***ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD***

187,380 Views | 1255 Replies | Last: 7 mo ago by aTmAg
Brian Earl Spilner
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Personally, the stand-out to me outside of the main 3 cast members was the little girl in the show.
TCTTS
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Screw it.

I know I said August 1st, but I saw this again last night and I can't wait another 12 hours to keep talking about it.

This movie is a masterpiece.

Granted, it's not a masterpiece in the traditional sense (again, it's bloated, meandering, etc.), but it's a masterpiece in the way it transcends traditional narratives to achieve an almost dream-like quality. In that sense, it really is a Quentin Tarantino fairytale. And a brilliant one at that. Seeing it for a second time only confirmed that this will be the second of dozens, once it hits cable/streaming. The first time I saw it, I was thoroughly entertained.

The second time I saw it, I fell in love.

Easily top three Tarantino for me, along with Pulp Fiction and Inglorious Basterds, and maybe even the most re-watchable. I at least I want to bask in this world again and again more than any of Tarantino's others.

A few random things I noticed this go-around...

- It's crazy that the entire second act is only one day. Dalton on the set of Lancer, Booth at Spahn Ranch, and Tate at the theater are all that Sunday. Considering the combined length of those three threads, and the expectations of my initial viewing, it almost felt like a week the first go-around. Really, the entire movie is basically a Saturday night, the Sunday immediately following (in February) and then a Friday evening/night (in August). With a few flashbacks and the Italian montage spliced in. This is all obvious, I know, but for a nearly three-hour movie, it really struck me this time how little time actually passes in the world of the movie.

- The narrative itself also felt much tighter. So many little things that felt like fluff the first go-around were actually perfectly setup and paid off throughout. A lot of great character moments that help paint exactly who these people are and what their woes are in life. One of my favorites was setup in the beginning, after the scene with Pacino at Musso & Frank's, when Dalton tells Booth, "It's official, ol' buddy, I'm a has-been ," and then as they're getting in the car, Dalton says something along the lines of, "Nobody recognizes me anymore." But then the final scene of the movie is Sebring, of all people, recognizing Dalton in the driveway and telling him what a big fan he is - something that likely leads to Dalton getting cast in a Polanski movie down the line. Just so many little things like that I didn't catch the first time.

- Speaking of Sebring, in this version of reality, he totally gets Tate back in the end. Not by the end of the movie (though that sentiment is definitely there), but eventually, at some point in that world. When Steve McQueen is explaining the Polanski/Tate/Sebring dynamic to the woman at the Playboy Mansion, he/Tarantino makes a point of saying something along the lines of, "And when that assh*le f*cks it up, [Sebring] will be there waiting" - a nod, of course, to Polanski's eventual rape charge. Granted, with Tate alive, Polanski may have never committed rape, but the fact that he's someone who *would* is enough to assume that he likely will regardless.

- The location where Tate picks up the hitchhiker woman on the way to Westwood is maybe two minutes from the Bruin theater in real life (where she watches her movie). The Bruin is right off Wilshire there, and the hitchhiker was just a few blocks down on Wilshire. Meaningless, I know, and Tate even says she's not going far, but I usually drive that stretch of Wilshire multiple times a week, and it's literally just a few blocks. Kind of funny.

- I haven't read the entire thread, so I might have missed it, but has anyone mentioned the two Aggie "references"? Hullabaloo is the name of the show where Rick Dalton dances, and the name of the movie Tate is in/watches is of course The Wrecking Crew.
TCTTS
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ATM1876 said:

This was a great read (and a broader interpretation of what I was aiming for above):

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/once-a-time-hollywood-end-tarantino-1227953

In 100% agreement with your earlier post about Easy Breezy (and Dalton, to an extent) essentially being Tarantino. Having read your post before I saw the movie a second time, I listened carefully during that scene with the girl, and there's no way that's not intentional / how Tarantino feels. The entire movie is an exercise in relevancy, and about taking back a world that is being taken from you by what is both fresh and new, and also that which wants to extinguish your joy and even literally your life.
TCTTS
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The Debt said:

My biggest complaint is that the Polanski group really didnt have any role in the plot. They were just this separate kingdom minding their own business and could have been cut from the film and nothing of value would have been missed except Margo's sexiness. Maybe that's QT showing how insulated Hollywood is from the narrative. But their role is just there to remind people of the real historical event.

One could argue, QT has to piggyback that reality as a means to justify the ultraviolence against the home invaders. The audience brings their knowledge of the event into the theater and QT uses that preexisting knowledge to justify any pornographic gore against them.

