I saw Tarantino chilling at a random bar in NOLA having a drink. He was by himself, I walked up and said “imma Huuuuuuge fan”. And he goes “imma huge fan of alcohol too”. Turned around and shook my hand, super nice and down to earth!
@@miahtiki I’ve met allot of famous ppl that I was a fan of.. but Tarantino is a legend! Everything he said was what you would imagine he’d say. Thrower off shit lol
Guy is from Tennessee..that's why.. greatest people and greatest place in the world..if u move here from a blue state, LEAVE UR STINKING LIBERAL POLITICS BEHIND
I had the pleasure of serving Tim Roth in a hotel I was working at and I was told by my managers to not interact and only to serve him and his wife. Of course I couldn't help myself and I said I loved his work in Reservoir Dogs and he was very humble and thankful. We started chatting and I asked him if Tarantino really is that crazy or is it for show and he simply said "man, you have no idea"
I love that Joe knows enough that when you have Quentin you just ask a question and let him go, he’ll carry the conversation on his own and does it so well
Absolutely! Stan Freberg was like that too. I just needed a one line sound bite from him once and an hour later his wife got on the line saying "Stan, don't you think maybe the young man has other things he needs to do today?"
Can you do a theory on what would happen if Vader kept a bunch of loose sand in his suit? I’m assuming he’d be the most powerful force user in the galaxy from being pissed off all the time
That is really classic and funny 😂 Brad Pitt is the only guy who would jump off the Titanic life raft to save Jack a.k.a Leonardo DiCaprio and drown in his stead. 😂
@@Chumpskey it’s the latest way to spam people and drive viewers to their channels. Just click the 3 dots and then report as spam. TH-cam will automatically delete their accounts if enough people do this
I watch Pulp Fiction once or twice each year. And to me it's one of those movies that leaves you thoughtful every time. And as I've aged.. I'm now 31 years old, the movie, or the message of the movie changes with me. And I pick up something new almost every time I see it. It's one of my absolute favorite movies of all time, and I never get sick of it.
@H As I get older, I see things from a different perspective. I have different values, and a whole lot more experience. I can relate to things in the movie, the previously just went straight over my head. That's how the message changes with me, even tho the movie don't necessarily change.
@@ss-iw6cs Damn you must be Quentin T HATER!!! He makes nothing but Block Busters!! One of the Greatest Directors of our time!!! But to each his own! ( I want my 100 scalps, from 100 Dead Nazis !!!! ) Lol 😆😆😆
I'm 60. And everything Quentin mentioned about TV , Speed Racer, Saturday morning cartoons, 4:30 movie of the week, ...etc. Brings back such strong nostalgic memories. He's so right we were the TV generation.
I'm 56 and I remember schoolhouse rock, speed racer, ect but I never considered myself Gen X. I'm from the 80s and we are pretty much a lost generation. Mall kids.
Yes, and for what it's worth we appreciated the comforts of reruns in the afternoons and sought the certain episodes. We engaged with what shows were available to us for entertainment before the boom of cable TV. By happenstance we became the reference makers.
I'm the same age and thought exactly the same thing. What he didn't mention, but could have, were all the reruns of stupid sitcoms like Giiligan's Island, Hogan's Heroes, the Munsters, Beverly Hillbillies, and Green Acres. Heck, my brother and I still pull random quotes from these shows once in a while: "I know....nothing!!!' "Well, Granny, I'm going out to the ceeement pond...." "Feed Spot...he's hungry." "Miiiiister Douglas!!!"
jay dubya Agreed. I think those reruns are just as relevant to his point. I’m GenX too (though younger than QT) and I still can quote entire scenes of dialogue from The Brady Bunch.
Quentin is geeky, awkward, and a bit odd-looking, but there truly isn’t a cooler person alive. An absolute genius, and he knows it. No one controls him. He does whatever the fuck he wants because he’s Quentin god damn Tarantino. Love him.
@586KING i personally dont feel the gimp scene had to be about race. If you put a big white guy in there it would have shocked just as much. Presenting that scene so brutally put you in both of the captives shoes and showed you how sick and twisted those gun shop owners were. And it also presents a hidden evil with ownership and zed as a police man. That scene would typically be associated with a violent gang but instead it was literally the underside of the establishment.
@@penknight8532 You and your "like" will stay in your set potato boring life. That's fine do that. People will be changed and moved and fucked up whether you think or not. 😉
I remember my parents rented Pulp Fiction and turned it off because they thought I was too young to see it around the time the heroin came out. I went back down to finish it as soon as they went to bed. Started a lifelong love of cinema that night.
Same scenario in the 90's with me happened--except with me it was my dad and me and I rented "Bad Lieutenant" with Harvey Keitel. Shocked both of us and video tape was ejected. I finished watching it next day.
Pulp Fiction might be one of the best films ever made. I think it’s the dialogue. Tarantino can make a conversation about Dutch McDonald’s fun and vibrant. Plus, a truly epic cast. My favourite section might be the one in which he himself appears with Harvey Keitel. And, I love how the story jumps and moves about and ends where it started, it’s almost like a less crazy, noir and just better Sin City
I saw Pulp the first day it came out in Nashville, TN. We walked out of the theater with our minds totally blown. We knew cinema had changed forever. The second topic of conversation was how GREAT it was to see John Travolta back and better than ever.
"Pop cultural glue that's going to tie them to their generation when they got older". That is pure gold and very true. Shared experiences of watching the same shows growing up.
@@nguvideos2868 Yeah, I've been aware pop culture doesn't exist anymore for a while cause of the choice the internet offers, but the way Tarantino explained it really made me realize how bad this could be. Once our generation grows up, what common cultural experiences will we have that will keep us glued? 9/11 and Trump? Social media culture? Two random baby boomers who have never met before could sit down at a nursing home and talk about the 60s counterculture, Elvis, the Beatles, Vietnam, the Cuban Missile crisis, what it was like having ww2 vets as dads etc, and they'd be able to relate to each other. But us? Even TH-cam stars from 10 years ago are forgotten, memes come and go every year. Internet culture is a poor substitute for pop culture.
@@nguvideos2868 pop culture is no longer creative and unique though I don’t know if it ever was meant to be. I feel like it’s all just stealing and clout chasing with no real talent
@@nguvideos2868 People still watch similar things. Look at how popular Game of Thrones or Rick and Morty became for example. These shows will be remembered for good or bad reasons, that's the pop culture.
This is why I love Joe's long form podcast. Quentin was just on Real Time with Bill Maher, but it was so short. Would it kill Bill to do a longer interview?
Yes, you should. I've done it yesterday. Tons of interesting facts and insights into his creative process. Just like you'd imagine Joe Rogan talking to Quentin Tarantino 🙂. Recommended!
This episode on Spotify in it’s entirety was one of my favorites so far. Quentin is so interesting and tells such great stories. He’s a genius. I’m Gen X too, so loved all the references he made.
Hello my beautiful great fans , thanks for your support, how are you doing, I hope everything is fine, you can write me in the hangout app with my email💖quentintarantino329@gmail.com
I saw Pulp Fiction in 1994 at the 2nd showing theater with my dad when I was 9 and in the 4th grade, for $1.50 a ticket. Immediately became my favorite movie and remains so to this day. Thanks pops. Rip.
I don't know if I would take a 9 year old to see Pulp Fiction but not for the reasons one might think. I was 9 when it came out and obviously my mom didn't let me watch it. But that was because of the violence and language. I don't know think a 9 year old would understand a lot of the themes and motifs in this movie. For example, the scene with the gimp and the attempted rape of Marcellus, the non linear storytelling which jumps around which may be confusing, the adrenaline 💉 along with drug usage and the somewhat liberal use of the N word.
