Born in Knoxville, Tennessee on March 27, 1963 to an Italian
father and a mother of Irish and Cherokee extraction, Quentin
Jerome Tarantino took a most unorthodox approach to showbiz. He
dropped out of high school at 15 to pursue moviemaking but it
would take some time to realize that dream. The closest he got
to Hollywood for years was a minimum-wage gig as a clerk at a
video rental store in L.A. where he became known for making
recommendations to appreciative customers.
He finally began his meteoric rise in 1992 with the release of
Reservoir Dogs, following-up that impressive directorial debut a
couple of years later with Pulp Fiction, the seven-time Academy
Award-nominee for which he won an Oscar in the Best Original
Screenplay category. Since then, his storybook career has
included such critically-acclaimed films as Jackie Brown, Kill
Bill 1 & 2, and a couple of collaborations with Robert
Rodriguez, Sin City and Grindhouse.
Here, Quentin talks about his new film, Inglourious Basterds,
which is based upon a screenplay he started writing over a
decade ago. The World War II action flick stars Brad Pitt as a
Lieutenant in the U.S. Army who leads a squad of Jewish soldiers
on a mission behind enemy lines in France to go hunting for
Nazis.
Quentin Tarantino
-
The “Inglourious Basterds” Interview
with Kam Williams
Kam Williams (KW): Hi Quentin, thanks for the time. I really
appreciate it.
Quentin Tarantino (QT): Oh, it's my pleasure, I was psyched to do
this especially after I read some of the comments you made after
reading the script. It was a real phantasmagorical collection of
references.
KW: That was an interesting experience. This is my first time
reading a script instead of seeing the movie before conducting
an interview.
QT: Oh, that's cool.
KW: How does it feel to have finished Inglourious Basterds,
finally, given that you've been working on it for over a decade?
QT: It's a little surreal, to tell you the truth, after having
the project in my mind for such a long time. I had scenes
written for it but for years it was always just kind of out
there. And at one point I even considered putting it aside,
thinking maybe I'd grown out of it or moved past it. But then I
realized that I'd invested too much into it, and that even if I
never made the movie, I at least had to finish writing it just
so I could get this mountain out of the way. One thing that's
different though is that opposed to thinking about it as this
long-gestating piece that was written over years and years, the
truth is I only came up with a lot of the characters and the
first two chapters of the final script way back when. Otherwise,
it has a whole different storyline. What kept preventing me from
making the movie earlier was that it was just too big and too
involved, almost like a mini-series. And just before I turned it
into a mini-series, I decided to take one more crack at trying
to make it as a movie. That's when I came up with a new
storyline about the premiere of a German propaganda film which I
completed about a year ago in just seven months. As a matter of
fact, on the cover page of your copy of the original script you
can see that I literally put the pen down on July 2nd, 2008. So,
the final draft was a weird combination of this long-gestating
project and something I had never worked at with more intense
momentum.
KW: Since Brad Pitt's character, Aldo, is from Tennessee and
part-Cherokee, like yourself, I was wondering whether he was
modeled on you?
QT: He's definitely modeled after me. I probably would've wanted
to play the character, if I had finished writing the script way
back when, in the Nineties. But now, I don't want to act at all.
KW: While reading the script, some of the films it reminded me
of in different spots included The Train, Von Ryan's Express,
The Guns of Navarone, The Bridge on the River Kwai, Black Book,
Zabriskie Point, The Wizard of Oz, The Big Lebowski and
Defiance.
QT: That's a neat collection, although I never saw Defiance. I'd
be interested in hearing how you connect the dots.
KW: Defiance is included because of the theme of Jews fighting
back. Why did you decide to have this all-Jewish unit led by a
gentile from the South?
QT: That's an interesting question. Basically, Aldo's this
character I've had in my mind for a very, very long time. So, in
a way he came before the Basterds. Furthermore, it's kind of a
two-way proposition, because Aldo had been fighting racism in
the South before the war. And if he survives the war, he's going
to continue fighting the Klan in the Fifties, with his own
version of the Basterds in the Tennessee Hills. Also, the fact
that he's part Native American is significant, because what he's
doing against the Nazi's is similar to the Apache resistance,
the ambushing of soldiers, desecrating their bodies and leaving
them there for other Germans to find. Aldo's idea is to find
Jewish soldiers because he should be able to motivate them more
easily because they are essentially warriors in a holy war
against an enemy that's trying to wipe their race off the face
of the Earth.
KW: You have a black character named Marcel [played by Jacky Ido]
who works as the projectionist in a movie theater. I'd have
guessed that all the blacks in occupied France had been carted
off to Concentration camps by the Nazis.
