What Does Tarantino know about making a great Movie? His hole career as been based upon plagiarizing other filmmakers. He's never made a great Movie.. Ok movies maybe?(I quite like Kill Bill vol.1) but never great Movies
@DEATHbySHATNER Is Quentin Tarantino You're Favourite Director? I'll never understand why Tarantino is in some people regards hold up in such high esteem and he's like some messiah of cinema My Top 10 Director's Better Than Quentin Tarantino 1) Martin Scorsese 2) Ken Loach 3) Edgar Wright 4) James Mangold 5) Wes Anderson 6) Taika Waititi 7) David Fincher 8) Guillermo del Toro 9) Hideo Nakata 10) Christopher Nolan
To be honest I knew it was a bunch of white slave masters from the trailer... and Quentin is saying we don't know what's going on but we know the black servants are strange lol... I knew they were mind controlled instantly lol.
@@TheKomentor not sure. But maybe when he’s done making his final film he’ll do a podcast and break down classic movies. The guy was born for this stuff.
@@Berkmugga There was news in June this year that he was going to start a podcast called The Video Archives Podcast from July onwards. I wonder what happened to it.
Careful what you wish for. His book Cinema Speculation goes very deep into his film critic mind. Took me like 5 months to read because I had to see a lot of the movies he writes about.
If he's going to stop at 10 movies, he should do a podcast. Movies, film makers, actors, careers. Go deep on some, explain why some budget movie is secretly great, etc.
I saw this movie twice, and the second time, I had to pause a scene because I was asking why the cinematography was making me feel weird. And then I realized that everything in the home is in shades of black skin colours, from the colour of the wall, to the dark wood for the staircases and furniture, to the oven buttons that had been painted in a shade of dark copper as well as almost everything in the kitchen - you don't quite catch it because there are very few elements of green and few other colors, like plants in the kitchen, and since it's so well done it's hidden in plain sight. There is a moment when the main character is walking up the stairs soon after entering the home : if you pause there you'll immediately see it. His skin is the same colour as the the wood almost to a T and you realize exactly why you had this feeling from the moment he gets in the house. It's a complete masterpiece!
@@pawsnclaws1 the movie definitely doesnt suck, and if it does i imagine the shining sucks too… theyre just movies anyway maybe movies just suck for you
@@pawsnclaws1 If you didn't catch the subtleties and couldn't care less for the nuances of colour theory and the relationship between colour theory and race in films, then this film was not made for you.
He’s gonna write plays, books and pretty much anything involving writing so he can be at home for his kid and all that. I for one am hoping for him to get like a series deal with like Netflix or something to see if he’ll do inglorious bastards show or something
So far it’s kind of looking like Get Out was lightening in a bottle. Peele’s following efforts haven’t measured up even close. Let’s hope he gets it right with NOPE.
It's literally AMAZING how articulate and QUICK Tarantinos response was to the interviewers question.Theres no "pause, ummm, uggh," but straight flow of brilliance. He would be like the EMINEM of movie talk lol
I firmly believe Get Out will be a classic movie that will never die out in our minds, it was a really genius movie. Honestly hope in the future they don't try to remake or reboot of the movie like they do with all these other classic horror movies and fail.
How? The message is so specific. I don't even think it applies to normal black people, just athletes and marketable black entertainers for white profit. Notice how black stars are encouraged to date and marry white people or else they get blackballed in the industry? Originally, Eartha Kitt wanted to marry Harry Belafonte but she ended up married to a white executive in the industry instead. Same thing with Minnie Riperton and Diana Ross.
I also believe that Jordan Peele is the black Alfred Hitchcock of our generation. His movies are brilliantly made with suspense, thrilling plot twist that keeps you on your toes, so yeah Get out and many more of his films will be classic.
@@firefly5571 Afro-Surrealism- Jordan Peele, Donald Glover, Micheala Coel, Kendrick Lamar, Ava Duvernay, Ryan Coogler, etc. Like in the turmoil era late 70s/early 80s Black people created Hip Hop culture, I believe the turmoil of the aughts will be known for creating Afro-Surrealism in film and music, but this time its happening alongside our brothers & sisters in the United Kingdom.
@@jamessummers5936 ah okay, I thought he directed or wrote it for some reason. Still, he had a part in the worst horror movie I’ve ever seen. It also most definitely did not “create empathy across racial groups”
I remember seeing it at the movie theater and the collective experience was unreal. We were all connected as an audience. At the end, when we realized that the police officer ends up being actually the TSA guy, we all screamed:”YEAH!!!”, and clapped as if we all living through the character rejoice that we wouldn’t be victims of injustice.
I just love listening to this guy talk about movies! He is so damned passionate. But because he has been so passionate all his life, and he is so driven and intelligent, he has directed that passion into reeeeeaaaallllyyy knowing and understanding the medium with amazing breadth and depth. So he passionately delivers real insight when he speaks. It makes me smile.
If you've seen Get Out only once, you need to watch it again knowing the movie's secrets. You can catch all the little things you didn't notice before, like the irony of the dad's talk about how he feels about deer.
So perfect...I loved it because after seeing so many films, 1) I didn't know where it was going and 2) the pay off was satisfying. I think it's great when some stories end badly/realistically, but so glad it had a /*SPOLIER*/ happy ending...I would have been devastated. And agree he needs to have a podcast and share his wealth of thoughts on film!
For me, the scary moment was the bingo scene. It was all visually telling the audience the overall point of the film and you become fearful for the main character who's oblivious to the who situation.
Exactly! I felt the exact same way, that was the true horror moment for me in the whole movie, not the pictures. Not one person that I spoke to about Get Out brought up the pictures. Ever.
Love this movie. My favorite part I didn’t catch until the 2nd time around when the maid/grandmother is apologizing for unplugging Chris’s phone and her demeanor goes from gracious, to terror and struggle, and back to gracious again after “no, no, no, no, no ,no….” The 2nd time you watch the film you realize the grandmother and the body’s rightful owner are wrestling for control. Haunting…
Also Daniel Kaluuya is a fantastic actor and his writing was great. Like, he was just a regular guy, who happened to be black, not any kind of stereotype. And then this shit just happens to him, for literally no good reason. Which rhymes with audiences cos of what happens in the news every other day.
@@rnw2739People like you can not STAND when a black actor or actress gets to shine. You love watching films in which black people are portrayed as downtrodden slaves or harmful members of their community through gangster films, but when you watch a film of a black superhero, or a black lord of a great house (house of the dragon) you can’t stomach it. And god forbid they get an award for it.
His point about the confidence in Peele is so true. I watch a lot of horror and mystery movies. When watching Get Out, you can tell that you won't be left guessing. It's hard to explain but I felt like I just needed to stay strapped in and I'd get a nice delivery.
My favorite part about Get Out is that it dose a reverse uno twist that completely subverted my expectations as to wtf was going on in that community.... and it was all done intentionally. Truly brilliant writing and directing from Mr. Peele.
0:28 this is why i hate when ppl say "no one asked for this" when a movie is announced. No one asked for Pulp Fiction, Terminator, Parasite, Fight Club, Heat, Fargo, but ppl still loved them. If a movie doesn't interest you it simply means that the movie is not for you
@@bagman817right but that's just an illogical statement made from a personal point of view with zero factual relevance based on obvious box office returns. So I think his point stands, regardless of the film. You are not everyone. And obvious as that should be, it is not. Lack of self awareness
I just respect what he says because you can tell he just loves and cares about movies. Movies were his escape as a kid and his legacy as an adult and a lifetime of watching and either enjoying or not enjoying so many films molded him into the best film maker of all time.
