Skip to Content

Quentin Tarantino is producing a ‘Django Unchained’ comic mashup with Zorro

Quentin Tarantino’s appearances in the news over the last few months have been a saga worthy of his own filmography. THR reported on Wednesday that the story of Django Unchained will continue in a new comic book series mashing up Django and Zorro. Tarantino and Matt Wagner (Mage, Grendel) will co-write the comic series and …

Read More about Quentin Tarantino is producing a ‘Django Unchained’ comic mashup with Zorro

Slavery in Cinema as Polar Opposites in ‘Django Unchained’ and ’12 Years a Slave’

Two films about slavery in the United States have been released barely a year apart. One is by a renegade American auteur starring American actors; the other, based on a memoir, brought to the screen by a British video artist and a cast led by Brits playing American. Despite their similar subject matter, they are …

Read More about Slavery in Cinema as Polar Opposites in ‘Django Unchained’ and ’12 Years a Slave’

A Feast For The Eyes: Famous Film Eateries

Locations in films are rarely the thing an average filmgoer remembers after watching a film; it’s always about the story, character and the lines they say that later form the proverbial ‘word of mouth.’ However, when you think of great confrontations, conversations and simple exchanges, they always take place in a nice public setting – …

Read More about A Feast For The Eyes: Famous Film Eateries

The western to smite all westerns, racism

Did the “Baghead” scene in Django Unchained (2012) feel at all familiar? It was total Mel Brooks. We’ve seen bumbling baddies arguing with one another in the desert before. Blazing Saddles (1974), one of the cinematic funnyman’s best, shot a hole in westerns and racism with one bullet. While the majority of Quentin Tarantino films …

Read More about The western to smite all westerns, racism

BAFTAs 2013: Who is going to win? – part 2

Now that we are nearing the big awards of the season, it is time to revisit the nominations and predictions for the 2013 BAFTAs.  Part 2 will cover the following categories: (see part one here) Best Film Best British Film Leading Actor Leading Actress Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress Best Director The EE BAFTA …

Read More about BAFTAs 2013: Who is going to win? – part 2

2012 and the Box Office: It Was A Very Good Year

I hate being wrong. Really hate it. The only thing I hate more than being wrong is publicly admitting I’m wrong. And, man, when it comes to how 2012 played out at the movies matched up against what I’d predicted in my end-of-2011 box office wrap-up, I couldn’t have been more wrong. “Want a prediction …

Read More about 2012 and the Box Office: It Was A Very Good Year

A Revved-Up Chick Flick

Death Proof Written by Quentin Tarantino Directed by Quentin Tarantino 2007, USA **Contains Spoilers*** Tarantino’s many skills set him apart from other auteurs working in the film industry today, but none of them dominate in his work as much as his ability to seamlessly weave his narratives through genre/sub-genre mash-ups. The Nouvelle Vague coolness and …

Read More about A Revved-Up Chick Flick

Django Chained: Tarantino and the American Slave

In just barely over a week since its Christmas release, Quentin Tarantino’s eighth feature film, Django Unchained, has exhaustively become a source of public controversy for its setting amongst southern, pre-Civil War plantations where the height of the black man’s plight in the United States was the accepted norm. Not the least of the film’s …

Read More about Django Chained: Tarantino and the American Slave

Staff List: The 40 Best Films of 2012

#10: The Cabin in the Woods (107 points) Written by Joss Whedon and Drew Goddard Directed by Drew Goddard USA, 2012 Like Scream, it’s a self-aware slasher film, but where Scream was happy simply to turn the genre’s bloody glove inside out and examine the stitching, The Cabin in the Woods has more complicated ambitions. If Scream is …

Read More about Staff List: The 40 Best Films of 2012

Essential Viewing for fans of Django Unchained’ Part 2: ‘The Mercenary’ / ‘Navajo Joe’ / ‘Legend of Nigger Charley’

December is Tarantino Month here at SOS, and in the week leading up our January month-long theme of westerns, I thought it would be best to whip up an article spotlighting some films that influenced Tarantino’s long awaited take on the western, Django Unchained. For my money, all of the films listed below are essential …

Read More about Essential Viewing for fans of Django Unchained’ Part 2: ‘The Mercenary’ / ‘Navajo Joe’ / ‘Legend of Nigger Charley’

Essential Viewing for fans of ‘Django Unchained’ Part 1: ‘Django’ / ‘Mandingo’ / ‘The Great Silence’

