Left, the cover of Quentin Tarantino's first nonfiction book, "Cinema Speculation." (Courtesy Harper Collins) Right, Quentin Tarantino attends the close encounter red carpet during the 16th Rome Film ...
A carrot-topped boy and a girl with long blond tresses recall their friend Daisy and her entourage: "Her three fat cats/ we liked to stroke/ Her raven with its/ awful croak/ Her pig that almost/ never ...
Quentin Tarantino is as much of a critic as he is a filmmaker. Over the years, the Academy Award winner has discussed and given his opinions on several of his favorite films. But there was one film, ...
Movies I Watched Top Gun: Maverick For The First Time, And I Did Not Love It As Much As Others Movies I Know Tarantino Wants To Make Ten Movies, But If Once Upon A Time...In Hollywood Was His Last ...
Sebastian Peris is a Montreal-based film buff, comic book geek, political junkie, and nature photography hobbyist. He is also a Media Studies graduate and former writer for Heroic Hollywood. He has ...
Action Movies Legendary director Steven Spielberg praises Leonardo DiCaprio's new "bizarre" action thriller at early screening: "What an insane movie, oh my God" Musicals Quentin Tarantino begins his ...
Quentin Tarantino is keeping busy as he practices social distancing. The famed director, 57, owns the New Beverly Cinema, an independent movie theater in Los Angeles with a rich history that he bought ...
Quentin Tarantino‘s characters are often astonished to find themselves in his intricate universe of references. That’s certainly true of Django (Jamie Foxx), a black slave in the antebellum South ...
Marco Vito Oddo is a writer, journalist, and amateur game designer. Passionate about superhero comic books, horror films, and indie games, he formally worked as a Senior Writer for Collider. When he's ...
Et voilà, The Second Act, a bubbly apéritif to open this year’s Cannes Film Festival, and the latest bit of mischief from Quentin Dupieux, the Loki of the French cinematic universe. Dupieux turns out ...
The irreverent director of 'Wrong' delivers a short-and-sweet satire about how audiences engage with art they don't like, and what might happen if one dissatisfied customer took matters into his own ...