Three things I was pleasantly surprised to see in a Tarantino film: 1. a memorable child performance 2. a memorable animal performance 3. a memorable flamethrower performance
@@NostalgiNorden Seriously though I'd never seen a kid actor that young before and thought "Y'know, that's a real kid." until I saw the performance for B.B in that movie.
That bit at the beginning was the shortest, weakest, most anemic attempt at a traditional Half In The Bag storyline segment I've ever seen. Keep up the good work.
Gone are the days of haphazard shootings, beer bottle-strewn parties, erupting colostomy bags, and gay potion cakes 😞. Plinkett's abode has become just another boring run-of-the-mill centigenarian psycopath's pigsty.
The alternative was to accept a comments section filled with nothing but, "Why are you guys so sweaty in this episode? Is it because you're in the wrong seats?" Luckily they're still getting plenty of the second bit. I'm sure there's a satisfactory explanation forthcoming.
One of my favorite scenes was just the two guys sitting around watching FBI and drinking beer and talking over it and laughing. It really felt authentic.
Yeah wow, commentating over a clip drinking beer haha that's what everyone does right? If I say it feels authentic everyone will think I do the same thing, it's so cool yeah wow
My thought when I heard the one girl suggest they kill the “actors who taught us to be violent through the violence in their movies” was that Tarantino was projecting those criticisms he gets onto that character. Then she gets the most brutal death. I refuse to think that was coincidental.
That was definitely a self aware meta commentary of not only those criticisms but when movies frequently inject some sort of message that is inherently contradictory (eg Canto Bite and capitalism by a Disney product) and Quentin probably thinks it’s nonsense that people try that
@@Dorian-_-Gray Congratulations, you've effortlessly eased yourself all the way to the concept of being a pretentious douchebag to strangers for no reason.
Funny, they didn't mention the meta ending. Cliff does almost all the fighting and dangerous work, Rick gets a closeup doing something very showy and flashy and gets all the credit...stuntman and star.
I enjoy all of Tarantino’s movies, but I think this is the first one that ever made me respect him as an individual. It would have been so easy to milk the tragedy and give Manson more scenes, but this almost felt like he was trying to give Tate one more movie to shine in. The Manson Family got famous for what they did to her, but her memory always winds up taking a back seat to the spectacle of Manson. The moment Rick starts speaking to them after the point in time when they would have been murdered...it honestly made me cry and gave me chills, like he was giving them their voice back. It was so sweet to give them that ending.
I've heard True Romance(edit: I mean natural born killers) was supposed to be a satire about the absurdity of fetishizing serial killers, but it failed, this movie pulls it off brilliantly
I work in Westwood village literally a block away from the Bruin Theater where Sharron Tate watches her movie. I was there while they were filming and the way they transformed those 2 blocks into 1969 was surreal. Even down to the newspaper stands having old newspapers in them.
Yep, I was an extra on a movie set, driving my own car. The actually changed the registration sticker on my windshield to a New York State registration sticker.
To be fair, movie magic can do amazing things. I would at least _ask_ if they could do something about it. He doesn't complain, he just asks. They say "It's a flamethrower" he says "Okay" and moves on without complaints... IDK, I'd ask as well. Who knows? Maybe some cooling gel on the face? Goggles to help the eyes? Anything to get that most intense shot possible, ya know?
@@got5432 that's like a weird running gag in Leonardo diCaprio's career-he pulled the exact same shit complaining about the cold water in _Titanic_ and Cameron just left it in.
"When Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio are starring in a movie together, and it is second to a movie with CGI lions that you've seen before, the era of Hollywood A-List stars is done." Depressing, but well said.
It's kinda accurate but also a bit overkill. The Lion King is child-friendly combined with nostalgia factor for adults. Once Upon A Time In Hollywood is relevant to film fans and Tarantino fans, much more limited in audience appeal.
@@Trendyflute and a year later, it's already dead. Gladly. I don't see much anticipation for Marvel Phase who-knows. "Endgame" really was the end. I tried watching "Love and Thunder" and "Eternals". Fell asleep more than once and couldn't finish Eternals at all. Just too plain boring. "Star Wars" is pretty much dead in the water, too. Episode 9 just sucked. "Let's just get the Emperor back and reshoot 'Return of the Jedi' only more boring with larger plot holes and breaking canon.
the driving around scenes: that is pretty much the essence of Los Angeles, you are forever driving around somewhere because nothing is near anything else
In my opinion this movie was a love letter to Sharon Tate. Anytime anyone mentions her name the first and only thing people think of is the way she was murdered. Quentin Tarantino made a movie that portrays her in an angelic light, shows off her work and leaves you with her sweet voice at the end. I think Quentin wanted to change the way people think about and remember Sharon Tate for who she was as a person and actor rather than her involvement in a famous murder. Quentin created a "What if?" ... saying what if this story had a happy ending.
Yeah! This movie is a perfect example of how movies are fiction--fantasies that can comfort and briefly impose a veneer of justice to a brutal and often unjust world.
I was with a dead ass audience that had no sense of humor. I still laughed out loud as fuck. The dude next to me was awkward as hell, killin my vibes. had a whole fist up his ass. when he brought out the flame thrower i was in tears.
Also, by this point the Manson family had already killed Gary Hinman and shot Bernard Crowe. Also, also, the girl who drives away is supposed to be Linda Kasabian, who in real life did refuse to kill anyone, tried to stop the other three during the Tate murder and served as a key witness.
I try to buy as many of their shirts as I can, then I figured I'd start doing Patreon too, they provide me with so many hours of entertainment. I look forward to their stuff as much I used to look forward to a Game of Thrones episode. Started off at $2/month, Upped it last month to $5
During the climax, Cliff gets stabbed in the hip. In the novel the Rick is reading earlier, the protagonist breaks a hip and can no longer be the best bronco buster. I think this means that Cliff will not be able to do stunt work anymore.
I loved that the Sharon Tate in The Wrecking Crew was not Margo Robbie, because it was telling us that the Sharon Tate in Quentin's movie is in the Kelvin timeline.
The girl that drove away, I think her name was Linda, was new to the Manson family on the night of the murders and wasn’t completely on board. In reality, she was told to go check the back of 10050 Cielo for open windows. She found some opened, but lied and said there were closed, hoping that they would call off the mission. Unfortunately they found open windows in the front of the house. During the trials, she went against the family as a witness. So I think that Tarantino got her to drive away because he knew that it was something she would do, that she wasn’t pure evil like the rest of them and wouldn’t feel right brutally killing her off.
I feel it should be noted that no one but Linda Kasabian agrees with that version of events. Literally everyone else (and the evidence available) suggests she took a more active role.
They had to turn somebody for immunity and she was the least "mansoned". Also they even absurdly try to pin it all in her, that she was actually the mastermind haha.
Another factoid about the murders: they were planning on writing racially charged messages in the victims' blood implicating the Black Panthers. That's why it was supposed to start a race war. Still completely insane (especially since they thought the small minority of black people in the country were going to win the race war and then the white Manson family was going to come out of their bomb shelter and be immediately accepted as rulers by the black people who had killed all the other whites), but there was some method to the madness. Of course, the whole thing was inspired by a Beatles album and a lot of drugs.
13:37 to Jay’s point the best nail in the coffin to the Manson Family in the movie was when Cliff completely botches Tex’s “I’m the devil” line when he’s telling it to the cops at the end. “He said ‘I’m the devil and I’m here to do... I don’t know some devil shit’, I don’t know” it’s like their entire legacy is taken away by the ending. Even Rick and Cliff don’t even know why they were there. Their ideology never gets exposure. Brilliant. Edit: 19:43 that is taken loosely from a quote from the trial. Also: the girl who leaves is in fact the Manson girl who turned on the rest and testified against them at the trial, and left halfway through the murders to sit in the car because she was so disturbed by the others’ level of depravity. Tarantino has done his research.
It's also recorded that, on the night of the murders, the killers drove all the way to the gate then reversed the car back and returned on foot. Again, Tarantino depicts that in the movie but with his own twist being that the reason why they reversed was Leo's margarita-fuelled tantrum.
I feel like Sharon not being replaced in Wrecking Crew with Margot Robby was simply because Sharon was an actual real person, rather then Rick Dalton screen testing a scene, who sadly enough, isn't real.
Whatever it was, it broke the suspension of disbelief for me. Robbie is a decent representation of Tate, but when you see them side by side you know it's two different people and that took me out of the movie.
Agreed! She was taken from the world too early as it is. It would have been a huge disservice to erase her further. I felt it was the most touching 4th wall brush (not quite break) to leave those snippets of her performance in tact.