Quentin was raised on Black Cinema because his mum dated a lot of black guys and they would take him to watch Blaxploitation movies at Black Cinemas. He’s probably the only director that can reach into multiple audiences.
Jesus, for an interviewer to turn to a white man and say you get black people so what did they think with this film - to get such an awkward, precarious, easily embarrassing question and then knock it out of the park right away with a convincing response, this just may be the most impressive moment I’ve ever heard from Tarantino.
@@stevowilliams8279 I wasn’t impugning the question itself. I was saying it’s a precarious question for a white person to answer - without presuming an expertise on the black experience. It’s not an easy thing to navigate without sounding presumptuous or pat or nauseating. But Quentin was ready for it with a convincing, solid answer. And being an expert on black cinema does not automatically make one an expert in speaking about black people’s experience. It’s a separate area.
Yeah, that was a disgusting tone-deaf question, to be honest. "You get Black people, don't you?" But fortunately, Tarantino saved the day with a reasonable answer.
I wonder if Quentin spoke to actual black people about Get Out. Because when I first saw it in theaters, hardly anyone responded like that when Chris found the photos. The “oh!” moment came during the auction scene. I’m black and saw it in a theater with a bunch of other black people and when that scene came up, I heard reactions ranging from “Huh?! Uh-uh!” to - and I kid you not - “Nah they really gonna buy this nigga like a slave??” That last reaction even got half the theater to laugh unintentionally which is what I think Jordan Peele wanted in order to catch them further off-guard.
It was a fine movie. It handled the topic better than most movies but it wasn’t an incredible movie. I had heard so much going into this movie expecting a masterpiece and i saw an original movie that was solid.
I’ve watched NOPE about five times. Jordan is a master director! Get Out was a great movie. I didn’t care for Us so much. I feel like it’s lacking something in the ending to really tie it together. NOPE is one of those few movies I could put on over and over like No Country for Old Men, GoodFellas, and Gone Girl.
I really like 'Get Out'. I love those movies where you keep wondering wtf is going on - not in a confusing way, but a scary kinda way. That moment when the gardner is running straight at the camera is creepy af, and I love it. Wasn't a big fan of 'Us', tho.
@@dlobelow760 It was a Twilight Zone episode that became popular because it overly didactive with the politics of the time. It won't age well in a few decades.
I went tot he movie not having seen a trailer and having no idea what I was in for. Saw it opening night. Was such a fun ride seeing how the story unfolded and the theater was confused and we all got it at the same time. Very collective experience.
A lot of people write off Peele whenever he's mentioned alongside the likes of Eggers and Aster but I personally think he's as good of a director as them, if not better. Get Out and Us are phenomenal films. Really looking forward to Nope.
Get out is a master class, in the level of both the witch and hereditary, probably more tongue and cheek but arguably better in many aspects. Although I didn't liked he second film, I think it was a bit pretentious for me, the same thing you could say about the lighthouse, but William Defoe is a heavy hitter. Probably I need to watch it again, but honestly I prefer to be watching the sketch show, and that also speaks about his range.
Peele has a wider appeal to his work that Eggers and Aster don't imo. That's not to say those guys aren't excellent, but their work is much more an acquired taste.
There’s another part that doesn’t get touched on often, it wasn’t just the message, it was it happened at the right time. Something about this movie just tapped into the zeitgeist. Like If this movie dropped in 2013 it most likely doesn’t have anywhere near the cultural resonance it had. Kind of like how the watchman tv series has been said it came out about a year too early.
It burned brightly and quickly as went away. Who mentions it anymore? It was lid, directed, "paced" and framed like many of their sketches, so i kept waiting for a comedic twist, cause it kept telling me it had one. The comedic relief didn't help to diminish that expectation (It was unintentionally funny tho). -The twist could off been pulled of only by a black director, otherwise it would be racist propaganda. -Every white person's evil, no other race matters but black. What did EVERY white character want? To be black! xD The Oscars are a massive circle jerk, but come on now, giving a slasher with ZERO subtlety of racial tensions it tried to tackle an award?! It has as much validity as Obama's Nobel peace prize 30 days in. One of THE most overrated films ever.
@@4Everlast You're really not seeing the forest through the trees with this take. Seems like a personal thing tbh especially with the "every white person is evil" thing 😂 that's like being mad that all the rednecks in Wrong Turn were evil.
@@4Everlast I would say that about 'black panther' for sure, but I thought 'Get out' was really good, and quite unique. As for issues with subtlety - phuk me, what is 'blatantly the case' is too subtle for half the people I talk to; the 'white characters wanting to be black' was about appropriation (but you knew that right?) ; the reality of things re the issues in question 'is' a phuking slasher movie ... what better genre to make the point! "no other race matters but black?...where, wah...? what you talkin bout Willis?
@@brigwood7658 It messed with my head from the beginning, as it was framed and lid just like most of their comedy sketches, and feeling the mystery is behind the corner i was 100% sure the twist is comedic, and it ruined the damn thing for me, the tone was unique but it didn't feel right, not even the moment the guy with the hat starts cracking telling him to "get out" it felt borderline comedic, and the "funny" cop didn't help the tone, I kept looking for Peel to pop from around the corner, now ok, that one might be on me, but tonally it was, awkward. Appropriation with zero subtlety as i said, they didn't want anything cultural, they wanted a black body as it's superior, they kept hinting at it with the finese of an elephants fart. At first I expected a lot, knowing it got an oscar for the screenplay, but by the same standards the Nolan's should drown in them by now, as this compared to 90% of their stuff is child's play in terms of depth and complexity, but if you got racial undertones the award is guaranteed(Crash, Green book etc.) Then again, fuck the awards, the audience loves it, must be good, thennn you remember all the horse shit audiences loved and payed good cash to see... I think my point is, maybe I was expecting to much? I don't mind Peel, nor this movie, it's just overrated by any standard (it's hovering around an 8 on most sites)i mean come on now. Well yeah, in the movie only black matters, all whites are evil bastards are they not?! What other race do you see? Ain't there more then black and white folks in the world/America? Cultural appropriate's happening left and right not just white-black. It would be solved easily but putting justttt one bad black guy and one single good white guy, nothing else needed. WTF do you think would happen if the roles were reversed? If it was a white guy coming into a house of wealthy black folks? Exactly. I mean i might be analyzing it to much, but got damn, a movie people say is an 8/10 has to be inspected by a fine toothed comb.
Yeah he hits the nail on the head in every aspect. Especially that ending: "This isn't just white liberalism being awkward" - That's what so many of the movies aimed at black audiences are, that's why they suck so much. It's trying to make a movie "for black people" first and foremost, and if it's good or not is an after-thought. But with Get Out, it was good original concept that was also aimed specifically at black people, and it worked with everybody, it was an original movie. Props to K&P.
Not really. Millions of people have the same taste and opinions he does. He's just famous and has a platform where he can be very loquacious about film.
I saw Get Out after all the hype and I was let down but I’m glad I watched it. I decided to watch Nope and loved that movie so I play on giving Get Out a rewatch. I may not love all of his films but I will always watch them because he’s at least doing something different.
dude, those last 20 minutes were so so cringy and stupid, i mean how in the world could you even bold ur words. wtf. What could've beeen a true classic fell flat in that horrendous scape scene.
