Description
Quentin Tarantino is one of the best-known living American filmmakers in the world, and the story of his career has been the subject of a number of books and articles. But what do his films mean? In this new study, Edward Gallafent does not look at Tarantinos story but at the films themselves. He asks to what extent Tarantino can be seen as a specifically American filmmaker, with the kinds of preoccupations and interests that have formed part of Hollywoods traditions, and also how he explores the expressive possibilities of current cinema. The book concentrates on the main feature films of Tarantinos career so far:
Reservoir Dogs,
Pulp Fiction,
Jackie Brown, and the two volumes of
Kill Bill. Apart from
Kill Bill the films are not treated individually, but in terms of some of the subjects that connect them together, such as success and tradition, their notorious deployment of violence, and Tarantinos approach to story-telling: his interest in presenting events out of chronological order. The book also covers adaptations of Tarantinos work, looking at the screenplays of
True Romance and
Natural Born Killers as well as the films made from them, and compares Tarantinos approach to adapting Elmore Leonard with that of another important American filmmaker, Paul Schrader. The aim of the book is to explore these topics and to take the reader back to what the American critic Robert Warshow called the actual, immediate experience of seeing and responding to the movies. It is designed to appeal both to those who were excited by the films on first seeing them in the cinema and to those taking the opportunity of reconsidering them on the screen or on DVD.