Syklone personally It didn’t take me out of it because I was thinking about the context of the movie the whole time. In that moment it made me think of Sharon the person and I appreciated it for that.
Margot as Sharon didn't need a lot of dialogue. Her sitting in the theater loving the little laughs that her part got out of the people is one of the most genuine things I've seen in a movie and one of the best scenes
It was an adorable scene that did a lot to endear her character to the audience which sets up stakes for the dreaded assumed ending of the movie because we like her innocent character. It didnt need dialogue. From that scene we get that she's shy and a little insecure but really happy that people enjoy her movies. For example the ticket lady not recognizing her or trusting other people would recognize her if she wasnt next to the poster shows that she isnt quite famous and gets a genuine joy in seeing people enjoy her performances and how hard she worked on them from the quick cut to her training with bruce lee. But no, the audience needs to be spoon fed dialogue for a character to be important according to the clickbait lady.
The Tate scenes were lovely, but I felt they made the film grind to a halt. I was trying to enjoy them, but honestly I just wanted to get back to Cliff and Rick.
* 3 people break into your house at night, clearly deranged and holding knifes and guns, talking about murdering you. Mike: "BuT ThEY DidNt dO AnyYThinG"
I agree with you but what Mike meant was we perceive them a certain way because we know what happened in real life and Cliff's response would feel over the top and unfair if it was removed from the Tate murders context (which wouldn't make sense and it doesn't matter).
Gunna Marta if you have 3 people, 2 with knives and 1 with a gun pointed at your face, wouldn’t you assume they were there to, i don’t know, murder you? Since Cliff knew them and knowing what he did at the ranch, I’m sure he assumed they wanted revenge and knowing the type of guy he is, he was reasonable to attack them.
@@AshleyTheSwift The random hippie girl took Cliff to the manson ranch. She kept saying "Charley will really like you." She was clearly apart of the manson family.
One thing I really enjoyed about Once Upon A Time...In Hollywood was ironically, Manson wasn't in much of it. I actually thought that was very clever and wise as well, because rather than show the physical presence Manson had over his 'Family' we saw how deeply his followers believed in Manson and would do anything to protect it. Like when Pussycat yelled to Cliff that he was blind, that really showed how much Manson had manipulated his followers and made it more chilling, in my opinion.
walkin dude Mason came up to the driveway of the Polanski/Tate house, thinking the house belonged to Terry Melcher, a former friend of Manson’s. If I’m correct, that was his only appearance in the film.
deg1studios yeah I remember him arriving in a van, but can’t remember what kind of van it was. I do remember him at the door of the Polanski house because he was blocked by Jay Sebring and only shown when he backed away from the door where Sebring couldn’t block him from Sharon.
I love when Pitt is in the car and the girl waves at him the second time she saw him and visually asked for a ride and Pitt motioned he wasn’t going that way. The girl does the fake cry and Pitt just shrugs, like too bad and drives away. Brilliant acting and a brilliant scene with no dialogue.
What does that even mean? And no I’m too lazy to @ someone if that’s what you’re asking. But I’m still not sure if I’m the one who suffered a stroke or you are
@@visionist7 yeah, I went with people who don't watch films with subtitles on, so I couldn't appreciate the real performances, but the dubbers were really good and maybe I will watch it again once it comes out on bluray in original
@@tlr9403 Well because it's easy to remember legends like Sergio Leone, but like all the italian directors at the time got aboard the Westerns train and most of them were utter trash
They dubbed leo into the great escape because he was lying to Timothy Olyphant about not being close to getting the role when in actuality he had done test screenings for the role
ZuluKasuki I don’t think this movie leaves room for us to interpret what we see as imagined. Joker had a “protagonist” that was quite literally delusional, in the psychological sense. Leo’s might’ve been in the sense of how he viewed his self-worth, but the way it was presented, it seems to be (at least, in my opinion, can’t speak for Tarantino) something that did happen, but he was so bitter/sad about losing that role, he lied about it. Fits the character.
Was literally just about to write this. And the joke is that he delivered the lines so hokey that they replaced him. Not sure why so many people missed this
yeah we have to remember they just saw the movie and saw it once. almost 3 hours long they're going to forget little nuances like that. I'm even amazed they remember as much as they do. I'm sure they write a bunch down but still!
At the beginning of the movie, during the opening credits, you can see the names of Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio on the screen but the names are switched so Brad Pitt is on the side of the screen where Dicaprio is and Leonardo Dicaprio is where Brad Pitt is. I wonder if Mike and Jay switched because of that....
Is this comment secretly a "is Jay replacing Mike replacing Jay"? Are good comments replacing youtube comments? Patting my back like a discovery writer.
I took the Great Escape flashback as saying Leo's character got the movie and was fired and replaced by McQueen. And that's why he was so keen to get across that he was "never close" to getting it.
That was my interpretation too, that he was embarrassed to have had and lost such a great role. I hadn't even considered that it might have been him imagining if he had gotten the role, and just being bitter that he didn't. Either option seems equally likely to me now.
Went and saw this movie with my pops(we haven't missed a QT flick in theaters since Kill Bill Vol 1.) Once that last act of gratuitous violence hit we couldn't stop laughing and the old couple next to us said, "why would anyone laugh at this?" It just made us laugh even more. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was a wonderful film and I hope to enjoy many more Tarantino moments with my father in the future!
Dont listen to those stuck ups . I laughed like a mad man in that scene . These people are really not made for tarantino's style of movies . This is catharsis violence and it was great !
I've gone to all Tarantino's since inglorious bastards, and have always had at least one laugh at the extreme violence. But in this one, I was really crying laughing
My friend Mike Gill shot that behind the scenes clip in this episode. He recently passed away and I was prompted to tell everyone how much he loved RLM. He even took me to Boardner’s from LA Wars 💕
I’m very sorry for the loss of your friend, I will say I’m glad he took you to Boardner’s; there’s something so captivating and special about that place. I like to think about all different types of people who walked into that place over the years so much history! I haven’t been in a few years but I can still taste the old fashioned.
26:30 He never sold out. I don’t know why but that part hit me like a truck. Leonardo DiCaprio feels like one of the last true mainstream actors who stars in roles that challenge himself and challenge audiences. I guess it just feels like that there’s still people out there trying to do something real and not glossy or clean, and they’ve been right under our noses the whole time.
I think it's hilarious that they randomly put actors on their shit list. I mean, you can find something to critique about anyone really, but a few actors just really bug them for some reason. I like Leo, but their hate for him entertains me.
I don't know if I'd necessarily call that "selling out" per say. James Cameron was a very lucrative filmmaker and he did end up making the highest grossing film ever made up to that point, but Cameron's not like the Russo brothers in that he worked on like one studio movie before his big break with zero passion. Keep in mind, the man made Terminator and Aliens up until then
Stopped this review before the spoilers and finally saw it ... three weeks later in a packed theater. It is such a well-crafted thing that perfectly encapsulates a certain era and time that I never even lived through. My girlfriend hated every minute of it and I had a smile on my face the entire time. It's so much fun, Jan!
"giving no shits" He's working with A-Listers and a high budget. He hid Weinstein's proprieties for years and was likely in on it himself. If anything it's "manufactured rebellion".
The most satisfying ending in a movie I have ever watched. Since I had a knot in my stomach waiting for them to go and murder Sharon Tate. It released so much tension.. Was not expecting this to go this way at all!
It is kind of dim of you to call the Manson cult "the hippies" when this video explains exactly why the Manson-family murders are considered, in hindsight, the end of that era. Like... their "bad plan", as Mike puts it, was an extreme right-wing white-power fantasy. Tarantino's politics here are still "shooting Hitler".
Dear Mr. Evans, I like your work a lot. Also, Mike's camera is knocked out of position for most of the video, but I didn't mind. Keep doing what you do. Yours truly, a non-angry viewer.
@@valgehiir lol your nuts leo is a great actor and he was the better actor in this movie than Brad but Cliff was my favorite character in this movie. Every scene he was in I found myself enjoying more. Im gonna go see it again to have a better opinion on it. Something I really gotta see twice
How did this movie at all seem like it "wanted to be about Margot Robbie," she was hardly in it and I never got the feeling Tarantino wanted more scenes with her in it but didnt shoot them for some reason lmao. It was 100% a Rick and Cliff show
@@valgehiir Lmao Leo was the best part of The Departed. A classic movie that won Best Picture. Leo has easily been one of the best most consistent actors of this generation. You are basically fart trolling your minority opinion around
I watched Once Upon a Time in Hollywood yesterday and this whole thing with Shatners Twitter had him on my mind and I thought about that idea. Tarantino directing a movie about the TOS cast with parts of it being them filming Star Trek episodes like Rick Dalton filming his western pilot would be awesome. Probably too much of a retread though.
yes, taking the power away from manson and his followers was the best thing about it. I don't know why people hate that they made them buffoons. it was the best part
@@ToddTheTolerable Treating your enemies like morons eventually leads to them defeating you because you underestimate them. The Romans made a habit of venerating their enemies. Otherwise who's the bigger idiot, the idiot or the idiot who gets defeated by the idiots?