Wow quentin is spot on. His comment at 0:50 about laughter, i really experienced that watching Django. When Django was in the blue outfit whipping one of the brittle brothers, i was in the audience laughing and you could tell who did and didnt find the irony of the scene funny. In contrast to when Hildie was getting whipped or even Jodie was gonna get whipped, the latter had a very searing and sinister effect.
It's really not. That show key and peele was creative in itself , if you go back and watch it now. You can sew certain horror elements in his sketches that he chose to make comedy, but could of easily went dark lol.
Also Get Out wasn't the setup to the Get Out Cinematic Universe. It told its story and was a complete movie on its own without having to watch a disney+ show, read a comic book, etc.
Yes, it's like when you grow up in a dysfunctional family and them date someone in a healthy family and realize, "I never knew that this is what I wanted. I need this." A good mystery writer walks the reader thought the process of discovery.
He exposed the transactional nature of the relationships between white girls and black guys. You couldn't make a Get Out movie about black women and white men because both parties are more careful and studious and want stability when they venture out their own pool.
Normally when you watch a movie, you can point to other examples as clear inspirations for any given scene. I mean Tarantino built a massive career on this artform. But with Get Out its trickier. There are creepy family movies and there are brainwashing movies, but there are things going on in this movie that are completely unique and when you watch it, you feel the power of that. You don't know where this fucking movie is going or what its trying to do. There's no blueprint for it. Its a true masterpiece. I just think of Us in comparison, which is great, but does not have that same originality that Get Out has. It does a lot of fun stuff, but I'm not getting the same suspense I feel from Get Out.
Its kinda weird to hear him talk about "black audiences" in this way, but he's right. That's essentially how I felt about Get Out when I saw it in theaters. It was like a new lane of of where films could go that were made for me, were discovered. A lightbulb of sorts.
@nickxero2740 because he's talking about it *from* the black prospective. And he only touched on a small part of the experience because he cannot have the experience.
@nickxero2740 They didn't victimize anything, they said it was weird to hear a non Black person talk about this. Not that he isn't allowed to, or that he shouldn't. You just got mad and just jumped to conclusions
@nickxero2740 Hard disagree, "weird" is not exclusive to negativity. It's just not what he was used to, and that in no way means he had an issue with it. He quite literally agreed with him in the original comment.
I'm sure Q had more to say about the movie, but at the end of the day the movie is actually scary AF for lots of Black people. Peele was able to braid together the traumatic historical memory of America's treatment of Black people with excellent deployment of horror movie tropes. You leave that movie ACTUALLY shook about being the only Black person in all white folks' situations. Which many of us rightly already have but Peele made that feeling more visceral and slightly less irrational, even though the premise is still a movie construct.
It’s just like attack on titans when you go down the basement and we get to know what’s in there, everyone goes “Ahhhh” we get some insight but not the full picture, pun intended.
"Get out" gives you the same vibe a black man would get from white liberals, they are nice to you in the surface, they even pretend to be interested in black culture, but you kind of sense they have a sinister agenda that involves using and discarding you when you are no longer valuable to them, a new form of plantation but way darker and more subtle, then you find out their political predecesors were in the Klan and before that they fought against the abolition of slavery and you realize your initial intuition was right all along, but now they have you completely trapoed and dependent on government subsidies and probably dealing with drug addict or delinquent family members.
Asking Quentin Tarantino's opinion on get out because he's a great filmmaker makes perfect sense. Asking him because he's "locked into the black film community" is clown-level activity.
How so? I'm curious because Django, Get Out, Pulp Fiction, etc are all well-celebrated among the black community--I know this first hand. He tells excellent stories, with excellent black characters and people recognize--and celebrate--that. I don't think it's that much of a stretch to basically say he's sensible to black culture, atleast within his own field: FILM.
Nah, it’s more like any black person could have wrote the movie, but it’s a perfect way to let other races know what it feels like to be black, especially dating or socializing in non-black spaces.
@@redfacegaming7727 Then you understand. What’s the issue? This is basically how being black is. People will get you wrong most of the time, especially if you don’t fit a stereotype.
I hope in tarantinos post film days he becomes the next Andre bazin and sparks a new renaissance for cinema. Make it cool broadly to love film and good movies.
"THERE IS A GENUINE MYSTERY" - QT. Yes, yes and 100 times yes. Is there racial satire and over-looming tones of observance on the culture of racism? Yes. But the crux of the film is powered by this STORY.
Observance on the culture of racism... Yeah where it made all the white people into evil bodysnatchers and the black ppl as the heroes or victims, yeah genius work there hahaha goofy take son
As black guy… I always felt Tarintino was an insider to black culture. As if he had kicked it with black people on the regular and understood the culture and language… he’s special in that way. He understands culture- and I don’t think people really give him credit for that.
As a white guy I thought white people could never understand your culture no matter how much anyone kicked it with anyone else. Its almost like there's different rules for different people like how some people can get away with black face and other people can't.
Forreal. Tarantino delves deep into the art of filmmaking, culture and art. It's been his whole life🎥.... then there's commenters offended that racism is called bad and being discussed 🙄
@@goodfuhnothing.3976 explain , we’ll keep casual. Nobody’s is gonna flame each other in this comment section. I understand how to respect others opinions ☺️
@@amsrremix2239 idk its just tough cause while definitely an inspiration for guerrilla filmmaking and growth to high level art, it reads as exploitation to me in the sense of only capitalizing on big names on the screen not off (like the writers, cinematographer, and such …also i know reginald hudlin co produced django). the writers of django, pulp fiction, hateful 8 are QT solely. i guess the research could have been immense and fully within the culture of African-Americans and africans in general, but he didnt put anyone on imo like a jim carrey - in living color situation …. or anything you can think of that is a better example…. all african american actors were prospering imo.. regardless of quotables……it could be me just hating his personality entirely as he reads as an unapologetic overly talkative “auteur” … but he owes more to other cultures for his greatest moments in film. personal opinion…. his most lack luster film was more homegrown to him than any other (once upon a time in hollywood)… understanding a language, culture or tropes does not translate to respecting it imo (ie him repeatedly in an interview with sway saying “if you think i said nigger more than the Alabama south your kidding yourself. i did not” … like in that moment he was extremely callous of how repeating it outside of the film comes across.. if his point in that film was to show how Laissez-faire white people in the south were with the word … in that film…. why personally exemplify that trait in an interview with sway like you deserve to say it? … lol idk man…. Blaxploitation is an example of that… foxy brown was written by jack hill an old af …. mad white dude…. and black people cheered in the theatres for movies like that because they and their values were “represented” (stereotyped) in such films for the sake of capital gain… but they didn’t know who was behind the scenes, cause who cares lmao.… its easy to see shock value and use it to benefit from it imo… still a talent though obviously. oh and just fact that he felt the need to actually choke a woman for the sake of a satirical film about a moment in WWII because “choking scenes are never believable” … like wth? your film is an EXAGGERATED epic about WWII… not a hyper-real biopic on some men from the time…. literally put comedy into the film…. but he lowkey needs to actually see the air sucked away from someone? 😂😂😂 like HUH? in 2009???? have you seen the popular films in that year? lmao bruh the technology was there…. FULLY CAPABLE. 😂😂 idk man im hating. i guess i just want to fight the dude with some homies.
