A few days ago we learned: Tarantino was completely canceling the movie ‘Cinema Critic’, which would be the tenth movie of his career and the last as the director had promised for years. The project started as a chronicle of the profession. a California critic who wrote for low-end magazines in the seventiesbut it eventually became a kind of metafiction starring ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ stuntman Cliff Booth.
Now, The Hollywood Reporter (the same media that reported that Tarantino had definitely stopped writing the script) is revealing a few additional details about the disappointing film, and it’s inevitable that eyebrows will be raised at some of the decisions made by the director of ‘Reservoir Dogs’. ‘. Apparently, for example, Tarantino wanted the movie to create some kind of metadata array that included all of his previous movies.
This means many of the actors from their early films return, playing themselves; For example, the actors who give life to the characters in these films will exist in the ‘Film Critic’ world, since almost their entire filmography fits. Of course, one way or another, in the seventies. Some They would enter a cinema where they could interact with the younger version of Tarantino At 16, he was actually an usher at a porn theater at that age.
old acquaintances
Rumor has it that the film would bring back some of the actors who worked with Tarantino, such as John Travolta, Jamie Foxx, and Margot Robbie (except Brad Pitt, of course). The wildest speculations mentioned Tom Cruise, but different sources denied this. A possible newcomer community Tarantique would be Olivia Wilde, who met the director this year, and according to some sources, she would give life to the cinema critic legend Pauline Kael.
Tarantino is no stranger to canceling movies: An R-rated ‘Star Trek’ movie prompted him to unthinkably back out with Paramount, a hypothetical ‘Kill Bill: Volume 3.’ cross over Django and Zorro… According to an experienced agent who knows Tarantino well, “he wrote many scripts and threw them away”, i.e. This comeback isn’t 100 percent unexpected for his last movie.. There’s no telling what he’ll do now.
What’s certain is that it will do so with Sony, which was very pleased with the performance of ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ ($377.4 million worldwide). According to ‘The Hollywood Reporter’, this is what makes Sony not worry about the director’s fear: It’s part of the process. It is a process that we need to sit down and think about.
Title | sony
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