Quentin Tarantino has revealed that he plans to film a series, which he will have eight chaptersover the next year, as released today by US media.
the site of Variety said the famous director of pulp Fiction broke the news at an event in New York, where he presented his new book, film speculation, although he gave almost no details about the project.
What is known is that Tarantino has just closed a deal with Netflix of a remake of his film The 8 most hated, but in serial version. The background to his close encounters with television was in episodes of the series based on his film -con Roberto Rodriguez- From dusk to dawnin a couple of chapters of CSI extension in 2005, and one episode he shot for Emergency rooms, in 1995, as well as playing a character in a double chapter of Alias.
Another project he was involved in was that of a series of stars Trekkingalthough after agreeing with JJ Abrams, he maintained he was “far” from it.
The last film he directed was Once upon a time… in Hollywoodin 2019. Currently, he was on the trail for a third installment of kill Billalthough Uma Thurman, the protagonist, said she did not see that the new film in the saga would be made “in the short term”.
According to Espinof the director shared that he wrote a play before it was completed Once upon a time… in Hollywood. He also stated that he was made an offer to do a review of the reboot of spearsince 2000, with Samuel L. Jacksonbut he declined the offer.
The 7 perfect movies
Quentin Tarantino listed the seven movies who believes they are perfect or “impregnable”. Among them, the director included horror, comedy and science fiction titles.
The brilliant director made the commentary in his book Film speculationnow available from HarperCollins Publishers.
He started by quoting The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, from 1974, one of Hollywood’s few “perfect” films, he stressed. She then revealed the other films that fall into her top seven: Shark (1975), The exorcist (1973), Annie Hall: Two Strange Lovers (1977), young frankenstein (1974) and Back to the Future (1985).
Then he thought a little more and added another name to the list, choosing the western of sam peckinpah since 1969 The Wild Bunch (in Argentina known as the wild gang). The director added that it wasn’t technically a “perfect” film, but it was “so impregnable” that it had to be on the list.
Tarantino has decided to argue his personal tastes, implying that, in fact, there is nothing written about tastes: “Look, when you say, in quotes, perfect movies, you are talking about the individual decisions of any person. But also trying to take into account all the aesthetics… The perfect films cross all the aesthetics in one way or another.”
And about your best film, what did you say? “If you asked me a year ago, I could tell you kill Bill, and in another it might say something else. But now I really believe it Once upon a time… in Hollywood It’s my best film.”
POS
Source: Clarin