@White Knight Exactly... I don't think he should make his decision based on someone else's life. Now if he says he's tired of it, thats one thing. But to say its bc of old age (when this is when you have the most wisdom and experience) bc another guy made a couple duds, that kills me especially when we all know he's the exception to the rule
I love Bill for not asking him about Harvey Weinstein or the fact that he knew girls were being raped behind the scenes while he was working with them.
@@meephead6636 I honestly don't think Tarantino actually was around the studio/parties much, or even considered to be approachable by assistants/actors...etc on a conversation level outside of the project he was working on. The guy seems pretty isolated. However, you don't know until you ask, and then you only get a response. So, who knows?
You gotta appreciate how he’s more concerned with making great film, and not how much money he can make. That mentality is completely dead in big budget modern filmmaking
He already has more money than he knows what to do with. He hasn’t been shy about being rich. He loves cinema first and foremost, yes, but it’s not like he has never cared about being financially comfortable.
fun fact: tarantino said Polanski's 13 year old rape victim was a party girl who was asking for it. he also portrayed Polanski as a cool guy who probably would've never done that awful thing if he didn't experience the Tate murder. and he sexualizes 2 children in Once Upon and makes the 10 year old one intellectually/emotionally an adult and shows the other minor's feet because he has a foot fetish. Pitt's character would sleep with the minor but he doesn't want to go to jail. tarantino is a piece of shit and his movies aren't even that good. also HBO is really good at deleting comments like this one. i went back to edit it and it was deleted already after 2 minutes.
@@asdf1991asdf I don't think it's appropriate to ascribe Tarantino's last couple of movies as representing the decline of his skills due to age. That's ridiculous. Yes, there won't be some amazing new vanguard of a movie from him. But there could certainly be another Django flick. Easily.
I credit Once Upon a Time In Hollywood for helping me get sober. That movie changed my life. I will NEVER forget how I felt, leaving the theater that one summer night…
When you're a creative at the level of this Genius, you do what you feel is good for and to you. Hail Tarantino, HAIL FOREVER! #RealTime #TarantinoTheCreativeGenius. #ItsHisChoice!!!
Exactly. He has decided a long time ago he will stop at 10. He has good reasons to do so. He never said he would quit working. Maybe he will go one to create great mini-series or TV shows. TV series make a lot more impact that films lately anyway. He is retiring from film at the perfect time.
@@Boobalopbop I believe whatever is in your heart and mind, your muse never goes away. He didn't get here half-assing anything, and he deserves to go as he wants to, not as we want him to.
the ending of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is soo sweet and thoughtful. With the power of film, a terrible terrible tragedy was for a brief moment corrected to how it should have been...
I personally really disliked the ending, because it only makes sense when you know what happened in real life. In the context of the film however, it doesn't make sense. Killing Hitler in Inglorious Basterds was something else, it was still the same Hitler we had in real life. The people at the end of Once Upon A Time In Hollywood however were not the same people, they haven't done anything wrong yet other done breaking into someone's house and threatening them, which IS a huge crime, but it doesn't justify killing them in the most brutal and horrific way one could think of and then even celebrating the people who killed them as if they are heroes. Of course some of this comes from the american mentality that when you tresspass on someone else's property, they have the right to shoot you or something like that, which just shows how fucking retarded the USA are. In USA the real story behind the movie is pretty well known, but outside the US it is not that well known, so many people will watch the movie without context. Also I personally believe a movie should always speak for itself and you shouldn't require outside knowledge.
I completely understand him. One of the great lessons I learned about 8-9 years ago was that it's better to let something go while you still love it, then drag on until you hate it. Even with one film to go, I can only understand the pressure he's under, because he wants it to be a masterpiece. If he makes 10 great films and bows out, he becomes a legend. If his last movie is a piece of shit, he'll forever be remembered for it. And for those who call bullshit, look at any TV show that was a masterpiece but ended in a dud, and how that dud defined it. Lost, Game of Thrones, How I Met Your Mother, etc. No one talks about the great moments. They only bring up the fuck up of a conclusion.
That is a great statement. But what if he exits Sopranos-style or Breaking Bad style. I all for quality over quantity but still 10 features seem too little. Remember when Malick did 2 movies and "walked away" for almost 2 decades and he became a myth or when Garbo quit at the top of their game. Many examples of masters retiring because they refused to be below excellent. And yet Eastwood, Ford, Rohmer, Oliveira, Vidor, Godard kinda prove him to be kinda "dead wrong". I am with Bill Maher on this one. He should not quit at just 10 features before he's even 60 - the only names that might be compared to him, in terms of small cinematic output are Víctor Erice with 4 features, Jacques Tati with 6 features, Malick and Lynch both with 10 features each (altho Lynch has not directed a feature in 15+ years dunno if he retired from Ever directing a new feature), Miyazaki and Michael Mann with both 11 features each and Kubrick with 13 features but none of them are (or did) retire(d), least of all before 60 y.o.!! I guess we'll have to wait and see.
@phillydisco Who cares what a movie someone else wrote would be like? He's a writer-director. It's like shitting on Messi for not being a great hypothetical baseball player
@@grizzybear9111 hateful eight had great dialogue but it was slow and dragged on a little too long, so I see what you mean with that one.. Once upon a time in Hollywood however, was great. You’re buggin
He touched on it here with the mention of the couple of names people throw at him but I don’t think he considers himself to be one of the greatest to ever do it or to be in that stratosphere of director so he feels it’s a bad comparison. He may very well be up there but to think it about yourself is a little egomaniacal. Especially since unlike athletes there aren’t really any objective metrics to measure it by. Unless ticket sales and how many awards your studio bought for you counts.
Bergman made Fanny and Alexander in his sixties. Kurosawa made Ran in his seventies. Scorsese is in his late seventies, and The Irishman, Silence, and The Wolf of Wall Street are as good as any movie he's ever made. Tarantino has potentially many, many years left full of great movies.
@@Angels510 I just think take a break and come back when you want to come back why make this an ultimatum. I think there is no way he doesn’t make more movies it will just be too hard to resist. He’s a legend one of the greats. No doubt.
Luc Besson said he'd only ever direct 10 movies. He's on his 18th so far. Steven Soderbergh retired in 2013. Then three years later he started directing _Logan Lucky_ and has directed 6 films since. In the meantime he directed three seasons of television and a play. Plenty of other examples among directors, actors, writers, musicians, etc...
He even announces it publicly 🤣 .. It's hilarious. He hates the process every time, but keeps doing it.. it's a beautiful thing. It's the artist in war with himself, until another pearl comes off. I'm so looking forward his next one.
@@hasselett This vid here is just a teaser, several minutes from the beginning of the interview - the whole interview was longer and really good parts came later.
I remember when Quentin did a two parter CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episode Grave Digger, nominated for the 2005 Primetime Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series.
I would love for him to make a documentary series based on questions about his own country, life and wishes for the future (private and as a collective) ...... and then make a more Tarantino movies. LOVE the guy
i actually applaud him only making 1 more movie. one of the reasons why seinfeld is still a beloved show is because they didnt milk it until it was sour. they went out on top. tarantino should as well. as much as i'll miss his films, theres no better way to cement a legacy than to make your best film your last.
