetalhead 14 дней назад
He's mocking the choices of other directors tho ..
@rainesorrow1986
@rainesorrow1986 Месяц назад
Good analysis. Clickbait title.
@GabarytCWL
@GabarytCWL Месяц назад
Here before you blow up. Great stuff.
@Fivehe
@Fivehe Месяц назад
Great restraint in video runtime. It would’ve been hypocritical to let yourself babel for 21 mins. 14 would be acceptable, earned. 7 is sleek, athletic even.
@TommyLikeTom
@TommyLikeTom 19 дней назад
word-salad video about popular movie is also popular
@camdonking1919
@camdonking1919 Месяц назад
The bear jew scene would have taken on a whole new perspective if Tarantino got the actor he wanted, Adam Sandler
@MyHandle4455
@MyHandle4455 Месяц назад
Fun fact, Tarantino wrote the role of the Jew Bear for Adam Sandler. However, because Adam was busy filming another movie, Tarantino had to cast somebody else.
@nozrep
@nozrep Месяц назад
that was cool! Would have never guesses any of that. Although once you point it out it’s like ohhhhhh yes that does make sense!😅 So i was also thinking, I wish there would be… maybe there already is… a “Tarantino”, if you will, of youtube videos. I mean like, someone who semi half parodies all the different video production styles of youtube videos while simultaneously covering a subject sincerely and or geniunely, while leaving all sorts of easter eggs around for one to sleuth out or find out. ohhhh what fun it would be!
@Gigsav
@Gigsav 2 месяца назад
I was here before you blew up
@SimonSanchez-kw3lj
@SimonSanchez-kw3lj Месяц назад
I have no idea what this dude just said
@bs-calrissian2023
@bs-calrissian2023 24 дня назад
He said a bunch of obvious, page one film analysys and simple things in an unnecessarily complicated and wannabe intelectual way tbh. These videos are the epidomy of the phrase "It ain't that deep fam"
@BobJTMarts
@BobJTMarts Месяц назад
This video found me and this channel 💯
@shilombaba
@shilombaba 24 дня назад
After Jackie Brown, every movie he made was just a glorified excuse to frame violence different ways. And if the argument in this video, which I can hear, is valid and true, then there would be more masterful ways to achieve that goal. To me, he has become a parody of himself. But I'd still hold his 3 first movies dear in my heart, I learned most of my english with them :)
@iamerror1699
@iamerror1699 11 дней назад
Then you really don't know any English, if 'most'' of your English comes from these movies and it shows, you saying 'english'.
@shilombaba
@shilombaba 11 дней назад
@@iamerror1699 I said : "I learned". Preterit, in the past, and since learning is a process that almost never stops, I meant, at that time, 25 years or so ago, they boosted my ability to communicate in english (once the F words were taken out) buy giving me the best insight as to how flexible the grammar was, in addition to the added vocabulary entries. Also who cares, what's the point ? You're seriously only commenting to make a personnal "attack" ? You silly goose.
@killer3544
@killer3544 Месяц назад
wait... elcarbon?
@bekilturgut
@bekilturgut Месяц назад
good analysis. but I dont think Tarantino thought all of these. if he thought that much he couldnt shoot that many good movies. Shooting movies like riding bicycle for him.
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