@@luk833_CZ Tarantino said if he didn't find Waltz to be able to play this role he probably wouldn't have gone through with making the movie. You really needed someone who was versatile in being able to speak German, French, English and Italian.
My family's German so we always use our thumb when putting up three fingers funny thing is I didn't know that was a German thing until I saw this movie
@@joemckim1183Im American and yeah, just about everyone keeps their thumb in here, but I agree with the others that its been more comfortable for me to include the thumb for 3
A friend of mine was stationed in Germany, and his first night out, he ordered two beers, or so he thought. He got three because the server saw the index and middle fingers and assumed the thumb was out as well.
@@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps also a great film, utilizing an out-of-period musical score. Oddly enough, my favorite scene in that, was the use of "Bowie's "Golden Years" for the dance scene.
As additional info to Christoph Waltz: That guy was a mostly comedic TV actor with an incredible sense of humor for the German and Austrian TV. Taratino saw something in him and he likely delivered one of the most chilling performances of a bad guy since Silence of the Lambs. Because he played him nice..that makes him so chilling..that guy is a total monster under the cover of a nice and polite man
I love the subtlety of Aldo looking down the camera and saying "I think this might just be my masterpiece" then immediately following it with "Written and Directed by Quentin Tarantino"
That first scene is one of my favorite scenes in any film. So much communicated with so little actually spoken. My favorite part is that Landa knew from the very beginning that they were hiding there. Everything was just a posturing display in order to intimidate LaPadite into surrendering them.
Vikki, I swear you look better in every successive video! Love your POV on these movies, especially QT's. Watching every film with you is like the first time, every time. Thanks.
Quention LOVES to reimagine history. This movie where Hitler and Nazi high command burn to death, later Once Upon A Time In Hollywood and the Manson family.
Brad Pitt got some flak for this role but rewatching it multiple times, Lt. Aldo is such an amazing character. When he says he wants scalps, he’s not speaking metaphorically 😂
Fun Fact: The person that the movie Fury is based on was actually nicknamed War Daddy, but the tank was not named Fury...he had actually named it "In The Mood"...which is the most fucking baller name for a tank that was at the forefront of pushing into Germany during WWII...
This is the most high tension, subtle introduction in cinematic history. With a glass of milk. Not Saving Private Ryan on D-Day. When we knew that was coming. Brilliantly done Quentin
Django Unchained is my 2nd fav Tarantino movie behind Pulp Fiction. Just love Christoph Waltz. Pulp Fiction is my all time fav movie. Jackie Brown is the most underrated Tarantino movie for sure. If you have not seen Goodfellas, then this is a must watch. A true life, Mafia story. It is one of the greatest movies of all time. I prefer it to The Godfather. On par with the Shawshank Redemption.
As far I know she has gotten a lot of requests to react to it including from her own mother in her 100K subscriber livestream celebration, but I don’t think she has seen it yet.
I love how Tarantino re-used some of Ennio Morricone's best music in this. Along with the basic themes/chapter titles it is an awesome homage Leone's spaghetti westerns in addition to the 60s WW2 movies. Check out Duck you Sucker/A Fistful of Dynamite.
The strudel scene actually has even more weight than you realize. Everyone recognizes the milk but, iirc, the common strudel at that time was made using pork product. Which isn't kosher. So Landa ordering not just milk but also strudel for her is an extra cruel test - either she refuses and casts suspicion on a "noble officer's generosity" or she goes against her culture and religious beliefs as a Jew by eating something non-kosher just to play the part and hide.
32:21 if interested VKunia, that "Gadget" is called a Sedgely Glove gun: Fires a pistol cartridge with a punch - trigger. Used by secret service outfits during WW2 as well as, though i cannot confirm, the Seabees in the Pacific theatre. Brandon Harera fires one on his You tube channel. Highly recommend watching
As for the scar on Aldo Raine's neck: no one knows. There is a rumor that Tarantino said in an interview that Raine was lynched by the KKK for defending African Americans in the South- but is unsubstantial. It does seem to be a rope burn and not from a knife so, probably.