I saw the notification and exploded with joy. This show was the only light in my life. However, once I saw that you guys switched chairs, I cannot watch this series anymore. Year after year of supporting you guys, I did not think I would be insulted this much.
When we see Margo Robie's Tate alive at the end, it literally made me cry after a short time of thinking that in some parallel universe, this really did happen. It's a better timeline for sure.
Actually when the girl drives away is not changing history. That did also happened. that's meant to be Linda Kasabian who abandoned them the night of the Tate murders. She ended up key witness for the prosecution.
Scott Pasta She didn’t literally abandon them like in the movie, they took her out of the scene because otherwise she would have been slaughtered by Cliff.
The girl that Brad Pitt smashed the face of (great context!)... she ran at him with a knife and stuck it into his leg (artery)... so it wasn't totally innocent.
I loved the ending. Watched it last night for the first time. I thought it was engaging but I was detached a bit cause I wasn't looking forward to what I thought the ending was gonna be. It was brilliant how he completely subverted my expectation. I need to watch it again now so I can be more engaged. That ending was one of Tarantino's best.
I feel the same way. Once it ended i wasn't sure what to think. But after a day of processing the movie as a whole i think it's one of Tarentino's best.
I think they meant he's the last guy that can draw a general audience with his name only. I would even argue that Jordan Peele has reached that status.
Quentin Tarantino blames the Manson hippies for ending the Golden Age of Hollywood and murdering Sharon Tate both of which he obviously loves. In this film he rewrites history and exacts his revenge. He hates hippies for killing what he loved.
The Manson family were a violent neonazi gang. They weren't peace/love antiwar youths, they were armed white supremacists who had dune buggies with machineguns mounted on them. Hippies didn't ruin Hollywood, I dont know where anybody got that idea.
@@asisin2Manson family weren't hippies, and they weren't any more fanatical than the supporters of the Vietnam war, or the GI and marines who committed worse crimes against civilians on a daily basis.
Leo being in the Great Escape footage is totally different than using real Sharon Tate footage because there is no real Rick Dalton. The point of the scene was him playing it off like it was never close to actually happening, while he was actually already in wardrobe and filming. Like you said, BITTER. Eric-Stoltz-Back-To-The-Future bitter.
Eric Stoltz! He would have been a good fit for the Rick Dalton role! And thats how I took that scene as well, he was replaced and was too embarrassed/ashamed to admit it.
I saw this movie 4 times in theaters and each and every time, we were all in hysterics during the final scene, one guy literally fell out of his seat because he was laughing so hard, everyone was clapping and gasping and cheering, there were loud "Ow's!"after each hit. Even louder than Endgame. Easily the most fun at a movie theater I've ever had. I can't wait until it's out on Blu-ray.
If Cliff Booth didn't actually kill his wife, that could be interpreted as commentary on how easily a rumor can wreck someone's career, especially in Hollywood.
The flashback cut away just at the moment where you're thinking, "He's seriously about to kill this bitch with a harpoon." That got a guilty laugh from me.
As someone who saw this in a packed theater, it was so surreal to hear the reactions around me towards the ending. Everyone was gasping and laughing at the same time.
Having just come out of this film I feel like the ending is an act of catharsis, from what I understand the Tate family loved this film and I can strangely see why for all the reasons Jay said. Not perfect by any means but easily in my favourite films of the year list, definitely will see again.
Frank Merker they had planned the murder of several innocent young actors, and hell, they were on their way to do it; they just decided to go for a different house in this version of history. Slaughter them!
They had already killed and committed crimes before the Tate-Labianca murders. And the whole race war thing is a lie that started with Bugliosi's Helter Skelter.
The "he killed his wife" is actually pretty deliberate in showing you what happened. It does leave it ambiguous as to whether or not it was an accident, an impulsive reaction, or pre-meditated, but when his wife gets up and starts berating him, we see a shot from below her waist where Cliff is looking up at her despondently, and he has the harpoon gun across his lap, hand on the trigger, and the harpoon aimed, by chance, in her direction. It creates a lot of tension if you actually notice it. It took me a second, but then I was like "Holy fuck we're about to watch him shoot her with a fucking harpoon!" and then it cuts away so we don't know *exactly* how it happened or how he responded. I loved that.
Reminded me a bit of the scene where William H Macy takes the gun out of the car in Boogie Nights and you suddenly realise it's a tragedy not a comedy.
Noah Heninger He probably killed her, she reminds me of my ex and i totally wanted to dump her in the ocean the second time she slashed my tires and berated me
@@noahheninger I think he killed her, but I don't think it was a premeditated, calculated thing. I think his hand was already on the trigger, she was going off on him, and he was just so sick of it he had a split-second impulse and contracted his finger. He doesn't seem like the guy who would legitimately want to murder someone unless they were a threat to him, and I'm sure he was as shocked and horrified as could be after he shot her.
What is it with these beautiful hollywood actresses staying with these sicko/homicidal men...women need to grow a pair and leave these toxic relationships, or better yet listen to their instincts and NEVER GET INVOLVED.
You guys changed me with this episode. Not gonna bother with film festivals and screenplay contests anymore. I'm just gonna go make my movie, for better or for worse. Thanks.
Charge on, brother. Indie film/film festivals are a a joke these days-- they pump out the wackest shit. I feel like ever since Little Miss Sunshine came out that has been the template for shitty indie comedies. It's like the Iron Man of indie films. Sad that young filmmakers are so willing to sell out (or maybe they are just that lame/bad at making movies) before they even get a paycheck. Trying to replicate shitty Hollywood movies on a shoe string budget is peak autism.
This movie alone proves Tarantino is a true master of cinema and absolutely loves all aspects of it. I felt growing up that i was the only kid who loved a wide scope of cinema. Having a father who took me to see such films as Gone In 60 Seconds “1974”,The Deep,Close Encounters Of The Third Kind,The Wild Geese and A Bridge Too Far,as well as Star Wars,Superman,ET and Raiders Of The Lost Ark and at home we’d watch Citizen Kane,The Third Man and The Wizard Of Oz i was given an education in cinema…but then we got a VHS player and after that my world opened up to everything and anything i could get my hands on..just like Tarantino. I tried my hardest to introduce my friends to all kinds of movies but they weren’t interested at all
"It's about family and that's what's so powerful about it."
- Charles Manson
oof
That's funnier than it has any right to be.
That's a weird statement in that the sentence begins with two words one way and ends with the same two reversed.
That’s the funniest use of that quote.
My friend you just transcend this meme
"Our show has been the documentation of the death of movies". The best tagline for a movie review show. I love you, guys.
This should have WAY more likes.
What do you mean by that?
@@EvanWCraig They've mentioned it in prior videos, you idiot. Sit the fuck down.
@@EvanWCraig Meanwhile Mike kept forcing in Hollywood molestation jokes in the HiTB of Justice League
@@EvanWCraig do you even watch the show? They constantly call out directors, producers, actors etc for that shit. You're a fake nigga
Mike: All she did was hold a knife.
I guess you forgot the lessons from Surviving Edged Weapons.
she also tackled and stabbed him
Jay Williams He can’t help it, it’s the dementia.
Jay Williams The Force Awakens is too good for you
@@Heartland.Productions Any man with the balls to not like Blade Runner is a man after my own heart, too.
@@robertgaudet7407 honestly that's what I'm saying.. like sorry he has an opinion
Three things I was pleasantly surprised to see in a Tarantino film:
1. a memorable child performance
2. a memorable animal performance
3. a memorable flamethrower performance
The kid stole the show for me, she was brilliant
You made me laugh pretty good there man, thanks.
@ReservoirFrogs
You mean Mirabella?
@@NostalgiNorden Seriously though I'd never seen a kid actor that young before and thought "Y'know, that's a real kid." until I saw the performance for B.B in that movie.
That part with the kid was really heartwarming. She deserves a lot of credit for how she played that role.
That bit at the beginning was the shortest, weakest, most anemic attempt at a traditional Half In The Bag storyline segment I've ever seen.