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction tbf in 100 years I don’t think anyone will give a shit about films, they’ll be too busy in some kind of augmented VR reality living their best fake life lol
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction Yes. I liked Fury Road. A VERY beautifully photographed film. But The Road Warrior is the better film. Even my young nephew thought so.
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction But the thing is FURY ROAD is an incredibly well put together, energized work from a 70 something director there's young men and women who couldn't dream about creating something that volatile and beautiful. Narratively ROAD WARRIOR may have the ultimate charms, but still -
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction Did you actually see Fury Road? I thought it looked hyper digital too in the trailer, but almost everything in the film was shot in-camera with only a few scenes of exception. The reason you think it looks digital is the saturation is cranked up to like 150%. Everything is extremely vibrant. If that's your main issue with the film, watch the director's cut, which actually is the reverse: It's entirely a very high contrast black & white. That's the way he wanted it in the first place. It completely changes the visual feel. Finally, the political message stuff is crap. Nobody really had an issue with it, all of the "war of the sexes" news stories was media hype based on a twitter account with like 30 followers, not the mainstream. I don't exactly think it's uberwoke messaging to say "Yeah you probably shouldn't keep a slave harem."
This short clip is not the whole interview - and some very interesting things were said later on by both Tarantino and Maher about harmful impact of ideology on art. Look it up if you are interested, I won't link any videos here out of respect for this channel and what they decided to publish from the whole interview in this short clip.
@@alphacraig2001 There are articles on web, there are several vids on youtube about it but the full video of the interview is not on youtube afaik. There is a short clip of the key part circulating Twitter, though. If interested, search for "ideology is (now) more important than art" plus both names.
I wish the clip was the last part of the interview which was a lot more interesting when Tarantino was describing the cycles over the decades in Hollywood regarding the amount of artistic freedom that was allowed in the context of what was going on historically. Maher brought up the issue of political correctness in today's Hollywood, and Tarantino's answer was pretty interesting. Gives me a little hope for the future on this issue.
I hear this nonsense all the time, look at always sunny in philadelphia, family guy, south park, borat... there are countless examples of programs that are literally in your face not PC but the real problem is that alot of them are not profitable for studios.. so they dont make them
He’s falling victim to what people do to gifted people who don’t leave while still great. I say who cares if you put out a dud. Nobody thinks of the Wizards when they think Michael Jordan. Sure, in the moment comments were made that he was slowing down but today no one remembers.
One time I had Morgan Freeman sit in my chair I said "Morgan, you hang out with Clint Eastwood. Just between me and you. How old is Clint Eastwood?" You know what Morgan told me? he said "Hey, Clint Eastwood is a hundred and thirty-seven years old." A hundred and thirty-seven years old!
yesss few people actually know that.. but they wouldn't believe it anyway, so. Clint is a resilient fella. I think he can pull it off until 195-ish, I know it sounds crazy, and I won't be here to confirm it, but.. our grandchildren may see it.
Larry Fleetwood Larry you know I have never in my life met a person named Fleetwood and if I did I would want to ask them if they are related to Mick Fleetwood. Are you, Larry?
I retired from the underground music business after 28 years. It was a mixed bag of reactions from family, friends, and colleagues. You have my support Quinton. Go be a legend at something else 💪and thank you for eveyrthing.
Quentin needs to make a 10 hour movie. That drops weekly like on Netflix. Would be epic giving a filmmaker like him ten hours. The story would be amazing.
That’s called a limited series, lol. And I agree. While he says he will only do 1 more film, he never said anything about a TV show or limited/mini series.
Django will always be one of my favorite movies. The "make sure you call the sheriff" scene is all-time. The way Tarintino can get inside your head and make you count the seconds, anxiously awaiting the return from law enforcement, then at the end turn it into a witty joke. Just brilliant.
Hopefully he does the Steven Soderbergh “retirement.” (i.e., say you’re retiring after your latest movie only to come back after maybe two years at most, and start making a shitload of movies again, lol)
I also like how Soderbergh makes these small-scale movies filmed on iphones. Just because you're a famous director w/ clout who can make $100 million movies doesnt mean you cant do something scaled back without the logistical and bureaucratic headaches of a big studio movie. I hope QT will do the same but he seems pretty firm on the 10 movie vision
I remember renting Reservoir Dogs as a flier back in 1994. Never heard of Tarrantino or the movie. Plugged it into the VCR and was transfixed about 5 minutes in. Couldn't take my eyes off of it. I had no idea at that time what this man was capable of. Tarrantino doesn't make movies .... he makes fine art. The finest writer and director that America has ever produced. As long as you're drawing breath Quentin ..... you should be making grown up pieces of art.
how can he utter those words of"quitting while you are on top".. it took fkn Scorcese 40 years to even win an Oscar. AND HE'S STILL GOING! Long live Marty! Stop with the crap Quentin- Hollywood needs your genius...or else it will be nothing but animated movies and comic book remakes.
As much as I would love for him to make more movies, it’s not like he’s completely going away. I’m excited for all the other stuff he’s going to put out - books, a podcast, possibly a tv series…I’m happy just to hear talk about movies more often!
Love ya Bill. I'm here in Newfoundland, Where the weather isn't great but the weed is. For many years now, you have been entertaining me and educating me. Here in Canada politics isn't as prominent in our culture. Your show certainly has raised my eyebrows to my own country's socioeconomic and political goings-on. Helping me to be a more well rounded and informed citizen . Love your show and your humor. Thank you .
I agree with Bill, huge fan here, BTW. You are Quentin fucking Tarantino. Stop comparing yourself to other directors and slow down, just relax and enjoy life , don't force ANYTHING, and when you get an obsessive idea which you just can't resist making, then and only then, make it, no retirement!!
Tarantino’s Aspergers is on full display here. He’s convinced himself of his decision based on ‘film history’, which is silly and has nothing to do with him personally. You can tell no-ones really called him out on this before.
Epic?.. No. it wouldn't.. You cannot re open a fresh bag of lays potato chips.. Its not the same.. Its the fans who would ruin it. Expectations and the viewers thoughts interfering with the "way" he remade it, the changes etc.. The fans might critique it to death ruining it for themselves.... Let sleeping dogs lie.
As crappy as it sounds, Quentin really is right. Having seen a lot of movies from different eras and different legendary directors, they often fell short of their quality in the later years, perhaps because of a certain amount of comfort with the medium that leads to a confidence and a complacency, a lack of the need to EARN their success as young directors trying to prove themselves do. It will be sad to see Quentin go and maybe number eleven will be a missed masterpiece, but being an all powerful, omnipotent being I feel it is ok that he retire.
That's so individual. Some people just get better with age. Like Sergio Leone -- his best was his last. Eastwood still kills it. Scorcese maybe isn't at his best but is still great. Some people get complacent, and some learn, and some continue to push. Categorising him as one of the three as if it's inevitable there's only one path is totally unjustified.
