The Arizona Republic

Quality time with legendary Tarantino films

- Brian Truitt LINDA R. CHEN/MIRAMAX FILMS

You’d probably never want to be in a Quentin Tarantino film, where the chances of getting suddenly shot in the face are inordinate­ly high, but you always know when you’re watching one. There’s the blood and ultraviole­nce, for starters. And the cursing. Plus the protagonis­ts who don’t lean heroic. And the deep cuts of the soundtrack­s, some funky and others just cool. And all that style. But most important, a consistent sense of quality.

It’s true, the movies in Tarantino’s eclectic oeuvre – including the writer/ director’s latest, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” – span everything from decent to legendary. Over the past 27 years, that means nary a stinker in the bunch. Here’s how his star-studded “Once Upon A Time” – which reteams the auteur with Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt in 1969-era Los Angeles – stacks up against his other films.

10. ‘Kill Bill: Volume 2’ (2004)

There is a huge quality gap between the spectacula­r first “Bill” and the justOK second, with action traded for chattiness in the kung fu sequel. Bride (Uma Thurman) hunts the rest of the Deadly Viper Assassinat­ion Squad responsibl­e for her near-death experience, including former lover Bill (David Carradine). Bonus points for some satisfying thirdact reveals and the cool Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique.

9. ‘Jackie Brown’ (1997)

The only Tarantino film based on outside source material – in this case, Elmore Leonard’s 1992 book “Rum Punch” – “Jackie Brown” is a homage to blaxploita­tion films of yesteryear with a great cast including Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Keaton and Robert De Niro. But Pam Grier, as a 40-something flight attendant who smuggles money on the side, truly is dynamite in a welcome return back to the big screen.

8. ‘Death Proof’ (2007)

Part of the “Grindhouse” double feature (with Robert Rodriguez’s “Planet Terror”), “Proof” goes to some intriguing places in mashing up genres, from slasher tropes to feminist empowermen­t. And “Proof ” also gives us the rare Kurt Russell supervilla­in: Stuntman Mike is a serial killer who chases women and murders them using his “deathproof ” car. That is until he messes with a trio of female friends (Zoe Bell, Rosario Dawson, Tracie Thoms) who fight back in an equally vicious manner.

7. ‘Django Unchained’ (2012)

Tarantino gives Southern slavery and racism the spaghetti Western treatment with a noteworthy team-up: Freed man Django (Jamie Foxx) and dentist bounty hunter King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) take down sibling outlaws in Tennessee before heading to Mississipp­i to find Django’s wife. The super-violent and brutal death matches between slaves are hard to watch, but DiCaprio’s smooth and sinister plantation owner Calvin J. Candie is an over-the-top villain to savor.

6. ‘Reservoir Dogs’ (1992)

From gangsters discussing Madonna’s musical catalog in the beginning to the bloodshed and betrayal later, Tarantino’s first feature film showed glimpses of the referentia­l and nonlinear storytelli­ng that would soon put him on the map with “Pulp Fiction.” The cast is excellent, from Steve Buscemi and Harvey Keitel to Tim Roth and Michael Madsen, as well-dressed crooks in dire straits.

5. ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ (2019)

Tarantino’s love letter to the L.A. where he grew up in the 1960s finds the tale of a fading TV star (DiCaprio) and his stunt double (Pitt) intersecti­ng with the fate of up-and-coming actress Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie). While somewhat staid considerin­g the auteur’s usual work, he conjures some magic recreating the changing culture of the time and unleashes his male leads – especially DiCaprio – for a couple of knockout performanc­es.

4. ‘The Hateful Eight’ (2015)

Tarantino goes the Western route again but this time with a bunch of blizzard-bound ne’er-do-wells stuck in a cabin for a murder-mystery potboiler. From a couple of post-Civil War bounty hunters ( Jackson and Kurt Russell) to an unhinged fugitive (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and a loquacious executione­r (Tim Roth), they’re a morally questionab­le crew and you can’t trust a one. In other words, the kind of folks Tarantino does best.

3. ‘Kill Bill: Volume 1’ (2003)

There aren’t a lot of pure heroes in Tarantino’s films, but Thurman’s The Bride is the closest – and one an audience easily gets behind, thanks to the actress’ natural charisma, her circumstan­ces (getting shot in the head on her wedding day) and the unholy hell she unleashes in a Bruce Lee jumpsuit. The Toyko action sequence pitting a swordwield­ing Bride against any army of Yakuza henchmen (and a schoolgirl with a deadly ball and chain) is all-time stuff, yet Tarantino ventures outside the box, too, as with an animated back story for Bride foe O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Liu).

2. ‘Inglouriou­s Basterds’ (2009)

Tarantino makes his war picture that’s just as much a revenge fantasy, and one that playfully uses a David Bowie song before a vengeful woman (Melanie Laurent) torches a theater full of Nazis. While maybe not the most historical­ly accurate World War II film, “Basterds” is one of the most pleasurabl­e and fun – depending on your point of view – with Pitt as the leader of a team of German-scalping soldiers and Christoph Waltz as one of the more rascally and despicable villains in the director’s rogues’ gallery.

1. ‘Pulp Fiction’ (1994)

We don’t get many game-changing movies anymore, but those who watched this in a movie theater 25 years ago – once they wrapped their head around the intertwini­ng stories and character interactio­ns – knew it was something special. The iconic art-house film made stars again of John Travolta and Bruce Willis and launched Thurman and Jackson into pop-culture prominence. Its memorable lines become apart of the lexicon (and had everybody quoting from the Book of Ezekiel for the first time in forever), and the movie was just crazy enough to work on a mainstream level. If only QT would tell us what was in that golden briefcase …

 ??  ?? Mr. Pink (Steve Buscemi, left) and Mr. White (Harvey Keitel) share a tense moment in “Reservoir Dogs.”
Mr. Pink (Steve Buscemi, left) and Mr. White (Harvey Keitel) share a tense moment in “Reservoir Dogs.”

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