7:55 his mannerisms are actually pretty accurate if you have watched original footage of his speeches. Indeed very manic, aggressive and expressive. 34:56 I do hate to admit it but Hugo Boss dit make some nice looking uniforms, it’s just a shame they were worn by that group of people(i would rather not censor myself but we all know how TH-cam would probably censor me anyway)
i didn’t know adam sandler was originally supposed to be the bear jew. that would’ve been amazing! sandler is a legitimately good actor. he’s made me laugh and made me cry. i’d love to see how he would make me scared.
This probably wasn't your intention, but when Landa was saying why her black employee should not be working during the movie, it sounded like you were reluctantly excusing what he said as a relic of the times. And in some contexts that would be true. But in this context, he was explaining Nazi beliefs on race; beliefs that present-day Nazis still espouse. So it's wrong to say, "it was a different time." In this case, it was less the different time than the Nazi ideology.
Italian Here, yes, we use different fingers for three counting, but man... the italian language here is ATROCIOUS OH MY GAWD AHAHAHAH!! it makes me cringey so hard that make the lap around the globe and become ICONIC!!! Love, V!
Cristoph waltz’ character was based somewhat on reinhard heydrich, the man who came up with the idea of the holocaust, was eichmann’s boss, and was a nazi so evil that hitler himself was shocked by his cruelty and called him ‘the man with the iron heart’. He is not as well known as he should be becuase was assasinated in 1941, so he wasnt at the nuremberg trials, but make no mistake, he was the very worst of the worst.
HBO did a great movie about the meeting where Heydrich proposed the Final Solution. Called Conspiracy, Kenneth Branagh of Shakespearean fame plays Heydrich. It's chilling, and worth a watch.
@@phillipribbink6903 That was a 2001 HBO movie called Conspiracy starring Kenneth Branagh, Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth. Its just a bunch of Nazi guys sitting around a table discussing how to do the Holocaust but it was really captivating to see such evil bastards deciding to kill a whole race of people like they're just discussing business like its no big deal.
Daniel Bruel is more than bilingual; he speaks, 3, maybe 4 languages? I think its German, english, french and Spanish. So dude gets a lot of work in Europe!
The conversations throughout this movie especially when they all speak in German made this movie great but the bloody gory action scenes were good too especially when Donny The Bear Jew Donowitz beats Nazis with a baseball bat. it's not a Quentin Tarantino movie unless there's bloody gory gun fights in it
22:55 I don't know about Germany but in Czech Republic, we still use the same hand gestures (I'm guessing that a good portion of europe still uses these). It's the same difference to the Japanesse system of counting fingers, as to the North and South Americas.
"I love to see famous bi-lingual actors and actresses" the only tging that was racing through my mind was brad pitt with the "Bon jorno" talking eye talian 😂
So I was reminded of this little bit of trivia when you brought up King Kong during the tavern scene. Hitler was a huge movie buff, he was reported to have watched two or three films in a private theatre every night. As they covered in Lieutenant Hicox's briefing, he also used films extensively in the Nazi Party's propaganda efforts. Allegedly King Kong was a favourite film of Hitler's, along with Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. Knowing Tarantino, I feel like that that scene was put into his movie knowing that piece of trivia. Bonus fact at the beginning of the tavern scene when Hammersmarck and the soldiers are playing the game. One of the guys answers Winnetou Chief of the Apaches. This is a reference to a series of Westerns written by Karl May. That were some of the best selling fiction in Germany at the time. In fact Hitler himself had been a fan from boyhood. They were also widely distributed to the German frontlines as reading material for military personnel. It's details like this that really set Tarantino apart.
23:00 Yeah it is true that these gestures could betray you, especially in a WWII setting where you would be looking for spies and traitors, not to say that he wasn't suspicious of this group before. Just the final nail in the coffin.