@H Advertising is based on the fact that people can be swayed by what they see. Laws were passed not allowing a TV kids show host to hawk a product for example. If the media can sway people's minds, imagine a movie with rape and killing. NOT saying that'd make someone a rapist and murderer. But how exactly does a young mind without other life experiences slot those images correctly in their psyche? There's such a thing as age appropriateness.
Kill Bill was Tarantino's first movie I watched as a kid, so you must imagine that a 8-years-old kid watches a movie like that is kind of shocking, then I watched Pulp Fiction, Inglourious Basterds, which I consider a truly masterpiece with Christoph Waltz's great performance as Colonel Hans Landa. All along the history of cinema, nothing overcomes that film.
I was like 13 when i first saw kill bill and i was traumatized but like up to this day and after infinite rewatches, it is still my favorite Tarantino movie
Tarantino is spot on with 70s pop culture that influenced us during that period movies, tv shows, cartoons, speed racer, happy days, jaws, green acres, and music. Today I still have conversations of all these with friends and family or make references to that they get immediately. Quentin is an amazing film maker! I'm ready for his next masterpiece!
Never been affected by a movie more than Pulp Fiction - I was 19yrs old when it come out & at 46yrs old it’s still the most EPIC movie I’ve ever seen 👍🏻🇦🇺
the word "epic" literally means nothing anymore, because of overuse. it conveys nothing about what you're describing. it's the ultimate filler word. try harder.
I’m also 46 and saw it in Dallas with my dad…It made my brain start thinking of creative ways to use violence to solve simple problems. We went to a McDonald’s drive through afterwards and waited 10mins in line just to be told they were closed when we tried to order. The thoughts we both had at that moment were dark very dark to say the least.
Pulp Fiction is number 1 on my list of favorite movies. There isn't a bad part, there isn't a down or slow part that feels like it drags. It's quality from beginning to end with amazing acting and it ties in all the parts together beautifully. I watch it every time I harvest and trim my cannabis grows, and it never gets old.
I watched pulp fiction last night for the first time , and is a masterpiece , soo good , with incredible acting , dialogue , shoot , soundtrack , and the story telling is original , and so well written , no one can't film like this nowday .
@@p3t3yjuic3 I can't stand the copious use of the word "literally" these days myself. Now you google the definition and find "[informally] used for emphasis or to express strong feeling while not being literally true." In other words, the dictionary accepts its use as its literal opposite. We have lost, my friend.
Gary Oldman as the white Rasta, Drexl, that was something! All the smaller roles shined in that movie, Bronson Pinchot, Brad Pitt, Michael Rapaport and Val Kilmer. Quotes · Floyd : Don't condescend me, man. I'll fuckin' kill ya, man. · Floyd : Hey! Get some beer and some cleaning products!
After watching Pulp Fiction, I have immediately decided, that I need to watch all Tarantino movies (have not heard of him at the time). Was not dissapointed, what a legend this guy is.
I would love to see an actual conversation between him and Diane Kruger about the choking scene in Inglourious Basterds. I've seen Quentin mention he wanted it to look real, and Diane said afterwards that the decision was questionable and she'd never do it again, but what a topic that would be imo.
Still my favorite movie. True genius. I like Rogans description of it too. Does seem to capture the feeling. The girl I’m with hadn’t seen or heard of pulp fiction, which blew my mind. I asked “how could you live through the 90s without any knowledge of pulp fiction?” She said “maybe I have seen it and don’t remember”. I told her “ that’s impossible. You don’t see pulp fiction and forget seeing it”
@@jackedkerouac4414 Good point, but I don’t think that’s the case. Very soon after that mind boggling conversation, I made her watch PF and she loved it. She grew up out in the country, which doesn’t fully explain it in my book. I just try not to think about it because I still can’t make sense of it.
@@seanhickey1999 I was mostly just joking but there was a small element of truth in there. It kind of goes to show you that to be a good story teller takes more than just telling a good story. Timing, delivery, confidence, voice, Morgan Freeman can make anything sound good for example! Again, mostly joking but there is a little truth to it.
That's pretty cool as an observation. He's a visual story teller. Describing through word is a lot more work than showing someone a picture of something.
@@TauricornA Yes! You articulated my own idea better than I did. There are many ways to tell a story, visually, musically, orally, and the art of sitting down and telling a story is very different than the art of telling a story through film, as evident by this interview.
Come to Christ. He is the way, the truth and the life. He will welcome you with open arms, and wash you clean from all sin. On your own- you can not be righteous before God because we have all broken God’s moral law. Only Christ’s righteousness covering us can reconcile us (depraved sinners) to a Holy and Righteous and good God. Repent. Turn away from this sin and believe in Jesus Christ. He, God incarnate lived a perfect and sinless life. He died on the cross as a substitute for us and faced the wrath of God for us. He died but resurrected as death had no power over Him. He sits at the right hand of the Father right now. Please call on Him. He comes to all who call on him. Be saved through faith and know eternal life.
@@palindromia130 When Bonnie goes shopping she buys shit. I buy the gourmet expensive stuff because when I drink it I wanna taste it. But you know whats on my mind right now? It aint the coffee in my kitchen. It's the dead.....
When they tried to copy his style, they thought it was about throwing in random dialog about films or everyday conversation, but what they mostly never got was that those lines only felt random, but they never were random. Every single apparent random dialog line gave information to advance the plot or to present a character. If you watch the initial breakfast scene in Reservoir Dogs, the dialogue seems random but in the end, each character and how they approached things was presented. Tarantino never was random, he's been a precise perfectionist.
sabre yep, pretty much that's it. He mentioned True Romance was a great "Tony Scott" movie. If he ended up directing it, he'd do it differently but that didn't stopped him from enjoying it. On the other hand, he said any actor that appeared on NBK wouldn't work in him the future. Stone changed the original script a lot too that he only received story credit. I love both movies LOL
The dialog was incredible, the time-line kept you on your toes, the violence seemed as natural as drinking a cup of coffee for the characters. It was simply a level of vision and movie reform that hit the mark and timing perfectly.
Watched the episode on Spotify... amazing...I never understood Mr Tarantino, was not a fan at all...new I do and I'm a fan. Excellent work Mr Rogan. Your personal knowledge and non arrogance got Tarantino to open up and tell his story... About his background...why he does what he does in a relax and non aggressive way...a person that is known to be able to walk away. Great job!
One thing I've learned from hearing these great directors like him is that these little genius things they bring to cinema just comes to them suddenly and they dont overthink things like what most directors do these days.
HE CANNOT COUNT 03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
@@HybridGlobalCitizen It's not a hard science. Not everyone agrees on the starting birth year. He considers himself Gen X and he's off by - oh my fucking god - an entire year? Take your pills buddy.
Tarantino extremely astute. He crystalizes what is in my psyche, especially, as he says, a Gen X'er. Saturday morning cartoons, sit-coms of the day, ABC Movie of the Week, 70's movies--all that stuff resonates with me when he mentions it.
as a child born in the late 70s.. and reared in the 80s.. we had all the same.. all the reruns of 60s & 70s shows.. one of my favorite things was sitting on the floor with a bowl of cereal and watching the looney tunes show on saturday mornings .. i try to explain to my teenage son the glory of the three stooges and munsters.. but he just thinks its sad.. lol/
Without doubt he changed movies after pulp fiction. Quentin's choice of music, his dialogue, characters, choice of actor and editing combined is peerless, greatest moviemaker of our generation and my favourite by far.
