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On the Shelf
Cinema Speculation
By Quentin Tarantino
Harper: 400 pages, $35
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Quentin Tarantino is brewing some coffee and it is, as Samuel L. Jacksonâs âPulp Fictionâ hit man would enthuse, âsome serious gourmet sâ,â served in a mug bearing the logo of his podcast âVideo Archives,â named after the Manhattan Beach video store where Tarantino worked in his early 20s before becoming a filmmaker.
Weâre settling into the library of Tarantinoâs Hollywood Hills home, though pretty much any room in this spacious, multilevel mansion could technically qualify as a library. There are piles of film books and magazines in nearly every corner and on every surface, rows of vinyl record albums snaking across the carpeted and tiled floors, metal carts overflowing with VHS tapes just off the kitchen, revolving racks of comic books clamoring for attention. And we havenât even ventured into the guest house, where Tarantino stores a vast collection of magazine and newspaper clippings. Itâs not âHoardersâ â thereâs too much floor space â but, safe to say, the man will never want for entertainment.
Itâs Halloween, and Tarantinoâs wife, Daniella, and their two children are home in Tel Aviv, where the family spends part of its time during the year. Left to his own devices, Tarantino has been going through his horror movie collection, making a little stack to watch later that evening. These are films he hasnât viewed since they came out, like the 1977 supernatural thriller âThe Sentinel,â and others he has never seen at all (âperhaps for good reason,â he says, laughing) like âManâs Best Friend,â which has Ally Sheedy unwittingly adopting a genetically altered dog.
Neither of these movies is mentioned in Tarantinoâs new book, âCinema Speculation,â though the volume, the first work of nonfiction from the 59-year-old filmmaker, is full of references and reveries to other genre movies (Tobe Hooperâs slasher flick âThe Funhouse,â the vigilante thriller âRolling Thunderâ) as well as musings on those more generally accepted as classics, including âBullittâ and âDirty Harry.â Thereâs a chapter pondering what âTaxi Driverâ might have looked like had Brian De Palma directed it instead of Martin Scorsese. (De Palma was the first to read Paul Schraderâs screenplay.) Thereâs even an appreciation of longtime Los Angeles Times film critic Kevin Thomas, whose enthusiastic reviews of exploitation movies captivated Tarantino as a young reader.
âHe seemed like one of the few practitioners who truly enjoyed their job, and consequently, their life,â Tarantino writes, adding that Thomasâ appreciative review of Robert Forster in the 1980 âJawsâ ripoff âAlligatorâ stuck with him through the years â leading him to cast the veteran actor in âJackie Brown.â
Tarantino saw all the films he writes about in âCinema Speculationâ as a kid, often at an age that might strike some as wildly inappropriate. He brags about seeing a double feature of âThe Wild Bunchâ and âDeliveranceâ when he was 11. Movies were then (and remain to this day) everything to Tarantino, and the book is often as much about his experiences watching them â at a grindhouse like the Carson Twin Cinema or maybe the second-run Paradise Theater in Westchester â as the films themselves.
Asked if there were any movies that maybe he should not have seen as a kid, Tarantino recalls asking to leave the theater during âBambiâ after Bambiâs mother was shot and the forest fire began.
âI think âBambiâ is well known for traumatizing children,â Tarantino says. âItâs a clichĂ©, but itâs true. The only other movie I couldnât handle and had to leave was at a drive-in in Tennessee. I was there alone, sitting on the gravel by a speaker, watching Wes Cravenâs âLast House on the Left.â So for me, âLast House on the Leftâ and âBambiâ are sitting on the fâ shelf right next to each other.â He laughs. âBoth take place in the woods, and both had me saying, âI gotta get out of here!ââ
Tarantino has been thinking about writing âCinema Speculationâ for years. The book evolved, he says, from being a mere appreciation of his favorites to a survey of films that inspired a âpoint of view worth talking about.â
âDoing this made me respect the professionals of film criticism even more for the simple fact that I realized I couldnât do what they do,â Tarantino says. âIf my job was to go and watch the new movies every week and then write what I thought, I canât imagine I would have anything to say about everything, other than offer a plot summary and a âgood,â âbad,â âindifferentâ verdict. With the book, I wanted to find something quirky thatâs interesting and worth talking about.â
Shortly after filmmaker Quentin Tarantino appeared at a New York march protesting police brutality on Oct. 24, police groups across the country began calling for a boycott of his next movie, âThe Hateful Eight,â taking issue with the remarks Tarantino made that day.