Keep up the good work.
These hack frauds really phoned it in on this one. Unsubscribed and then re-subscribed.
The hacks think they can rest easy now they have a million subs,and also get Mac to care for Rich Evans.
It subverted my expectations
Gone are the days of haphazard shootings, beer bottle-strewn parties, erupting colostomy bags, and gay potion cakes 😞. Plinkett's abode has become just another boring run-of-the-mill centigenarian psycopath's pigsty.
The alternative was to accept a comments section filled with nothing but, "Why are you guys so sweaty in this episode? Is it because you're in the wrong seats?"
Luckily they're still getting plenty of the second bit. I'm sure there's a satisfactory explanation forthcoming.
"Is everyone okay?" "Well, not the Hippies." Best line of the movie.
MrNathanStarr it’s actually “Well, the fucking hippies aren’t!”.
Eduardo Suazo “that’s for GOT DAMN sure”
"Don't cry in front of the Mexicans" was my favorite lol
That entire scene was perfect and hilarious.
I also love when Cliff is talking to the cops in the aftermath and butchers Tex's quote, "I'm the devil... and I'm here to do some... devil shit."
One of my favorite scenes was just the two guys sitting around watching FBI and drinking beer and talking over it and laughing. It really felt authentic.
xGIxJOKERx hahahaha that one hit a little too close to home. literally how my buddies and i sit around talking shit and watching television
Yeah wow, commentating over a clip drinking beer haha that's what everyone does right? If I say it feels authentic everyone will think I do the same thing, it's so cool yeah wow
@@homersams9015 With Cliff kissing Rick Dalton's ass
Right? I was like damn, that’s me and my buddy right there.
It felt so much like Mystery Science Theater 3000
My thought when I heard the one girl suggest they kill the “actors who taught us to be violent through the violence in their movies” was that Tarantino was projecting those criticisms he gets onto that character. Then she gets the most brutal death. I refuse to think that was coincidental.
That was definitely a self aware meta commentary of not only those criticisms but when movies frequently inject some sort of message that is inherently contradictory (eg Canto Bite and capitalism by a Disney product) and Quentin probably thinks it’s nonsense that people try that
He researched them in such meticulous detail he actually realised it was Manson not Madsen.
@@lucasoheyze4597 ahahah
Congratulations, you've struggled yourself all the way to the concept of social commentary in cinema
@@Dorian-_-Gray Congratulations, you've effortlessly eased yourself all the way to the concept of being a pretentious douchebag to strangers for no reason.
Funny, they didn't mention the meta ending. Cliff does almost all the fighting and dangerous work, Rick gets a closeup doing something very showy and flashy and gets all the credit...stuntman and star.
I don't know if that's "meta" exactly, but that's a good observation.
Not meta, it’s repetition and theme.
Thanks guys. I knew "meta" didn't fit perfectly, but I struggled to think of a better word.
Because it isn't that interesting.
How is it funny or surprising that they didn’t mention that? I highly doubt many people noticed that on their own
The camera being out of position through the whole episode made me feel like I was watching an episode of Mr Robot
It's like poetry
Lol i was playing video games and listening so i didn't care
Robson Marques
Or Star Trek: Discovery (?)
I enjoy all of Tarantino’s movies, but I think this is the first one that ever made me respect him as an individual. It would have been so easy to milk the tragedy and give Manson more scenes, but this almost felt like he was trying to give Tate one more movie to shine in. The Manson Family got famous for what they did to her, but her memory always winds up taking a back seat to the spectacle of Manson. The moment Rick starts speaking to them after the point in time when they would have been murdered...it honestly made me cry and gave me chills, like he was giving them their voice back. It was so sweet to give them that ending.
Great observation..great!
I've heard True Romance(edit: I mean natural born killers) was supposed to be a satire about the absurdity of fetishizing serial killers, but it failed, this movie pulls it off brilliantly
I agree, the last scene in the movie, walking into the Polanski house was very emotional
@@davidhooper1610 Do you mean Natural Born Killers?
@@timothyhurley5920 yes I do
Note to self: 27:45 is the magical moment when Jay brings up Star Trek, and Mike responds by bringing up David Lynch.
Don't cross the beams!
It was beautiful
I cried butterfly tears when agent picard's tulpa met Q in the white lodge
@@RyanReenBattikh😂😂😂
For some reason it’s a documented fact that Sharon Tate hated wearing shoes. So Tarantino has leeway here
@Stellvia Heonheim hey, asshole who is commenting negative shit everywhere, fuck you and get a life.
Stellvia Heonheim cool
Was it an accident Tarantino went to this? Or did he seek out a character who was naturally shoeless?
@@guyjperson now that is a genuine point. This is what the comment section is for.
I didn't notice the feet. I was looking for lady butts.
I work in Westwood village literally a block away from the Bruin Theater where Sharron Tate watches her movie. I was there while they were filming and the way they transformed those 2 blocks into 1969 was surreal. Even down to the newspaper stands having old newspapers in them.
Yep, I was an extra on a movie set, driving my own car. The actually changed the registration sticker on my windshield to a New York State registration sticker.
Exactly the same experience down in Toluca Lake. On Forman Avenue, they transformed the blocks beautifully
"Can we turn down the heat??"
......it's a flamethrower rick
Fun fact about that line, Leo said this out of character as it was too hot for him and QT kept it in the film.
That was my wife's favorite line lol
To be fair, movie magic can do amazing things. I would at least _ask_ if they could do something about it. He doesn't complain, he just asks. They say "It's a flamethrower" he says "Okay" and moves on without complaints... IDK, I'd ask as well. Who knows? Maybe some cooling gel on the face? Goggles to help the eyes? Anything to get that most intense shot possible, ya know?
@@got5432 that's like a weird running gag in Leonardo diCaprio's career-he pulled the exact same shit complaining about the cold water in _Titanic_ and Cameron just left it in.
@@DistractedGlobeGuy wow, thanks for that 1
"When Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio are starring in a movie together, and it is second to a movie with CGI lions that you've seen before, the era of Hollywood A-List stars is done."
Depressing, but well said.
@@bluefire9147 God bless you!
Children's movies will always be number one money makers. There are no niches for kids and their parents have to come along.
It's kinda accurate but also a bit overkill. The Lion King is child-friendly combined with nostalgia factor for adults.
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood is relevant to film fans and Tarantino fans, much more limited in audience appeal.
Indeed, the age of the franchise is definitely upon us.
@@Trendyflute and a year later, it's already dead. Gladly. I don't see much anticipation for Marvel Phase who-knows.
"Endgame" really was the end. I tried watching "Love and Thunder" and "Eternals". Fell asleep more than once and couldn't finish Eternals at all. Just too plain boring.
"Star Wars" is pretty much dead in the water, too. Episode 9 just sucked. "Let's just get the Emperor back and reshoot 'Return of the Jedi' only more boring with larger plot holes and breaking canon.
the driving around scenes: that is pretty much the essence of Los Angeles, you are forever driving around somewhere because nothing is near anything else
Counterpoint: Everything is really close together, but the traffic makes a short trip down the street take a fucking hour.
Both of you are 100% correct
@@ANNON10123
As a European that makes me wonder why anyone would live there. I'm currently in South Carolina and fuck me why's nothing walkable?
@@danielyoung6778 to weed out those with weak legs - only the strong survive in LA
In my opinion this movie was a love letter to Sharon Tate. Anytime anyone mentions her name the first and only thing people think of is the way she was murdered. Quentin Tarantino made a movie that portrays her in an angelic light, shows off her work and leaves you with her sweet voice at the end. I think Quentin wanted to change the way people think about and remember Sharon Tate for who she was as a person and actor rather than her involvement in a famous murder. Quentin created a "What if?" ... saying what if this story had a happy ending.
This is what I got from it as well. I adored this movie for giving her the happy ending she unfortunately didn't get in real life.
It's Tarantino's penthouse letter to Sharon Tate. Probably jerked off a few times watching her scenes.
Yeah! This movie is a perfect example of how movies are fiction--fantasies that can comfort and briefly impose a veneer of justice to a brutal and often unjust world.
Jesus Christ, if I see one more person refer to this movie as a "love letter" to so and so I think I might go insane. Try being original for once.
Namedude Don’t be bitter just because you never got one.
"Don't cry in front of the Mexicans"
"And away we go"
-Cliff Booth
I was crying laughing at the Mexicans line.
@@iceman10129 that line is funny on so many levels...
I was with a dead ass audience that had no sense of humor. I still laughed out loud as fuck. The dude next to me was awkward as hell, killin my vibes. had a whole fist up his ass. when he brought out the flame thrower i was in tears.