To put it this way: 3 unknown home invaders come into a house, is it overkill to bash one of their faces into 27 different places until the brain comes out the skull? ....yea. but is it overkill if it's the Manson family? No. Is it overkill if the intruders were klansmen entering a black household? No.

The Manson family (and the existence of the Polanski house) gives QT the liberty to be as violent as he wants. This is gonna piss off a lot of yall: but its weak storytelling. This is in contrast to the excellent story telling of pitt/leo on screen. What motive did the film provide for th antagonist? What buildup? The incident at the ranch was entirely coincidence. "Senseless random violence" isnt compelling storytelling, its lazy. Every psychopath has some internal rationale that drives them, here we get 40 secs of dialogue "Charlie said" and "media teaches us to murder". As an audience we are just suppose to accept that as the "rising action".


Maybe I'm all wrong. The break-in isnt the narrative of the film, leo getting accepted into the A-list is the story. The breakin is just some peripheral event that gets him into the gate. The conversation with his neighbors is the true climax because his entire career hinges on their acceptance.

Did we watch the same movie?

"The Polanski group really didnt have any role in the plot."

Plot is nothing more than the mechanism by which the writer affects the characters. How the writer affects the characters is what leads to their change. And change is the point of all storytelling.

In the words of Christopher McQuarrie, "Plot is condiment, not a course."

Who cares what they had to do with the plot?

They had EVERYTHING to do with the main course; they had everything to do with our characters changing.

The Manson Family wasn't in a "separate kingdom." They were not only haunting the edges of the actual kingdom (Hollywood), they were slowly but surely trying to infest it, trying to rot it from the inside. Their opening scene is literally them arriving to Hollywood and then digging through the trash, pillaging. Their ultimate goal is to then try and kill the joy of cinema, manifested in Sharron Tate. They've already infested a part of Hollywood - Spahn Ranch - and in that sequence we see exactly what they're capable of; how bad things can get if the plague they represent goes unchecked. Now, they're coming for the whole shebang. They represent the "dirty hippies" mentioned time and again throughout the movie, and they infuse the narrative with a constant, underlying sense of dread that rears its head over and over and over again.

Only when Dalton and Booth finally decide they're not going to go gently into the good night - once Tarantino finally brings them to a moment of change and understanding; a realization that they can still be relevant - they're able to fend off the encroaching infestation, and figuratively "save" the joy of cinema.

Could all the dots have been connected more, and the plot have been more of a well-oiled machine? Sure. But I'd argue that it'd ultimately be a worse overall movie for it. In this instance, I'd sacrifice "plot" for the experience of what we got, all day long.
TCTTS
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This pretty much sums it up for me...

Brian Earl Spilner
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I'm definitely doing a third viewing before it leaves theaters.
42799862
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TCTTS
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veryfuller
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Quote:

The Manson Family wasn't in a "separate kingdom." They were not only haunting the edges of the actual kingdom (Hollywood), they were slowly but surely trying to infest it, trying to rot it from the inside. Their opening scene is literally them arriving to Hollywood and then digging through the trash, pillaging. Their ultimate goal is to then try and kill the joy of cinema, manifested in Sharron Tate. They've already infested a part of Hollywood - Spahn Ranch - and in that sequence we see exactly what they're capable of; how bad things can get if the plague they represent goes unchecked. Now, they're coming for the whole shebang. They represent the "dirty hippies" mentioned time and again throughout the movie, and they infuse the narrative with a constant, underlying sense of dread that rears its head over and over and over again.

Only when Dalton and Booth finally decide they're not going to go gently into the good night - once Tarantino finally brings them to a moment of change and understanding; a realization that they can still be relevant - they're able to fend off the encroaching infestation, and figuratively "save" the joy of cinema.

Could all the dots have been connected more, and the plot have been more of a well-oiled machine? Sure. But I'd argue that it'd ultimately be a worse overall movie for it. In this instance, I'd sacrifice "plot" for the experience of what we got, all day long.
See this is where the movie throws me. The message of the movie seems to ask the audience to ignore everything that is going on in our current political moment. I know it's not Tarantino's job to cater his films to our current time, but its like he is blissfully unaware that his film kinda argues a point that is in complete contrast to what mainstream Hollywood is arguing day in and out for the last 3 years.

I don't want to get into a political argument, I just think it felt like the movie wasn't aware of the message its actually communicating, or that its being intentionally dense and selective in what its ok to be nostalgic about. IDK if that makes sense.

