Inglorious Basterds had me STRESSED (Reaction) *First Time Watching*
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 พ.ค. 2024
- A few Jewish soldiers are on an undercover mission to bring down the Nazi government and put an end to the war. Meanwhile, a woman wants to avenge the death of her family from a German officer.
OPEN ME (=^_^=)
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Bruce Sora Jr, Casey, Michael Hill, Roy Eschke - เกม
Christoph Waltz won two Oscars. One for the role of ultaracist - Hans Landa in Inglorious Basterds, the other for the role of antiracist - King Schultz in Django Unchained. A classy actor
The other interesting fact that amazes me is that Christoph Waltz is a distinguished multilingual actor also as Daniel Brühl who played Fredrick Zoller)
Dude... limiing the image of Landa as ultraracist is such an ungrateful... viewership. He is intrensicly simple opportunist but at the same time when he despizes jewish rodent manners he shows absolutly same manners with such an aristocratic posture! Its actually a story about an artist in a nazy uniform. Speaking of artists and third reich...
No ultraracist, just an opportunist, obviously.
Brad Pitt saying "arrivederci" has to be the funniest thing put on film in that entire decade
”Ah man, I shot Marvin in the face" is definitely up there too haha
"Uhhhh sì... correct-o"
Yea, that had me the first time I watched the movie, the second time I watched, the line "Kein mensch glaubt wirklich dass der bären jude ein golem ist" had me rolling.
Also, he proclaimed to be the best Italian speaker of the bunch. X)
MAR-GAR-AYYYTEEEE!
He's the third best
Nazi shows up in nazi occupied france to a secluded farm house.
Alyska: “what does this guy want”
😂😂😂
immature
@@siyem2051 I thought it was funny, i wasn’t trying to be a dick, i ask you read it jovially and not as an offence please, thank you (and apologies if you were offended on someone elses behalf)
@@n0body550 don't apologize to that idiot
A glass of milk=?
@@equest511 nazis dont do that .
My favourite meme to come from this movie is:
Me, kicking my feet under the covers.
My cat: “you’re sheltering enemies of the state are you not😾”
Did he drink milk just before ?
@@Balpharion No, but he smoked a pipe. A big, ridiculous looking pipe.
@@pistonburner6448 could you imagine a cat, that just so happens to smoke a pipe?
Telling Hitler he needs anger management classes is the understatement of a millennium
“Is that the guy from the Office?”
Now you know why he was fired for a season. 🤣
The Fire Guy
Fired? You idiot, he just wasn't around because he was acting in this project. You must never have worked a real job if you think you can get a job back after being "fired", he was just absent.
Ryan started the 🔥
The feeling/question that the director wanted to convey in most scenes is “Does Hans Landa know?”
And I think it’s shown brilliantly. You never can tell how much he actually knows until it’s too late and he’s backed you into a corner
Hans Landa is like the opposite of Scotty. Scotty doesn't know.
@@pistonburner6448 Zip it! Ziiiiiip!
Unless you are good at reading people and you know he knows from the beginning.
@@dallesamllhals9161 Wrong movie, wrong reference: I meant Eurotrip!
@@pistonburner6448 Sry' kid, but Dr.Evil wins!
Fun facts
1. Quentin Tarantino was considering abandoning the film while the casting searched for someone to play Colonel Hans Landa fearing he'd written a role that was unplayable. After Christoph Waltz auditioned however both Tarantino and producer Lawrence Bender agreed they had found the perfect actor for the role.
2. This is the first Quentin Tarantino film to win an Oscar for acting Christoph Waltz for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. Waltz won another Oscar for Tarantino's Django Unchained (2012) while his Inglorious Basterds costar Brad Pitt would go on to win his first acting Oscar at the end of the decade for Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
3. At the end of each take actors would face the camera and say "Hello Sally" referring to Sally Menke the film's editor. This practice has occurred since Quentin Tarantino's previous movies (such as Kill Bill Vol. 1 (2003), Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004), Death Proof (2007)). Inglourious Basterds was the last film by Tarantino to be edited by Menke whose work was honored in 2010 with her final Academy Award nomination for Best Editing prior to her death later that year.
4. Christoph Waltz dubbed his own performance in the German version.
5. Michael Fassbender's performance as Lieutenant Archie Hilcox is layered with irony. Fassbender was born in Germany to German and Irish parents and raised in Ireland. He now resides in London with fluency in German as his first language Gaelige as his second and English as his third and a mastery of English accents and dialects. Here he plays an Englishman who goes undercover as a German and who can speak German fluently but has difficulty hiding his accent.
6. Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) speaks the most languages in the movie four (English, French, German, and Italian).
7. One of the Jewish names carved on The Bear Jew's (Eli Roth's) bat is Anne Frank.
8. For his performance in this film Christoph Waltz became one of seven performers to win an Oscar playing a character that mostly spoke in a foreign language (German, French, and Italian). The others are Sophia Loren, Robert De Niro, Roberto Benigni, Benicio Del Toro, Marion Cotillard, and Youn Yuh-Jung.
9. This was Quentin Tarantino's film with the most Academy Award nominations (eight) until Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) which earned ten winning two.
10. Quentin Tarantino approached Adam Sandler to play Sergeant Donny Donowitz but Sandler had to turn it down because the schedule conflicted with the filming of Funny People (2009).
11. The giant swastika falling down in the final scene is real. It was a mistake that happened on the set.
12. In the scene where Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) strangled Bridget von Hammersmark (Diane Kruger) the hands doing the strangling are those of writer and director Quentin Tarantino.
13. Chapter Three is the only chapter throughout the movie where someone doesn't die and the only chapter where English is not spoken.
14. Despite his reputation and being leader of the Basterds Aldo Raine is only seen killing one person on-screen at the end when he shoots the radio operator.
15. Body Count three hundred and one.
17. In this film Brad Pitt's Lt. Aldo Raine he demands scalping of as many Nazi Germans as possible during World War II. In Legends of the Fall (1994) Brad Pitt's Tristan avenges his brother death by killing and scalping many German soldiers during the World War I.
18. Harvey Keitel the voice of the American officer negotiating on the wireless radio with Raine and Landa.
19. In the original draft of the script Wilhelm survives being shot by Bridget von Hammersmark and it is his information provided to Colonel Hans Landa that blows her cover.
20. Eli Roth's character Sgt. Donny Donowitz is part of the Tarantino-verse sharing the last name of the film producer character Lee Donowitz in the Tarantino-written "True Romance" where Lee Donowitz produced a war film "Comin' Home in a Body Bag". According to an interview Tarantino conducted with Ron Bennington Donny is Lee's father.
21. Aldo Raine is the father of Cliff Booth who is Rick Daltons long time stuntman from Quentin Tarantino's 9 film Once Upon A Time In Hollywood. There is no clear story to the Birth of Cliff Booth the only information we have so far is Aldo Raine is Cliff's father and Cliff took his mother's last name of Booth.
Oh, so that's why Aldo Raine and Cliff Booth looks so similar!!
These were awesome to read - thank you for sharing!
@@wolfetone8380 np
Christoph Waltz definitely deserved his Oscar for his portrayal of Hans Landa. His little smiles, his sudden mood changes and the tension is so amazingly portrayed by Waltz.
Waltz was even instructed by Tarantino to not rehearse with the other cast as he wanted to shock the other actors as to how good Waltz was in their preparation.
This is the most intense opening scene in movie history to me. Saving Private Ryan in its own rights, but that wasn't until the beaches of Normandy. This was just a conversation, with more tension than you can imagine. And a glass of milk instead of German artillery. Quentin is a genius. I.Q. of 160.
which IQ test did he do? there are two that are recognized, but there are hundreds "iq test" out there
The opening line in GREEN MILE for me
17:26 is one of my favourite moments in any film. "Ah, Landa!" and then the INDUSTRIAL BEAT and it's just... perfection. Fear, dread, surprise, despair.
-"A river derci" LOL That`s my favorite Tarantino Film by far!
love Your React!
That opening scene is so Intense.
waltz is incredible in this and then in django unchained from 1 villain to hero both played equally well
Watching Alyska reactions has drastically improved my credit score 🌻
I think we all wish that history had played out this way. One of tarantinos best films
This movie taught me 3 new words in Italian: "Grotsey", "BunJohrNoh" and "Reever Derchey".
The Sniper guy is also the guy who plays Baron Zeemo in the MCU.
18:25 Fun Fact: At that time many Strudels were served with cream that was not vegetable but rather pork lard, that's why Landa insists that she wait for the cream, Landa knows who she could be so he provokes her with the glass of milk and tests her with the cream, the Jews cannot eat anything made of pork so she eats to save her life. In the end it is seen that Landa wanted to tell her about his suspicions but since she ate the Strudel with lard he says that he doesn't remember it and just leaves.
