
Takedown, six years later, into no less than Heat.
Quentin tarantino reservoir dogs movie#
And Michael Mann expanded his 1989 TV movie L.A. Tarantino favorite Howard Hawks remade the screwball Ball of Fire as the musical A Song is Born. In 1959, Yasujiro Ozu remade 1934’s The Story of Floating Weeds as, simply, Floating Weeds, and 1932’s I Was Born, But… as Good Morning. John Ford turned his 1934 Will Rogers vehicle Judge Priest into 1953’s The Sun Shines Bright. Hitchcock redid The Man Who Knew Too Much, in 19. Plenty of great filmmakers have remade their own movies.

“I have actually considered doing a remake of Reservoir Dogs as my last movie,” he said, laughing. When Maher asked him if he thought he could make it even better, he replied that the movie, released in 1992, was “a captured-time-in-a-moment kind of thing.” He then dropped a big reveal. “If you were making Reservoir Dogs tomorrow, would you make the exact same movie?” Maher asked him. Maher, in trying to convince him that he was still evolving as a film director, asked him about his debut feature.

Maybe - who knows! - it even made him change his mind.īut there was one tidbit Tarantino squeezed in at the end of their debate - one idea it doesn’t seem he’d ever made public before. On Friday, to promote his new novel version of the film, Bill Maher did his best to talk him out of this, and given that the normally hyper-articulate Tarantino was left stammering, flinging off excuses his host quickly debunked. Recently he’s teased that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, his ninth, could be his swan song. At one point he swore he’d only make ten movies. But there’s one promise he’s seemed adamant about keeping: He wants to retire from filmmaking early. It is what it is - just a demo reel, a rehearsal of a couple of the scenes, yet it is a magnificently interesting piece of filmmaking that plays a much important part in the shaping of American independent cinema than it gets the credit for (this could be an overstatement by myself but nonetheless, check this short film out if you are a fan of Tarantino, 'Reservoir Dogs' or simply like indie movies).Quentin Tarantino is infamous for promising things he never delivers. The direction is low key, but still interesting enough. But this is not important - he never wanted to show off his acting skills in this anyway. Quentin Tarantino's own acting is atrocious but at the same time sincere and entertaining. The writing is masterful, and proof to that besides fast dialogue is that the story is perfectly clear and characters are nicely drawn out. White (later portrayed by Harvey Keitel), and Joe Cabot is played by David Jensen (to whom this was the only collaboration with Tarantino). Pink (the role he reprised in the real movie), Tarantino is Mr. This little gem was made with the help of the Sundance Film Institute to secure more funding for the feature-length movie. And, oh boy, what beautiful writing that is - edgy, witty and intelligent.


This short is like an audition tape of Quentin Tarantino for feature-length 'Reservoir Dogs' movie, but not to show his acting talent, but rather to showcase his writing chops.