When you love it as much as Q does, you don't quit. He's kidding himself, but also building hype around this next project. It's actually a genius marketing move.
I'm not sure the quality drops rather the audience sees you go from original and fresh to something they expect to ...is there nothng new? none of that is down to the Director...its just how taste and trends work...in ART in Fashion...in Writing styles and genres come in vouge then get replaced
@@samsabruskongen Is Scorsese the same kind of Director as Quentin or Guy Ritchie...where their Personality is stamped on every frame or a craftsman who is a master filmsmith
@@samsabruskongen I'm saying that Scorsese makes great movies...but he dosn't make a 'Scorsese' movie where you instantly recognise...Oh this is a Scorsese movie....His shelf life is far longer because of that...you don't have expectations of seeing certain troupes or styling when you goto a scorsese movie...well other than certain actors turning up
Disney's control over so much of the movie industry might piss him off as it does me, but I doubt superhero movies would discourage Tarantino at all. And he's big enough to get his movies past any Disney gate keepers and on to many thousands of screens around the world regardless. I bet you he privately loves the MCU too (especially Thor Ragnarok and Guardians of the Galaxy) because, like his movies, they are really fun movies! There's a bunch of superhero crap too, but there were a thousand fake Quentin copy crap movies in the 90s too. I think he's worried that at some point he's going to be the old guy that can't make cool movies anymore. And I don't think he's worried about other people thinking his movies aren't cool either. I think he likes his own movies the best, and he's worried that some day he'll make something he thinks is crap. And no matter how much other people like it, he'll know it sucks and he'll hate himself. Also, Tarantino is by far my favourite director and has written and/or directed 2 of my personal top 5 films, but Iron Man is also great. Have fun at the movies!
I agree with Bill Maher 120%. I'm a Brazilian translator, and one of the greatest essays ever written in Portuguese is Ensaio sobre a Cegueira, by José Saramago. There is even a great movie adaptation with Julianne Moore ("Blindness", I think). Saramago wrote it at the tender age of 87. Hell, Kurosawa directed "Ran" at 75. One would imagine Tarantino would know better, right 2:15 (also a big fan, btw).
((SPOILERS ))The satification the audience gets after realizing that orange is an undercover cop is amazing... you see all these scumbags and you find out that there is a good guy amongst them for you and justice is going to be served... so good.
@@lzcdf Three Major Reasons: First look at the cast, damn near everyone of them went on to be a heavy hitter in Hollywood. But in the era of the 90s, the vibe, the style of the moment - they all were iconic. An actor today would not only need to act the character part but also act like they're in the 90s. Second who can rob a bank on foot? In the era of cell phones and militarized police departments? Cops back then were basically Mall Cops of today. Third Reservoir Dogs wasn't made to be iconic. It was just made. It grew unbeknownst to the actors during filming it. They could have destroyed their careers in some of those scenes. They didn't know. They didn't care. Actors today have advocates and agents who plan for a 20 career in film. So they would not take the role without contractual script changes or scene changes that would take away from the original vibe in order to protect the actor's career. Back then, actors were hungry and didn't give a damn.
I'm with Tarantino : you have to know when to quit. He will not be loved more even if he makes 50 more movies... But those would be opportunities to screw up, sell out and be remembered only for that.
Who cares who will be remembered for what? What's the point? Art is for the living not for the dead so let's have more instead of less. If Tarantino makes something really bad and uninteresting we don't have to watch it you know.
You can't control how you're going to be perceived in the future. Tarantino might be remembered by the guy who only wanted to make 10 movies, but not for some masterpiece he refused to make. He should retire whenever he pleases, but not with such idea. Ray Park was almost forced to make the Ghostbusters theme, and now is the only hit people remember him for...
@@ojacobsen3727 let me ask a simple question : would you rather an artist pour his soul in 10 great works... or churn out 1,000 half-assed cash-grabs ? Quantity and quality : always mutually exclusive, kid. Tarantino is wise enough to know that. I find those who don't are people who haven't even made _one_ great work yet.
@@pdzombie1906 indeed you can't control how people will perceive you. But anyone with any curiosity about Tarantino will eventually watch his movies, at which point they'll remember him for something other than "only wanted to make 10 movies". You also have to consider that if someone is only going to remember you for one weird detail about you... that someone isn't worth impressing.
Man, theres a brief moment of heartbreak i felt when Bill tells Quentin about He hearing that He is just going to make one more film, and He didn't seem to have a direct answer for it. Quentin said for years that "Once Upon A Time" was going to be his last movie. as much as that movie is by far one of his best (even my parents loved it)there are rumors (though probably fact by now), that he's going to do the next Star Trek movie. That would be a fitting end and probably would be his crown achievement in Film - even though i wish he would do another 10 ! He is one of 4 of my favorite Directors of all time. the other 3 being Copolla, Scorsese, and Wes Anderson.
Not just cancel culture, rather the whole dominance of the current ideology over art and the damage it does to art. Anyone interested and not being able to watch the whole Bill Maher show can look the info up, even here on youtube there are many vids about it. The clips published in this channel are always only a sample of the content of the show, sort of advertisement or demo ;-) so I am not sure cutting the good part out was to censor it... but if it were included it would have gained this vid many more shares and views, no doubt, so cutting it perhaps was not a good idea from any point of view...
*trivia:* The coffee shop manager in pulp fiction is also in reservoir dogs! He’s one of the cops that gets blown away by Steve Buscemi right after he gets hit by the car in the street. Edit: It just hit me he’s also one of the boxing announcers commentators on the radio in pulp fiction too! He’s the only person that plays two parts in the same movie! *Bob Roth*
i, for one, am devastated by the news of Tarantino's retirement from the film industry. his movies have been my edutainment, for so long... i do not know anyone who puts the time and effort into each frame as if those frames are all standalone photos, each telling a 1000 word story. but i do look forward in dread fascination to his next phase in life as a barista in Soho who moonlights as a night orderly at an old folks home...
Great show. Opening monologue, so so, had much better, but then spiked up with Tarantino interview, a good panel too. through New Rules and everything else. I love Tarantino movies. Bill definitely had a point about too young to retire from filmmaking, and I started thinking about plenty of older filmmakers who didn't retire so soon. Hitchcock, Wilder, etcetera.
He’s my favorite director after Kubrick. Not all of QT’s films are masterpieces, but each and every one of them were worth standing in line to go see upon initial release.
Quentin will get bored, and in those lowly moments he will be evermore inspired to continue making more movies. Never say never for nobody knows what the future holds in store for anyone.
I feel like this is a really bizarre interview. In fact, it wasn’t really an interview at all. It was just a lecture on how he should finish out his career.
you do know, they are only posting very short clips here, on youtube channel and there was the entire long episode, right? This interview was actually way longer and great, but it is in the episode, not here on youtube.
I could literally sit and have a beer with Quentin Tarantino and let him talk to me about the most boring or uninteresting things in the world and I’d be 💯 percent entertained!
because he probably didn't want to talk politics or some guest feel they can't excel or don't want any part in that section and thus the beginning interview was probably best. real time breaking up sections of their show like this has allowed them to bring on a wide array of guest and while i would like to see more Tarantino this is fine too. i was thinking man if only Larry King were still with us that he would be a great show for Tarantino to kick back and speak alot longer.