Brian Earl Spilner
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Quote:

I know it's not Tarantino's job to cater his films to our current time, but its like he is blissfully unaware that his film kinda argues a point that is in complete contrast to what mainstream Hollywood is arguing day in and out for the last 3 years.
Can you explain further? I'm honestly not sure what you're referring ti.
TCTTS
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I don't quite track. To me, the politics of actors or Hollywood or whatever has nothing to do with a joy/love of cinema. I don't understand why those things not being presented as one and the same could be interpreted as contradictory. They're two completely separate things in my mind.
Wes97
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Not sure I follow this either. I am probably on the opposite side from some of the poster's above me when it comes to Hollywood and its infusion of politics in art, but I don't see what that has to do with this movie.

If anything, this movie shows the benefit of leaving out references to our current political culture and just making a good movie.
veryfuller
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I'm trying to explain without being overly specific or political because I don't really want to turn this thread into something it shouldn't be, so excuse my vagueness:

Let's just say there is a politician whose main argument for running is to return a country to its former glory (real or imagined). There are those who fall on either side, who believe the former glory was the best the country has been and we should return to that. There are those who think said former glory was imagined, and that things weren't really that great for people and we are looking at the past thru some rose colored lenses. Now the people who would argue the later, let's pretend a vocal contingent works in the film industry and sees it as part of their job to illuminate the experiences of people who were not doing so well in said former glory days.

NOW, there is a film about the former glory days of Hollywood and takes place in proximity to an event that ruined these glory days. And people are applauding the film for capturing the glory days so brilliantly and reminding everyone of the joy of this era.

Oddly enough, the era is the same era that said politician argues was the era of the country's glory days as well. AND the film is looking at the era thru rose colored lenses, ignoring or omitting a lot of those who were not doing so well in the era it is celebrating.

And finally, the film twists history so that the events that led to the end of the era, never happened. And who stopped them but two characters who refused to let the dirty hippies ruin a good thing. And everyone was happy!



Now, I am all for celebrating the joy of movie making, but it just seems that the actual story and way Tarantino frames everything is incredibly tone deaf to whats going on today. And, OK its a fairy tale instead of historical film, but then, why use real life events to prop up your story? He is using the tension of a real life tragedy to provide some stakes and tension in situations that wouldn't have them otherwise, only to flip that knowledge on the audience at the end.
Brian Earl Spilner
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I honestly think you're going several layers deeper than even Tarantino did.

Reminds me of this interview with QT, where the lady asked him if the violence in his movies is his critique on humanity. His response was great.

TCTTS
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Yeah, I hear you, and I get what you're saying, but I think I'd still refer you to Wes97's last sentence in his post immediately above.
veryfuller
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Yeah, that's fine if that isn't what his intent was. I am not arguing it was or wasn't. Its just how the movie hit ME. It felt like an argument for the glory days, not the joy of movies, IMO. It felt like he was celebrating movies for sure, LOTS of references and homages (too many IMO, but I digress), but the story itself was an argument to return to the way that era was. Like I said in a previous post, an alternate title could be "Make Hollywood Great Again".

veryfuller
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Sure, that would be ideal, but that isn't reality.

I remember being annoyed that The Dark Knight got slammed because people said it was pro-patriot act, Bush-era propaganda. I didn't really get that then, because I wasn't really paying attention, but its a valid critique I think. I don't think Nolan was going for that, and if it came out now, probably wouldn't be perceived that way. Movies are both of their moment and independent from them (because they go on). Maybe this will age better with me over-time, but it just felt like a weird choice considering whats going on, for me.
veryfuller
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ANYWAY. Thanks for humoring me everyone. Obviously I am in the minority in disliking the movie.

I do think Leo should get an Oscar nod. Pitt was good, but I am hoping he gets more to do in Ad Astra. He could go supporting here.
Wes97
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I understand the point you are trying to make now, but I disagree. It seems this is just the other side of the coin to those people who search every detail of a movie trying to find some hidden liberal point to get offended about. Sometimes the movie should just be looked at for what it is trying to say without inferring current political arguments in it. Not everything is political.

And nostalgia for some aspect of the past might be "small c" conservative but it is not automatically politically conservative. Plenty of aspects of liberalism infer some nostalgia for certain aspects of the past. Not every form of nostalgia automatically equals an endorsement of the dark ages or bringing back slavery. You can be nostalgic about some aspects of the past and still acknowledge some of the shortcomings in the past as well.