Nyda can you explain them; I genuinely don’t understand
Nicholas Montaño I don’t either tbh
"Smashing a woman's face who did nothing"
She literally stabbed him with a knife that stuck right in him Mike, how drunk were you when you saw this??
Also if someone breaks into your home and holds a knife up to you, they deserve anything that happens to them.
That scene was cathartic, especially knowing what they did in real life to Sharon Tate and everybody else in her house.
3 armed people break into your home and tell you they’re “the devil” My advice would be grab your flamethrower
Also, by this point the Manson family had already killed Gary Hinman and shot Bernard Crowe. Also, also, the girl who drives away is supposed to be Linda Kasabian, who in real life did refuse to kill anyone, tried to stop the other three during the Tate murder and served as a key witness.
To be fair that scene didn’t have the best lighting
“Because it’s fun Jan!”
That was a GOAT moment.
Is Jan replacing Mr Plinkett?
I feel like I've hated Jan my whole life now lol. Never tire of that clip
GET IT
They're sat in different seats.
IT BROKE NEW GROUND.
Subverted my expectations
It's scary and different and I don't like it.
Oh my GAHd!
So brave and inspirational!
@Spit Dragon Who? You mean Susan?
My red letter media Patreon is the best smartest money I’ve spent in my entire goddamn life
Thank you for doing this guys, it matters
@Mark Collins most people won't give them a dime, but almost everyone gives them their 2 cents.
You sir are doing gods work
I’ll give them a thousand dollars if mike or rich say the “n-word” on their next video. Like do it at an unexpected moment lol
I try to buy as many of their shirts as I can, then I figured I'd start doing Patreon too, they provide me with so many hours of entertainment. I look forward to their stuff as much I used to look forward to a Game of Thrones episode. Started off at $2/month, Upped it last month to $5
During the climax, Cliff gets stabbed in the hip. In the novel the Rick is reading earlier, the protagonist breaks a hip and can no longer be the best bronco buster. I think this means that Cliff will not be able to do stunt work anymore.
I loved that the Sharon Tate in The Wrecking Crew was not Margo Robbie, because it was telling us that the Sharon Tate in Quentin's movie is in the Kelvin timeline.
The Dead Texan what’s the Kelvin timeline?
@@coreyander286 is there going to be a legacy Basterds squadron as part of Section 31?
The girl that drove away, I think her name was Linda, was new to the Manson family on the night of the murders and wasn’t completely on board. In reality, she was told to go check the back of 10050 Cielo for open windows. She found some opened, but lied and said there were closed, hoping that they would call off the mission. Unfortunately they found open windows in the front of the house. During the trials, she went against the family as a witness. So I think that Tarantino got her to drive away because he knew that it was something she would do, that she wasn’t pure evil like the rest of them and wouldn’t feel right brutally killing her off.
Yes, I wish Tarantino made a Manson Family movie more than a Rick & Cliff movie
I feel it should be noted that no one but Linda Kasabian agrees with that version of events. Literally everyone else (and the evidence available) suggests she took a more active role.
They had to turn somebody for immunity and she was the least "mansoned". Also they even absurdly try to pin it all in her, that she was actually the mastermind haha.
Another factoid about the murders: they were planning on writing racially charged messages in the victims' blood implicating the Black Panthers. That's why it was supposed to start a race war. Still completely insane (especially since they thought the small minority of black people in the country were going to win the race war and then the white Manson family was going to come out of their bomb shelter and be immediately accepted as rulers by the black people who had killed all the other whites), but there was some method to the madness. Of course, the whole thing was inspired by a Beatles album and a lot of drugs.
Terry Beardmore TBF, these are the same guys who just got done murdering people, so maybe we shouldn’t treat their word as bond.
invite Quentin Tarantino to the next Best of the Worst
Patricia Pandacoon he’d probably do it
You need to be a has been to hang out with RLM
@@Arkangel630 But Tarantino is a has-been connosseur... Does this count?
"I'm shutting your butt down, Mike"
@@Comakino "Because it's so much FUN, JAY"
13:37 to Jay’s point the best nail in the coffin to the Manson Family in the movie was when Cliff completely botches Tex’s “I’m the devil” line when he’s telling it to the cops at the end. “He said ‘I’m the devil and I’m here to do... I don’t know some devil shit’, I don’t know” it’s like their entire legacy is taken away by the ending. Even Rick and Cliff don’t even know why they were there. Their ideology never gets exposure. Brilliant.
Edit:
19:43 that is taken loosely from a quote from the trial. Also: the girl who leaves is in fact the Manson girl who turned on the rest and testified against them at the trial, and left halfway through the murders to sit in the car because she was so disturbed by the others’ level of depravity. Tarantino has done his research.
Also he says his name is "rex, no, something gayer than that."
Linda Kasabian
@@frankmacdemarco something *dumber
@@luiginastro8831 *gayest
It's also recorded that, on the night of the murders, the killers drove all the way to the gate then reversed the car back and returned on foot. Again, Tarantino depicts that in the movie but with his own twist being that the reason why they reversed was Leo's margarita-fuelled tantrum.
I feel like Sharon not being replaced in Wrecking Crew with Margot Robby was simply because Sharon was an actual real person, rather then Rick Dalton screen testing a scene, who sadly enough, isn't real.
what do you mean, Fourteen Fists was my favorite movie growing up
Whatever it was, it broke the suspension of disbelief for me. Robbie is a decent representation of Tate, but when you see them side by side you know it's two different people and that took me out of the movie.
Agreed! She was taken from the world too early as it is. It would have been a huge disservice to erase her further. I felt it was the most touching 4th wall brush (not quite break) to leave those snippets of her performance in tact.
Syklone personally It didn’t take me out of it because I was thinking about the context of the movie the whole time. In that moment it made me think of Sharon the person and I appreciated it for that.
"I don't like the Manson family."
- Mike Stoklasa
sirkowski “I don’t like what they did”
Thats really controversial. I expect Vox and CNN to have editorials about how Mike hates women and “progressive” men
@Spit Dragon gotemmmm
Manson rejected his love letters.
Who likes them?
Margot as Sharon didn't need a lot of dialogue. Her sitting in the theater loving the little laughs that her part got out of the people is one of the most genuine things I've seen in a movie and one of the best scenes
Scott Pasta no you just liked the feet didn’t you?
Yea that scene was really cute
It was an adorable scene that did a lot to endear her character to the audience which sets up stakes for the dreaded assumed ending of the movie because we like her innocent character. It didnt need dialogue. From that scene we get that she's shy and a little insecure but really happy that people enjoy her movies. For example the ticket lady not recognizing her or trusting other people would recognize her if she wasnt next to the poster shows that she isnt quite famous and gets a genuine joy in seeing people enjoy her performances and how hard she worked on them from the quick cut to her training with bruce lee.
But no, the audience needs to be spoon fed dialogue for a character to be important according to the clickbait lady.
Also she had plenty of lines, and a whole lot of screen time, genuinely respectful screen time at that.
The Tate scenes were lovely, but I felt they made the film grind to a halt. I was trying to enjoy them, but honestly I just wanted to get back to Cliff and Rick.
Watching this video a year later and oh boy the guys didn't know how much of an end of an era this was for cinema.
* 3 people break into your house at night, clearly deranged and holding knifes and guns, talking about murdering you.
Mike: "BuT ThEY DidNt dO AnyYThinG"
Pitiful H Also, the ginger had actually stabbed Cliff with her knife prior to his bashing her face in.
Mike Stoklasa, contrarian to the end. Gotta give him credit for that.
I agree with you but what Mike meant was we perceive them a certain way because we know what happened in real life and Cliff's response would feel over the top and unfair if it was removed from the Tate murders context (which wouldn't make sense and it doesn't matter).
Hmm......Aaron Eckhart? Ben Affleck? Don Cheadle?
Gunna Marta if you have 3 people, 2 with knives and 1 with a gun pointed at your face, wouldn’t you assume they were there to, i don’t know, murder you?
Since Cliff knew them and knowing what he did at the ranch, I’m sure he assumed they wanted revenge and knowing the type of guy he is, he was reasonable to attack them.
Hippies: "We are going to murder who teached us to murder through movies"
Cliff: "Im going to brutally murder you because im on acid that you sold me"
Irony!
He bought it from a random hippy girl, it wasn't one of the Manson family
The hippies are basically like Donald Trump :)
That was PCP
@@AshleyTheSwift The random hippie girl took Cliff to the manson ranch. She kept saying "Charley will really like you." She was clearly apart of the manson family.