Hollywood is already done! They've sold out to remakes and comic book films since 2000's. But I agree on this, Filmmakers like Scorsese and Tarantino etc are the last of the mohicans.
I don't think so. People get tired of doing the same thing. And this guy is so sprung with creativity and energy. He's said he wants to write novels and film criticism.
@@green_monday artists retire then unretire all the time. Some retire multiple times. I can see him making 1 more then getting the itch after 5 years or so.
We all know why he's retiring. The Wokeness of Hollywood would make any one of his new movies a living hell to make. Just look at the press conference for Once upon a time where the Woke NYT reporter accuses him of stiffing Margo out of a potentially stronger role... This question was asked to a director who's arguably best work all have strong female leads. Hes done with the Wokeness..
He’s writing a miniseries. Look how much we fall in love with his characters in a 2-3 hour movie (or 5 hours in the case of kill bill). Now imagine you’re getting 10 hours to bond with these guys… it’s going to be epic! And what’s to say he doesn’t do more than one miniseries?
I love Bill for aggressively trying to talk him out of it
Yeah best thing he has done in awhile honestly
@White Knight Exactly... I don't think he should make his decision based on someone else's life. Now if he says he's tired of it, thats one thing. But to say its bc of old age (when this is when you have the most wisdom and experience) bc another guy made a couple duds, that kills me especially when we all know he's the exception to the rule
I love Bill for not asking him about Harvey Weinstein or the fact that he knew girls were being raped behind the scenes while he was working with them.
@@meephead6636 I hope you are being sarcastic. Lol
@@meephead6636 I honestly don't think Tarantino actually was around the studio/parties much, or even considered to be approachable by assistants/actors...etc on a conversation level outside of the project he was working on. The guy seems pretty isolated.
However, you don't know until you ask, and then you only get a response. So, who knows?
You gotta appreciate how he’s more concerned with making great film, and not how much money he can make. That mentality is completely dead in big budget modern filmmaking
How are you doing Josh
yeahhh there are some prime examples one could mention .... : I M LOOKING AT YOU Michael Bay
Talk is pretty cheap when you have already been rewarded like he has.
He already has more money than he knows what to do with. He hasn’t been shy about being rich. He loves cinema first and foremost, yes, but it’s not like he has never cared about being financially comfortable.
Don't forget, he came from nothing. Working in a video store.
Made megabucks. RESPECTS!
Do what you want
Imagine being so good that everyone is giving you $hit for saying you will only make 1 more.
He's like the reverse Uwe Boll.
fun fact: tarantino said Polanski's 13 year old rape victim was a party girl who was asking for it. he also portrayed Polanski as a cool guy who probably would've never done that awful thing if he didn't experience the Tate murder. and he sexualizes 2 children in Once Upon and makes the 10 year old one intellectually/emotionally an adult and shows the other minor's feet because he has a foot fetish. Pitt's character would sleep with the minor but he doesn't want to go to jail.
tarantino is a piece of shit and his movies aren't even that good.
also HBO is really good at deleting comments like this one. i went back to edit it and it was deleted already after 2 minutes.
@@RefugeeOfModernity Hollywood is full of pedophiles, what do you expect?
He's kind of a hack fraud. He's a pop culture director. He's not actually a respected director.
@@RefugeeOfModernity He is amazing huh.
Selfishly, I wish Tarantino would make 10 more movies.
Are you not familiar with the formula yet?
@@theloniousm4337 Django was better than you think, so was Hollywood . 8 was good, you’re right. Basterds was brilliant. There isn’t a decline.
I really like him personally, but truly not a fan of his films.
@@asdf1991asdf I don't think it's appropriate to ascribe Tarantino's last couple of movies as representing the decline of his skills due to age. That's ridiculous. Yes, there won't be some amazing new vanguard of a movie from him. But there could certainly be another Django flick. Easily.
Me toooooooooooooooo
I credit Once Upon a Time In Hollywood for helping me get sober. That movie changed my life. I will NEVER forget how I felt, leaving the theater that one summer night…
Wow. That's awesome. The power of cinema is real.
Whoa
Really?? The first hour of the movie was a total nothing burger...
@@marklewen9384 Still 100000000000 X better than any Marvel “movie” 🙄
@@wolffman2445 agreed...just not in the same league as resorvoir dogs,pulp fiction,or Jackie Brown. Guess we got spoiled.
Tarantino is living proof of the fine line between genius and insanity. He's such a weird quirky dude.
When you're a creative at the level of this Genius, you do what you feel is good for and to you.
Hail Tarantino, HAIL FOREVER!
#RealTime
#TarantinoTheCreativeGenius.
#ItsHisChoice!!!
Exactly. He has decided a long time ago he will stop at 10. He has good reasons to do so.
He never said he would quit working. Maybe he will go one to create great mini-series or TV shows. TV series make a lot more impact that films lately anyway. He is retiring from film at the perfect time.
@@Boobalopbop I believe whatever is in your heart and mind, your muse never goes away. He didn't get here half-assing anything, and he deserves to go as he wants to, not as we want him to.
@@altonhumes5782 ...well said 🖖
creative my ass! he copied stories from Asian movie and pretend to be original
@@guojunma1925 lol 😆 which ones hurt you?
the ending of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is soo sweet and thoughtful. With the power of film, a terrible terrible tragedy was for a brief moment corrected to how it should have been...
I'm glad you liked it. Unfortunately I didn't.
How are you doing scott
Part of his wish fulfillment thing like killing Hitler in In glorious Basterds and slavers in Django.
I personally really disliked the ending, because it only makes sense when you know what happened in real life. In the context of the film however, it doesn't make sense. Killing Hitler in Inglorious Basterds was something else, it was still the same Hitler we had in real life. The people at the end of Once Upon A Time In Hollywood however were not the same people, they haven't done anything wrong yet other done breaking into someone's house and threatening them, which IS a huge crime, but it doesn't justify killing them in the most brutal and horrific way one could think of and then even celebrating the people who killed them as if they are heroes. Of course some of this comes from the american mentality that when you tresspass on someone else's property, they have the right to shoot you or something like that, which just shows how fucking retarded the USA are. In USA the real story behind the movie is pretty well known, but outside the US it is not that well known, so many people will watch the movie without context. Also I personally believe a movie should always speak for itself and you shouldn't require outside knowledge.
@@Crowbar you don't get it buddy
I completely understand him. One of the great lessons I learned about 8-9 years ago was that it's better to let something go while you still love it, then drag on until you hate it. Even with one film to go, I can only understand the pressure he's under, because he wants it to be a masterpiece. If he makes 10 great films and bows out, he becomes a legend. If his last movie is a piece of shit, he'll forever be remembered for it. And for those who call bullshit, look at any TV show that was a masterpiece but ended in a dud, and how that dud defined it. Lost, Game of Thrones, How I Met Your Mother, etc. No one talks about the great moments. They only bring up the fuck up of a conclusion.