QT:
No they weren’t. The relationship between black people and
Nazi Germany was very interesting. Part of the reason is that
there were so few blacks in Europe that there wasn't a ’Black
Problem’ per se, the way there was a ’Jewish Problem.’ So, black
people weren’t rounded up in Nazi occupied France. you'd have to
keep a low profile, to be sure, but having said that, you'd
still enjoy more freedoms there than on the streets of Chicago
at the same time period. And far more freedoms than in a state
like Alabama. For instance, you could walk into a restaurant in
Paris and sit down and order something. The odd irony in all
this is that while there's no mistaking where Hitler was coming
from as far as blacks were concerned, after all, he made that
very clear in Mein Kampf, the average German soldier did not
feel the same way about black people. In fact, they were
absolutely appalled whenever they witnessed the racism exhibited
by white American soldiers towards their fellow black soldiers.
They couldn't fathom it, because they believed the hype about
America being the land of the free and the home of the brave.
It's equally unfathomable that we went to Europe to fight racial
oppression with a segregated army. A wonderful paper could be
written about all this, and maybe I'll do that one of these
days.
KW: Do you make a cameo appearance in this film, like you have
in a lot of your movies?
QT: Not really. I think you can hear my voice a little bit in
one of the propaganda movies. [Chuckles]
KW: Why did you spell ’Basterds' with an ’E’ in the title?
QT: I wasn't trying to be coy or anything, but it was just an
artistic stroke.
KW: How did you feel when the picture was so well received at
Cannes, where you got an 11-minute ovation?
QT: Yeah, we got the standing ovation of the Festival. That was
really exciting and a lot of fun kind of dropping it on the
world there. And I felt a sense of satisfaction because we had
worked hard to get the picture finished in time for Cannes.
KW: Laz Lyles is curious about why you chose a lot of relatively
unknown actors for this picture?
QT: Since I was casting country-appropriate, every actor had to be from the place they were representing, and they had to be able to speak the appropriate language as well. In other words, it wasn't enough that you could speak German, you had to be German. Oddly enough, in Germany, this is considered an all-star cast.
KW: Laz also asks, how did director Eli Roth get involved with
the project as an actor?
QT: Eli's a really good friend of mine, and I've always known
that he's a really fun performer on screen. Plus, he looks like
his character, the Bear Jew, and he does an impeccable Boston
accent.
KW: Nick Antoine says you're already one of the greatest
directors of all time, so where do you go from here? What's the
next mountain for you to climb?
QT: Oh, that's a really good question. I don't really know.
Usually, when I finish making a movie, I have to pause to
contemplate life a little, and then I see where to go. It's not
like I'm shopping for scripts. I generally have to start from
scratch every time. However, I could go with Kill BiIl 3. Or I
could do a prequel to this movie, because I have half of it
written. It's actually a story about the Basterds with a bunch
of black troops. The truth is that I don't really know what's
next, but I really like being in that square one position.
KW: How about making another homage to either martial arts or
blaxploitation flicks?
QT: Well, I gotta say that I do hear a bit off a calling to do
another crime picture. Maybe one set in the Seventies. All these
other people are doing it, and to me, they never get it right.
Like American Gangster. Were there any black people at all
involved making that movie?
KW: Nick also asks, what is your opinion of the direction the
film industry seems to be headed?
QT: I don't want to sound like one of those guys who's always
bemoaning the business today and thinking about how much better
it was before. But as my movie gets ready to go out into the
marketplace, I feel very lucky that I'm still a commercial
director and that my movies still play mainstream and open in
3,000 theaters, because my movies always seem so different from
everything else playing in the multiplexes. As long as there's a
place for people like me and Michael Mann to exhibit our work,
then I'm all for it.
KW: Finally, Nick asks, how would you say the internet has
influence film?
QT: What the internet has done is destroy film criticism. I
would never have guessed ten years ago that the profession of
film criticism would be going the way of the dodo bird.
KW: Who's your favorite film critic? Let me guess: the late
Pauline Kael.
QT: For sure. She's just about my favorite writer.
KW: And who's your favorite director, Howard Hawks?
QT: I love Howard Hawks, but I would probably go with Sergio
Leone.
KW: Keith Kremer asks, if you met someone unfamiliar with your
work who wanted to watch just one of your movies, which one
would you suggest?
QT: That's an interesting question’ Umm’ I would probably cater
to that person's personality. So, if they seemed like more of a
Kill Bill person, I'd show them, Kill Bill. If I wanted someone
to get to know me though, I would have to start with Reservoir
Dogs.
