Inglourious Basterds

Film

War films

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>2/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Tue Aug 18 2009

You’ve got to admire the sheer, infectious force of Quentin Tarantino’s personality. Is there any other popular American director, who, like Tarantino, is constantly ranting and raving about cinema’s glorious past and giving young filmgoers reason to extend their DVD library back beyond ‘Star Wars’? Even the name of his new film is fondly stolen from a little known Italian movie of the 1970s. It’s only when you turn to Tarantino’s own films that things get more tricky. For the sad truth is that Tarantino, like cheap wine, just isn’t improving with age.

Which is an awkward reality because Tarantino obviously wants to put away childish things with this new film. Not only does Brad Pitt close the film with the self-regarding line ‘This may well be my masterpiece’, but ‘Inglourious Basterds’ is a little more restrained and a little more quiet than films like ‘Death Proof’ and ‘Kill Bill’.

I say ‘a little’ because much of the film is not quiet at all: when the music comes, it’s loud; when the deaths occur, they’re gruesome, even sadistic; and when the plot kicks in, it’s pure, wild fantasy.

The film moves liberally between French, German and English dialogue and takes us through five chapters. First, in 1941, we see a Nazi, Colonel Hans Landa (played by Austrian Christoph Waltz), known as ‘The Jew Hunter’, discover and kill a Jewish family in France; only the youngest daughter gets away.

Then we’re introduced to the ‘basterds’, a gang of eight Jewish-American soldiers who, while deep undercover, roam Nazi-occupied France, murdering German soldiers and collecting their scalps. They’re led by a Tennessee goodtime boy, played by Pitt, but oddly they’re not on screen much. Pitt is lively but he disappears for a long time and is upstaged by Waltz, who gives a teasing turn of sly comedy and cruel charm. His scenes are the film’s best.

For the film’s final chapters, we leap to Paris in 1944, where the two stories collide. The girl who fled the Nazis, Shosanna Dreyfus (Mélanie Laurent) is now running a cinema (of course) which plays films by Riefenstahl and Pabst. A Nazi private, Frederick (Daniel Brühl), takes a shine to her. It turns out that his gun-toting heroics are being immortalised in a film produced by Goebbels, who decides that Shosanna’s cinema is perfect for the premiere. Shosanna and the ‘basterds’ decide that the screening is their chance to strike.

This might be a period movie, but still we clock Tarantino’s signature style – the extended, know-it-all dialogue, the tricky gunplay, the pop-cultural nods. There’s even a Mexican stand-off à la ‘Reservoir Dogs’ and the obligatory ‘nigger’ reference, this time in French. But this lacks the stylistic pizzazz of Tarantino’s best, and by putting more emphasis than usual on the chatter it makes it more obvious that the talk often lacks wit and verve.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Tarantino takes the history of cinema more seriously than the history of Europe. References to films abound: Michael Fassbender’s British spy (who has an amusing, if silly, ‘Dr Strangelove’-like scene with a superior played by Mike Myers) used to be a critic and regurgitates what sounds like a Wikipedia entry on German film, while another character wonders whether he prefers Chaplin or the French silent actor Max Linder.

What’s not clear is what Tarantino wants to achieve: ‘Inglourious Basterds’ is an immature work that doesn’t know whether it’s a pastiche, a spoof, a counterfactual drama, a revenge tragedy or a character comedy. How can we, within a space of minutes, feel adult sympathy for a hunted Jewish family and then childish glee when a Nazi’s skull is crushed with a baseball bat? The one cancels out the other.

But perhaps the biggest faux pas is introducing real historical characters. Tarantino’s inventions are big enough – not least Waltz’s terrific ‘movie’ Nazi – so why does he have to court implausibility by dragging in a loony Hitler (Martin Wuttke, nothing special) and introducing Goebbels? You might imagine, too, that this film was written in the ’60s: Tarantino seems blithely uninterested in more than 60 years of slow reconciliation between Europe and its past.

‘Subtle’ is not a word in Tarantino's lexicon. At the film’s heart is a fatal attempt to conflate fact with fiction and a celebration of vengeance that’s misplaced and embarrassing. Loyal fans expecting a familiar patchwork of Tarantino tics and quirks – ‘Pulp History’ or ‘Kill Hitler’ – might not be disappointed. Those expecting anything approaching progress, cinematically or ideologically, probably will be.

Cinemas showing Inglourious Basterds

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Prince Charles Cinema

7 Leicester Place, London, WC2H 7BP Show map/details

  • Address:

    Prince Charles Cinema 7 Leicester Place
    London
    WC2H 7BP

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  • Mon May 27:

    • 17:20
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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (61 ratings)
  • I really should have read timeouts review, it would have saved me the price of the tickets. Left after an hour, could not stand it any longer.

    Peter Wed Sep 16 2009
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • I thoroughly enjoyed this latest slice of Tarantino-pulp. It's simply a revenge story that pokes fun at what was a ridiculous collection of people: the nazis. The campest depiction of Hitler that I've seen since the original Producers movie. Great performances, great plot, great soundtrack, and a very satisfying ending, depending upon your perspective! Go see it.

    DV Tue Sep 15 2009
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • This film, as usual with a Tarantino film, was just fantastic. The best film I've seen at the cinema in a very long time, it came close to Pulp Fiction in my estimations. This review has some points but it is general far too negative and just wrong. Inglourious Basterds is an amazing film, clever, funny, and emotionally manipulative (in a good way!) and I came out of the showing beaming.

    Rose Mon Sep 14 2009
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • A fabulous film. And Waltz and Tarantino have created Cinema's best ever Nazi. Pitt good too but couldn't understand a lot of what he said. I don't know who this critic is writing for? It's not cinema audiences, One can examine a subject too deeply and come up with pseudo-academic tosh.

    David Mon Sep 14 2009
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Alright...for all I know nothing remains minutes after you have left the theatre. I found it Long, full of over used tarantinesque strings, the revenge, the music, the references, all teh things that made tarantino's cinema new and fresh by repetting themselves in every signle of its films just end up making it dull and annoying. That's it ! that's exactly the word that I was looking for for the feeling I had while watching teh movie, I was annoyed and irritated. Yes, there is at time beautifull cinematography and one or 2 good lines, but over 2hours and a half that's a bit slim. I genuinely wanted to love that movie, and felt so so so disapointed. The tarantino stamp still brings in the audience but for how long?

    AB Thu Sep 10 2009
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • An honest review of a disappointing film.

    Kieran Tue Sep 8 2009
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • Sorry but Tarantino has produced only average films since Pulp Fiction. And this film is only just average. It's too long and wordy. And the clips make it feel like its an action packed war movie which it isn't.

    Ant Man Mon Sep 7 2009
    Rated as: 2/5
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  • Has this reviwer actaully seen the film for has he just heard what its about and decieded he doesn't like the idea of it, it is a brilliantly made film and very entertaining.

    Deano Sat Sep 5 2009
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • 2 stars! Time out are you serious! You gave final destination 3... If you dont like the movies idea fine, but if you watched the skill set on every level in this movie is has to be worth at leat a 4 and thats without C Waltz. Has you film critic ever made a movie?

    FOC Sat Sep 5 2009
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  • Sorry, didn't like it at all. The most boring and stupid film I have ever watched. Brad Pitt only good thing about this.

    Les2647 Wed Sep 2 2009
    Rated as: 1/5
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