4:35 is so true, the old stuff that we all experienced as kids truly bonds generations together, and people outside of that time period and moment feel like outsiders
Quentin is one of those guys whose comfort with his subject reminds you "oh, that's right, he's a fucking genius." No one is everyone's cup of tea, but Tarantino created a world that we can visit, an alternate Earth full of compelling stories and adjusted to his own desires. Taking fucked up things and trying to do right by them by changing history with your storytelling is extremely courageous. Tarantino is fierce, funny, and fearless.
Ripping off every movie that you have ever seen that you like is no genius bub. The entirely over rated QT is simply the "video store guy" with aspergers on tremendous amounts of coke.
@@yoholmes273 LOL. You clearly know nothing about movies if you think ripping off other movies shouldn't happen. Every movie is a rip off of previous movies. That's how it works. There is no such thing as originality. Every movie maker knows that.
@@CillBill94 You are a total fool if you believe every movie is a ripoff of one before. Tell that to Hitchcock or Chaplin or WC Fields or any of the multitudes of orginal artists. I am speak specifically of the man in question QT. I can name 15 movies or TV shows off the top of my head he totally ripped off. He is a fanboy making cinematic masturbation for himself.
The “pop culture glue” is what I wonder the current generation will have. As an 80’s kid we shared so many experiences with others as we didn’t have so many options. We all played the same Nintendo video games, watched the same cartoons and moves and all saw the same games on TV. Now things have splintered wildly with a million different apps, games, interests... etc.
Yes exactly, I feel like the only things you can talk about with people are the most popular films right now unless you have a really similar taste and have watched a lot of the same films and series
@@hotcoldman77 yes movies like the avengers get talked about a lot, but movies like don't really spawn very interesting conversations since they're not that deep. Some lesser known movies are though, but there a hundreds of those getting made every year unlike back in the day. So you gotta be lucky to find someone who has watched the same movie as you have
03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
I watched that movie while on leave from the Marines Corps. I watched it in the middle of the afternoon in a theater with about four old ladies present. The Christopher Walken "watch" scene came on and I let out a loud laugh when he dropped the "I hid this uncomfortable hunk of metal up my ass for two years....and now little man I give it to you." The old ladies sounded a little shocked.
Reminds me of when I saw "Happiness" in a theater in Boston and people started leaving in droves, including a group of little old ladies, until there was just a few people left. I also remember seeing Pulp Fiction in a packed theater and being one of the few people guffawing at scenes like that. Same with Gran Torino.
I saw Kill Bill vol1 matinee style. 4 old gray hair ladies were there prob because it was pitched as a woman's movement and they lasted to the crazy 88s scene. Then got up and left. Did the same for Django and a black church of about 30 ppl walked in and sat behind me. I was like oh geez. We all laughed at Stephen tho.
Come to Christ. He is the way, the truth and the life. He will welcome you with open arms, and wash you clean from all sin. On your own- you can not be righteous before God because we have all broken God’s moral law. Only Christ’s righteousness covering us can reconcile us (depraved sinners) to a Holy and Righteous and good God. Repent. Turn away from this sin and believe in Jesus Christ. He, God incarnate lived a perfect and sinless life. He died on the cross as a substitute for us and faced the wrath of God for us. He died but resurrected as death had no power over Him. He sits at the right hand of the Father right now. Please call on Him. He comes to all who call on him. Be saved through faith and know eternal life.
"Robbing them of their pop cultural glue" that's deep man because it's so true I remember when my parents dabled with taking things away from me growing up and sometimes wish they had been more stubborn by taking away more but now I look back on it and that quote genuinely sums up how I feel about it I was glad I had these experiences that I share with other people my age just by the fact we grew up at the same time
YA BUT HE BOOMER 03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
@@chrisbova9686 yup, and so are a lot of show Biz BS-ers Also a lot of People did his so called chat schticke long before he got into it!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Abbot and Costello , Mel Brooks, Belusi- Ackroyd etc etc
@@benjaminperez7328 yes, he has! Maybe an episode with just Mel Gibson would be cool. I’m not saying the other wasn’t but it was recorded with Dr. Neil Riordan. Perhaps a podcast focused solely on Mel Gibson and his take on directing and acting would be interesting. This one with Tarantino was awesome
Mel had his tin foil cap on and was giving a hell of a speech on the government not allowing stem cell procedures to happen. I think he brought his doctor on.
I was in my senior of high school and saw a kid in my 4th period had a pulp fiction t-shirt I asked him what the image was and he told me I went home that day and turned it on, till this day Tarantino has been my favorite film creator/director
Missing Joe a ton and Quentin being my favorite producer for decades still isn't enough to ignore Joe's desperate minute long beg to join spotify at the end of all his clips. Still a hard no from some of us old Rogan fans....
More people probably use Spotify than TH-cam these days. Get over it guys. How is it controversial in any way? And the whole “Spotify is censoring him” is bullshit too, considering how much stuff they remove and bury with their algorithms here on TH-cam.
@@dreammfyre I'd guess you praise Apple and Amazon then too. Some ppl are drilling holes in their own boat claiming its ok cuz everyone is doing it. Capitalism only works if we fight the companies that have predatory practices.... They all prey on the ignorance of their customers
I saw Pulp in the theaters about three times in a two week span - with a different person each time. The reactions in each audience, including two set of people walking out mid movie during the "wifey is coming home" scene is when I knew this film changed things. I thought it was and still is brilliant and is very QT. The country was going through a different PC movement and this film really shook things up. I look forward to the dialogue in every one of his movies as it is very well done. This movie blew me away and instantly became one of my all time favorites.
@Mmmhhhmmm He's already created several. But I can see him coming back for a swan song. I don't blame him for walking away. The current environment is treacherous in Hollywood, especially for someone always pushing the edge like Tarantino. They came after him during the release of Once Upon A Time. I think he's had enough.
Think this becomes the problem with artistic genius we all want too much from them. He won’t top his other masterpieces. He’s most likely peaked. Enjoy what you have
@@zyrrhos but maybe pushing the edge even further will be even more amazing, who knows. Political correctness isn’t going to lessen any time soon. And the bigger the difference between his work and average Hollywood would make it even more sought after to us who are sane and understand art for what it is; an expression of an idea.
@@SunnyLovetts I work in film in Los Angeles and it's exhausting. I can't blame him for wanting to walk away. But I think anything an artist of his level does is a gift. Unfortunately there are those who think otherwise. And it's only getting worse.
He's right about this movie being a major shift in cinematography, I remember in wood shop I guy telling us about this movie. The plot lines of each character it sounded crazy just hearing about it. We hung on to every word. I think that's why Quentin Tarantino is drawn to rapper's especially one's that tells a good story like Nas.
Tarantino is a damn genius. I have most of his movies on dvd without even realizing it. And he's absolutely right about growing up in the 60's and 70,s. There's never been a time like that and there will never be another. I especially love it when Tarantino Is in his own movies . I can't get enough of this dude.
I saw Tarantino chilling at a random bar in NOLA having a drink. He was by himself, I walked up and said “imma Huuuuuuge fan”. And he goes “imma huge fan of alcohol too”. Turned around and shook my hand, super nice and down to earth!
Lmao that's a good line
That’s has to be one of your greatest moment of your life.