Had no idea that Adam Sandler was considered for the Bear Jew role. Tarantino obviously made the right decision not to use him, otherwise no one could have taken him seriously. Or even semi-seriously. It would have ruined the film.
Little side note: in the 1983 film Scarface, Tony was a Cuban mobster, but in the original 1932 movie he was Italian. You are correct! Hitler got Scarfaced by an American acting as an Italian.
They never address the mark on Lt. Raine's neck, although it's clearly from hanging/lynching. Classic Tarantino! It's like Marcellus Wallace's random band-aid and the "glowing" briefcase in Pulp Fiction. There's literally nothing ever said about what's actually *in* the briefcase. Technically there was a lightbulb inside the actual prop for the "glow" effect, but beyond that, QT just lets the audience draw their own conclusions as to what the characters see inside. As for the band-aid on the back of Marcellus Wallace's neck, it was simply the result of actor Ving Rhames cutting himself shaving and Tarantino deciding to just roll with it because it added to the mystery.
There's two looks I recognize Brad Pitt for: young Brad Pitt (Fight Club, Se7en, Burn After Reading), and older Brad Pitt (Once Upon a Time... In Hollywood, Bullet Train). But then there's Inglourious Basterds Brad Pitt whom I didn't even know was Brad Pitt because he looked so different.
This is definitely Tarantino's best film in my opinion, everything about it just works perfectly - the numerous intersecting storylines, the perfect balance of suspense and dark humour, the impeccably written characters, including one of the greatest cinematic villains of the 21st century, the score, the graphically violent action, the sparkling dialogue, the stunning cinematography, the excellent performances. When Aldo looks down at the mark he's left on Landa's forehead and proclaims it to be his masterpiece, I like to imagine it as also being Tarantino himself acknowledging this as his greatest work, and if so, I don't disagree in the slightest.
as a german i have to say that the "Order Scene" with the 3 glasses is true ^^ we germans use our thumb to start counting with our fingers and i might add that we germans (austrian and swiss maybe too idk) are the only ones who count on this way
15:56 if you remember when he puts his cigarette out in the strudel it is an homage to the house at the start where her family is killed. The cigarette is the chimney.
I'll never understand peoples milk hate.. there's nothing more refreshing than a big, cold glass of milk! Especially when eating cookies or chocolate or something. Perhaps it's a city folk vs country folk thing.
All the amazing things about this flick are well known, so I will share a personal one... Everyone has certain, like, movie crushes... OR certain actors/characters they're struck by in a given movie. For me, Shosanna Dreyfus/Melanie Laurent made it difficult for me to even follow what was happening lol. Breathtaking 🙌
15:14 I'm not a jew, but I hear that in their religion is like a sin to eat that thing so he knows who's her and he was torturing by making her eat it. for you that was delicious, for her that was giving up her own soul.
I would love to see you react to "The Passion of the Christ". It's a movie depicting the last hours of Jesus and is the most accurate depiction of what he went through.
The first time I saw this movie, I noticed the conspicuous 'three' fingers and knew that he had given himself away. It is a thing. I was stationed in Germany for six years. They tell you about this when you first get their so you will get the correct number of beers when you order them!
Another fun fact, may have been pointed out already, but at the end when Landa had the knife on his forehead, that's a real knife. They put some latex on Waltz's forehead for the shot, but if Pitt went too far, he'd literally carve into Christophe's head with it. So the look of fear in his eyes is genuine at the end of the film lmao
It's hard to feel any type of sympathy and empathy for this specific group of people when another specific group of people is currently being hunted by the former.
My mom said that there was a squad of Native Americans in my dad’s unit (he interrogated German prisoners), who brought scalps instead of prisoners. I was skeptical until I saw this movie.
What's that on his neck? That is a hanging scar. Which means that not only did Aldo do something so offensive that someone tried to lynch him, but that he is mean and stubborn enough to have survived being lynched.