That is a great statement. But what if he exits Sopranos-style or Breaking Bad style. I all for quality over quantity but still 10 features seem too little. Remember when Malick did 2 movies and "walked away" for almost 2 decades and he became a myth or when Garbo quit at the top of their game. Many examples of masters retiring because they refused to be below excellent. And yet Eastwood, Ford, Rohmer, Oliveira, Vidor, Godard kinda prove him to be kinda "dead wrong". I am with Bill Maher on this one. He should not quit at just 10 features before he's even 60 - the only names that might be compared to him, in terms of small cinematic output are Víctor Erice with 4 features, Jacques Tati with 6 features, Malick and Lynch both with 10 features each (altho Lynch has not directed a feature in 15+ years dunno if he retired from Ever directing a new feature), Miyazaki and Michael Mann with both 11 features each and Kubrick with 13 features but none of them are (or did) retire(d), least of all before 60 y.o.!! I guess we'll have to wait and see.
How are you doing Acromat
when the 10th movie of Quentin comes out, that's gonna be the biggest mic drop ever
and I don't want do but also at the same time can't wait for it
How his last few movies sucked
@phillydisco Who cares what a movie someone else wrote would be like? He's a writer-director. It's like shitting on Messi for not being a great hypothetical baseball player
@@grizzybear9111 hateful eight had great dialogue but it was slow and dragged on a little too long, so I see what you mean with that one..
Once upon a time in Hollywood however, was great. You’re buggin
What about kubrick? He made eyes wide shut in his 70's right? C'mon quentin.
He touched on it here with the mention of the couple of names people throw at him but I don’t think he considers himself to be one of the greatest to ever do it or to be in that stratosphere of director so he feels it’s a bad comparison. He may very well be up there but to think it about yourself is a little egomaniacal. Especially since unlike athletes there aren’t really any objective metrics to measure it by. Unless ticket sales and how many awards your studio bought for you counts.
Bergman made Fanny and Alexander in his sixties. Kurosawa made Ran in his seventies. Scorsese is in his late seventies, and The Irishman, Silence, and The Wolf of Wall Street are as good as any movie he's ever made. Tarantino has potentially many, many years left full of great movies.
It's not entirely fair to compare *anyone* to Kubrick. He is considered by many, including myself, the GOAT after all.
@@Angels510 I just think take a break and come back when you want to come back why make this an ultimatum. I think there is no way he doesn’t make more movies it will just be too hard to resist. He’s a legend one of the greats. No doubt.
Clint is still making them.
"Quentin Tarantino is here, the star of all of my sexual nightmares." -Tina Fey Golden Globes monologue
Don't worry, Bill. Hayao Miyazaki is saying "Just one more movie." for about 30 years now.
Luc Besson said he'd only ever direct 10 movies. He's on his 18th so far. Steven Soderbergh retired in 2013. Then three years later he started directing _Logan Lucky_ and has directed 6 films since. In the meantime he directed three seasons of television and a play. Plenty of other examples among directors, actors, writers, musicians, etc...
@@TheMoviePlanet Not sure whether Luc Besson or Steven Soderbergh are good examples because most of their recent films were terrible...
@@jonasulrich That's a matter of personal opinion
He even announces it publicly 🤣 .. It's hilarious. He hates the process every time, but keeps doing it.. it's a beautiful thing. It's the artist in war with himself, until another pearl comes off. I'm so looking forward his next one.
@@TheMoviePlanet yep, and the fifth element was his last good movie.
"My mom took me to see Carnal Knowledge and The Wild Bunch and all these kind of movies when I was a kid."
- Quentin Tarantino
What a badass mom 🤣
Truly one of the best Tarantino interviews I've ever seen. Bill Maher should interview QT more often
Really? I sat here feeling like Bill tried to corner Quentin with the repeated retirement questions.
@@hasselett This vid here is just a teaser, several minutes from the beginning of the interview - the whole interview was longer and really good parts came later.
My favorite Tarantino film and one that is usually underrated is Jackie Brown
Yer not The Lone Ranger on that one:)
A masterpiece!!!
Same here!
Dude looks like he de-aged since I last saw an interview with him.
Must be the adrenochrome enemas
@@IMAXXHEW The hell?
Must be cutting back on the Coke
🤣
He must have met many feet during the pandemic
I remember when Quentin did a two parter CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episode Grave Digger, nominated for the 2005 Primetime Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series.
It was friggin awesome
Yes that was a really good 2 parter. It made me wish he had kept that script for himself and made it into a movie not related to the CSI show.
It was called grave danger.
He directed an episode of ER, too. (Motherhood)
I would love for him to make a documentary series based on questions about his own country, life and wishes for the future (private and as a collective) ...... and then make a more Tarantino movies. LOVE the guy
i actually applaud him only making 1 more movie. one of the reasons why seinfeld is still a beloved show is because they didnt milk it until it was sour. they went out on top. tarantino should as well. as much as i'll miss his films, theres no better way to cement a legacy than to make your best film your last.
Oh God, The Walking Dead is a perfect example of how bad it is to do make a series last way too long.
Seinfeld sucks.
Quentin is probably thinking, "Set me free why don't ya baby?"
Tarrintino: "Directors do not get better."
"Explain George Miller."
Tarrintino: "I must rethink my entire life."
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction tbf in 100 years I don’t think anyone will give a shit about films, they’ll be too busy in some kind of augmented VR reality living their best fake life lol
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction Yes.
I liked Fury Road. A VERY beautifully photographed film. But The Road Warrior is the better film. Even my young nephew thought so.
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction I love the original Road Warrior. I always will. Fury Road is absolutely as good at the very minimum, in it's own way.
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction But the thing is FURY ROAD is an incredibly well put together, energized work from a 70 something director there's young men and women who couldn't dream about creating something that volatile and beautiful. Narratively ROAD WARRIOR may have the ultimate charms, but still -
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction Did you actually see Fury Road? I thought it looked hyper digital too in the trailer, but almost everything in the film was shot in-camera with only a few scenes of exception. The reason you think it looks digital is the saturation is cranked up to like 150%. Everything is extremely vibrant.
If that's your main issue with the film, watch the director's cut, which actually is the reverse: It's entirely a very high contrast black & white. That's the way he wanted it in the first place. It completely changes the visual feel.
Finally, the political message stuff is crap. Nobody really had an issue with it, all of the "war of the sexes" news stories was media hype based on a twitter account with like 30 followers, not the mainstream. I don't exactly think it's uberwoke messaging to say "Yeah you probably shouldn't keep a slave harem."
How did I miss this. I actually downloaded Spotify just to enjoy the Quentin Tarrintino interview on JRE.
Man... You bring Tarantino to your show, and basically ask just one question!
This short clip is not the whole interview - and some very interesting things were said later on by both Tarantino and Maher about harmful impact of ideology on art. Look it up if you are interested, I won't link any videos here out of respect for this channel and what they decided to publish from the whole interview in this short clip.