@@miahtiki I’ve met allot of famous ppl that I was a fan of.. but Tarantino is a legend! Everything he said was what you would imagine he’d say. Thrower off shit lol
Guy is from Tennessee..that's why.. greatest people and greatest place in the world..if u move here from a blue state, LEAVE UR STINKING LIBERAL POLITICS BEHIND
@@mitchelll3879 nobody will be coming unfortunately you're gonna have to invite the racists
I had the pleasure of serving Tim Roth in a hotel I was working at and I was told by my managers to not interact and only to serve him and his wife. Of course I couldn't help myself and I said I loved his work in Reservoir Dogs and he was very humble and thankful. We started chatting and I asked him if Tarantino really is that crazy or is it for show and he simply said "man, you have no idea"
haha nice
See some of his early British stuff like The Firm and that one where he plays a skinhead. And, of course, Rob Roy.
@@williamshaw9047 Rob Roy is an under the radar cult phenomenon itself!!!
Tim Roth really needs to be on JRE too!!
The managers probably said that because they didn't want a pumpkin and honey bunny situation happening
I love that Joe knows enough that when you have Quentin you just ask a question and let him go, he’ll carry the conversation on his own and does it so well
I think artificial intelligence could interview Quentin random questions and it would only inspire his own conversation.
I really appreciated that. Most talk show hosts just try to get their jokes and stories in, Joe just sets him up and lets him go.
If only Rogan could shut the fuck up for 5 seconds.
Absolutely! Stan Freberg was like that too. I just needed a one line sound bite from him once and an hour later his wife got on the line saying "Stan, don't you think maybe the young man has other things he needs to do today?"
Quentin's one of the only guests that can out Joe of interrupting.
Holy smokes. Tarantino!
Go Frank yourself 🤪
Can you do a theory on what would happen if Vader kept a bunch of loose sand in his suit? I’m assuming he’d be the most powerful force user in the galaxy from being pissed off all the time
We weren't expecting special forces.....
A surprise to be sure, but a welcomed one
Nice to see that youtubers also watch other youtuber account videos
“Tarantino is the only guy who needs cocaine to stop talking”
-Brad Pitt
th-cam.com/video/kSXyke4rzOg/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/9n5HyKWvHmA/w-d-xo.html
That is really classic and funny 😂
Brad Pitt is the only guy who
would jump off the Titanic life
raft to save Jack a.k.a
Leonardo DiCaprio and drown
in his stead. 😂
what the fuck are these replies LMAO
@@Chumpskey it’s the latest way to spam people and drive viewers to their channels.
Just click the 3 dots and then report as spam. TH-cam will automatically delete their accounts if enough people do this
I watch Pulp Fiction once or twice each year. And to me it's one of those movies that leaves you thoughtful every time. And as I've aged.. I'm now 31 years old, the movie, or the message of the movie changes with me. And I pick up something new almost every time I see it. It's one of my absolute favorite movies of all time, and I never get sick of it.
What was in the briefcase???
@H As I get older, I see things from a different perspective. I have different values, and a whole lot more experience. I can relate to things in the movie, the previously just went straight over my head. That's how the message changes with me, even tho the movie don't necessarily change.
@@jerrylewis788 A MacGuffin
@@jerrylewis788 yes
meanwhile, I'm the only person alive who hasn't made past the fist 10 minutes of the pulp fiction, and yet, I'm still a big fan of Quentin.
Pulp Fiction changed the game! ❤️
Alright!
I agree but Reservoir Dogs, fuck I honestly think its better.
@@spawnkeeper999 Don't know bud, R-Dogs is the shit but Pulp just barely edges it. Real F$K$N close! Both are Great movies!!!!
What about it changed? Its boring.. another generic crime movie that pretends to teach a lesson about the lifestyle but actually just glorifies it
@@ss-iw6cs Damn you must be Quentin T HATER!!! He makes nothing but Block Busters!! One of the Greatest Directors of our time!!! But to each his own! ( I want my 100 scalps, from 100 Dead Nazis !!!! ) Lol 😆😆😆
I'm 60. And everything Quentin mentioned about TV , Speed Racer, Saturday morning cartoons, 4:30 movie of the week, ...etc. Brings back such strong nostalgic memories. He's so right we were the TV generation.
Absolutely, I never really thought about it but he is right… we relate everything to 70, 80’s TV.
I'm 56 and I remember schoolhouse rock, speed racer, ect but I never considered myself Gen X. I'm from the 80s and we are pretty much a lost generation. Mall kids.
Yes, and for what it's worth we appreciated the comforts of reruns in the afternoons and sought the certain episodes. We engaged with what shows were available to us for entertainment before the boom of cable TV. By happenstance we became the reference makers.
I'm the same age and thought exactly the same thing. What he didn't mention, but could have, were all the reruns of stupid sitcoms like Giiligan's Island, Hogan's Heroes, the Munsters, Beverly Hillbillies, and Green Acres. Heck, my brother and I still pull random quotes from these shows once in a while:
"I know....nothing!!!'
"Well, Granny, I'm going out to the ceeement pond...."
"Feed Spot...he's hungry."
"Miiiiister Douglas!!!"
jay dubya Agreed. I think those reruns are just as relevant to his point. I’m GenX too (though younger than QT) and I still can quote entire scenes of dialogue from The Brady Bunch.
Quentin is geeky, awkward, and a bit odd-looking, but there truly isn’t a cooler person alive. An absolute genius, and he knows it. No one controls him. He does whatever the fuck he wants because he’s Quentin god damn Tarantino. Love him.
Yeah, it just shows you when someone becomes willful, smart, and puts themself into the right network....
@586KING which scene?
@586KING i personally dont feel the gimp scene had to be about race. If you put a big white guy in there it would have shocked just as much. Presenting that scene so brutally put you in both of the captives shoes and showed you how sick and twisted those gun shop owners were. And it also presents a hidden evil with ownership and zed as a police man. That scene would typically be associated with a violent gang but instead it was literally the underside of the establishment.
@586KING Black dude getting raped had nothing to do with his race.
He's the ultimate movie geek. But unlike most geeks, he's very outgoing.
Joe: "People came out of that theater fucked up"
Tarantino: Chuckles "yeah"
You believe that bullshit???
It wasn't like that.
Good Movie but it didn't fuck anyone up.
@@penknight8532 You and your "like" will stay in your set potato boring life. That's fine do that. People will be changed and moved and fucked up whether you think or not. 😉
Lol’d at that bit too, legend
Pen Knight maybe it didn't fuck you up but you certainly can't say that for everyone else who saw pulp fiction.
Were exposed to so much shit now. Imagine seeing this in the early 90s were most movies were playing it pretty safe.
I remember my parents rented Pulp Fiction and turned it off because they thought I was too young to see it around the time the heroin came out. I went back down to finish it as soon as they went to bed. Started a lifelong love of cinema that night.
Same scenario in the 90's with me happened--except with me it was my dad and me and I rented "Bad Lieutenant" with Harvey Keitel. Shocked both of us and video tape was ejected. I finished watching it next day.
Low key I thought you were gonna say lifelong heroin addiction.
@@MakeItMakeSense285 me too, I'm actually disappointed
I was 13 when Pulp Fiction came out and i saw it in theaters and then i remember my mom asking me if it was good and if she should go see it.
@@MakeItMakeSense285 haha I was wondering where that was going would’ve been so funny if that was the story.
Pulp Fiction might be one of the best films ever made. I think it’s the dialogue. Tarantino can make a conversation about Dutch McDonald’s fun and vibrant. Plus, a truly epic cast. My favourite section might be the one in which he himself appears with Harvey Keitel. And, I love how the story jumps and moves about and ends where it started, it’s almost like a less crazy, noir and just better Sin City
You started out with the important part -- he wants to make *good movies* period. Think about how sad it is that that's a notable thing...
And he sold The the movie script to True Romance to make Pulp Fiction is the real crazy thing ...
Winston wolf was the man
It's the French McDonalds. The Holland part of the scene is when he's talking about the hash bars.