Christoph Waltz as Hans Landa gives one of the best villain performances in cinema. His Oscar win for Best Supporting Actor was well deserved
Definetly. I cannot imagine better pronunciation and precision in this role. He made 50% of the movie. I love him. haha
@@luk833_CZ Tarantino said if he didn't find Waltz to be able to play this role he probably wouldn't have gone through with making the movie. You really needed someone who was versatile in being able to speak German, French, English and Italian.
I believe Christoph Waltz also won a Oscar for best supporting actor in Django
@@jamesrein648 correct
@@joemckim1183 You are right, he was searching for him untill he found him. Perfect casting.
22:55 German here. Yes, we use different fingers to show three
Swiss here. We also show three like that. Showing three not using the thumb just feels wrong and weird
@@astro824 Americans only use the thumb when showing five, one thru four we just use our other fingers.
My family's German so we always use our thumb when putting up three fingers funny thing is I didn't know that was a German thing until I saw this movie
@@joemckim1183Im American and yeah, just about everyone keeps their thumb in here, but I agree with the others that its been more comfortable for me to include the thumb for 3
A friend of mine was stationed in Germany, and his first night out, he ordered two beers, or so he thought. He got three because the server saw the index and middle fingers and assumed the thumb was out as well.
Only Quentin Tarantino could put a 1982 David Bowie song into a WWII epic, and make it work PERFECTLY.
Brian Helgeland might too, look at A Knight's Tale.
@@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps also a great film, utilizing an out-of-period musical score. Oddly enough, my favorite scene in that, was the use of "Bowie's "Golden Years" for the dance scene.
🐰 The people who made "Jo Jo Rabbit" also managed to end their WWII epic with a 1977 David Bowie tune.
The performance of Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa, is one of the greatests ever. What an amazing character. Terrific, classy and smart as hell.
I just feel the need to comment on the absurdity that we live in a time where the word Nazi needs to be censored, less than 100 years after WWII.
Censoring the word Nazi does the opposite effect of what is intended
@@xvor_tex8577ahhhhhhh, so maybe that's why it's censored. It's more impactful that way...
TH-cam might be onto something
@@xvor_tex8577 Yeah they should just say MAGA instead.
@@rickwelch8464You mean every democrat ever? You can’t have an opinion unless it matches their agenda just like the Nazis.
@@rickwelch8464 Definitely
After uncut gems, I think Adam could do it. He's more talented than most would think
Also did you see him flip out on PSH in Punch-Drunk Love(2002)?
As additional info to Christoph Waltz: That guy was a mostly comedic TV actor with an incredible sense of humor for the German and Austrian TV. Taratino saw something in him and he likely delivered one of the most chilling performances of a bad guy since Silence of the Lambs. Because he played him nice..that makes him so chilling..that guy is a total monster under the cover of a nice and polite man
"Oui, Shoshana."
Between that, and the scene where her face is projected on the smoke, laughing maniacally...I get massive chills, every time.
I love the subtlety of Aldo looking down the camera and saying "I think this might just be my masterpiece" then immediately following it with "Written and Directed by Quentin Tarantino"
Your idea of subtlety feels like Quentin smacking me in the face saying "Yeah I know I did good" 😂
There is no way! I literally searched from yt like 3 days ago if you had already reacted to this. This is THE best Tarantino movie in my opinion😍
That first scene is one of my favorite scenes in any film. So much communicated with so little actually spoken. My favorite part is that Landa knew from the very beginning that they were hiding there. Everything was just a posturing display in order to intimidate LaPadite into surrendering them.
Barely noticeable in the farm scene is a young Lea Seydoux, who became a famous actress in French and international cinema. Bond girl.
She basically became the main Bond girl in the Craig Bond movies.
Vikki, I swear you look better in every successive video! Love your POV on these movies, especially QT's. Watching every film with you is like the first time, every time. Thanks.
