Quentin Tarantino
Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill Vol 1 & Reservoir Dogs
I’ve always enjoyed Quentin Tarantio movies. Maybe it’s the actors, or the way the films are shot, the stories he tells or even the eccentricity of most of his films. There are many ways you can identify a Tarantio movie. First, the actors. Quentin Tarantino tends to use the same actors in a good amount of his films. Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth & Michael Madsen just to name a few. Many of his films involve multiple scenes in cars. Pulp fiction is full of them, Jackie Brown and Reservoir Dogs as well. The easiest way for me to distinguish a Tarantino film from another director would be the way it’s shot. He uses long tracking …show more content…
So he takes the journey back to his apartment to retrieve the watch. The shot follows him as he walks through the alley, through an empty field and he looks over to make sure the coast is clear at his apartment. Then it continues to track him into his apartment before dialogue resumes. This is over a 2 minute period that the shot is tracking him. The same long tracking shot is demonstrated in Kill Bill when the shot tracks Uma Thurman to the restroom, transitions to another actor then picks her back up and in the restroom. Again, there is almost 2 minutes of this type of shot. Another aspect that would illustrate to me that I was watching a Tarantino movie would be the POV and God-eye shots. There are tons of POV shots in his movies and several God-eye …show more content…
Maybe it’s the actors, or the way the films are shot, the stories he tells or even the eccentricity of most of his films. There are many ways you can identify a Tarantio movie. First, the actors. Quentin Tarantino tends to use the same actors in a good amount of his films. Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth & Michael Madsen just to name a few. Many of his films involve multiple scenes in cars. Pulp fiction is full of them, Jackie Brown and Reservoir Dogs as well. The easiest way for me to distinguish a Tarantino film from another director would be the way it’s shot. He uses long tracking shots, God-eye shots, POV shots and lots of close ups in Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill and Reservoir