KW: Bi-continental attorney Bernadette Beekman told me that she
was in Cannes for the release of Reservoir Dogs, and she was
wondering, what was the best time you ever had at the festival?
QT: Well, I've had a lot of good times in Cannes, but when I won
the Palme d’Or for Pulp Fiction would have to be the best.
KW: Director
Hisani Dubose wanted to know what you shoot on now.
She points out that you shot part of Pulp Fiction on High 8.
She's curious about whether you're still using film or if you've
gone to High Definition video
QT: I've never used High Definition video, never, ever, ever,
ever, ever. And I never will. I can't stand that crap.
KW: Larry Greenberg says you started out at 15 and have been
immersed in the
industry, in one way or another, your whole life. He asks, do
you think a person
coming to the industry later in life still has a chance for
success at acting or directing?
QT: It can be difficult to get into directing at a later age.
However, look at Courtney Hunt, the woman who won the Grand Jury
Prize at Sundance last year for Frozen River [at the age of 43].
So, if you can raise the money on your own, you can direct a
movie at any age. As far as acting is concerned, it's advisable
to get started when you're younger, but there are plenty of
actors who started their careers in their late thirties or early
forties.
KW: Jackie Schatz asks, how do you think of Hitler?
QT: In a word, despicable!
KW: Marcia Evans asks, will you ever settle down and have a
family?
QT: I've thought about that. Look, I went through baby fever,
for sure, about five or six years ago, but I kind of got over
it. Up until now, I've wanted my movies to be the most important
thing in my life. I haven't wanted to let anything distract me
from that. And I think I still feel the same way right now.
KW: Marcia may be a bit presumptuous here, but she says she
knows you have a foot fetish. And she asks if there's another
part of the anatomy that you have a fetish about?
QT: I appreciate the female foot, but I've never said that I
have a foot fetish. But I am a lower track guy. I like legs' I
like booties' [Laughs] Let's just say, I have a black male
sexuality.
KW: Is there any question no one ever asks you, that you wish
someone would?
QT: No, there isn't one that's just been hanging out there, that
I say to myself, why don't they ask this?
KW: The
Tasha Smith
question: Are you ever afraid?
QT: [Hesitates] Very rarely would I use the word ’afraid.’ I
feel trepidation. I get nervous, particularly when I'm about to
shoot a big cinematic sequence that absolutely has got to work
or else why bother. Going into those scenes, I have trepidation,
because it's mine to mess up.
KW: The
Columbus Short
question: Are you happy?
QT: Oh, I'm very happy.
KW: Teri Emerson would like to know, when was the last time you
had a good laugh?
QT: Oh, I laugh all the time. I'm an easy laugher. You can find
me on any set, because I'm always laughing.
by Judith Mayne This is the first full-length study of the woman who has always been the exception in Hollywood film history-the one woman who succeeded as a director, in a career that spanned three decades. |
KW: The bookworm Troy Johnson question: What was the last book you read?
QT: I'm a cinemaphile, so I read a lot of cinema books. The last one I read was a biography about the director Dorothy Arzner.
KW: What was the biggest obstacle you had to overcome?
QT: Poverty, to a great degree. I was very poor at the age of 16
and 17.
KW: Working in the video store?
QT: No, those were the good days. But even then, while working
at the video store for five years, I was a high school dropout
making minimum wage. And that's what I existed on for what
seemed like forever. We would dream about one day getting a
raise to the wonderful world of $8 an hour. So, to overcome that
minimum-wage kid white underclass to actually be responsible for
millions of dollars when it comes to making a movie was a very
big deal.
KW: What advice do you have for anyone who wants to follow in
your footsteps?
QT: If you want to be a filmmaker, you have to love it. If you
love cinema as much as I do, and not many people do, and if you
are focused and actually have something to offer, you will get
somewhere with it. And when it comes to being a writer, just
write. Writing is actually the easiest thing to get started at.
But don't write what you think people want to read. Find your
voice and write about what's in your heart.
KW: What's your favorite dish to cook?
QT: That's a good question, actually. I'd have to say barbecuing
a steak. It's one dish I do it really well, and it's very
satisfying. I can make other things, but I don't like to cook
just for myself. Barbecuing a steak is always good.
KW: Well, thanks again for the interview Quentin. Best of luck
with Inglourious Basterds and I look forward to speaking with
you again down the line.
QT: Hey, I look forward to it Kam. This was a really great
conversation.
_________________________________________
A trailer for Inglourious Basterds:
Related Links
Quentin Tarantino - “Django Unchained” Interview (2012)