Quention LOVES to reimagine history. This movie where Hitler and Nazi high command burn to death, later Once Upon A Time In Hollywood and the Manson family.
But V, nothing satisfies thirst better than cold milk
Brad Pitt got some flak for this role but rewatching it multiple times, Lt. Aldo is such an amazing character. When he says he wants scalps, he’s not speaking metaphorically 😂
Fun Fact: The person that the movie Fury is based on was actually nicknamed War Daddy, but the tank was not named Fury...he had actually named it "In The Mood"...which is the most fucking baller name for a tank that was at the forefront of pushing into Germany during WWII...
2036, WW3 rages. A semiautonomous hovertank drone and its pilot spread terror on the front lines.
Its name?
"Vibe Check"
31:50 The commanding officer on the other end of that phone call is Harvey Keitel aka Winston Wolf aka Mr White
This is the most high tension, subtle introduction in cinematic history. With a glass of milk. Not Saving Private Ryan on D-Day. When we knew that was coming. Brilliantly done Quentin
Can u imagine if she watched Schindler’s List? Great movie but ohh the tears😢
Django Unchained is my 2nd fav Tarantino movie behind Pulp Fiction. Just love Christoph Waltz. Pulp Fiction is my all time fav movie. Jackie Brown is the most underrated Tarantino movie for sure. If you have not seen Goodfellas, then this is a must watch. A true life, Mafia story. It is one of the greatest movies of all time. I prefer it to The Godfather. On par with the Shawshank Redemption.
Schindler's List is also a masterpiece. Have you watched it?
As far I know she has gotten a lot of requests to react to it including from her own mother in her 100K subscriber livestream celebration, but I don’t think she has seen it yet.
ye im from europe and instinctually i do the "german" 3. doing the "american" 3 is strange and its a little bit hard to do lol
I love how Tarantino re-used some of Ennio Morricone's best music in this. Along with the basic themes/chapter titles it is an awesome homage Leone's spaghetti westerns in addition to the 60s WW2 movies. Check out Duck you Sucker/A Fistful of Dynamite.
The strudel scene actually has even more weight than you realize. Everyone recognizes the milk but, iirc, the common strudel at that time was made using pork product. Which isn't kosher.
So Landa ordering not just milk but also strudel for her is an extra cruel test - either she refuses and casts suspicion on a "noble officer's generosity" or she goes against her culture and religious beliefs as a Jew by eating something non-kosher just to play the part and hide.
Crazy to think Adam Sandler was going to be in this
32:21 if interested VKunia, that "Gadget" is called a Sedgely Glove gun: Fires a pistol cartridge with a punch - trigger. Used by secret service outfits during WW2 as well as, though i cannot confirm, the Seabees in the Pacific theatre. Brandon Harera fires one on his You tube channel. Highly recommend watching
Now I want to see VKunia react to some of the "Hitler reacts to" videos. Like the death of Han Solo.
Love this movie! If you full out hate a villain in a movie and I really hope you do get to Fury, amazing cast.
I'm a %1000 down for this movie.
I swear I got this on DVD at my 1st year of College and I watched it a million times over, It's so Epic! 😆👏🏽🎬
27:05 Also he makes each of them repeat their name to test whether they are going to say it the same way consistently
As for the scar on Aldo Raine's neck: no one knows. There is a rumor that Tarantino said in an interview that Raine was lynched by the KKK for defending African Americans in the South- but is unsubstantial. It does seem to be a rope burn and not from a knife so, probably.
I consider this movie with Django and Once upon a time as Tarantino's unofficial revisionist history revenge trilogy
7:55 his mannerisms are actually pretty accurate if you have watched original footage of his speeches.
Indeed very manic, aggressive and expressive.
