Sunday, August 23, 2009

Inglourious Basterds (2009)































Inglourious Basterds
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Starring: Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Melanie Laurent

I would call myself a Tarantino fan. Pulp Fiction is one of my favorite movies and I really enjoyed Kill Bill. This movie is definitely more on the Kill Bill side of things. It was a stylized revenge flick. The violence was ridiculous and he blatantly ripped various genres, including spaghetti westerns. This was unlike any war movie I have ever seen. This was more like a comic book than a film.

This is not the movie that the previews made it out to be. This was not all about Brad Pitt and his men running around, slaughtering Nazis. This was maybe 1/4 of the movie, and I was glad of this. I actually found Pitt's "Basterds" to be the least interesting story arc of the film. In true Tarantino style, the movie was broken into chapters that told 3 different stories that all slowly blended together. One story was about a young French movie theater owner whose parents were killed by Nazis. She is involuntarily befriended by a Nazi war hero who wants to throw a big movie premier at her theater. The second story is about the Basterds, a crew of American Jews who are out to terrorize and scalp the Nazis. The third story focuses on a British mission to rendezvous with a German movie star double agent and take out Hitler. This all culminates into one vengeful bloodbath (with a historically inaccurate ending).

The acting was superb. Everyone was great (except for the awful Eli Roth) but were outshined by Christoph Waltz's performance as the Nazi "Jew Hunter". This guy was oozing with charisma and delivered his lines flawlessly. He was menacing, powerful, playful, and tricky all at once. He was the perfect villain. Amazing. Expect to see his name a lot at awards shows this year.

I loved that language played a big role in this movie. Nazis spoke German. French people spoke French. This may seem obvious, but almost no other war movie has taken language into account as much as this film did. Also, Tarantino has proven again that he is a great dialogue writer. The three best scenes of the movie all involve long conversations that built tension. The audience knew that someone was about to die and, in true Leone fashion, Tarantino keeps us on the edge of our seats until we are surprised when the inevitable killing takes place.

This was s fun movie, but was ver episodic. I think the parts here are greater than the whole. Is it accurate? No. Are the Nazis treated as human beings? No. Was it fun? Yes. Hitler was a supervillain. Nazis were his evil henchmen. This was a WWII exploitation film unlike any other war film.

Lesson learned: Germans count with their thumb.

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