Wow great fun fact. So many little details in this film. I love it
Great reaction Alyska like always, Love this movie, there are some fun-facts about it, in the beginning of the movie when Landa is meeting the entire family he does something sneaky, when he is shaking their hands of the daughters, but if you look closer at his hands what he is really doing is checking their pulse to see who be nervous, this little details are awsome. The scene where Landa speaks Italian flawlessly and Aldo’s Tennessee accent radiates “Not Italian At All” energy is not how it was scripted. He was written to be extremely fluent and competent at it, but Brad Pitt convinced Tarantino to let him try it that way. In the end, Tarantino agreed that he shouldn’t blend in because, as he put it, “the plan they cobble together is fucking dumb.” It only succeeds because Landa wants it to succeed, it should not work… and the accent just rams home just how dumb the plan is.
The character of Hans Landa was a stumbling block for him to get the movie made in the first place. He thought he’d written a character that no actor could play. He has to speak, in order, French, English, German, and Italian fluently, be charming and terrifying at the same time, and appear to be a brilliant detective, a nazi version of Sherlock Holmes (that’s why he has the large pipe in the first scene, it’s a reference to Holmes’ pipe). Thank goodness for Christoph Waltz who steals every scene he’s in. And another fun-fact trivia. Since puff pastries (what strudels are) during WWII were made with pig lard (not Kosher) due to wartime butter shortage, Landa's choice of dish for Shosanna could be seen either as a test to see if she's Jewish (as she'd normally reject the food) or he knows who she is and is forcing her into eating non-kosher. Keep up the good work.
Landa didn't shoot Shoshanna because he enjoys the hunt. He may have missed at that range or may have hit her, but that'd ruin his fun.
Watching movie snippets like this... my life's too short for this.
Everyone in the Germany 🇩🇪 army is aware of HUGO STIGLITZ 😂😂😂😂
According to Wikipedia Tarantino name this character to honor Mexican actor from German ancestry Hugo Stieglitz which in most movies(1970’s) he was cast, Stieglitz play the bad guy .
Damn idk how much i rewatched this movie. chistopher waltz is just pure class
He didn't shoot Shoshana in the beginning because you can't hit anything with a pistol at that distance. She was well over 100 meters away, and a pistol would only be good to 50m or less.
"This movie's graphic!" I thought she was familiar with Tarantino, she knew about the foot thing.
There are no mountains near paris. That shows you how much they hadn't prepared their story
This movie almost didn't get made because Tarantino couldn't find a decent actor that actually spoke fluent English, German, French and Italian. Christoph Waltz basically fell into his lap at the last minute. He played a Nazi in this and a militant anti-racist in Django Unchained, and won an Oscar for both. EDIT: I'm American, but I do speak basic German (it was my mother's first language, but I can't understand some of the dialogue). The fact they actually made Michael Fassbender's accent a giveaway was brilliant. Again, my German sucks something awful, but his accent is actually somewhat wonky. It's halfway between English and Irish. Tarantino was brilliant for having that almost give him away.
The bear jew is played by Eli Roth, who is known for making horror movies such as Cabin Fever and Hostel
I believe that Hans knew that she was Shosanna. as hinted by the milk, and his, "laps in memory". He probably knew she would plan something at the premiere. Like at the begining when he held the hand of the Dryfuss' daughter who grabbed the milk for him, he was also checking her pulse. Nothing Hans Landa does is pointless. Like having Aldo saying Gorlami and laughing, because of how bad it sounded compaired to a real Italian speaker. Watch Analyzing Evil: Hans Landa by the channel called The Vile Eye. It's an Amazzing video.
The thumbnail shows you all you need to know about this reaction. "😂"
When I first see this film, I also hated Zoller. When I watched this over and over again, I realize something, the guy wants companionship. I guess he wants to get away with the trauma that he got fighting that war. Unfortunately, he was not aware that the girl he wants hates his kind.
I love your movie reactions, they are so entertaining and you always make me smile. Your personality shines through every time and i appreciate you so much!
Huh, i thought you had quit. My subscriptions page hasnt shown a single of your videos for what feels like months now.
TH-cam's gotta TH-cam. Check your subscription settings, but she's had four other videos in the last month.