@@terracottapie and the mayonnaise on the fries. mmmmmm
I think this will be the first time I'll actually go to Spotify and watch a full episode since Joe went there
Lucky for you because spotify podcast is not available in my country.
Yeah not many interesting guests of late. This worth I listen I'm sure.
I'll be there checking this out as well 😎
@Giannis Antetokounmpo does spotify podcast work in android?
I like the wait and see if someone uploads it on TH-cam. I just don't like going to Spotify
I saw Pulp the first day it came out in Nashville, TN. We walked out of the theater with our minds totally blown. We knew cinema had changed forever. The second topic of conversation was how GREAT it was to see John Travolta back and better than ever.
I love Nashville
Feel like I could’ve listen to 6hrs more of Quentin
"Pop cultural glue that's going to tie them to their generation when they got older". That is pure gold and very true. Shared experiences of watching the same shows growing up.
Yeah those days are gone though. There's too much to choose from now not everyone is watching or hearing only the same things. Its Kinda sad.
@@nguvideos2868 The internet was a mistake
@@nguvideos2868 Yeah, I've been aware pop culture doesn't exist anymore for a while cause of the choice the internet offers, but the way Tarantino explained it really made me realize how bad this could be. Once our generation grows up, what common cultural experiences will we have that will keep us glued? 9/11 and Trump? Social media culture? Two random baby boomers who have never met before could sit down at a nursing home and talk about the 60s counterculture, Elvis, the Beatles, Vietnam, the Cuban Missile crisis, what it was like having ww2 vets as dads etc, and they'd be able to relate to each other. But us? Even TH-cam stars from 10 years ago are forgotten, memes come and go every year. Internet culture is a poor substitute for pop culture.
@@nguvideos2868 pop culture is no longer creative and unique though I don’t know if it ever was meant to be. I feel like it’s all just stealing and clout chasing with no real talent
@@nguvideos2868 People still watch similar things. Look at how popular Game of Thrones or Rick and Morty became for example. These shows will be remembered for good or bad reasons, that's the pop culture.
This is why I love Joe's long form podcast. Quentin was just on Real Time with Bill Maher, but it was so short. Would it kill Bill to do a longer interview?
Ba dum tss.
Tanrantino was so high on Real Time he couldn’t form a sentence. Here you can see how loose he is.
I like what you did there. Thumbs up for me.
🙄
It probably would. Bill likes to talk, he isn't much of a listener
We didn’t find out if Tarantino has ever tried DMT. Joe’s slackin
Joe was quiet after all the Bruce lee drama
Unnecessary question. No one with an ego the size of Quentin's has experienced DMT.
@@anneominous7172 so true lol
@@anneominous7172 Correction: Quentin doesn't need drugs. He is drugs
I was just going to this lol
Fuck, this is the one interview I'll watch on Spotify.
Yes, you should. I've done it yesterday. Tons of interesting facts and insights into his creative process. Just like you'd imagine Joe Rogan talking to Quentin Tarantino 🙂. Recommended!
He's up there for me. But not at all the one interview I'd pick if limited to a single episode. To each their own.
lol was just thinking the exact same thing
That's how they get ya.
Stop acting like Spotify is such a big deal man you can skip all the ads before the episode starts with a free account, that’s what I’ve been doing.
FASCINATING interview. This is the first time I saw some clips on youtube and actually opened Spotify and watched the full episode. Well worth it.
This episode on Spotify in it’s entirety was one of my favorites so far. Quentin is so interesting and tells such great stories. He’s a genius. I’m Gen X too, so loved all the references he made.
Hello my beautiful great fans , thanks for your support, how are you doing, I hope everything is fine, you can write me in the hangout app with my email💖quentintarantino329@gmail.com
This might be the one interview that would make me actually go see the full version on Spotify.
But did ya??
I just signed up
it is free and you can skip the ads, let's not complain
I’m about to
too bad that the podcast is not appearing here at Spotify in my country
I saw Pulp Fiction in 1994 at the 2nd showing theater with my dad when I was 9 and in the 4th grade, for $1.50 a ticket. Immediately became my favorite movie and remains so to this day.
Thanks pops. Rip.
RIP your dad but that was the worst possible movie to let a 9 year old watch
I don't know if I would take a 9 year old to see Pulp Fiction but not for the reasons one might think.
I was 9 when it came out and obviously my mom didn't let me watch it. But that was because of the violence and language.
I don't know think a 9 year old would understand a lot of the themes and motifs in this movie. For example, the scene with the gimp and the attempted rape of Marcellus, the non linear storytelling which jumps around which may be confusing, the adrenaline 💉 along with drug usage and the somewhat liberal use of the N word.
@H Advertising is based on the fact that people can be swayed by what they see. Laws were passed not allowing a TV kids show host to hawk a product for example. If the media can sway people's minds, imagine a movie with rape and killing. NOT saying that'd make someone a rapist and murderer. But how exactly does a young mind without other life experiences slot those images correctly in their psyche? There's such a thing as age appropriateness.
Kill Bill was Tarantino's first movie I watched as a kid, so you must imagine that a 8-years-old kid watches a movie like that is kind of shocking, then I watched Pulp Fiction, Inglourious Basterds, which I consider a truly masterpiece with Christoph Waltz's great performance as Colonel Hans Landa. All along the history of cinema, nothing overcomes that film.
I was like 13 when i first saw kill bill and i was traumatized but like up to this day and after infinite rewatches, it is still my favorite Tarantino movie
@@LuisSierra42 what did you think of Once upon a time in Hollywood?
@@sebastianalegria3401 I thought it was good, the only Tarantino movie I don't like is death proof
I watched Dusk till Dawn everyday one summer when I was 10.
@@LuisSierra42did you like the hateful eight
Tarantino is spot on with 70s pop culture that influenced us during that period movies, tv shows, cartoons, speed racer, happy days, jaws, green acres, and music. Today I still have conversations of all these with friends and family or make references to that they get immediately. Quentin is an amazing film maker! I'm ready for his next masterpiece!
I get it, I was born in the 80s but me and my friends do the same thing!
Never been affected by a movie more than Pulp Fiction - I was 19yrs old when it come out & at 46yrs old it’s still the most EPIC movie I’ve ever seen 👍🏻🇦🇺
Same. I was 16 and my mum lied to get me into the theatre to watch it. Just an amazing movie.
the word "epic" literally means nothing anymore, because of overuse. it conveys nothing about what you're describing. it's the ultimate filler word. try harder.
@@jimvarney511 STFU
I’m also 46 and saw it in Dallas with my dad…It made my brain start thinking of creative ways to use violence to solve simple problems. We went to a McDonald’s drive through afterwards and waited 10mins in line just to be told they were closed when we tried to order. The thoughts we both had at that moment were dark very dark to say the least.
@@greatcornholio5541 - lol 😂
Pulp Fiction is number 1 on my list of favorite movies. There isn't a bad part, there isn't a down or slow part that feels like it drags. It's quality from beginning to end with amazing acting and it ties in all the parts together beautifully. I watch it every time I harvest and trim my cannabis grows, and it never gets old.
I watched pulp fiction last night for the first time , and is a masterpiece , soo good , with incredible acting , dialogue , shoot , soundtrack , and the story telling is original , and so well written , no one can't film like this nowday .
*When Pulp Fiction came out, I was afraid to say “what” for months*
"Say what again, I dare you! I double-dog dare you!"
Ok. You win YT comment of the YEAR! 🤣
🤣🤣😅🤣
SAY WHAT AGAIN
DO THEY SPEAK ENGLISH IN WHAT?!
