Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent
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Quentin Tarantino, a film-maker who believes that the camera was invented to portray violence, made a scathing attack on film music composers yesterday, saying that he would never trust any of them with his films.
The director of some of Hollywood's most gory films said: “Music is so important. The idea of paying a guy and showing him your movie at the end. Who the f*** is this guy [who's] going to s**t on my movie?”
He was speaking at the Cannes Film Festival where he followed Martin Scorsese and Sydney Pollack, among others, in being invited to give a masterclass in film-making.
Such is his following that 1,200 people came to hear him speak at a hysterical, break-neck speed interrupted only by what one observer described as a manic laugh. His language was peppered with four-letter words, just like his fictional characters.
Tarantino, who began his career in a video rental shop, said that he preferred to draw on existing music: “I have one of the best soundtrack collections in America.” That, he said, was how he started “filming in my mind when I was a little boy”. Listening to the soundtracks, he would replay scenes in his head, “just pacing around the room”.
He described Scorsese as among his major influences.
Tarantino was clearly preaching to the converted. The cheers and applause from an audience made up of critics and film-makers could not have been more vigorous and appreciative.
It was nothing less than a hero's welcome, even though his last film, Death Proof - an homage to sleazy 1970s B-movies featuring fast cars, guns and under-dressed babes - was largely panned by the critics.
The Observer dismissed the horror-comic splatterfest as “a tedious, meaninglessly anachronistic project”, while The Daily Telegraph observed: “The recent consensus suggests that he has lost the plot. His sixth film, Death Proof - after his two exhausting Kill Bills - confirms that he's lost rather more: his ear for dialogue, a gift for quirky characterisation, almost everything that once gave his work an enjoyable zest.”
But his reputation rests on films such as Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 1994. Ever since, he has remained a favourite son of the festival which he, in turn, describes as cinema's Mount Olympus.
Asked to give advice to budding film-makers, he urged them just to have a go at making a film - “that's the best film school you can have”. That was far better, he said, than “going to classes and begging to use their crappy equipment”. That was how he did it, he told them.
He also criticised computer-generated imagery, saying that it detracted from the thrill of real-life stunts.
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Yep hes def heard of him. He used Hermmanns theme from Twisted Nerve in Kill Bill. Hence the whole point of his argument that using 1 composer for an entire score for a movie doesnt work for him.
Pete, MA,
This report doesn't give enough context of what he said for me to feel informed. For the kind of films Tarantino makes and with his style, orchestral or other hired-gun type music largely wouldn't work anyway. Each person needs to make the soundtrack choice that will best suit their particular film.
Wade, Sydney, Australia
i'm a hollywood film composer, and i'd agree with the vast majority of what QT said. most directors and producers are totally clueless when it comes to music, that's why they hire morons to score their films. look for real artists, they're all you'll ever need to make a film, for any department.
matt milne, aberdeen, uk
What on earth does QT know about music? John Williams and Howard Shore, pretty easy targets, are presumably the straw men that he's placed up for knocking down. Could it be that he's self-conscious about his cluelessness about how music can enhance a film? Has he ever even HEARD of Bernard Herrmann?
Pablo Hernandez, Kansas City, USA
where is this nonsense coming from? pulp fiction , reservoir dogs and even kill bill are just as memorable for the characters and dialogues.
I will take the rough-hewn quirky genius of Tarantino over the constipated, Minghella-like British crap anytime.
Rajiv M, Hyderabad, India
Yes, Death Proof wasn't universally panned at all. I hope it were, since it is a terrible film -- much like the quotes would indicate.
Slobodan Chutzpah, Helsinki,
Death Proof panned by the critics? Grind House gets a 77 on metacritic and of the two films, Death Proof was by far the better reviewed. Get your facts straight.
jason, OKC, USA
Asking Quentin Tarantino to teach a masterclass is like asking Helen Keller to teach opera.
John Smith, Phoenix,
Hurray!
someone who gets as annoyed as I do about the musical orgasms inserted into every Hollywood film. All that orchestral surging and sentimental violin stuff....
cat, Marseille, France
I've got a lot to respond to this journalist about:
You mention that Death Proof was largely panned by the critics... but which critics? In the United States Death Proof and Grindhouse as a whole received very good reviews. It was the mainstream audience that gave it the thumbs down.
Michael Giammarino, Spring Hill, USA
For a movie emulating cult films, should it be surprising that the Death Proof was bound to be popular solely to a cult audience?
This journalist cites two critical pans of Death Proof but neglects to mention how Cahiers du Cinema ranked it #2 of the ten best films of 2007.
Michael Giammarino, Spring Hill, USA