@@Stevarooni Yeah i saw. Super weird and random
Algorithm changes based on a combo of what you're watching, activity on the accounts you're susbcribed to (so for example, they got demonitized), and what direction or trends TH-cam wants to follow
Same I thought she was taking a break from content
She can't quit you!
Let's gooo Alyska with another great reaction 😄 this was really good
Lmao, this is the same chick who called Pulp Fiction overrated. 🤣
Every time I hear your voice I want to hear you offer me tea and crumpets LOL
"I think this just might be my masterpiece" Yes Quentin, I also think it is your masterpiece.
There's a theory that Hans is actually a Jew himself and this is the path he has chosen to follow instead of one of rebellion. So he LET HER GO. He knows it's her and is just messing with her. He is a weird individual who feels like he has rescued the Jews from destruction despite being their chief exterminator, just by letting her go.
She ends up being one of the ones who ended the war in the film. And at the end of the movie, Hans Landa is seen offering options to end the war. Doesn't act like a true Nazi who really believes in their stuff.
There are few lines I love more than, after she says to burn down the cinema on the screen, Marcel smiles and says, “Oui, Shosanna.” 47:05
You need to watch Peter Jackson's King Kong next lol
In the bar scene when he hold up 3 fingers... if he was german he would have held up 2 fingers and the thumb, just 3 fingers is what gave him away.
Loved this reaction, I could practically SEE the emotions you were feeling lmao, it's anxiety inducing! Loved it!!
Favorite line: “Attendez la crème.”
"How interesting can this film really be?"
Well, there was American Sniper in 2014 sooo...
I know right, and more son, John Wick, John Wick became a four movies franchise and it is basically all just a guy shooting people on the face.
It's a mark of Tarantino's talent that he can create a story of pure fiction and make it seem like history.
47:20 That was a mountain of film stock. Back in that time period film was made from basically gun powder (gun cotton) and was EXTREMELY flammable. So flammable it was banned from trains and airplanes
grAt-si... Is the highlight of the movie😂
Tarantino is a master of using music to aid in painting a vivid picture. He's right up there with John Hughes, in that respect. Using "Cat People" by David Bowie, was sheer brilliance.
And the scene with Shoshana's laughing face, projected on the billowing smoke, gives me chills every single time. As does, "Oui, Shoshana."
"Why so scary when picking her up" - he's GESTAPO xDDD
Fun fact..Hugo Stieglitz was a real person. Not a nazi killer but a Mexican based actor in the 70s.
That's uhhh... something. Not quite a step down, not really a step up lol
Another movie in theaters right now with a similar vibe but less gore is The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare stars Superman himself Henry Cavil
Love you, Alyce! Thanks for sharing!
Quentin Tarantino is an absolute master when it comes to wordplay. The riveting dialogue and epic monologues are characteristic of all his films. He is also renowned for his ability to develop multiple seemingly unrelated plot lines simultaneously, which only interweave later in the movie. It is often not until the final scene that the audience can truly comprehend and appreciate the full meaning of all the previous scenes. That is one of the keys that make his masterpieces so enjoyable and unique! It is one of the marks of his genius that set his productions above and beyond all of the usual tripe, tired story lines, and hackneyed, worn-out tropes that Hollywood mindlessly spews out nowadays…
My favorite Tarantino film. Christoph Waltz was insanely good.
I remember walking out of the first showing of this film and saying to my then gf (for the first time ever caring about Oscar's): "If the actor for Landa doesn't get an Oscar I'm gonna start a RIOT". The sounds of the leather jacket snarling and Waltz's amazing performance, goosebumps.
Germans show the number three beginning with the thumb. So they would hold up their thumb, index and middle fingers. Only Brits, Americans, etc. would hold up their index, middle and ring fingers.
I love the bit of self-meta-commentary by Tarantino at the end. He thinks this is his masterpiece, and I agree with him
There is a video on the channel called "The Infographics Show" that talks about the historical, real-life Inglorious Bastards that I highly recomend. As well as "How the Roman Army turned men into Warriors" and "How the Great Mafia War killed Thousands" both by the same channel. Let me know if You want to react to my suggestions!
Everyone agrees about Christoph Waltz (Hans Landa). He won an Oscar and a bunch of other awards for this role.
There wasn't a scene in this movie I thought was boring but I really loved the part with the image of Shosanna laughing face projected onto the smoke.
"This is graphic!"
Well, it's made by Tarantino, sooooo...