Tarantino is a national treasure. I love the way his mind works and his ability to put it on film for us to enjoy. :)
A lot of his recent stuff sucks though.
one of the best interviews with the OG Tarantino, highly recommend watching it all! so much insight to his genius thinking! what a guy.
Joe Rogan On top of the world talking to a man like this!
Big Facts!
Go Frank yourself!! 🤪
Your’e so right
There's 100 million reasons A listers are coming on his podcast. Game recognizes game.
Quentin doesn't bullshit and he said Joe was asking interesting questions, it's a genuine interaction
Pulp Fiction literally is timeless
Did you really have to put "literally" in there?
it was literally released in 1994. so like 27 years actually
@@p3t3yjuic3 I can't stand the copious use of the word "literally" these days myself. Now you google the definition and find "[informally] used for emphasis or to express strong feeling while not being literally true." In other words, the dictionary accepts its use as its literal opposite. We have lost, my friend.
Stupid fucking movie along with every other Tarantino film.
The discussion about Sicilians in True Romance with Christopher Walken as a mob. Wow 🤩
with Christopher Wallken as a *mobster
@@andresvelasco2767 Or Sicilian rooted mafia 😁
One of the greatest dialogues in a Tarantino script!!
My favorite movie of all times.
Gary Oldman as the white Rasta, Drexl, that was something! All the smaller roles shined in that movie, Bronson Pinchot, Brad Pitt, Michael Rapaport and Val Kilmer.
Quotes · Floyd : Don't condescend me, man. I'll fuckin' kill ya, man. · Floyd : Hey! Get some beer and some cleaning products!
After watching Pulp Fiction, I have immediately decided, that I need to watch all Tarantino movies (have not heard of him at the time). Was not dissapointed, what a legend this guy is.
Most overrated director
@@dogsbreakfast4952 I'm retarded
I love Quentin cause he’s real but he doesn’t talk shit, that’s true confidence. He knows the value of his work and doesn’t feel threatened by anyone
For real, I really look up to him now more than ever after seeing how he is wth questions like this. A true king
Dude went to Epstines island
@@gottmituns698 Misinformation.
@@gottmituns698 me too it’s over rated. It was just a bunch of nerds trading stock tips.
I would love to see an actual conversation between him and Diane Kruger about the choking scene in Inglourious Basterds. I've seen Quentin mention he wanted it to look real, and Diane said afterwards that the decision was questionable and she'd never do it again, but what a topic that would be imo.
Still my favorite movie. True genius. I like Rogans description of it too. Does seem to capture the feeling. The girl I’m with hadn’t seen or heard of pulp fiction, which blew my mind. I asked “how could you live through the 90s without any knowledge of pulp fiction?” She said “maybe I have seen it and don’t remember”. I told her “ that’s impossible. You don’t see pulp fiction and forget seeing it”
I bet that was her way of telling you she doesn’t like QT movies
@@jackedkerouac4414 Good point, but I don’t think that’s the case. Very soon after that mind boggling conversation, I made her watch PF and she loved it. She grew up out in the country, which doesn’t fully explain it in my book. I just try not to think about it because I still can’t make sense of it.
“Pop Culture Glue.” Nailed it.
We should have name for this... maybe we could name it zeitgeist?
Search:
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
It’s hilarious! 😂
Just check the comment section of any of your favorite songs from when you were in high school. You'll find your generation there.
One of the best movies ever made.
The best movie ever made.
AMEN!!!
@@matthewmitchells8008 your taste in movies is trash
Movie was trash and boring. Only betas thought it was good
@Rocks Give us a couple examples of great films to be certain we’re not dealing with a troll lol
I watched this whole episode on Spotify and I blown away… one of the greatest story tellers alive, is an average story teller 😂
Different art I guess. Jamie fox is an amazing story teller and it seems he uses his acting traits to enhance his stories
@@seanhickey1999 I was mostly just joking but there was a small element of truth in there. It kind of goes to show you that to be a good story teller takes more than just telling a good story. Timing, delivery, confidence, voice, Morgan Freeman can make anything sound good for example! Again, mostly joking but there is a little truth to it.
That's pretty cool as an observation. He's a visual story teller. Describing through word is a lot more work than showing someone a picture of something.
@@TauricornA Yes! You articulated my own idea better than I did. There are many ways to tell a story, visually, musically, orally, and the art of sitting down and telling a story is very different than the art of telling a story through film, as evident by this interview.
yeah man it's hard to talk
I’m surprised that everybody wasn’t dead at the end of this.
Come to Christ. He is the way, the truth and the life. He will welcome you with open arms, and wash you clean from all sin. On your own- you can not be righteous before God because we have all broken God’s moral law. Only Christ’s righteousness covering us can reconcile us (depraved sinners) to a Holy and Righteous and good God.
Repent. Turn away from this sin and believe in Jesus Christ. He, God incarnate lived a perfect and sinless life. He died on the cross as a substitute for us and faced the wrath of God for us. He died but resurrected as death had no power over Him. He sits at the right hand of the Father right now. Please call on Him. He comes to all who call on him. Be saved through faith and know eternal life.
Did you mean the audience or the characters?
Wait for Pingtrip's edit.
@@wayneurquhart1967 yes.
@DankCatFish420 Oh I about peed myself! That was funny
That laugh when Joe said “people were fucked up by this movie” “heh heh yeah”
Does anyone know what was in the small suitcase? More bandaids? I wanna know
@@mrgreen5097 No you didn't.
@@nikkizwijacz3001 coronavirus
@@mrgreen5097 that’s what I thought
@@randomstuff797 😂
It is a pleasure to listen to this man. Everything he says is interesting as much as every single scene in his movies.
"Zed's dead baby. Zed's dead." ~ Butch
Not a motorcycle baby it’s a chopper
I think I cracked a Rib
"I'm an American, honey, our names don't mean shit."
That of course is Butch's response to his girls question: "Who's Zed?" Which makes the quote even funnier IMO... 👍😉
wait are you a Zeds dead Fan ? or is that line just iconic ?
Pulp Fiction is still my favorite film of all time. It's so full of life, fun, suspense, shock, and strangely... honor.
"Goddamn Jimmy this is some serious Gourmet shit". ~Jules
“I would’ve settled for some freeze dried tasters choice but you lay this serious gourmet shit on me!”
@@Mtbker456 I don't need you tell me how fucking good my coffee is, ok? I'm the one buys it, I know how good it is.
@@palindromia130 When Bonnie goes shopping she buys shit. I buy the gourmet expensive stuff because when I drink it I wanna taste it. But you know whats on my mind right now? It aint the coffee in my kitchen. It's the dead.....
Quentin is such a massive inspiration to me. The ability to create an unbreakable link among people who witness the same iconic film is incredible!
When they tried to copy his style, they thought it was about throwing in random dialog about films or everyday conversation, but what they mostly never got was that those lines only felt random, but they never were random. Every single apparent random dialog line gave information to advance the plot or to present a character. If you watch the initial breakfast scene in Reservoir Dogs, the dialogue seems random but in the end, each character and how they approached things was presented. Tarantino never was random, he's been a precise perfectionist.
there's nothing random about trying to be random.
well said
I wonder how this applies to Quentin's rant about the Madonna song and big dicks at the beginning of the movie
I hope he talked True Romance in this interview 🤯 The best!
He hates that movie
@@supernothing77 Why? Its good.
That was the first 'Tarantino' movie I saw. I know he doesn't like it, but I was absolutely blown away. Cool and funny af.