I think Get Out is an allegory of how black Americans experience the workplace as a new hire in a majority white or corporate space, or any social space really. You start there as yourself and notice other black people are kinda off. They're not authentic until it's "safe" and some have been there so long their corporate identity has become their primary identity. If you don't get out soon enough you end up just like them. I just couldn't help but be reminded of my experience at work watching it. Glad I got tf outta there early.
The interviewer literally asked a white italian guy what black audiences think, because he's so "in tune" with them. Just ask Tarantino why he thinks the movie was a hit. Don't pawn his opinion off on black people.
I’ve seen theories that she was hypnotized, is that what you are referring to? I’ve also heard people (including one Black friend) say that they liked her personality and would date her regardless of what she was involved with (a weirder take to be sure, but hey people say the same thing about many horrible villains in fiction). But I have never heard anyone straight up claim that her actions were not villainous.
Thanks for posting! I've been waiting to hear him talk about this film. Now I am just waiting to hear him talk about Luca Guadagnino's version of 'Suspiria' which apparently moved him to tears. Get Out was my favorite film of 2017 and Suspiria was my favorite film of 2018.
It's Edgar Allen Poe but with race and it's utterly brilliant. The title is literally GET OUT and you KNOW that it should happen, you WANT it to happen as an audience member, from the beginning, and yet the protagonist is completely justified in sticking it out as long as he does. I still can't believe how great that movie was.
When Tarantino retires he just needs to start a podcast and talk about movies forever
:) Yes! His knowledge and enthusiasm are so transfixing and wonderful.
He's doing one! With Roger Avery
@@LouisGalore I searched ‘Tarantino avery podcast’ and nothing comes up anywhere 🤔
@@Sprite_525 it’s coming. ”The video archives podcast”, or something similar to that. He’s mentioned it on podcasts he’s been a guest on.
he's absolutely brilliant and astute...as long e doesn't talk about Bruce Lee.
Its so cool to hear Quentin talk about films by other directors.
He is a major cinephile.
Love hearing directors talking about other directors' films!
What Does Tarantino know about making a great Movie?
His hole career as been based upon plagiarizing other filmmakers.
He's never made a great Movie..
Ok movies maybe?(I quite like Kill Bill vol.1) but never great Movies
@@joekerry741 This is such a lame and tired take. Quit trolling and find a person that likes you for yourself.
@DEATHbySHATNER Is Quentin Tarantino You're Favourite Director?
I'll never understand why Tarantino is in some people regards hold up in such high esteem and he's like some messiah of cinema
My Top 10 Director's Better Than Quentin Tarantino
1) Martin Scorsese
2) Ken Loach
3) Edgar Wright
4) James Mangold
5) Wes Anderson
6) Taika Waititi
7) David Fincher
8) Guillermo del Toro
9) Hideo Nakata
10) Christopher Nolan
Tarentino is so spot on here, as always. He literally explains something to me before I can even figure it out for myself lol
Spot on about Tarantino being spot on
To be honest I knew it was a bunch of white slave masters from the trailer... and Quentin is saying we don't know what's going on but we know the black servants are strange lol... I knew they were mind controlled instantly lol.
@@alifarooqi7779 Spot on about this guy being spot on about Tarantino being spot on
@@PoppoYoppo Spot on about this other guy being spot on about this guy being spot on about Tarantino being spot on
@@joseph7105 get outta here you non spot on-er
I could listen to Quentin Tarantino talk about movies all day. He knows what he’s talking about in detail.
Has he talked about The Godfather? Would be interesting to know his opinions on one of my favourite movies.
@@TheKomentor not sure. But maybe when he’s done making his final film he’ll do a podcast and break down classic movies. The guy was born for this stuff.
@@Berkmugga There was news in June this year that he was going to start a podcast called The Video Archives Podcast from July onwards. I wonder what happened to it.
He’s a legit savant
Careful what you wish for. His book Cinema Speculation goes very deep into his film critic mind. Took me like 5 months to read because I had to see a lot of the movies he writes about.
Tarantino not only has great insight but his genuine zeal for films, be it his own or others, is so infectious
If he's going to stop at 10 movies, he should do a podcast. Movies, film makers, actors, careers. Go deep on some, explain why some budget movie is secretly great, etc.
@@recoil53 he has a podcast! It's called the Video Archives, him and Roger Avery have done one season so far.
I saw this movie twice, and the second time, I had to pause a scene because I was asking why the cinematography was making me feel weird. And then I realized that everything in the home is in shades of black skin colours, from the colour of the wall, to the dark wood for the staircases and furniture, to the oven buttons that had been painted in a shade of dark copper as well as almost everything in the kitchen - you don't quite catch it because there are very few elements of green and few other colors, like plants in the kitchen, and since it's so well done it's hidden in plain sight. There is a moment when the main character is walking up the stairs soon after entering the home : if you pause there you'll immediately see it. His skin is the same colour as the the wood almost to a T and you realize exactly why you had this feeling from the moment he gets in the house. It's a complete masterpiece!
I never caught these details before.
people used to use black peoples skin for boots and probably a lot of other things
@@pawsnclaws1 the movie definitely doesnt suck, and if it does i imagine the shining sucks too… theyre just movies anyway maybe movies just suck for you
@@pawsnclaws1 If you didn't catch the subtleties and couldn't care less for the nuances of colour theory and the relationship between colour theory and race in films, then this film was not made for you.
@@pawsnclaws1 Ive seen Get Out and i enjoyed it. “Mike Hunt421” what are you? 14? Lol
I'm excited to see 'Nope', but I can't wait to see what QT will do for his final movie, and to see if he's actually going to call it quits after 10
Theatre will be his next step. And QT hasn’t ruled out writing more scripts so we may still get more QT stories just from another director.
He’s gonna write plays, books and pretty much anything involving writing so he can be at home for his kid and all that. I for one am hoping for him to get like a series deal with like Netflix or something to see if he’ll do inglorious bastards show or something
So far it’s kind of looking like Get Out was lightening in a bottle. Peele’s following efforts haven’t measured up even close. Let’s hope he gets it right with NOPE.
I'm waiting for KB3.
Supposedly it’s going to be a graphic but light hearted version of events that went down in Jonestown, Guyana.
I think that TARANTINO NEEDS HISOWN PODCAST TO INTERVIEW THE BEST DIRECTORS OF OUR TIME
It's literally AMAZING how articulate and QUICK Tarantinos response was to the interviewers question.Theres no "pause, ummm, uggh," but straight flow of brilliance. He would be like the EMINEM of movie talk lol
He definitely had a constructed thought about it way before the interview
Also he’s super comfortable talking to Eli Roth. Their friendship is solid.
Getting props from someone like Tarantino must be a dream come true
Rra Morake, wena , Peele doesn't need it. he is doing his thang
@@PHlophe Nobody said he does, But props from Tarantino one of the greatest Movie director is huge no matter how you look at it.
@@PHlopheugh
I firmly believe Get Out will be a classic movie that will never die out in our minds, it was a really genius movie. Honestly hope in the future they don't try to remake or reboot of the movie like they do with all these other classic horror movies and fail.
How? The message is so specific. I don't even think it applies to normal black people, just athletes and marketable black entertainers for white profit. Notice how black stars are encouraged to date and marry white people or else they get blackballed in the industry? Originally, Eartha Kitt wanted to marry Harry Belafonte but she ended up married to a white executive in the industry instead. Same thing with Minnie Riperton and Diana Ross.