@@tehvalheru is it on TH-cam?
@@alphacraig2001 There are articles on web, there are several vids on youtube about it but the full video of the interview is not on youtube afaik. There is a short clip of the key part circulating Twitter, though. If interested, search for "ideology is (now) more important than art" plus both names.
I wish the clip was the last part of the interview which was a lot more interesting when Tarantino was describing the cycles over the decades in Hollywood regarding the amount of artistic freedom that was allowed in the context of what was going on historically. Maher brought up the issue of political correctness in today's Hollywood, and Tarantino's answer was pretty interesting. Gives me a little hope for the future on this issue.
Every block buster must have investment from the Eastern Giant now n contents scensored.
5’ is too long for you? Your tiny lizard brain Gen Zr has difficulty w more than 280 characters! Read non-fiction, history BOOKS!
Not everything has to be about PC even though Bill likes to bring it up everywhere.
Well...you can find the complete show on TH-cam as well...
I hear this nonsense all the time, look at always sunny in philadelphia, family guy, south park, borat... there are countless examples of programs that are literally in your face not PC but the real problem is that alot of them are not profitable for studios.. so they dont make them
If Akira Kurosawa stopped at his tenth movie, he never would have made Rashomon. And his career only started from there.
Tarantino is a hack director and his movies are completely forgetable.
Akira Kurosawa made a masterpiece (Ran) in his 70s and nearly blind.
Yeah but Tarantino's career started at about Pulp Fiction (when he became world wide known) and he's been doing it forever. His movies are incredible.
@@squatch545 If you don’t like Tarantino’s work that’s your opinion, but why come to an interview with him then?
@@jeremyklepac8410 For the same reason why you choose to come to reply to me.
I appreciate his dedication to the craft over money. That’s rare nowadays.
He’s falling victim to what people do to gifted people who don’t leave while still great. I say who cares if you put out a dud. Nobody thinks of the Wizards when they think Michael Jordan. Sure, in the moment comments were made that he was slowing down but today no one remembers.
Not when it comes to filmmaking, you are only as good as your last movie.
One time I had Morgan Freeman sit in my chair I said "Morgan, you hang out with Clint Eastwood. Just between me and you. How old is Clint Eastwood?" You know what Morgan told me? he said "Hey, Clint Eastwood is a hundred and thirty-seven years old." A hundred and thirty-seven years old!
🤣🤣🤣
yesss few people actually know that.. but they wouldn't believe it anyway, so. Clint is a resilient fella. I think he can pull it off until 195-ish, I know it sounds crazy, and I won't be here to confirm it, but.. our grandchildren may see it.
You lyin you never met Morgan Freeman
Thought he was older.
One of the best movies of the past 10 years. Can’t wait to read this novel.
I wish he makes a Sopranos level series or something after the final movie
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction But he's written every movie he has directed
@Weapons Of Mass Distraction He wrote six episodes of "Bounty Law" just to get the feel for it.
He'll probably get into writing for TV shows once he stops making movies. That and the occasional acting cameo. I just fucking know it.
How novel and interesting that would be...more of the same we've seen over 25 yrs now 🥱
I doubt he could ever write such valuable material.
The dialogue in his movie as always top notch
My favorite Filmmaker/Director of all time, his movies are really unique and intriguing! 🍿
I hardly ever read books, but this one has already been placed in my Amazon cart. Can't wait.
Quentin is starting to look like his character in From Dusk Til Dawn, after he is bitten.
That's so weird I thought the same thing!
A tanned Tarantino, there's just something very wrong about this.
Richie! Lol
Larry Fleetwood Larry you know I have never in my life met a person named Fleetwood and if I did I would want to ask them if they are related to Mick Fleetwood. Are you, Larry?
😂😂😂
I retired from the underground music business after 28 years. It was a mixed bag of reactions from family, friends, and colleagues. You have my support Quinton. Go be a legend at something else 💪and thank you for eveyrthing.
Quentin needs to make a 10 hour movie. That drops weekly like on Netflix. Would be epic giving a filmmaker like him ten hours. The story would be amazing.
That’s called a limited series, lol. And I agree. While he says he will only do 1 more film, he never said anything about a TV show or limited/mini series.
nah... If you know anything about QT his last will be on FILM in a theatre.
It would be Amazing!!!
His movies would be too expensive for Netflix! No digital! All 35mm!
@@Boobalopbop I think ending up doing a series is what hes worried about.
accumulating skills // good line // also 'out last the competition' LOL
This was too short.
Would it kill Bill to do a longer interview?
I see what you did there :P
Damn. That was smooth. Did you think about the pun and work backwards or did it happen organically?
@Kevin Votaw clearly this is just a snippet
Smooth!
Django will always be one of my favorite movies. The "make sure you call the sheriff" scene is all-time. The way Tarintino can get inside your head and make you count the seconds, anxiously awaiting the return from law enforcement, then at the end turn it into a witty joke. Just brilliant.
How are you doing Stephen
@@JenniferSmith-ho3im I'm gay how about you
Hopefully he does the Steven Soderbergh “retirement.” (i.e., say you’re retiring after your latest movie only to come back after maybe two years at most, and start making a shitload of movies again, lol)
Let’s hope that happens!
I also like how Soderbergh makes these small-scale movies filmed on iphones. Just because you're a famous director w/ clout who can make $100 million movies doesnt mean you cant do something scaled back without the logistical and bureaucratic headaches of a big studio movie. I hope QT will do the same but he seems pretty firm on the 10 movie vision
How are you doing Mark
Quentin says "Hey mate". Every Australian loves this guy!!!!!!!!!!!
I wish they were having this conversation while smoking a joint
I remember renting Reservoir Dogs as a flier back in 1994. Never heard of Tarrantino or the movie. Plugged it into the VCR and was transfixed about 5 minutes in. Couldn't take my eyes off of it. I had no idea at that time what this man was capable of. Tarrantino doesn't make movies .... he makes fine art. The finest writer and director that America has ever produced. As long as you're drawing breath Quentin ..... you should be making grown up pieces of art.
how can he utter those words of"quitting while you are on top".. it took fkn Scorcese 40 years to even win an Oscar. AND HE'S STILL GOING! Long live Marty! Stop with the crap Quentin- Hollywood needs your genius...or else it will be nothing but animated movies and comic book remakes.
As much as I would love for him to make more movies, it’s not like he’s completely going away. I’m excited for all the other stuff he’s going to put out - books, a podcast, possibly a tv series…I’m happy just to hear talk about movies more often!
I respect the interviewer just for knowing who Don Siegel is.
Love ya Bill.
I'm here in Newfoundland,
Where the weather isn't great but the weed is.
For many years now, you have been entertaining me and educating me. Here in Canada politics isn't as prominent in our culture. Your show certainly has raised my eyebrows to my own country's socioeconomic and political goings-on.
Helping me to be a more well rounded and informed citizen .
Love your show and your humor.
Thank you .
I agree with Bill, huge fan here, BTW. You are Quentin fucking Tarantino. Stop comparing yourself to other directors and slow down, just relax and enjoy life , don't force ANYTHING, and when you get an obsessive idea which you just can't resist making, then and only then, make it, no retirement!!