34:56 I do hate to admit it but Hugo Boss dit make some nice looking uniforms, it’s just a shame they were worn by that group of people(i would rather not censor myself but we all know how TH-cam would probably censor me anyway)
12:18 Daniel Brhül is multi-lingual! Besides English he speaks Spanish, German, Catalan, Portuguese and French
i didn’t know adam sandler was originally supposed to be the bear jew. that would’ve been amazing! sandler is a legitimately good actor. he’s made me laugh and made me cry. i’d love to see how he would make me scared.
I usually do not like slow drama movies very much but this is one of the few that I love..
7:42 "oh my god, he's the worst" she says to literally Hitler
Inglourious Basterds is actually Christopher Waltz's first movie he has ever played in
This probably wasn't your intention, but when Landa was saying why her black employee should not be working during the movie, it sounded like you were reluctantly excusing what he said as a relic of the times. And in some contexts that would be true. But in this context, he was explaining Nazi beliefs on race; beliefs that present-day Nazis still espouse. So it's wrong to say, "it was a different time." In this case, it was less the different time than the Nazi ideology.
Italian Here, yes, we use different fingers for three counting, but man... the italian language here is ATROCIOUS OH MY GAWD AHAHAHAH!! it makes me cringey so hard that make the lap around the globe and become ICONIC!!! Love, V!
This one movie is stacked with famous faces & newcomers that would become famous in their own right.
Michael Fassbender, Daniel Bruhl, Diane Kruger to name just a few.
Cristoph waltz’ character was based somewhat on reinhard heydrich, the man who came up with the idea of the holocaust, was eichmann’s boss, and was a nazi so evil that hitler himself was shocked by his cruelty and called him ‘the man with the iron heart’. He is not as well known as he should be becuase was assasinated in 1941, so he wasnt at the nuremberg trials, but make no mistake, he was the very worst of the worst.
HBO did a great movie about the meeting where Heydrich proposed the Final Solution. Called Conspiracy, Kenneth Branagh of Shakespearean fame plays Heydrich. It's chilling, and worth a watch.
@@phillipribbink6903 That was a 2001 HBO movie called Conspiracy starring Kenneth Branagh, Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth. Its just a bunch of Nazi guys sitting around a table discussing how to do the Holocaust but it was really captivating to see such evil bastards deciding to kill a whole race of people like they're just discussing business like its no big deal.
If I'm not mistaken Heydrick was second only to Himmler
I believe the first scalped body you see is indeed Tarantino
Daniel Bruel is more than bilingual; he speaks, 3, maybe 4 languages? I think its German, english, french and Spanish. So dude gets a lot of work in Europe!
22:55 It actually is true, that we Germans show "three" that way (in fact I find it extremely uncomfortable to use my 3 middle fingers for showing).
If this movie came out about ten years before it did, 2009, I could totally see Adam Sandler playing the bear jew.
The conversations throughout this movie especially when they all speak in German made this movie great but the bloody gory action scenes were good too especially when Donny The Bear Jew Donowitz beats Nazis with a baseball bat. it's not a Quentin Tarantino movie unless there's bloody gory gun fights in it
Scarface is a political prisoner from CUBA
Fun Fact: The first SS soldier who’s getting scalped is actually Quentin Tarantino himself
Wait for the creme
chapter 1 is a masterclass in suspense and looming terror, hitchcock would be so proud.
22:55 I don't know about Germany but in Czech Republic, we still use the same hand gestures (I'm guessing that a good portion of europe still uses these). It's the same difference to the Japanesse system of counting fingers, as to the North and South Americas.
8:32 Oh no! Really? Adam Sandler? 😆
Fury.... fury.... fury...... FURYYYYYY YESSS great reaction btw FURYYYYY
Is there a better first 20 minutes of any film in cinema history? I say no.
"I love to see famous bi-lingual actors and actresses" the only tging that was racing through my mind was brad pitt with the "Bon jorno" talking eye talian 😂
“Now that I’m more familiar with Tarantino’s work, I’ll be able to pick out his style.”