I also believe that Jordan Peele is the black Alfred Hitchcock of our generation. His movies are brilliantly made with suspense, thrilling plot twist that keeps you on your toes, so yeah Get out and many more of his films will be classic.
@@firefly5571 Afro-Surrealism- Jordan Peele, Donald Glover, Micheala Coel, Kendrick Lamar, Ava Duvernay, Ryan Coogler, etc. Like in the turmoil era late 70s/early 80s Black people created Hip Hop culture, I believe the turmoil of the aughts will be known for creating Afro-Surrealism in film and music, but this time its happening alongside our brothers & sisters in the United Kingdom.
@@firefly5571 😆😆😆😆🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
It's already a remake/reboot. Watch the original version of The Stepford Wives (1975). Same story, with a racial slant added to it
Jordan peele is using horror to create empathy across racial groups and it is fascinating and heartening to watch
Ya, "white people bad" is a uniting reverberation that echoes across the globe.
Could be said about get out. Definitely not candy man though
@@michaelcantu6071 Jordan didn't make Candyman tho, he produced it and did some writing on the 2021 movie.
I’m curious if you felt the same way about “skeleton key”
@@jamessummers5936 ah okay, I thought he directed or wrote it for some reason. Still, he had a part in the worst horror movie I’ve ever seen. It also most definitely did not “create empathy across racial groups”
I remember seeing it at the movie theater and the collective experience was unreal. We were all connected as an audience. At the end, when we realized that the police officer ends up being actually the TSA guy, we all screamed:”YEAH!!!”, and clapped as if we all living through the character rejoice that we wouldn’t be victims of injustice.
Yes! One of my favorite movie experiences ever.
I think they filmed 2 endings. The original one was much darker, a police officer arrives and shoots him
@@josend no a police officer shows up and the scene cuts to him talking to Rel in prison. He doesn’t get shot
It's a very dishonest movie made by liberals.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I just love listening to this guy talk about movies! He is so damned passionate. But because he has been so passionate all his life, and he is so driven and intelligent, he has directed that passion into reeeeeaaaallllyyy knowing and understanding the medium with amazing breadth and depth. So he passionately delivers real insight when he speaks. It makes me smile.
It was a fantastic movie from any angle. Cinematography, script, actors, directing etc.
Don’t forget realism. That stuff really happens!
If you've seen Get Out only once, you need to watch it again knowing the movie's secrets. You can catch all the little things you didn't notice before, like the irony of the dad's talk about how he feels about deer.
@@rickyred7813 All human beings are apes, stupid.
@@rickyred7813 what ?
@@rickyred7813 yikes
The movie is a fucking turd
@@TheSands83 You're certainly entitled to your wrong opinion, just as I'm entitled to my correct one. Go enjoy "Loqueesha" or whatever crap you like.
So perfect...I loved it because after seeing so many films, 1) I didn't know where it was going and 2) the pay off was satisfying. I think it's great when some stories end badly/realistically, but so glad it had a /*SPOLIER*/ happy ending...I would have been devastated. And agree he needs to have a podcast and share his wealth of thoughts on film!
For me, the scary moment was the bingo scene. It was all visually telling the audience the overall point of the film and you become fearful for the main character who's oblivious to the who situation.
Exactly! I felt the exact same way, that was the true horror moment for me in the whole movie, not the pictures. Not one person that I spoke to about Get Out brought up the pictures. Ever.
Everyone brings up the pictures lmao@@sneakykamon
Love this movie. My favorite part I didn’t catch until the 2nd time around when the maid/grandmother is apologizing for unplugging Chris’s phone and her demeanor goes from gracious, to terror and struggle, and back to gracious again after “no, no, no, no, no ,no….” The 2nd time you watch the film you realize the grandmother and the body’s rightful owner are wrestling for control. Haunting…
Also Daniel Kaluuya is a fantastic actor and his writing was great. Like, he was just a regular guy, who happened to be black, not any kind of stereotype. And then this shit just happens to him, for literally no good reason. Which rhymes with audiences cos of what happens in the news every other day.
@JohnBaigerIt was a nomination for his skin colour, not performance.
@@rnw2739not even remotely true. His facial expressions alone in that movie are memorable and he had a really good performance imo
@@rnw2739People like you can not STAND when a black actor or actress gets to shine. You love watching films in which black people are portrayed as downtrodden slaves or harmful members of their community through gangster films, but when you watch a film of a black superhero, or a black lord of a great house (house of the dragon) you can’t stomach it. And god forbid they get an award for it.
@@rnw2739I watch any movie he is in. He's great
@@rnw2739Sure, after I was born, a gold trophy fell out of my mom’s cunt. It said “from Hollywood, just for being black”.
His point about the confidence in Peele is so true. I watch a lot of horror and mystery movies. When watching Get Out, you can tell that you won't be left guessing. It's hard to explain but I felt like I just needed to stay strapped in and I'd get a nice delivery.
Exactly. I hate when I’m watching a movie and I’m thinking “I HOPE we figure out what happens” it takes you out of it.
Theres something infectious about tarantino analysing movies.
My favorite part about Get Out is that it dose a reverse uno twist that completely subverted my expectations as to wtf was going on in that community.... and it was all done intentionally.
Truly brilliant writing and directing from Mr. Peele.
0:28 this is why i hate when ppl say "no one asked for this" when a movie is announced. No one asked for Pulp Fiction, Terminator, Parasite, Fight Club, Heat, Fargo, but ppl still loved them. If a movie doesn't interest you it simply means that the movie is not for you
Usually when people say that they're talking about sequels/spin-offs of mediocre to bad movies. Looking at you, Avatar 2-5
@@bagman817right but that's just an illogical statement made from a personal point of view with zero factual relevance based on obvious box office returns. So I think his point stands, regardless of the film. You are not everyone. And obvious as that should be, it is not. Lack of self awareness
Man... You can tell Tarantino just LOVES cinema! ❤
I just respect what he says because you can tell he just loves and cares about movies. Movies were his escape as a kid and his legacy as an adult and a lifetime of watching and either enjoying or not enjoying so many films molded him into the best film maker of all time.
Get Out was definitely an eye opener. Very well Written, Directed etc....
I feel like I could listen to Quentin Tarantino for hours
Quentin was raised on Black Cinema because his mum dated a lot of black guys and they would take him to watch Blaxploitation movies at Black Cinemas. He’s probably the only director that can reach into multiple audiences.
He was raised on black exploitation movies. That's not black cinema.
@@LPno.9 that’s your personal opinion
@@TosereOjeme Lol. You gave your personal opinion, and I gave mine. Congrats! You've figured out how discussions work.
@@TosereOjeme Lol. You gave your personal opinion and I gave mine. Congrats! You've figured out how discussions work.
@@LPno.9 no one was having a discussion with you.
This guy knows movies well. He's pretty smart too. Hopefully he can get his hands on the proper equipment and make his own movie some day.
your sarcasm is insane lmao
Big facts, 💯% spot on Quentin
That one scene where he goes upstairs and everyone at the party stops talking is like one of the creepiest scenes of recent times.
Jesus, for an interviewer to turn to a white man and say you get black people so what did they think with this film - to get such an awkward, precarious, easily embarrassing question and then knock it out of the park right away with a convincing response, this just may be the most impressive moment I’ve ever heard from Tarantino.