December is Tarantino Month here at SOS, and in the week leading up our January month-long theme of westerns, I thought it would be best to whip up an article spotlighting some films that influenced Tarantino’s long-awaited take on the western, Django Unchained. For my money, all of the films listed below are essential viewing …

Read More about Essential Viewing for fans of ‘Django Unchained’ Part 1: ‘Django’ / ‘Mandingo’ / ‘The Great Silence’

Tarantino’s new film ‘Django Unchained’ is a florid, entertaining Spaghetti Western

Django Unchained Directed by Quentin Tarantino Written by Quentin Tarantino USA, 2012 Quentin Tarantino wears his style on his sleeve. Homages, tributes, and callbacks to older films, forgotten performers, and oft-ignored genres are part and parcel of his filmography. But one element of his aesthetic has become more pronounced over the years: his fierce, almost …

Read More about Tarantino’s new film ‘Django Unchained’ is a florid, entertaining Spaghetti Western

Ricky D’s 50 Favourite Films of 2012 (Part Two)

  25: The Dark Knight Rises Directed by Christopher Nolan Screenplay by Jonathan Nolan and Christopher Nolan 2012, USA The Dark Knight Rises feels as if it was made up of two equal halves, with the most critical moment of the film breaking the movie in half, almost literally. While the second half may have …

Read More about Ricky D’s 50 Favourite Films of 2012 (Part Two)

Ricky D’s 50 Favourite Films of 2012 (Part One)

2012 wasn’t a bad year for movies. It was actually a great year. The problem is, the movies we were most anticipating, specifically the Hollywood blockbusters like Prometheus and The Hobbit, didn’t live up to our expectations. With that said I still managed to make a list of 50 films I loved. Maybe I just …

Read More about Ricky D’s 50 Favourite Films of 2012 (Part One)

Kill Bill: The five manners of fighting in Tarantino’s kung fu opus

If Tarantino’s films of the 1990s announced the writer-director’s as a phenom for writing formidably snappy dialogue that enhanced characterization, his films of the 00s, while continuing to demonstrate the aforementioned writing prowess, suggest that he is equally adept at staging and filming wonderful action scenes, be they brawls, gun fights or contests  of martial …

Read More about Kill Bill: The five manners of fighting in Tarantino’s kung fu opus

Scorsese & Tarantino: Whose Streets Are Meaner?

I’ve got Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino on my mind these days.  It’s a product of the end-of-year hurrahs for Scorsese’s Hugo.  The film goes into the Academy Award ceremonies with 11 Oscar nominations – the most of any film this year – including a Best Director nod for Scorsese.  Win or lose, Marty’s on …

Read More about Scorsese & Tarantino: Whose Streets Are Meaner?

‘Django Unchained’ a fitfully engaging ahistorical romp that fails to earn its runtime

Django Unchained Written by Quentin Tarantino Directed by Quentin Tarantino USA, 2012 Has Quentin Tarantino’s work to date actually been…restrained? It’s not a descriptor often thrown at the populist auteur, whose frequently digressionary writing style and dual penchants for graphic violence and meta-textual indulgences has made him one of the most easily distinguished popular filmmakers …

Read More about ‘Django Unchained’ a fitfully engaging ahistorical romp that fails to earn its runtime

“The Man From Hollywood”: Tarantino’s Roundabout Hitchcock Homage

“The Man from Hollywood” 1995 Written and Directed by Quentin Tarantino Following Pulp Fiction and an episode of television’s ER, Tarantino decided to handle some light fare by directing the final short in the anthology film Four Rooms. In “The Man from Hollywood” Ted the bellboy (Tim Roth) arrives at the penthouse with a cart …

Read More about “The Man From Hollywood”: Tarantino’s Roundabout Hitchcock Homage

‘Jackie Brown’: The joy of great character development

There is a lot to be said about writer-director Quentin Tarantino’s success as a filmmaker. His films have all been met with some degree of critical appreciation and have all made some decent money at the box office. What’s more, and this might be his true legacy, his projects have sparked the imaginations of fellow …

Read More about ‘Jackie Brown’: The joy of great character development

Quentin Tarantino’s Hall of Fame

Quentin Tarantino is credited for his homages to lesser-known cinematic gems.  So much so, he has his own film festival in Austin, Texas.  His films have helped revitalise the genres and styles amongst the hidden depths of world cinema but have also helped the careers of various actors and actresses, propelling them to the public …

Read More about Quentin Tarantino’s Hall of Fame