What? I'm pretty sure he likes it. He hates Natural Born Killers tho. You probably mixed that up.
sabre yep, pretty much that's it. He mentioned True Romance was a great "Tony Scott" movie. If he ended up directing it, he'd do it differently but that didn't stopped him from enjoying it. On the other hand, he said any actor that appeared on NBK wouldn't work in him the future. Stone changed the original script a lot too that he only received story credit. I love both movies LOL
The dialog was incredible, the time-line kept you on your toes, the violence seemed as natural as drinking a cup of coffee for the characters.
It was simply a level of vision and movie reform that hit the mark and timing perfectly.
If there was ever a time for Joe to upload a full episode on his TH-cam channel, this is it.
It’s free on Spotify with video ??
th-cam.com/video/kSXyke4rzOg/w-d-xo.html
Right!!!!!!
@@LunaTheKitty0 I can never get video to work
@@LunaTheKitty0 Spotify sucks
Watched the episode on Spotify... amazing...I never understood Mr Tarantino, was not a fan at all...new I do and I'm a fan. Excellent work Mr Rogan. Your personal knowledge and non arrogance got Tarantino to open up and tell his story... About his background...why he does what he does in a relax and non aggressive way...a person that is known to be able to walk away. Great job!
One thing I've learned from hearing these great directors like him is that these little genius things they bring to cinema just comes to them suddenly and they dont overthink things like what most directors do these days.
There aren't too many people that almost everyone can agree is brilliant.
I thought he'd mention Goddard at the end there.
HE CANNOT COUNT 03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
I agree that this comment is retarded
@@HybridGlobalCitizen somebody take away this mans internet connection
@@HybridGlobalCitizen It's not a hard science. Not everyone agrees on the starting birth year. He considers himself Gen X and he's off by - oh my fucking god - an entire year? Take your pills buddy.
I could listen to Quentin talk about cinema all day. And he clearly revels in it. Maybe one day, he'll have his own podcast.
Tarantino movies have a personality. I watch his movies as soon as they come out.
as the years go by, tarantino looks more and more like my mother-in-law.
You lucky. My mother in law looks like Bruce Willis.
@@DevDevi pre or post bald
These questions matter
@@jontraz5993 , Alas post bald.
@@DevDevi F
😂🤣😂🤣
I was 14 when Pulp Fiction came out.
Still to this day it remains the best film ever
Tarantino extremely astute. He crystalizes what is in my psyche, especially, as he says, a Gen X'er. Saturday morning cartoons, sit-coms of the day, ABC Movie of the Week, 70's movies--all that stuff resonates with me when he mentions it.
He forgot to mention Alf. I lost all respect for him.
@@jed2648 Also no mention of Wonder Showzen. That's unforgivable.
as a child born in the late 70s.. and reared in the 80s.. we had all the same.. all the reruns of 60s & 70s shows.. one of my favorite things was sitting on the floor with a bowl of cereal and watching the looney tunes show on saturday mornings .. i try to explain to my teenage son the glory of the three stooges and munsters.. but he just thinks its sad.. lol/
That's cool
My all time favorite flick.
Same. Goodfellas is a close second 👍
You fellas would be in my cool club. My top two favorite films... Pulp Fiction and Goodfellas.
Without doubt he changed movies after pulp fiction. Quentin's choice of music, his dialogue, characters, choice of actor and editing combined is peerless, greatest moviemaker of our generation and my favourite by far.
Quentin is the goat. Never been this excited to listen to a podcast!
One of JRs best interviews. He kept the convo rolling like its easy
4:35 is so true, the old stuff that we all experienced as kids truly bonds generations together, and people outside of that time period and moment feel like outsiders
Quentin is one of those guys whose comfort with his subject reminds you "oh, that's right, he's a fucking genius." No one is everyone's cup of tea, but Tarantino created a world that we can visit, an alternate Earth full of compelling stories and adjusted to his own desires. Taking fucked up things and trying to do right by them by changing history with your storytelling is extremely courageous. Tarantino is fierce, funny, and fearless.
well said
Is this a poem or a romance novel
Ripping off every movie that you have ever seen that you like is no genius bub. The entirely over rated QT is simply the "video store guy" with aspergers on tremendous amounts of coke.
@@yoholmes273 LOL. You clearly know nothing about movies if you think ripping off other movies shouldn't happen. Every movie is a rip off of previous movies. That's how it works. There is no such thing as originality. Every movie maker knows that.
@@CillBill94 You are a total fool if you believe every movie is a ripoff of one before. Tell that to Hitchcock or Chaplin or WC Fields or any of the multitudes of orginal artists. I am speak specifically of the man in question QT. I can name 15 movies or TV shows off the top of my head he totally ripped off. He is a fanboy making cinematic masturbation for himself.
The “pop culture glue” is what I wonder the current generation will have. As an 80’s kid we shared so many experiences with others as we didn’t have so many options. We all played the same Nintendo video games, watched the same cartoons and moves and all saw the same games on TV. Now things have splintered wildly with a million different apps, games, interests... etc.
Yes exactly, I feel like the only things you can talk about with people are the most popular films right now unless you have a really similar taste and have watched a lot of the same films and series
THE AVENGERS! I know that will be at the forefront. You're right though
@@hotcoldman77 yes movies like the avengers get talked about a lot, but movies like don't really spawn very interesting conversations since they're not that deep. Some lesser known movies are though, but there a hundreds of those getting made every year unlike back in the day. So you gotta be lucky to find someone who has watched the same movie as you have
The millennials had Harry Potter, Twilight, Attack of the Show, Naruto, and Dragonsball Z, and of course, Fortnite
@@hypeforce1 I associate Fortnite more with Gen Z than Millennials.
I saw Pulp Fiction for the first time while tripping on mushrooms! Still one of my all time favorite movies.
Quentin not reaching around that cable is driving me absolutely insane
i couldn't quite pin it, but YES OMG
"So...Quentin Tarantino!
"Hi, Joe."
"So Quentin...who do you think would win in a fight? You or Alex Jones?"
My money is on Alex
@@mattmillson4838 same
I don't know man Alex Jones tends to gas in the first couple rounds acquaintance lasts past two rounds I think he's got a shot.
@@mattmillson4838 It depends on if Tarantino's cocaine boost can outlast Alex's big ape energy - if so, Tarantino's got it in the bag
03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
One of the most satisfying cinematographic experiences to be had.
Dream podcast for me:
David Fincher, Coen Brothers, Tarentino, Scorsese, Nolan, inarritu
@ITS IN THE DOCUMENTS lol yup same here
Denis Villeneuve
I always liked the Coen Brothers. I always thought Tarantino and CB movies were similar. Mostly with the chaos,violence,and the humor.
Great list but at the risk of being called names could I add John Carpenter.
@@birthdaybatter815 yes
Well I'm going to Spotify for this one, see ya later alligators!
Nobody cares beta
the comments on this post are exactly why Joe went to spotify in the first place lol
@@ss-iw6cs stay mad
@@bigchiefsmackaho387 no he went for money tard
@@DomskiPlays ok beta
Quinten is the quintessential Hollywood guy. He stars himself in his own life
Just show him your feet and you’ll definitely get a role.
*Quentin
Pulp Fiction is an adventure.
One of the best movies of all time for sure
Seatbelt worthy
username checks out
You would know!
I watched that movie while on leave from the Marines Corps. I watched it in the middle of the afternoon in a theater with about four old ladies present. The Christopher Walken "watch" scene came on and I let out a loud laugh when he dropped the "I hid this uncomfortable hunk of metal up my ass for two years....and now little man I give it to you." The old ladies sounded a little shocked.
Reminds me of when I saw "Happiness" in a theater in Boston and people started leaving in droves, including a group of little old ladies, until there was just a few people left. I also remember seeing Pulp Fiction in a packed theater and being one of the few people guffawing at scenes like that. Same with Gran Torino.