In my opinion, Christoph Waltz is the premier actor of our times. I am blown away by the way he can go from utterly charming and disarming in one moment to terrifyingly menacing and threatening in the next instant - superb! His mastery of dialogue was also on display just as effectively in “Django Unchained,” another Quentin Tarantino masterpiece.
Such a good film! So glad you enjoyed it :) This is my 2nd favorite Tarantino film, as Reservoir Dogs still takes the top spot for me.
The best movie I can recommend after this is QTs other movie Django Unchained, watching Christopher Waltz play the exact opposite character but equally brilliantly is pretty amazing
Alyska: "He's the worst"
Me: "He's the best"
Wow! This is such a great movie! Great choice Alyska, I hope you like it! Hope all is well
This is easily my favourite Tarantino film
10:51/52:38 this is the best movie scene of this movie when the nick name bear jew guy batting the nazi Germans head for him refusing to give info of nazi Germans positions on the map
The leading role 'Shosanna' Mélanie Laurent is one of my favorite actress. I highly recommend hers other films. She's an actor but also great director and singer.
IMO Best Mélanie Laurent films
1. Inglorious Basterds (2009)
2. Beginners (2010)
3. The Mad Women's Ball (2021 / Directing / Acting)
4. The Round Up (2010)
5. Wingwomen (2023 / Directing / Acting)
You can trust me. I saw 46 Mélanie's films.
According to the original script, Aldo's neck scar is a hanging scar from his bootlegging days
Christolph waltz is terrifying in this, the tension when it's even around ❤
27:35 I love this scene so much. Just by body language alone and without saying a word you can tell that something just went horribly wrong.
Because Germans don't indicate 3 that way they use the thumb and next 2 fingers. That's how he knew he wasn't German
fun fact: in the dinner scene, landa was messing with her the whole time and he knew who shoshana is. You can see how he puts out his cigarette in the bread that looks like the farm house with the chimney
Love the idea that the big revenge Shoshana takes is recording the movie and distributing pirated copies. LOL.
You have excellent tastes in films
My favourite Tarantino movie! Close 2nd.... Killl Bill, Once Upon a Time and Django.
Pulp fiction and Jackie Brown are some of the best Quentin Tarantino films i’ve seen so far. Reservoir Dogs is pretty good too.
SO! ..has he made any really BAD films?
Into the Lion's den. Kicking the hornet's nest maybe? Because of the other story.
Hans may be the scariest villain
Awesome video keep up the amazing work 😎🤘🔥 and I definitely gotta see this movie
Quality film! Thanks for the reaction!
The scars on Aldo's neck
That is a hanging scar.
If he was convicted of a crime and senteced to hangjng, he would have been hung til he was dead.(when done properly the neck breaks)
This means he was probably lynched, or illegally hung by vigilantes or villains.
But he survived and wears the scar proudly.
Without any dialogue on the matter, the scat tells us volumes about Aldo.
The Eli Roth/Zachary Quinto confusion is very common. My moment was when I saw Zachary as Sylar and thought it was either Eli or his brother Gabriel.
Another great reaction from Alyska to one of my fav Tarantino movies many more to come
I recently found out that the opening scene is an homage (or blatant ripoff) from "The Good the Bad and the Ugly".
Bad Batch reaction when? Season 3 was really good.
In my opinion Inglorious Bastards is one of the best movies ever made, yes there are several amazing movies through the decades, but I think Inglorious Bastards should be in any top 100 best movies ever made, and on a high position.
My favorite reaction from you. If you haven't seen Gladiator, I'd say that one ranks #1 to many in terms of most hate-able villain.
Melanie Laurent is absolutely stunning in this movie, oolala!
There's a reason Christoph Waltz got an Oscar for that role
Love another Tarantino film. Hope you watch them all eventually 💙
The blond girl in Lapadite residence is Lea Seydoux who will become a bond girl in Spectre.
Love the Boba Fett chair 🤟🏾🤟🏾🤟🏾
This is my favorite Tarantino film as well.
34:58 best line delivery in the movie 🤣
I bet alyska speaks the most i-talian
Fun fact: Quentin tarantino wanted to cast Adam Sandler as the bear jew but because of scheduling Adam couldn't do it. How different wud it be if had played the part?
The tension you felt was everyone watching this in the theater. So funny and so violent. And Baron Zemo from the Marvel Universe. I forgot he was the actor hero in the propaganda film.
Two things are always important in any Tarantino movie. Great music and feet. You always get both.
6:39 Because he's like that hawk, he wants to hunt