Well said man.
The question was fine, Quentin is actually an expert on black cinema. Watch interviews from the time of Jackie browns release
@@stevowilliams8279 I wasn’t impugning the question itself. I was saying it’s a precarious question for a white person to answer - without presuming an expertise on the black experience. It’s not an easy thing to navigate without sounding presumptuous or pat or nauseating. But Quentin was ready for it with a convincing, solid answer.
And being an expert on black cinema does not automatically make one an expert in speaking about black people’s experience. It’s a separate area.
Yeah, that was a disgusting tone-deaf question, to be honest. "You get Black people, don't you?" But fortunately, Tarantino saved the day with a reasonable answer.
@@StamfordBridge I urge you to rewatch the clip. The question is about black cinema, not black people.
I wonder if Quentin spoke to actual black people about Get Out. Because when I first saw it in theaters, hardly anyone responded like that when Chris found the photos. The “oh!” moment came during the auction scene. I’m black and saw it in a theater with a bunch of other black people and when that scene came up, I heard reactions ranging from “Huh?! Uh-uh!” to - and I kid you not - “Nah they really gonna buy this nigga like a slave??” That last reaction even got half the theater to laugh unintentionally which is what I think Jordan Peele wanted in order to catch them further off-guard.
Get Out is one of the best and most original movies I've seen in 40 years.
I like how people talk about Get Out like it has the depth of a Kubrick film, when in reality it has the depth of a David Gordon Green film.
@@laurencewhite4809 stop sucking off old dead guys and enjoy the original entertainment you have while you still can, snob
Watch Everything Everywhere All at Once
It's just a Stepford Wives knock off.
It was a fine movie. It handled the topic better than most movies but it wasn’t an incredible movie. I had heard so much going into this movie expecting a masterpiece and i saw an original movie that was solid.
I’ve watched NOPE about five times. Jordan is a master director! Get Out was a great movie. I didn’t care for Us so much. I feel like it’s lacking something in the ending to really tie it together. NOPE is one of those few movies I could put on over and over like No Country for Old Men, GoodFellas, and Gone Girl.
I really like 'Get Out'. I love those movies where you keep wondering wtf is going on - not in a confusing way, but a scary kinda way.
That moment when the gardner is running straight at the camera is creepy af, and I love it.
Wasn't a big fan of 'Us', tho.
Get Out is a film that schools will discuss 100 years from now. So brilliant.
Calm down
maybe after his last movie comes out.
Overrated in ever sense of the term
@@johngoldsworthy7135 "overrated" is a tad disrespectful.
Talked to death, sure. But definitely not overrated.
@@dlobelow760 It was a Twilight Zone episode that became popular because it overly didactive with the politics of the time. It won't age well in a few decades.
he is so knowledgeable and really explains well
I went tot he movie not having seen a trailer and having no idea what I was in for. Saw it opening night. Was such a fun ride seeing how the story unfolded and the theater was confused and we all got it at the same time. Very collective experience.
A lot of people write off Peele whenever he's mentioned alongside the likes of Eggers and Aster but I personally think he's as good of a director as them, if not better. Get Out and Us are phenomenal films. Really looking forward to Nope.
I hear someone slandering Jordan I’m swinging
Get out is a master class, in the level of both the witch and hereditary, probably more tongue and cheek but arguably better in many aspects. Although I didn't liked he second film, I think it was a bit pretentious for me, the same thing you could say about the lighthouse, but William Defoe is a heavy hitter. Probably I need to watch it again, but honestly I prefer to be watching the sketch show, and that also speaks about his range.
@@nicanornunez9787 I've watched Us more times than Get Out. Love both films. Lupita Nyongo is a heavy hitter too.
Peele has a wider appeal to his work that Eggers and Aster don't imo. That's not to say those guys aren't excellent, but their work is much more an acquired taste.
Us sucked. Get out was good. Everything he produces however, has been absolute “woke” pandering, black suffering porn trash
QT always made great movies from my childhood until now , and he did great on the Get out take love the perspective
There’s another part that doesn’t get touched on often, it wasn’t just the message, it was it happened at the right time. Something about this movie just tapped into the zeitgeist. Like If this movie dropped in 2013 it most likely doesn’t have anywhere near the cultural resonance it had. Kind of like how the watchman tv series has been said it came out about a year too early.
It burned brightly and quickly as went away. Who mentions it anymore? It was lid, directed, "paced" and framed like many of their sketches, so i kept waiting for a comedic twist, cause it kept telling me it had one. The comedic relief didn't help to diminish that expectation (It was unintentionally funny tho).
-The twist could off been pulled of only by a black director, otherwise it would be racist propaganda.
-Every white person's evil, no other race matters but black. What did EVERY white character want? To be black! xD
The Oscars are a massive circle jerk, but come on now, giving a slasher with ZERO subtlety of racial tensions it tried to tackle an award?! It has as much validity as Obama's Nobel peace prize 30 days in. One of THE most overrated films ever.
@@4Everlast You're really not seeing the forest through the trees with this take. Seems like a personal thing tbh especially with the "every white person is evil" thing 😂 that's like being mad that all the rednecks in Wrong Turn were evil.
@@4Everlast I would say that about 'black panther' for sure, but I thought 'Get out' was really good, and quite unique.
As for issues with subtlety - phuk me, what is 'blatantly the case' is too subtle for half the people I talk to; the 'white characters wanting to be black' was about appropriation (but you knew that right?) ; the reality of things re the issues in question 'is' a phuking slasher movie ... what better genre to make the point! "no other race matters but black?...where, wah...? what you talkin bout Willis?
@@brigwood7658 It messed with my head from the beginning, as it was framed and lid just like most of their comedy sketches, and feeling the mystery is behind the corner i was 100% sure the twist is comedic, and it ruined the damn thing for me, the tone was unique but it didn't feel right, not even the moment the guy with the hat starts cracking telling him to "get out" it felt borderline comedic, and the "funny" cop didn't help the tone, I kept looking for Peel to pop from around the corner, now ok, that one might be on me, but tonally it was, awkward.
Appropriation with zero subtlety as i said, they didn't want anything cultural, they wanted a black body as it's superior, they kept hinting at it with the finese of an elephants fart.
At first I expected a lot, knowing it got an oscar for the screenplay, but by the same standards the Nolan's should drown in them by now, as this compared to 90% of their stuff is child's play in terms of depth and complexity, but if you got racial undertones the award is guaranteed(Crash, Green book etc.) Then again, fuck the awards, the audience loves it, must be good, thennn you remember all the horse shit audiences loved and payed good cash to see... I think my point is, maybe I was expecting to much?
I don't mind Peel, nor this movie, it's just overrated by any standard (it's hovering around an 8 on most sites)i mean come on now.
Well yeah, in the movie only black matters, all whites are evil bastards are they not?! What other race do you see? Ain't there more then black and white folks in the world/America? Cultural appropriate's happening left and right not just white-black. It would be solved easily but putting justttt one bad black guy and one single good white guy, nothing else needed. WTF do you think would happen if the roles were reversed? If it was a white guy coming into a house of wealthy black folks? Exactly.
I mean i might be analyzing it to much, but got damn, a movie people say is an 8/10 has to be inspected by a fine toothed comb.
Interesting, what’s been said about the watchmen show?
2 of my favorites. 2 of the best at unfolding a compelling narrative.