And now I have veered way off into politics on what should be an "entertainment" related discussion which is what I normally oppose, so I will drop this train of thought like a bad habit,,,
TCTTS
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Very well said.
Know Your Enemy
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Wes97 said:

I understand the point you are trying to make now, but I disagree. It seems this is just the other side of the coin to those people who search every detail of a movie trying to find some hidden liberal point to get offended about. Sometimes the movie should just be looked at for what it is trying to say without inferring current political arguments in it. Not everything is political.

And nostalgia for some aspect of the past might be "small c" conservative but it is not automatically politically conservative. Plenty of aspects of liberalism infer some nostalgia for certain aspects of the past. Not every form of nostalgia automatically equals an endorsement of the dark ages or bringing back slavery. You can be nostalgic about some aspects of the past and still acknowledge some of the shortcomings in the past as well.

And now I have veered way off into politics on what should be an "entertainment" related discussion which is what I normally oppose, so I will drop this train of thought like a bad habit,,,
You seem like a nice fellow. Maybe we should get together for a few beers sometime and chat
veryfuller
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Its not the nostalgia itself that I view as political, it really is the story itself and the message of the movie (which TCTTS outlined above). I was not offended by it, just didn't like it.
Wes97
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I rarely turn down beer. And I try to generally keep my politics contained to the relevant locations. Although not always successfully.

Then out spake brave Horatius, the Captain of the Gate:
To every man upon this earth death cometh soon or late.
And how can man die better than facing fearful odds,
For the ashes of his fathers, and the temples of his gods
Gomer95
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I just got the soundtrack too and can't quit listening to it. Very cool. And it makes it way more fun to mow an acre because that's about the time it takes to listen to the entire soundtrack LOL.
Brian Earl Spilner
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I thought Steve McQueen at the Playboy Mansion was a pretty brilliant way to dump exposition/backstory, but in an entertaining and somewhat organic fashion.
Brian Earl Spilner
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Brian Earl Spilner
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Also, one of the hardest laughs in the movie for me (and I know it's super random), is when Cliff is in the boat getting berated by his wife, and he pops a beer can open which splashes right on his goggles.
TCTTS
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So many great moments little like that. Another is when Cliff puts the beer can in the tool holster, right before he fixes the antenna.

My favorite random moment of the whole movie, though, is Rick's FBI commentary when he and Cliff are watching his episode. It's like Tarantino's version of a director commentary on a DVD. Just Rick, half drunk, half mumbling about Malibu, that one guy being a ***** assh*le, and then immediately following that up by saying the dead guy, though, was a "Real good guy." I was cracking up so much at all of that.
TCTTS
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Whoa, that was actually a real scene starring a young Burt Reynolds...

Jim01
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Man I really want to see this in the theatre a second time. It also makes me want to rewatch his entire catalog. And to get back to writing more. Just in general in love with cinema.
dave94
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TCTTS said:

Whoa, that was actually a real scene starring a young Burt Reynolds...




That's freaking badass
Brian Earl Spilner
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Completely forgot about James Marsden.

Hope his scenes are on the bluray.
Sex Panther
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Interesting, I just looked it up and he was going to play a young Burt Reynolds. And Burt Reynolds was supposed to be in the movie... Tim Roth was cut as well.
Sex Panther
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boogieman said:

Quote:

An alleged leak regarding Tarantino's upcoming Manson family heartwarmer(his first film based on true events) emerged on Reddit's Movies wing. User b1rdnest claims to have inside information on what's to come. According to the poster, the film will be modifying things from Tarantino's Kill Bill 3 script for use in this film. Here's the key juicy stuff, including casting talk involving Jennifer Lawrence and Brad Pitt.
Quote:

Brad Pitt: Tex Watson Jennifer Lawrence: Susan Atkins Margot Robbie: Sharon Tate Harvey Keitel is playing Manson as on old man, which aspects of the story are told through him.
[Young Manson is not featured]
The film will take place briefly before the murders begin and the twist will be that Sharon Tate survives and hunts down/murders the whole family.
It will have lots of references to The Fearless Vampire Killers which she stared in.
Tarantino gave up on Kill Bill 3 and converted elements to be adapted in this story.
It is heavily influenced by The Last House on the Left & Straw Dogs.
[And thanks for not just hating on me for a supposed leak. I was excited to share because this never happens to me. Again I CANT CONFIRM. It's just what I was told]

Interesting.

Link



lol at this
Brian Earl Spilner
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To be fair, it does sound like something he'd do.
 
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