One thing I really enjoyed about Once Upon A Time...In Hollywood was ironically, Manson wasn't in much of it. I actually thought that was very clever and wise as well, because rather than show the physical presence Manson had over his 'Family' we saw how deeply his followers believed in Manson and would do anything to protect it. Like when Pussycat yelled to Cliff that he was blind, that really showed how much Manson had manipulated his followers and made it more chilling, in my opinion.
Was Manson in it at all? When did they show him?
walkin dude Mason came up to the driveway of the Polanski/Tate house, thinking the house belonged to Terry Melcher, a former friend of Manson’s.
If I’m correct, that was his only appearance in the film.
@@michaellynch3502 He did have one scene in the trailer, where he was standing in front of an ice cream truck, but I guess they cut that out
deg1studios yeah I remember him arriving in a van, but can’t remember what kind of van it was.
I do remember him at the door of the Polanski house because he was blocked by Jay Sebring and only shown when he backed away from the door where Sebring couldn’t block him from Sharon.
Michael Lynch
Oh, I wasn’t sure whether that was supposed to be him or another family member.
I love when Pitt is in the car and the girl waves at him the second time she saw him and visually asked for a ride and Pitt motioned he wasn’t going that way. The girl does the fake cry and Pitt just shrugs, like too bad and drives away. Brilliant acting and a brilliant scene with no dialogue.
Those are probably the best 30 seconds of cinema this whole year
Lol what? It’s not even the best scene in that act of the movie
@@Ardepark so fucking this.
What does that even mean? And no I’m too lazy to @ someone if that’s what you’re asking. But I’m still not sure if I’m the one who suffered a stroke or you are
One of my favourite scenes in the movie.
I interpreted the Leo in Great Escape scene as trying to show he was in the movie originally and then fired.
Chadwick Withers Me too! It looked like a screen test.
Yeah, that was my read, probably due to his alcoholism. And why he was telling the other guy “oh, I was barely considered” and so on and so forth.
I read it as his idea of how he would have played it if he had gotten the role. Something that had gone through his mind over and over.
Can someone tell Nostalgia Critic to get off my recommendation?
dont cry , kiddo
You can. Click the 3 dots on the right and select “not interested”.
*to get off TH-cam
Cringe critic
He is trying to impersonate Wesley Snipes from Blade in the thumbnail. Why is this fella so odd-looking?
This is just what i needed to get through another cursed week of being a total hack fraud
Speaking of hack frauds: Quentin Tarantino.
@@HarryBuddhaPalm And where the fuck is your two Oscars?
I'm Italian and when Di Caprio called our cinema crap the whole theater laughed
@@visionist7 no it was dubbed
@@visionist7 yeah, I went with people who don't watch films with subtitles on, so I couldn't appreciate the real performances, but the dubbers were really good and maybe I will watch it again once it comes out on bluray in original
@@stefanopoeta19 I hope you did! The performances are 10/10.
Ironically enough, The Good, The Bad and the Ugly is one of his favourite movies ever
@@tlr9403 Well because it's easy to remember legends like Sergio Leone, but like all the italian directors at the time got aboard the Westerns train and most of them were utter trash
They dubbed leo into the great escape because he was lying to Timothy Olyphant about not being close to getting the role when in actuality he had done test screenings for the role
Or filmed part of the movie and got replaced
ZuluKasuki I don’t think this movie leaves room for us to interpret what we see as imagined. Joker had a “protagonist” that was quite literally delusional, in the psychological sense. Leo’s might’ve been in the sense of how he viewed his self-worth, but the way it was presented, it seems to be (at least, in my opinion, can’t speak for Tarantino) something that did happen, but he was so bitter/sad about losing that role, he lied about it. Fits the character.
@@BbNaB Yes I took it as him imagining it...
Was literally just about to write this. And the joke is that he delivered the lines so hokey that they replaced him. Not sure why so many people missed this
yeah we have to remember they just saw the movie and saw it once. almost 3 hours long they're going to forget little nuances like that. I'm even amazed they remember as much as they do. I'm sure they write a bunch down but still!
These deep-fakes are getting really good. Mike looks like Jay and Jay looks like Mike. It's like they switched seats.
At the beginning of the movie, during the opening credits, you can see the names of Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio on the screen but the names are switched so Brad Pitt is on the side of the screen where Dicaprio is and Leonardo Dicaprio is where Brad Pitt is. I wonder if Mike and Jay switched because of that....
They even changed the bodies! This technology is crazy!
I hope to god there is Rule34 of RLM out there somewhere
I’ve heard there is a gay porno floating around that has HitB playing in the background. Haven’t seen it myself but that’s what I heard
Is this comment secretly a "is Jay replacing Mike replacing Jay"? Are good comments replacing youtube comments?
Patting my back like a discovery writer.
The more I find out about this Manson guy… the more I don’t care for him
Oh hey Norm
2degucitas I didn’t even know he was sick!
A real jerk
Seriously, I mean, just an all around unpleasant guy.
i'm not norm, you're not norm, we're all not norm!
That David Lynch impression was pretty spot-on tbh
Jay also did a scarily good impression a few years ago when they were talking about Lynch being pitched Star Wars and saying "what's a Wookie?"
I'm gay
@@crapconnoisseur6691 I wasn't but then i realized i was for Mike, Jay, and Rich
It was. Made me crack up.
Yes
I hadn’t even considered that Cliff’s creepy backstory with his wife could be a nod to Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood. Damn.
Her name was Natalie too. The second time I saw it, i noticed that.
I took the Great Escape flashback as saying Leo's character got the movie and was fired and replaced by McQueen. And that's why he was so keen to get across that he was "never close" to getting it.
That was my interpretation too, that he was embarrassed to have had and lost such a great role. I hadn't even considered that it might have been him imagining if he had gotten the role, and just being bitter that he didn't. Either option seems equally likely to me now.
Aka "Pulling a Stoltz"
That's an interesting take. I never considered that it might NOT be imagined. Always cool to hear a different interpretation of something.
The actual film was in color, Leo's flashback was b&w - like the actual "dailes" would be, or a try-out would be filmed
patrick cassidy no it wasn’t
Went and saw this movie with my pops(we haven't missed a QT flick in theaters since Kill Bill Vol 1.) Once that last act of gratuitous violence hit we couldn't stop laughing and the old couple next to us said, "why would anyone laugh at this?" It just made us laugh even more. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was a wonderful film and I hope to enjoy many more Tarantino moments with my father in the future!
Dont listen to those stuck ups . I laughed like a mad man in that scene . These people are really not made for tarantino's style of movies . This is catharsis violence and it was great !
"Because it's fun, Jan!"
Wholesome. Laughter is the best way to shut their butts down. And you can't spell slaughter without laughter.
One more movie till retirement
I've gone to all Tarantino's since inglorious bastards, and have always had at least one laugh at the extreme violence. But in this one, I was really crying laughing
My friend Mike Gill shot that behind the scenes clip in this episode. He recently passed away and I was prompted to tell everyone how much he loved RLM. He even took me to Boardner’s from LA Wars 💕
I’m very sorry for the loss of your friend, I will say I’m glad he took you to Boardner’s; there’s something so captivating and special about that place. I like to think about all different types of people who walked into that place over the years so much history! I haven’t been in a few years but I can still taste the old fashioned.
@@itsthatoneguy5 Thank you. And I 100% agree. Very vibey bar that’s worth visiting.
Behind the scenes of OUATIH?
@@jhordyjimenez6283 Yes!
Sorry for your loss. That's a beautiful memory between friends. Thank you for sharing.
26:30 He never sold out.
I don’t know why but that part hit me like a truck. Leonardo DiCaprio feels like one of the last true mainstream actors who stars in roles that challenge himself and challenge audiences. I guess it just feels like that there’s still people out there trying to do something real and not glossy or clean, and they’ve been right under our noses the whole time.
Mr. Tables
Honestly don’t know why they have such a problem with Leo. He’s had more hits than misses imo.
David Rich I completely agree, he devotes all he can into every role
I think it's hilarious that they randomly put actors on their shit list. I mean, you can find something to critique about anyone really, but a few actors just really bug them for some reason. I like Leo, but their hate for him entertains me.
I count Titanic as 'selling out'.
Fortunately he just did that one sellout, his movies since then have been fine.