And so the chapter on âTaxi Driverâ emphasizes the groundwork laid for it by Charles Bronsonâs âDeath Wish.â (Tarantino recalls seeing the 1976 Scorsese-directed movie with a raucous audience at the Carson Twin, hardly the kinds of cineastes who revere it today.) Filmmakers De Palma, Don Siegel and Schrader become characters of a sort, moving through the book and Tarantinoâs young life. In fact, there was so much Schrader at one point that Tarantino decided to remove a chapter devoted to his 1974 Japanese gangster homage, âThe Yakuza.â
âIf I kept that, I would have needed Paul to write a foreword to the book,â Tarantino says, laughing.
Asked why he landed on Schrader, known for films centered on tormented men and their righteous fury, Tarantino paused for a moment.
âI donât want to be the one to break down his theme in a sentence, but inarticulately: lonely men with nothing but a profession existing in four walls,â Tarantino says. âAnd sometimes those four walls are their apartment, sometimes theyâre a city, sometimes theyâre the fâ planet Earth. Sometimes itâs just other human beings and how they bump up against the four walls until, usually, thereâs blood all over them.â
The movies in âCinema Speculationâ have a fair amount of blood-splattering moments, as youâd expect from the filmmaker who created âReservoir Dogs,â âPulp Fiction,â âOnce Upon a Time ... in Hollywood,â âKill Billâ ... I could keep running through the filmography, but you get the point. But there are also â and this is equally true to his oeuvre â plenty of laugh-out-loud jokes. Tarantino calls them âsnarky little asides out of the corner of my mouth,â and they usually arrive in a parenthetical, such as when he muses that, just as â60s antiestablishment auteurs rejoiced when studio musical adaptations fell out of favor, todayâs filmmakers âcanât wait for the day they can say that about superhero movies.â
âThe analogy works because itâs a similar chokehold,â Tarantino says.
Martin Scorsese expanded on his controversial Marvel movies comments in a lengthy op-ed, and âSpiderverseâ director Peter Ramsey agreed â sort of.
But when can we expect the tide to turn? âThe writingâs not quite on the wall yet,â he says, âthe way it was in 1969 when it was, âOh, my God, we just put a bunch of money into things that nobody gives a damn about anymore.ââ
And yet, so many auteurs have made superhero films. I ask him why he never has raised his hand for a Marvel or DC Comics flick, even though I know the answer. Sometimes itâs just fun to hear him say it.
âYou have to be a hired hand to do those things,â Tarantino says. âIâm not a hired hand. Iâm not looking for a job.â
Tarantino was 14 when âStar Warsâ came out in 1977 and changed movies forever â pretty much the perfect age to have his mind blown. But thereâs barely a mention of George Lucasâ space opera in the book, certainly nothing approaching what he writes about âJaws,â which, when it arrived in theaters in 1975, âmight not have been the best film ever made. But it was easily the best movie ever made.â
âOf course, I liked âStar Wars.â Whatâs not to like?â Tarantino says. âBut I remember â and this is not a âbutâ in a negative way but in a good way. The movie completely carried me along and I was just rocking and rolling with these characters. ... When the lights came on, I felt like a million dollars. And I looked around and had this moment of recognition, thinking, âWow! What a time at the movies!â
âNow, thatâs not necessarily my favorite exact type of film,â he continues. âAt the end of the day, Iâm more of a âClose Encounters [of the Third Kind]â guy, just the bigger idea and Spielberg setting out to make an epic for regular people, not just cinephiles. Few films had the kind of climax that âClose Encountersâ had. It blew audiences away.â
With the release of the final chapter of the Skywalker saga, âStar Wars: The Rise of Skywalkerâ on the horizon, we, the nerds of the Los Angeles Times, set out to make something comprehensive about the eight movies in the Skywalker saga released so far.
You donât need Quentin Tarantino to tell you that âStar Warsâ is an enjoyable romp or that âClose Encountersâ is a masterpiece. (For the record, he ranks both movies behind Ridley Scottâs âAlienâ today.) More intriguing, though, is the case âCinema Speculationâ makes for âRolling Thunderâ being a âdeeper depiction of the casualties of war than the contrite âComing Home.ââ Or the way the entire project evokes a pre-internet time when you had to look far and wide to find someone taking genre movies seriously.
âThere was a guy at the [Los Angeles] Herald Examiner, David Chute, and he was an expert on Hong Kong films, Japanese genre movies, stuff like that,â Tarantino remembers. âAnd there was a time when David Chute was the only person writing about genre in that kind of experienced way in a regular publication that would go out in everyoneâs homes. Now, everybody trying to be hip and cool is trying to write like David Chute. Thereâs nothing bad about that; in fact, thereâs everything good about it. But there was this point where he was this lone voice by himself. Little did we know that that one voice would become the critical voice of the internet.â
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