He’s explaining everything I think of the movie expertly …especially as a black viewer
this was the kind of comment i was scrolling for - good to hear, mate.
god i forgot how good that film was
My man
Don't get offended but the movie is trash
@@skamarfire your opinion is your opinion. I can’t be offended over that
Yeah he hits the nail on the head in every aspect. Especially that ending:
"This isn't just white liberalism being awkward" - That's what so many of the movies aimed at black audiences are, that's why they suck so much. It's trying to make a movie "for black people" first and foremost, and if it's good or not is an after-thought. But with Get Out, it was good original concept that was also aimed specifically at black people, and it worked with everybody, it was an original movie. Props to K&P.
Tarantino has such a unique perspective on movies
Not really. Millions of people have the same taste and opinions he does.
He's just famous and has a platform where he can be very loquacious about film.
Can’t wait for his new work on nope. The vibe and feel is so original in the trailers.
I'd like to hear his opinion of Wind River and Small Engine Repair. Love these movies that work their way towards that "Holy shit!" moment.
Can we just get a podcast for Tarantino talking about films?
It’s out now. Better support it since you asked for it.
@@ClipsCrazy__
What's it called?
@@alienboy1322 video archives
Tarantinos hubris when telling us “what black people want” is next level unfounded white confidence.
Thank you!
I saw Get Out after all the hype and I was let down but I’m glad I watched it. I decided to watch Nope and loved that movie so I play on giving Get Out a rewatch. I may not love all of his films but I will always watch them because he’s at least doing something different.
I thought it’d be a mediocre film when I went in, and I left thinking, *this is the best horror film from America in decades*
dude, those last 20 minutes were so so cringy and stupid, i mean how in the world could you even bold ur words. wtf. What could've beeen a true classic fell flat in that horrendous scape scene.
jewmerica
@@Afflictamine what
@@ArmLegLegArmHead47 jewmerica
@@Afflictamine What?
Wow quentin is spot on. His comment at 0:50 about laughter, i really experienced that watching Django. When Django was in the blue outfit whipping one of the brittle brothers, i was in the audience laughing and you could tell who did and didnt find the irony of the scene funny. In contrast to when Hildie was getting whipped or even Jodie was gonna get whipped, the latter had a very searing and sinister effect.
I'm not gonna lie. I was one of those people in the cinema audience going 'Ohhhhhh' 😂
Quentin and the Rza should do a podcast on movie’s.
Its crazy how Jordan Peele from Key and Peele went from making great comedy sketches to absolute banger movies.
It's really not. That show key and peele was creative in itself , if you go back and watch it now. You can sew certain horror elements in his sketches that he chose to make comedy, but could of easily went dark lol.
@@PoyTroy good point, the dancing skit is a good example
Also Get Out wasn't the setup to the Get Out Cinematic Universe. It told its story and was a complete movie on its own without having to watch a disney+ show, read a comic book, etc.
It feels weird listening to him talk about the black perspective, but I feel like he nailed it.
LOL. Racism is placing racial prerequisites on opinions.
I don’t know many Directors but Quentin in my top 3
The last time I watched a movie and was like “I’ve never seen anything like this.”
Tarantino is so aware sheet
If you haven’t seen Nope yet go see it! You won’t be disappointed. Peele does it again!
Yes, it's like when you grow up in a dysfunctional family and them date someone in a healthy family and realize, "I never knew that this is what I wanted. I need this." A good mystery writer walks the reader thought the process of discovery.
Brilliant movie, I love Jordan Peele.
He exposed the transactional nature of the relationships between white girls and black guys. You couldn't make a Get Out movie about black women and white men because both parties are more careful and studious and want stability when they venture out their own pool.
It’s a decent movie but nothing close to “brilliant”.
@@mohamadmahmoud6926 That's your opinion, though.
@@mohamadmahmoud6926 your opinion is actually a fact
@@suzygirl1843 What is the "transaction"?
Get Out is my favorite modern day horror movie. It’s like a modern day The Shining.
A bit to much underhanded anti-white racism and comedy to be even close to the Shining.
Lol
Good movie, but not even close to as terrifying as The Shining.
@@KoldHardCash have you watched the shining lately? Great film, but barely alarming by today’s standards
Hilarious.
Jordan Peele made 2 absolutely amazing films
2? What's the 2nd
@@jacktease27 Us
Us isn’t that amazing but it’s good
Get Out was amazing but Us was kind of… ehhh. Lots of narrative decisions about it that was highly questionable imo
@@jacktease27 get out and Us
I REALLY hope he does a third chapter of Kill Bill. I need to see the revenge of Copperhead's Daughter.
Normally when you watch a movie, you can point to other examples as clear inspirations for any given scene. I mean Tarantino built a massive career on this artform. But with Get Out its trickier. There are creepy family movies and there are brainwashing movies, but there are things going on in this movie that are completely unique and when you watch it, you feel the power of that. You don't know where this fucking movie is going or what its trying to do. There's no blueprint for it. Its a true masterpiece. I just think of Us in comparison, which is great, but does not have that same originality that Get Out has. It does a lot of fun stuff, but I'm not getting the same suspense I feel from Get Out.
Us was fine. Get Out was much stronger.
For anyone who doesn’t know, Quentin Tarantino has a podcast called The Video Archives Podcast.
Its kinda weird to hear him talk about "black audiences" in this way, but he's right. That's essentially how I felt about Get Out when I saw it in theaters. It was like a new lane of of where films could go that were made for me, were discovered. A lightbulb of sorts.
I thought the same thing... when the podcast host said that I was like huh 😆
@nickxero2740 because he's talking about it *from* the black prospective. And he only touched on a small part of the experience because he cannot have the experience.
Relax sensitve@nickxero2740
@nickxero2740 They didn't victimize anything, they said it was weird to hear a non Black person talk about this. Not that he isn't allowed to, or that he shouldn't. You just got mad and just jumped to conclusions
@nickxero2740 Hard disagree, "weird" is not exclusive to negativity. It's just not what he was used to, and that in no way means he had an issue with it. He quite literally agreed with him in the original comment.
I'm sure Q had more to say about the movie, but at the end of the day the movie is actually scary AF for lots of Black people. Peele was able to braid together the traumatic historical memory of America's treatment of Black people with excellent deployment of horror movie tropes. You leave that movie ACTUALLY shook about being the only Black person in all white folks' situations. Which many of us rightly already have but Peele made that feeling more visceral and slightly less irrational, even though the premise is still a movie construct.
He's a goddamned genius of celluloid.
I'd watch ANYTHING made by Tarantino.
It’s just like attack on titans when you go down the basement and we get to know what’s in there, everyone goes “Ahhhh” we get some insight but not the full picture, pun intended.
"Get out" gives you the same vibe a black man would get from white liberals, they are nice to you in the surface, they even pretend to be interested in black culture, but you kind of sense they have a sinister agenda that involves using and discarding you when you are no longer valuable to them, a new form of plantation but way darker and more subtle, then you find out their political predecesors were in the Klan and before that they fought against the abolition of slavery and you realize your initial intuition was right all along, but now they have you completely trapoed and dependent on government subsidies and probably dealing with drug addict or delinquent family members.
It's true, all whites are white supremacists, it's just that white liberals are sneakier about it.
99% agree. Except I'd say "a certain type of white liberal" vs. all white liberals basically. But agreed on this take for sure.