I saw Kill Bill vol1 matinee style. 4 old gray hair ladies were there prob because it was pitched as a woman's movement and they lasted to the crazy 88s scene. Then got up and left.
Did the same for Django and a black church of about 30 ppl walked in and sat behind me. I was like oh geez. We all laughed at Stephen tho.
I love this particular segment because I also grew up living in the same era that Quentin describes and he is spot on with that analysis.
i never go on spotify for jre since he moved but ill go for this one
Youve been missing out
Rewatching tarantino films after this episode.. the opening scenes are epic..
I remember seeing that movie and saying "Id never buy a 5.00 milkshake" And here Iam buying 8 dollar milkshakes
For real tho
Thanks Biden and Kamala
Genuinely feel like Tarantino could deliver a ten-minute treatise on any film ever made.
Pulp Fiction, literally my favorite movie.
We need more Tarantino. His work is unique.
Pulp Fiction just exudes “cool” at every level
When he plunged that syringe into her chest I nearly shat myself.
Come to Christ. He is the way, the truth and the life. He will welcome you with open arms, and wash you clean from all sin. On your own- you can not be righteous before God because we have all broken God’s moral law. Only Christ’s righteousness covering us can reconcile us (depraved sinners) to a Holy and Righteous and good God.
Repent. Turn away from this sin and believe in Jesus Christ. He, God incarnate lived a perfect and sinless life. He died on the cross as a substitute for us and faced the wrath of God for us. He died but resurrected as death had no power over Him. He sits at the right hand of the Father right now. Please call on Him. He comes to all who call on him. Be saved through faith and know eternal life.
@@inspiredby621 Amen
hes talking directly about guy ritchie 😄
"Everybody be cool , this is a podcast!"
Hahaha, literally heard it like the opener
“I love you too hunny bunny”. Hahaha. Very clever Well Done to you
Don't anybody freakin' cast or I'll blow your freakin' pod off!
He’s an actual genius. You can hate his films, or hate him as a person…..but reality is what it is. He could be the GOAT.
one of the GREATEST movies EVER made! Hes not wrong. He did create an entire Genre. His story telling ability is unmatched!
"Robbing them of their pop cultural glue" that's deep man because it's so true I remember when my parents dabled with taking things away from me growing up and sometimes wish they had been more stubborn by taking away more but now I look back on it and that quote genuinely sums up how I feel about it I was glad I had these experiences that I share with other people my age just by the fact we grew up at the same time
This was such a good interview. I love coming back to it and seeing it.
I swear, Quentin Tarantino has to be registered as a national treasure.
YA BUT HE BOOMER 03:43 GEN X ??? Tarantino is 58 born in 1963!!! The Baby Boomer Generation: (1946 - 1964) HEY BOOMER!!!! Also Madonna and Billy Idol called themselves GEN Xers ... ALL BOOMERS !!! BWAAA HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!! HEY BOOMER!!!!
Fools gold
@@HybridGlobalCitizen take your meds
@@HybridGlobalCitizen you are a boomer.
@@chrisbova9686 yup, and so are a lot of show Biz BS-ers Also a lot of People did his so called chat schticke long before he got into it!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Abbot and Costello , Mel Brooks, Belusi- Ackroyd etc etc
Mel Gibson would be a cool episode
He’s had Mel on.
@@benjaminperez7328 yes, he has! Maybe an episode with just Mel Gibson would be cool. I’m not saying the other wasn’t but it was recorded with Dr. Neil Riordan. Perhaps a podcast focused solely on Mel Gibson and his take on directing and acting would be interesting. This one with Tarantino was awesome
Second that motion
Mel had his tin foil cap on and was giving a hell of a speech on the government not allowing stem cell procedures to happen. I think he brought his doctor on.
oooh my nipples, they hurt! they hurt when i twist 'em!!!
I was in my senior of high school and saw a kid in my 4th period had a pulp fiction t-shirt I asked him what the image was and he told me I went home that day and turned it on, till this day Tarantino has been my favorite film creator/director
Always thought "Things to do in Denver when you're dead" was an excellent Tarantino type movie that never got it's due.
Yeah, u right. Great movie
8 heads in a duffel bag and things to do in Denver are two movies I watch at least once a year
@@brianlara6451 I have not seen first movie you mentioned. I'll have to check it out.
@@brianlara6451 8 heads in a duffel bag almost killed joe pesci s career.never seen it though critics sagged it
@@tommo8321 it's horrendous
“How to get randoms to try Spotify? Quentin.”
Search:
Elon Musk meets Post Malone
It’s hilarious! 😂
Missing Joe a ton and Quentin being my favorite producer for decades still isn't enough to ignore Joe's desperate minute long beg to join spotify at the end of all his clips. Still a hard no from some of us old Rogan fans....
Yep, i was tempted. In the end, nah. I’m good.
More people probably use Spotify than TH-cam these days. Get over it guys. How is it controversial in any way? And the whole “Spotify is censoring him” is bullshit too, considering how much stuff they remove and bury with their algorithms here on TH-cam.
@@dreammfyre I'd guess you praise Apple and Amazon then too. Some ppl are drilling holes in their own boat claiming its ok cuz everyone is doing it. Capitalism only works if we fight the companies that have predatory practices.... They all prey on the ignorance of their customers
I saw Pulp in the theaters about three times in a two week span - with a different person each time. The reactions in each audience, including two set of people walking out mid movie during the "wifey is coming home" scene is when I knew this film changed things. I thought it was and still is brilliant and is very QT. The country was going through a different PC movement and this film really shook things up. I look forward to the dialogue in every one of his movies as it is very well done. This movie blew me away and instantly became one of my all time favorites.
One of the best directors working today. He should do more than 10 movies 🎥
Bresson, Melville and Kubrick only made 13. Tarkovsky made 7. QT knows what he's doing. Leave 'em wanting more.
@Mmmhhhmmm He's already created several. But I can see him coming back for a swan song. I don't blame him for walking away. The current environment is treacherous in Hollywood, especially for someone always pushing the edge like Tarantino. They came after him during the release of Once Upon A Time. I think he's had enough.
Think this becomes the problem with artistic genius we all want too much from them. He won’t top his other masterpieces. He’s most likely peaked. Enjoy what you have
@@zyrrhos but maybe pushing the edge even further will be even more amazing, who knows. Political correctness isn’t going to lessen any time soon. And the bigger the difference between his work and average Hollywood would make it even more sought after to us who are sane and understand art for what it is; an expression of an idea.
@@SunnyLovetts I work in film in Los Angeles and it's exhausting. I can't blame him for wanting to walk away. But I think anything an artist of his level does is a gift. Unfortunately there are those who think otherwise. And it's only getting worse.
He's right about this movie being a major shift in cinematography, I remember in wood shop I guy telling us about this movie. The plot lines of each character it sounded crazy just hearing about it. We hung on to every word. I think that's why Quentin Tarantino is drawn to rapper's especially one's that tells a good story like Nas.
Cinema as a whole, not just the cinematography!
Tarantino is a damn genius. I have most of his movies on dvd without even realizing it. And he's absolutely right about growing up in the 60's and 70,s. There's never been a time like that and there will never be another. I especially love it when Tarantino Is in his own movies . I can't get enough of this dude.
Pulp fiction is one of the well made movies ever
My favorite director of all time QT LET'S GO !!!
I stand there
Ive never been more entertained by a movie than the first time i saw Django. Will forever be at the top of my movie lists
Quentin Tarantino is genius and makes his process sound so matter of fact . Love him.