Tarantino’s Aspergers is on full display here. He’s convinced himself of his decision based on ‘film history’, which is silly and has nothing to do with him personally. You can tell no-ones really called him out on this before.
This is the first time in awhile that couldn’t agree More with bill Maher on everything, it was his best movie and he should continue.
Quentin Tarantino doing his own remake of Reservoir Dogs??! That would be EPIC
Epic?.. No. it wouldn't.. You cannot re open a fresh bag of lays potato chips.. Its not the same..
Its the fans who would ruin it. Expectations and the viewers thoughts interfering with the "way" he remade it, the changes etc.. The fans might critique it to death ruining it for themselves.... Let sleeping dogs lie.
@@markjones7903 you're absolutely right about fans ruining it bc you're literally doing that right now 🙄
This is the best episode of RealTime this season. If not ever.
As crappy as it sounds, Quentin really is right. Having seen a lot of movies from different eras and different legendary directors, they often fell short of their quality in the later years, perhaps because of a certain amount of comfort with the medium that leads to a confidence and a complacency, a lack of the need to EARN their success as young directors trying to prove themselves do. It will be sad to see Quentin go and maybe number eleven will be a missed masterpiece, but being an all powerful, omnipotent being I feel it is ok that he retire.
That's so individual. Some people just get better with age. Like Sergio Leone -- his best was his last. Eastwood still kills it. Scorcese maybe isn't at his best but is still great. Some people get complacent, and some learn, and some continue to push. Categorising him as one of the three as if it's inevitable there's only one path is totally unjustified.
When you love it as much as Q does, you don't quit. He's kidding himself, but also building hype around this next project. It's actually a genius marketing move.
I'm not sure the quality drops rather the audience sees you go from original and fresh to something they expect to ...is there nothng new?
none of that is down to the Director...its just how taste and trends work...in ART in Fashion...in Writing styles and genres come in vouge then get replaced
@@samsabruskongen Is Scorsese the same kind of Director as Quentin or Guy Ritchie...where their Personality is stamped on every frame
or a craftsman who is a master filmsmith
@@samsabruskongen I'm saying that Scorsese makes great movies...but he dosn't make a 'Scorsese' movie where you instantly recognise...Oh this is a Scorsese movie....His shelf life is far longer because of that...you don't have expectations of seeing certain troupes or styling when you goto a scorsese movie...well other than certain actors turning up
I never thought I'd see the day where I was laughing at Bill Maher. But here we are.
Quinton could do a caillou movie, and I'd still watch it.
Good god - can you imagine him directing an anime film??
@@Gollum2008Tube like the O-ren Ishii segment from Kill Bill, Vol. 1? That would be cool.
Once upon a time was such a a delight to watch. Make another one.
I'd probably piss off most of the commentators on why QT is quitting. Disney, the popularity of comic book movies, and destruction of cinema.
Yeah, he would continue making movies during the decade of comic book movies only to quit in the twilight of comic book movies.
@@paisleydunbar7218 Once Upon a time was boring as shit.
Lazy argument.
Disney's control over so much of the movie industry might piss him off as it does me, but I doubt superhero movies would discourage Tarantino at all. And he's big enough to get his movies past any Disney gate keepers and on to many thousands of screens around the world regardless. I bet you he privately loves the MCU too (especially Thor Ragnarok and Guardians of the Galaxy) because, like his movies, they are really fun movies! There's a bunch of superhero crap too, but there were a thousand fake Quentin copy crap movies in the 90s too.
I think he's worried that at some point he's going to be the old guy that can't make cool movies anymore. And I don't think he's worried about other people thinking his movies aren't cool either. I think he likes his own movies the best, and he's worried that some day he'll make something he thinks is crap. And no matter how much other people like it, he'll know it sucks and he'll hate himself.
Also, Tarantino is by far my favourite director and has written and/or directed 2 of my personal top 5 films, but Iron Man is also great. Have fun at the movies!
I agree with Bill Maher 120%. I'm a Brazilian translator, and one of the greatest essays ever written in Portuguese is Ensaio sobre a Cegueira, by José Saramago. There is even a great movie adaptation with Julianne Moore ("Blindness", I think). Saramago wrote it at the tender age of 87. Hell, Kurosawa directed "Ran" at 75. One would imagine Tarantino would know better, right 2:15 (also a big fan, btw).
Yeah Q T and B M! Loved you long time!
What can I get for one dollar?
Almost agree that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was one of his best!
There's no way he could do Reservoir Dogs in today's environment.
Why not?
There's no way that a lot of the greatest movies ever could be made today.
((SPOILERS ))The satification the audience gets after realizing that orange is an undercover cop is amazing... you see all these scumbags and you find out that there is a good guy amongst them for you and justice is going to be served... so good.
@@BryonLetterman that's not the question, specifically why reservoir dogs couldn't be made?
@@lzcdf Three Major Reasons: First look at the cast, damn near everyone of them went on to be a heavy hitter in Hollywood. But in the era of the 90s, the vibe, the style of the moment - they all were iconic. An actor today would not only need to act the character part but also act like they're in the 90s. Second who can rob a bank on foot? In the era of cell phones and militarized police departments? Cops back then were basically Mall Cops of today. Third Reservoir Dogs wasn't made to be iconic. It was just made. It grew unbeknownst to the actors during filming it. They could have destroyed their careers in some of those scenes. They didn't know. They didn't care. Actors today have advocates and agents who plan for a 20 career in film. So they would not take the role without contractual script changes or scene changes that would take away from the original vibe in order to protect the actor's career. Back then, actors were hungry and didn't give a damn.
My top 2 directors right there. Watched every single movie he ever made. Doesnt get enough credit. He is the diamond in the rough
The greatest script that Tarantino will ever write is the script he starts writing Day 1 of his retirement.
Why did they cut the rest of the interview?
“Please don’t quit because we need you to entertain us, and when you bomb one, we will turn on you with a vengeance.”
LOL this! Either way the world will get by.
How are you doing Dan
Tarantino is so aware of his position within so many contexts, it's actually scary. Legendary character!
I'm with Tarantino : you have to know when to quit. He will not be loved more even if he makes 50 more movies... But those would be opportunities to screw up, sell out and be remembered only for that.
Who cares who will be remembered for what? What's the point? Art is for the living not for the dead so let's have more instead of less. If Tarantino makes something really bad and uninteresting we don't have to watch it you know.
You can't control how you're going to be perceived in the future. Tarantino might be remembered by the guy who only wanted to make 10 movies, but not for some masterpiece he refused to make. He should retire whenever he pleases, but not with such idea. Ray Park was almost forced to make the Ghostbusters theme, and now is the only hit people remember him for...
@@ojacobsen3727 let me ask a simple question : would you rather an artist pour his soul in 10 great works... or churn out 1,000 half-assed cash-grabs ? Quantity and quality : always mutually exclusive, kid. Tarantino is wise enough to know that. I find those who don't are people who haven't even made _one_ great work yet.