You mean the foot stuff? 😂
So I was reminded of this little bit of trivia when you brought up King Kong during the tavern scene. Hitler was a huge movie buff, he was reported to have watched two or three films in a private theatre every night. As they covered in Lieutenant Hicox's briefing, he also used films extensively in the Nazi Party's propaganda efforts. Allegedly King Kong was a favourite film of Hitler's, along with Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. Knowing Tarantino, I feel like that that scene was put into his movie knowing that piece of trivia.
Bonus fact at the beginning of the tavern scene when Hammersmarck and the soldiers are playing the game. One of the guys answers Winnetou Chief of the Apaches. This is a reference to a series of Westerns written by Karl May. That were some of the best selling fiction in Germany at the time. In fact Hitler himself had been a fan from boyhood. They were also widely distributed to the German frontlines as reading material for military personnel. It's details like this that really set Tarantino apart.
23:00 Yeah it is true that these gestures could betray you, especially in a WWII setting where you would be looking for spies and traitors, not to say that he wasn't suspicious of this group before. Just the final nail in the coffin.
someone made a scene with Adam Sandler as the Bear Jew with audio clips from Billy Madison and used AI for his face.It's actually hilarious
Honestly, I can absolutely imagine Adam Sandler as Donny. It would have been awesome.
I just realized that the suspenseful music at 32:00 is from Kelly's Heroes. Which is a movie you should check out if you haven't already.
Had no idea that Adam Sandler was considered for the Bear Jew role. Tarantino obviously made the right decision not to use him, otherwise no one could have taken him seriously. Or even semi-seriously. It would have ruined the film.
Fury is a fantastic movie that you should definitely watch
Stiglitz wzorowany na Blaskowitzu z znanej serii gier Wolfenstein
Little side note: in the 1983 film Scarface, Tony was a Cuban mobster, but in the original 1932 movie he was Italian.
You are correct! Hitler got Scarfaced by an American acting as an Italian.
Landa is one of the best villains in movie history
They never address the mark on Lt. Raine's neck, although it's clearly from hanging/lynching. Classic Tarantino!
It's like Marcellus Wallace's random band-aid and the "glowing" briefcase in Pulp Fiction. There's literally nothing ever said about what's actually *in* the briefcase. Technically there was a lightbulb inside the actual prop for the "glow" effect, but beyond that, QT just lets the audience draw their own conclusions as to what the characters see inside.
As for the band-aid on the back of Marcellus Wallace's neck, it was simply the result of actor Ving Rhames cutting himself shaving and Tarantino deciding to just roll with it because it added to the mystery.
Either this movie or Django unchained it the best work of Tarentino
also for Christopher Waltz
¿NO HABIAS VISTO BASTARDOS SIN GLORIA VKUNIA? ENSERIO? CUÁL ES TU PROBLEMA? ¿TU PAPÁ TE ABANDONÓ?
Villain is my favorite villain, we even share our love of milk. =D
Aldo's neck scar is actually ropeburn and no reason is given. Tarantino left it there just so you can speculate on his life.
Maybe some KKK types back home tried to lynch him for helping black people.
Christoph Waltz voiced himself in the german Dub as well and does an equally outstanding job hitting the right tone for everything he said in english
2:23 Mike Myers played the British General who gives the plan to meet with the spying actress.
There's two looks I recognize Brad Pitt for: young Brad Pitt (Fight Club, Se7en, Burn After Reading), and older Brad Pitt (Once Upon a Time... In Hollywood, Bullet Train). But then there's Inglourious Basterds Brad Pitt whom I didn't even know was Brad Pitt because he looked so different.
This is definitely Tarantino's best film in my opinion, everything about it just works perfectly - the numerous intersecting storylines, the perfect balance of suspense and dark humour, the impeccably written characters, including one of the greatest cinematic villains of the 21st century, the score, the graphically violent action, the sparkling dialogue, the stunning cinematography, the excellent performances. When Aldo looks down at the mark he's left on Landa's forehead and proclaims it to be his masterpiece, I like to imagine it as also being Tarantino himself acknowledging this as his greatest work, and if so, I don't disagree in the slightest.