I don't know if I'd necessarily call that "selling out" per say. James Cameron was a very lucrative filmmaker and he did end up making the highest grossing film ever made up to that point, but Cameron's not like the Russo brothers in that he worked on like one studio movie before his big break with zero passion. Keep in mind, the man made Terminator and Aliens up until then
Foot scene
Food scene
Gratuitous violence scene
_Fin_
Edit: So I finally got to see this film and uh -- *perpetual foot-time*
Joe Ross missed at least 90 fucks
_Perfection_
@@sernoddicusthegallant6986 there was two major foot scenes
Violence is never, never, N E V E R R R R R .... Gratuitous in a Tarantino film.
1 Million subscribers! Pfft too mainstream man. Such sell outs.
Stopped this review before the spoilers and finally saw it ... three weeks later in a packed theater.
It is such a well-crafted thing that perfectly encapsulates a certain era and time that I never even lived through. My girlfriend hated every minute of it and I had a smile on my face the entire time.
It's so much fun, Jan!
@@RoachDogg_JR probably had so many questions that the movie ended up answering lol
@@yellingyellow5209 I aussame he means twilight ?
@@RoachDogg_JR my mum liked it a lot
LoL Jan. I love that interview.
two sweaty old men talking about feet 10/10 would watch again
I don't know what I enjoy more.
Tarantino making unique movies or him giving no shits about Hollywood and releasing what he likes.
What a player.
"giving no shits"
He's working with A-Listers and a high budget.
He hid Weinstein's proprieties for years and was likely in on it himself.
If anything it's "manufactured rebellion".
He's an infantile Hollywood elite making masturbatory alt history movies
Just because he's famous doesn't mean he's good
Too bad he ran out of anything to say twenty years ago.
@Skaa Maune does that mean you enjoy me more than Tarantino.
Oh thank u
@@MazingerDestro I know I do ;)
The Manson family totally deserved that finale, and was so gratifying to watch in the movie.
The most satisfying ending in a movie I have ever watched. Since I had a knot in my stomach waiting for them to go and murder Sharon Tate. It released so much tension.. Was not expecting this to go this way at all!
@@Atlas65 Yes for me it was the best ending I've seen in decades...maybe ever.
I highly disagree.
@@liampatrick3110 Yes, they did.
@@liampatrick3110 Good for you.
It's Tarantino's version of a fairy tale. It starts with Once Upon a Time and ends with "they lived happily ever after." Well, not the hippies.
a very hollywood ending
That’s for god damn sure
They weren’t hippies. Literally they were white supremacists
It is kind of dim of you to call the Manson cult "the hippies" when this video explains exactly why the Manson-family murders are considered, in hindsight, the end of that era. Like... their "bad plan", as Mike puts it, was an extreme right-wing white-power fantasy. Tarantino's politics here are still "shooting Hitler".
@@zachkh I'm pretty sure OP called them hippies because that's what they're referred as during the entire movie.
Dear Mr. Evans,
I like your work a lot.
Also, Mike's camera is knocked out of position for most of the video, but I didn't mind. Keep doing what you do.
Yours truly,
a non-angry viewer.
Rich Evans: "I reject your hypothesis"
It was a Brad Pitt movie that wanted to be about Margot Robbie, but couldn't get away from Leonardo.
valgehiir wtf is Departure? Do you mean The Departed??
@@valgehiir lol your nuts leo is a great actor and he was the better actor in this movie than Brad but Cliff was my favorite character in this movie. Every scene he was in I found myself enjoying more. Im gonna go see it again to have a better opinion on it. Something I really gotta see twice
How did this movie at all seem like it "wanted to be about Margot Robbie," she was hardly in it and I never got the feeling Tarantino wanted more scenes with her in it but didnt shoot them for some reason lmao. It was 100% a Rick and Cliff show
The curse of Leonardo Retardo strikes again
@@valgehiir Lmao Leo was the best part of The Departed. A classic movie that won Best Picture. Leo has easily been one of the best most consistent actors of this generation. You are basically fart trolling your minority opinion around
What if Tarantino’s Star Trek movie is just a movie about the filming of the original show, that sounds like something he’d do to me
Roach Dogg Jr. at it again, I see.
I watched Once Upon a Time in Hollywood yesterday and this whole thing with Shatners Twitter had him on my mind and I thought about that idea. Tarantino directing a movie about the TOS cast with parts of it being them filming Star Trek episodes like Rick Dalton filming his western pilot would be awesome. Probably too much of a retread though.
Love the friendship between Leo and Brad in this movie
yes, taking the power away from manson and his followers was the best thing about it. I don't know why people hate that they made them buffoons. it was the best part
I'm already looking forward to this. Everyone in the Manson family were fucking morons
Hammer Of Witches Manson was WHAAAAAA? Weirdo!
@@JDobbsy79 he was a hero
kakha Gvelesiani ah. Sure, sure. 😐
@@ToddTheTolerable Treating your enemies like morons eventually leads to them defeating you because you underestimate them.
The Romans made a habit of venerating their enemies. Otherwise who's the bigger idiot, the idiot or the idiot who gets defeated by the idiots?
N-Word: The Movie, the anticipated finale to the Tarantino Cinematic Universe.
Can Rich Evans say the N-word?
@@SirKoto51 yes
@@brettvv7475 Nickle! Necktie!!
Starring only Samuel Jackson
i dont think theres a single n-word in this movie actually
"N-word: the movie"
Brilliant, that made me laugh
😂😂
Honestly Brad Pitt Racing his car through late evening LA was more thrilling than most 30 Minute action beats this year.
The Brad Pitt drive home, eating freeze dried pasta and chilling with his dog was one of my top three moments from this film.
This episode was also bittersweet. My favorite in a long time. Loved this film, love this show. Thank you guys.
Tarantino Phase 5 announced.
"Reservoir Feet" (2020)
"Pulp Feet" (2021)
"Footie Brown" (2022)
"Inglorious Foot-Fetish" (2023)
"Feet Unchained" (2024)
"Star Trek: The Foot of Khan" (2025)
Ω that sounds like a horrific flesh-eating disease
Don't see many Stingray references out in the wild these days.
I think that schedule needs at least four spin off movies and a netflix series.
Reservoir Feet could get dirty
Pulp Fictoes
I saw the notification and exploded with joy. This show was the only light in my life. However, once I saw that you guys switched chairs, I cannot watch this series anymore. Year after year of supporting you guys, I did not think I would be insulted this much.
When we see Margo Robie's Tate alive at the end, it literally made me cry after a short time of thinking that in some parallel universe, this really did happen. It's a better timeline for sure.
Actually when the girl drives away is not changing history. That did also happened. that's meant to be Linda Kasabian who abandoned them the night of the Tate murders. She ended up key witness for the prosecution.
She didn't abandon them, she sat outside in the car for most of the attack.
@@rattleshnake7179 and then ratted on them. She abandoned them
Scott Pasta She didn’t literally abandon them like in the movie, they took her out of the scene because otherwise she would have been slaughtered by Cliff.
So with how it ended up, you could say... Linda's In Custody?
Oh dear god. What on Earth damage I could have done with that minor mistake of misinformation. The lies I've spread.
I for one share Rich Evans’ appreciation for Mike’s right shoulder.
The girl that Brad Pitt smashed the face of (great context!)... she ran at him with a knife and stuck it into his leg (artery)... so it wasn't totally innocent.
@@oh-not-the-bees7872 again, that's the idea... Knowing who they were and we're going to do... Totally justify-able.
Why do people like you (on youtube)... write your comments (text box)... like this all the time? (Linear)
@@golden1324 (Autism)
sorry to break it to you but the femoral artery isn't there
It was a revenge fantasy like Django and Basterds. Tarantino basically using human action figures to kill the bad guys.
"Don't cry in front of the Mexicans" 😂
Great line. Makes me laugh every time.
Mike: HALF IN THE BAG!
Quentin: And I'm shutting your butt down!
this movie is one of Dan Schneider's favorites
I understand this reference.
Nah none of the feet are underage.
The feet are dirty and not under-aged, though.
Dan "Hold Her Tighter She's A Biter" Schneider
"Bring all my bitches back."
also love that scene in the bookstore bc she's picking up a copy of thomas hardy's tess for polanski which he adapted 10 years later.
That pretty cool. Didn't catch that the first 3 times I saw it
@@odoridori Steve McQueen did say Polanski looked like a 12 year old boy
@Stellvia Heonheim Children can't give consent. Something to do with this pretty obscure law called "AGE OF CONSENT". Weird huh
@Stellvia Heonheim She was way too young to give consent
Which he made in Sharon's memory
I loved the ending. Watched it last night for the first time. I thought it was engaging but I was detached a bit cause I wasn't looking forward to what I thought the ending was gonna be. It was brilliant how he completely subverted my expectation. I need to watch it again now so I can be more engaged. That ending was one of Tarantino's best.
