DesertFox- wrote:
It's a great movie if you love (read: love) movies, which apparently you don't. You'd expect the film to focus on Pitt because he's the big name attached to it, but he's not even the most interesting character in it, and the Basterds seem to be a sort of comic relief. You can't look at it like you're expecting a Hollywood war movie or drama, because it's wholly neither of those. It was amazing how much of it was in German and French as well, which is something you don't see at-fucking-all in Hollywood these days because most actors won't put in the effort to learn the languages (Waltz spoke fucking French, English, German and Italian ffs).
Why do you have to LOVE movies to enjoy Inglorious Basterds? Really, I'd like to hear your reasoning and logic behind this one... Isn't a personal opinion just that? Something personal? You either love it or you hate it. Basterds, however, ONLY did well because Tarantino and Pitt were all over it. Why? Because those are the names that bring in the cash. Tarantino is considered this almighty independent, fuck-off Hollywood god when he hasn't done anything truly original in a long time. His early 90s movies were gritty at a time when there were no gritty movies like those. It was different. Nowadays? Tarantino is just churning out gore-filled movies with no real sense beyond them other than the gore.
Finray wrote:
I thought the foreign languages and accents were bloody well done, they spoke unfaulted with perfect accents. Made for really entertaining dialogue.
Newsflash Finny: Christoph Waltz? He's Austrian. German is kinda his native language, and it's the same story with the entire cast that was speaking German and/or French. OMG! Tarantino hired NATIVE actors!!! What a concept?! That's so edgy!!! HE'S A FUCKING GENIUS!!! /sarcasm Waltz is also fluent in French. Til Schweiger? German. Diane Kruger? German. Nicolas Cage even remarks on her German-sounding accent in the first National Treasure movie. Jacky Ido, the black Frenchman? He's from Africa, a place where French is very widely spoken and from my short scanning of Wikipedia, his home country (Burkina Faso) was a French colony.
So here we have all these actors who speak these languages natively and fluently... that's like giving someone a pat on the shoulder for walking in a straight line. Kinda comes naturally and I'd be willing to bet hardly 5% of the people who saw the movie in the US spoke ANY of those languages fluently enough to pick out bad acting, so at the end of the day, it didn't even fucking matter since everyone was reading the subtitles anyway.
Bevo wrote:
jsnipy wrote:
Quentin Tarrentino is overrated ... violence so intense its not credible.
I think you're missing the point. It's so over-the-top it's not meant to be "credible".
Yaaa... you could certainly make that point (cuz you know, Tarantino is SOOOO edgy and indie it's like omigod)... except there's a difference to funny violence (Hot Shots Part Deux) and the violence in the movie which wasn't even entertaining. If anything, I found it absolutely tasteless. It wasn't trying to be funny. It was gory for the sake of gore. Wow - real original... as if so many movies nowadays aren't just that: gory because that's what people want to see...