@@buckib03 It's the majority of white liberals because most of them are only fighting for their own sense of self righteousness.
@@seanyoung9014 what a pessimistic way of viewing the world around you. But you’re free to think what you think🙏🏻
@@buckib03 It's based on decades of experience but it's great that people like you get to dismiss it as pessimism. Very convenient.
Quentin is such a great commentor.. for real
I would sell my soul to listen to his opinions on ‘everything everywhere all at once’
It’s like Tarantino says…. A great story keeps unfolding until the very end 🍻
As a black person the movie didn't feel "black" to me. Crossed over as a good thriller.
I think this is the first time I've heard his voice and I didn't expect him to sound like this.
whaaaaat
Tarantino is so smart man. He breaks down the art and techniques of cinema so well.
This was so satisfying. 💯
Asking Quentin Tarantino's opinion on get out because he's a great filmmaker makes perfect sense. Asking him because he's "locked into the black film community" is clown-level activity.
lol right?
cringeworthy, agreed. No self-awareness whatsoever.
Huh? Get over yaself buddy
How so? I'm curious because Django, Get Out, Pulp Fiction, etc are all well-celebrated among the black community--I know this first hand. He tells excellent stories, with excellent black characters and people recognize--and celebrate--that. I don't think it's that much of a stretch to basically say he's sensible to black culture, atleast within his own field: FILM.
@@bauchzilla If you feel the need to ask this in the first place, there's no answer for you I can give.
Pretty well articulated.
Nah, it’s more like any black person could have wrote the movie, but it’s a perfect way to let other races know what it feels like to be black, especially dating or socializing in non-black spaces.
I've been seeing this comment a lot on this video. I don't think feeling "out of place" is a Black specific thing.
@@redfacegaming7727 Then you understand. What’s the issue? This is basically how being black is. People will get you wrong most of the time, especially if you don’t fit a stereotype.
I hope in tarantinos post film days he becomes the next Andre bazin and sparks a new renaissance for cinema. Make it cool broadly to love film and good movies.
"THERE IS A GENUINE MYSTERY" - QT. Yes, yes and 100 times yes. Is there racial satire and over-looming tones of observance on the culture of racism? Yes. But the crux of the film is powered by this STORY.
Observance on the culture of racism... Yeah where it made all the white people into evil bodysnatchers and the black ppl as the heroes or victims, yeah genius work there hahaha goofy take son
so beautifully put
A scary sequel to Being John Malkovich from a black perspective
He said exactly how I felt about that movie.
As black guy… I always felt Tarintino was an insider to black culture. As if he had kicked it with black people on the regular and understood the culture and language… he’s special in that way. He understands culture- and I don’t think people really give him credit for that.
As a white guy I thought white people could never understand your culture no matter how much anyone kicked it with anyone else. Its almost like there's different rules for different people like how some people can get away with black face and other people can't.
Forreal. Tarantino delves deep into the art of filmmaking, culture and art. It's been his whole life🎥.... then there's commenters offended that racism is called bad and being discussed 🙄
ehh. idk
@@goodfuhnothing.3976 explain , we’ll keep casual. Nobody’s is gonna flame each other in this comment section. I understand how to respect others opinions ☺️
@@amsrremix2239 idk its just tough cause while definitely an inspiration for guerrilla filmmaking and growth to high level art, it reads as exploitation to me in the sense of only capitalizing on big names on the screen not off (like the writers, cinematographer, and such …also i know reginald hudlin co produced django).
the writers of django, pulp fiction, hateful 8 are QT solely. i guess the research could have been immense and fully within the culture of African-Americans and africans in general, but he didnt put anyone on imo like a jim carrey - in living color situation …. or anything you can think of that is a better example…. all african american actors were prospering imo.. regardless of quotables……it could be me just hating his personality entirely as he reads as an unapologetic overly talkative “auteur” … but he owes more to other cultures for his greatest moments in film. personal opinion…. his most lack luster film was more homegrown to him than any other (once upon a time in hollywood)… understanding a language, culture or tropes does not translate to respecting it imo (ie him repeatedly in an interview with sway saying “if you think i said nigger more than the Alabama south your kidding yourself. i did not” … like in that moment he was extremely callous of how repeating it outside of the film comes across.. if his point in that film was to show how Laissez-faire white people in the south were with the word … in that film…. why personally exemplify that trait in an interview with sway like you deserve to say it? … lol idk man…. Blaxploitation is an example of that… foxy brown was written by jack hill an old af …. mad white dude…. and black people cheered in the theatres for movies like that because they and their values were “represented” (stereotyped) in such films for the sake of capital gain… but they didn’t know who was behind the scenes, cause who cares lmao.… its easy to see shock value and use it to benefit from it imo… still a talent though obviously.
oh and just fact that he felt the need to actually choke a woman for the sake of a satirical film about a moment in WWII because “choking scenes are never believable” … like wth? your film is an EXAGGERATED epic about WWII… not a hyper-real biopic on some men from the time…. literally put comedy into the film…. but he lowkey needs to actually see the air sucked away from someone? 😂😂😂 like HUH? in 2009???? have you seen the popular films in that year? lmao bruh the technology was there…. FULLY CAPABLE. 😂😂 idk man im hating. i guess i just want to fight the dude with some homies.
Took me 3-4 times to catch all the little things in Get out. I have a love/hate thing for that film. But it’s definitely good.
I think Get Out is an allegory of how black Americans experience the workplace as a new hire in a majority white or corporate space, or any social space really. You start there as yourself and notice other black people are kinda off. They're not authentic until it's "safe" and some have been there so long their corporate identity has become their primary identity. If you don't get out soon enough you end up just like them. I just couldn't help but be reminded of my experience at work watching it. Glad I got tf outta there early.
spot on 💯
when he said genuine like that i immediately thought of Ginuwine - Pony LMFAO
The interviewer literally asked a white italian guy what black audiences think, because he's so "in tune" with them.
Just ask Tarantino why he thinks the movie was a hit. Don't pawn his opinion off on black people.
Once you've listened some interviews of Tarantino, you quickly recognise that everyone around him kisses his a$$ all the time.
He gave his opinion on why the movie was a hit.
Jordan Peele has a movie dropping this summer can't wait!!!
Yes! Also how Allison Williams says to this day she gets asked by white people “Rose wasn’t the bad guy, right?” Pure genius!
Nobody ever said that, like ever
I’ve seen theories that she was hypnotized, is that what you are referring to? I’ve also heard people (including one Black friend) say that they liked her personality and would date her regardless of what she was involved with (a weirder take to be sure, but hey people say the same thing about many horrible villains in fiction). But I have never heard anyone straight up claim that her actions were not villainous.
What else would she be?
She literally did on Seth Meyers
@@kgomotsomokoana5278 that let's you know how delusional white ppl are about their own racism
Thanks for posting! I've been waiting to hear him talk about this film. Now I am just waiting to hear him talk about Luca Guadagnino's version of 'Suspiria' which apparently moved him to tears. Get Out was my favorite film of 2017 and Suspiria was my favorite film of 2018.
It's Edgar Allen Poe but with race and it's utterly brilliant. The title is literally GET OUT and you KNOW that it should happen, you WANT it to happen as an audience member, from the beginning, and yet the protagonist is completely justified in sticking it out as long as he does. I still can't believe how great that movie was.
😂😂 holy shit don’t get out of control.,movie sucked tbh
This is why I love Quentin