@@pdzombie1906 indeed you can't control how people will perceive you. But anyone with any curiosity about Tarantino will eventually watch his movies, at which point they'll remember him for something other than "only wanted to make 10 movies". You also have to consider that if someone is only going to remember you for one weird detail about you... that someone isn't worth impressing.
@@TheNefastor No one is asking for a 1000 more movies from him. just a couple more.
This is a great conversation
Jackie Brown is a 1997 American crime film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino and starring Pam Grier in the title role., was the best.
It was my favorite QT movie until OUATIH!
wow!! dos de los mejores en una misma conversación!!! priceless!
3:13 It looks like that scene in Pulp Fiction between Marsellus Wallace and Butch Coolidge. "The night of the fight, you may feel a slight sting."
Man, theres a brief moment of heartbreak i felt when Bill tells Quentin about He hearing that He is just going to make one more film, and He didn't seem to have a direct answer for it.
Quentin said for years that "Once Upon A Time" was going to be his last movie. as much as that movie is by far one of his best (even my parents loved it)there are rumors (though probably fact by now), that he's going to do the next Star Trek movie. That would be a fitting end and probably would be his crown achievement in Film - even though i wish he would do another 10 !
He is one of 4 of my favorite Directors of all time. the other 3 being Copolla, Scorsese, and Wes Anderson.
4:39 so at one point he also considered making an R-rated Star Trek sequel as his final film.
It takes me back too when I saw Bill Maher guests in "Murder She Wrote."
My last fav of his was, the hateful 8. It was just a gritty, fun monvie.
I'm going to have to revisit Hateful 8. It didn't grab me initially. But Hollywood, Django, Pulp Fiction...movie perfection!!!
It'd be cool if Bill would actually let Quentin finish a sentence.
They cut the interview short. Left out the part where tarantino blames the activist cancel culture. Great job
Not just cancel culture, rather the whole dominance of the current ideology over art and the damage it does to art. Anyone interested and not being able to watch the whole Bill Maher show can look the info up, even here on youtube there are many vids about it.
The clips published in this channel are always only a sample of the content of the show, sort of advertisement or demo ;-) so I am not sure cutting the good part out was to censor it... but if it were included it would have gained this vid many more shares and views, no doubt, so cutting it perhaps was not a good idea from any point of view...
Bill is all of us if we got the chance to talk to him Lmao
How are you doing Kendrick
*trivia:*
The coffee shop manager in pulp fiction is also in reservoir dogs!
He’s one of the cops that gets blown away by Steve Buscemi right after he gets hit by the car in the street.
Edit:
It just hit me he’s also one of the boxing announcers commentators on the radio in pulp fiction too!
He’s the only person that plays two parts in the same movie!
*Bob Roth*
Yeah IMDB is cool
i, for one, am devastated by the news of Tarantino's retirement from the film industry. his movies have been my edutainment, for so long... i do not know anyone who puts the time and effort into each frame as if those frames are all standalone photos, each telling a 1000 word story.
but i do look forward in dread fascination to his next phase in life as a barista in Soho who moonlights as a night orderly at an old folks home...
Great show. Opening monologue, so so, had much better, but then spiked up with Tarantino interview, a good panel too. through New Rules and everything else. I love Tarantino movies. Bill definitely had a point about too young to retire from filmmaking, and I started thinking about plenty of older filmmakers who didn't retire so soon. Hitchcock, Wilder, etcetera.
Eastwood
Attenborough
Lean
Lee
Haha…Scorsese 😂
Come on !!!!
We the people may need to crowd fund / kickstart the 11th movie 🤞🏾🤞🏾🤞🏾🤞🏾🤞🏾
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood was easily the best film of 2019
I mean he is leaving us with a lot of masterpieces. He deserves retirement
What masterpieces? 😂
@@lukeskywalker6809 If you have to ask, you won't understand.
@@lukeskywalker6809 is a insult you call yourself luke skywalker and ask that
Man get out of that bubble that you live
He’s my favorite director after Kubrick. Not all of QT’s films are masterpieces, but each and every one of them were worth standing in line to go see upon initial release.
@@georgelayton6641 :'D
No body is talking about Inglourious Basterds....One of his best. Check it out guys...
It maht just be his masterpiece.
Quentin will get bored, and in those lowly moments he will be evermore inspired to continue making more movies. Never say never for nobody knows what the future holds in store for anyone.
Reservoir Dogs was lightning in a bottle never to be repeated. It's a standalone masterpiece IMHO. No remakes please.
I feel like this is a really bizarre interview. In fact, it wasn’t really an interview at all. It was just a lecture on how he should finish out his career.
I wasn’t pleased with how the questions were asked.. so I agree
you do know, they are only posting very short clips here, on youtube channel and there was the entire long episode, right? This interview was actually way longer and great, but it is in the episode, not here on youtube.
I could literally sit and have a beer with Quentin Tarantino and let him talk to me about the most boring or uninteresting things in the world and I’d be 💯 percent entertained!
I really really hate how your first guest, when not a contentious figure, isnt on the panel. Quintin would have been a great addition.
because he probably didn't want to talk politics or some guest feel they can't excel or don't want any part in that section and thus the beginning interview was probably best. real time breaking up sections of their show like this has allowed them to bring on a wide array of guest and while i would like to see more Tarantino this is fine too. i was thinking man if only Larry King were still with us that he would be a great show for Tarantino to kick back and speak alot longer.
How are you doing Mike
my favorite film director ever. I love pulp fiction
When Quentin leaves & Martin Scorsese dies, Hollywood is done
Hollywood is already done! They've sold out to remakes and comic book films since 2000's.
But I agree on this, Filmmakers like Scorsese and Tarantino etc are the last of the mohicans.
The Irish man kind of sucked
"how do you know it's the top?" Love it....
Prediction: He will come out of that "retirement" but he surely needs to enjoy his success for quite a while. (But just don't take too long 🙏)
I don't think so. People get tired of doing the same thing. And this guy is so sprung with creativity and energy. He's said he wants to write novels and film criticism.
@@green_monday artists retire then unretire all the time. Some retire multiple times. I can see him making 1 more then getting the itch after 5 years or so.
@@deecee1647 He will probably make a tv series and claim it isn't technically a "movie_
@@fayguled900 that would be cool
one of the greatest directors of all time
love his movies..... hope he makes more movies
We all know why he's retiring. The Wokeness of Hollywood would make any one of his new movies a living hell to make. Just look at the press conference for Once upon a time where the Woke NYT reporter accuses him of stiffing Margo out of a potentially stronger role... This question was asked to a director who's arguably best work all have strong female leads. Hes done with the Wokeness..
Thank you for supporting us Quinton Tarantino.
He wants to retire as a champion.
I hope Quentin puts Bill in his next movie. I'd love to see that.
He’s writing a miniseries. Look how much we fall in love with his characters in a 2-3 hour movie (or 5 hours in the case of kill bill). Now imagine you’re getting 10 hours to bond with these guys… it’s going to be epic!
And what’s to say he doesn’t do more than one miniseries?