I feel the same way. Once it ended i wasn't sure what to think. But after a day of processing the movie as a whole i think it's one of Tarentino's best.
"Tarantino is the last real filmmaker"
*Edgar Wright cries outside*
*Martin Scorsese wept*
Tim Burton screaming in a corner
(just kidding)
I think they meant he's the last guy that can draw a general audience with his name only. I would even argue that Jordan Peele has reached that status.
Along with the Coen brothers.
Terrence Malick is shaking his head in fierce disagreement.
Quentin Tarantino blames the Manson hippies for ending the Golden Age of Hollywood and murdering Sharon Tate both of which he obviously loves. In this film he rewrites history and exacts his revenge. He hates hippies for killing what he loved.
Not hippies, fanatics
@@guist_ same difference
The Manson family were a violent neonazi gang. They weren't peace/love antiwar youths, they were armed white supremacists who had dune buggies with machineguns mounted on them.
Hippies didn't ruin Hollywood, I dont know where anybody got that idea.
@@asisin2Manson family weren't hippies, and they weren't any more fanatical than the supporters of the Vietnam war, or the GI and marines who committed worse crimes against civilians on a daily basis.
I really wanted to see Leo digitally inserted into Chinatown at the end.
Would suck if they had to pay that nonve royalties.
As someone from LA when I watched this in theaters it was honestly breathtaking
"What was real and what wasn't there you couldn't really tell" THAT is what special effects should be in a nutshell.
Well.................................................
In this kind of movie, sure.
When Jay said “it feels like our show has been the documentation of the death of movies.”
I felt that.
Leo being in the Great Escape footage is totally different than using real Sharon Tate footage because there is no real Rick Dalton.
The point of the scene was him playing it off like it was never close to actually happening, while he was actually already in wardrobe and filming.
Like you said, BITTER. Eric-Stoltz-Back-To-The-Future bitter.
Eric Stoltz! He would have been a good fit for the Rick Dalton role! And thats how I took that scene as well, he was replaced and was too embarrassed/ashamed to admit it.
I saw this movie 4 times in theaters and each and every time, we were all in hysterics during the final scene, one guy literally fell out of his seat because he was laughing so hard, everyone was clapping and gasping and cheering, there were loud "Ow's!"after each hit. Even louder than Endgame. Easily the most fun at a movie theater I've ever had. I can't wait until it's out on Blu-ray.
If Cliff Booth didn't actually kill his wife, that could be interpreted as commentary on how easily a rumor can wreck someone's career, especially in Hollywood.
Or he actually did and that and the "war hero" throwaway are little flags that he's a psycho. Those and the alcoholism.
The flashback cut away just at the moment where you're thinking, "He's seriously about to kill this bitch with a harpoon." That got a guilty laugh from me.
Lol looked like he was about to launch that harpoon
they never talked about it again so I think it implies he did kill her.
@@amysarg Go watch it again but this time, pay attention.
I love Mike's 'yelling David Lynch'-character.
He nails it.
Wait, Inglourious Basterds wasn't a documentary!?!?
@@RoachDogg_JR lol
As someone who saw this in a packed theater, it was so surreal to hear the reactions around me towards the ending. Everyone was gasping and laughing at the same time.
famous LA landmarks: weinerschnitzel and taco bell
Fun fact: In the future they will both be Taco Bell.
*Der Wienerschnitzel
@@cts006 All restaurants will be Taco Bell....
@@joseparcenary4706 lol
@@Cyromantik Or Pizza Hut in Europe.
This was actually up there with Inglorious Basterds and Pulp Fiction as my favorite Tarantino film. Loved it.
Goodshag Productions those are my top 3 too!
The more I think about it the more I fucking love it
Kill Bill (second half, specifically), Jackie Brown, and Once upon a Time here. Once upon a Time being the best, imo.
@Stellvia Heonheim Who shat in your cereal bowl?
@Stellvia Heonheim nobody asked for your petty response either; that's life
The best part was Brad Pitt giving a *tick* *tick* signal to the dog. GOD DAMN!
I started cheering in the theater at that point lol
Yes !!! I've been scrolling hoping someone mentioned that. I loved seeing that dog FSU on those idiots.
I wouldn't know who Zach baggins is if it wasn't for red letter media
I'm gonna miss QT films. I want that Rick Dalton Telly Savalas poster for that Italian western.
Having just come out of this film I feel like the ending is an act of catharsis, from what I understand the Tate family loved this film and I can strangely see why for all the reasons Jay said.
Not perfect by any means but easily in my favourite films of the year list, definitely will see again.
Nah, perfect! ;)
So why isn’t it “perfect by any means”, In your opinion of course. 😂
Spin-off: Bruce Lee vs. Charlie Manson.
@@RockoEstalon the man destroyed a car with his body and kept fighting... Is that too weak to Lee's family standards???
@@RockoEstalon You're right.
@@RockoEstalon Did your dads leave when you were younger?
“In the logic of the movie, the Manson family didn’t do anything yet.” - Mike
Sorry, but I reject your hypothesis
Scott Douglas I reject your hippopotamus.
In the context of the movie all they were doing was living off that guys land at worst
Frank Merker they had planned the murder of several innocent young actors, and hell, they were on their way to do it; they just decided to go for a different house in this version of history. Slaughter them!
They had already killed and committed crimes before the Tate-Labianca murders. And the whole race war thing is a lie that started with Bugliosi's Helter Skelter.
Actors aren't real people anyways
I love how they've seemingly given up on storylines on this show.
just like hollywood
I usually hit the skip button on those. I wonder how many others do that too.
The "he killed his wife" is actually pretty deliberate in showing you what happened. It does leave it ambiguous as to whether or not it was an accident, an impulsive reaction, or pre-meditated, but when his wife gets up and starts berating him, we see a shot from below her waist where Cliff is looking up at her despondently, and he has the harpoon gun across his lap, hand on the trigger, and the harpoon aimed, by chance, in her direction.
It creates a lot of tension if you actually notice it. It took me a second, but then I was like "Holy fuck we're about to watch him shoot her with a fucking harpoon!" and then it cuts away so we don't know *exactly* how it happened or how he responded. I loved that.
Reminded me a bit of the scene where William H Macy takes the gun out of the car in Boogie Nights and you suddenly realise it's a tragedy not a comedy.
Noah Heninger He probably killed her, she reminds me of my ex and i totally wanted to dump her in the ocean the second time she slashed my tires and berated me
@@noahheninger I think he killed her, but I don't think it was a premeditated, calculated thing. I think his hand was already on the trigger, she was going off on him, and he was just so sick of it he had a split-second impulse and contracted his finger. He doesn't seem like the guy who would legitimately want to murder someone unless they were a threat to him, and I'm sure he was as shocked and horrified as could be after he shot her.
What is it with these beautiful hollywood actresses staying with these sicko/homicidal men...women need to grow a pair and leave these toxic relationships, or better yet listen to their instincts and NEVER GET INVOLVED.
@@emhu2594 It's almost like people who emote and look pretty for a living are better at their jobs if they are psychologically damaged or something /s
You guys changed me with this episode. Not gonna bother with film festivals and screenplay contests anymore. I'm just gonna go make my movie, for better or for worse.
Thanks.
Charge on, brother. Indie film/film festivals are a a joke these days-- they pump out the wackest shit. I feel like ever since Little Miss Sunshine came out that has been the template for shitty indie comedies. It's like the Iron Man of indie films. Sad that young filmmakers are so willing to sell out (or maybe they are just that lame/bad at making movies) before they even get a paycheck. Trying to replicate shitty Hollywood movies on a shoe string budget is peak autism.
Hey T D, if you’re reading this, please fuck off.
T D asshole.
JowFilmsLLC Go for it. We need that kind of atitude.
JowFilmsLLC Good luck, I sincerely hope everything goes as planned.
This movie alone proves Tarantino is a true master of cinema and absolutely loves all aspects of it.
I felt growing up that i was the only kid who loved a wide scope of cinema. Having a father who took me to see such films as Gone In 60 Seconds “1974”,The Deep,Close Encounters Of The Third Kind,The Wild Geese and A Bridge Too Far,as well as Star Wars,Superman,ET and Raiders Of The Lost Ark and at home we’d watch Citizen Kane,The Third Man and The Wizard Of Oz i was given an education in cinema…but then we got a VHS player and after that my world opened up to everything and anything i could get my hands on..just like Tarantino. I tried my hardest to introduce my friends to all kinds of movies but they weren’t interested at all