Its the one Tarantino movie that really could've been a 4 part miniseries. We barely get to see the Basterds scalping the Gemans.
as a german i have to say that the "Order Scene" with the 3 glasses is true ^^ we germans use our thumb to start counting with our fingers and i might add that we germans (austrian and swiss maybe too idk) are the only ones who count on this way
Legends of the fall. Do it.
QTs best movie in my opinion. Now granted I haven't watched Django and Jackie Brown but I'm pretty sure my opinion won't change even after.
"štrůdl s krémem" sounded almost Czech 😁
Great reaction as always ❤
This was one of the early film roles of Michael Fassbender (who played the film critic member of the Basterds who dies in the shootout).
Not that early, it was his 5th role in a feature length film. He also had done 6 TV movies before this.
Was it, tho? I haven't checked imdb, but I feel like he was pretty well established when he did this? Maybe I'm wrong.....
@@hoya1178 Fassbender had a small role in Band of Brothers also in 2001.
I literally just watched this movie for the first time 2 days ago
The European three is true. When I was in France, I ordered 1 using just my index finger, they gave me 2.
15:56 if you remember when he puts his cigarette out in the strudel it is an homage to the house at the start where her family is killed. The cigarette is the chimney.
Or not.
8:38 Actually, considering his performance in Punch-Drunk Love(2002), I probably could
I drink a lotta milk now, because of this movie. Am I crazy?
You're not, brother. Trust me. This movie and a Clockwork orange both made me drink more milk
@ 👍🥛
@@paneledmeteor33 🥛 🤝
I'll never understand peoples milk hate.. there's nothing more refreshing than a big, cold glass of milk! Especially when eating cookies or chocolate or something. Perhaps it's a city folk vs country folk thing.
No, you're just a lait man.
You don’t gotta be stonewall Jackson to know you don’t wanna be fightin in a basement 😂
All the amazing things about this flick are well known, so I will share a personal one... Everyone has certain, like, movie crushes... OR certain actors/characters they're struck by in a given movie. For me, Shosanna Dreyfus/Melanie Laurent made it difficult for me to even follow what was happening lol. Breathtaking 🙌
15:14 I'm not a jew, but I hear that in their religion is like a sin to eat that thing so he knows who's her and he was torturing by making her eat it.
for you that was delicious, for her that was giving up her own soul.
I would love to see you react to "The Passion of the Christ". It's a movie depicting the last hours of Jesus and is the most accurate depiction of what he went through.
The first time I saw this movie, I noticed the conspicuous 'three' fingers and knew that he had given himself away. It is a thing. I was stationed in Germany for six years. They tell you about this when you first get their so you will get the correct number of beers when you order them!
Another fun fact, may have been pointed out already, but at the end when Landa had the knife on his forehead, that's a real knife. They put some latex on Waltz's forehead for the shot, but if Pitt went too far, he'd literally carve into Christophe's head with it. So the look of fear in his eyes is genuine at the end of the film lmao
F*cking brilliant film! I love your reactions. You were one of the first channels I started subscribing to. Keep up the good work. 👍🎬📽️
It's hard to feel any type of sympathy and empathy for this specific group of people when another specific group of people is currently being hunted by the former.
3:45 Homelander has some competition now!
Did you know Adam Sandler was supposed to play the Jew bear
My mom said that there was a squad of Native Americans in my dad’s unit (he interrogated German prisoners), who brought scalps instead of prisoners. I was skeptical until I saw this movie.
What's that on his neck?
That is a hanging scar.
Which means that not only did Aldo do something so offensive that someone tried to lynch him, but that he is mean and stubborn enough to have survived being lynched.
not to get political here (too late!) but what you see going on in this movie is where America is headed right now...