Quentin Tarantino is an American filmmaker, screenwriter, producer, and actor who has directed and written several critically acclaimed and commercially successful films. He was born on March 27, 1963, in Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
Tarantino’s films are often known for their nonlinear storylines, memorable dialogue, and stylistic violence. Some of his most popular films include “Pulp Fiction,” “Kill Bill,” “Reservoir Dogs,” “Inglourious Basterds,” and “Django Unchained.” He has won several Academy Awards, Golden Globe Awards, and BAFTA Awards for his work.
Tarantino is also known for his love of cinema and his extensive knowledge of films from various genres and eras. He has cited filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese, Sergio Leone, and Sam Peckinpah as major influences on his work.
Few filmmakers love movies as much as Quentin Tarantino is a staggering understatement. Few people love movies as much as Quentin Tarantino, and the cinephileâs tastes continue to shape Hollywood.
The video store clerk-turned-director has spent decades dazzling interviewers and fans with his unparalleled knowledge of cinema history, with tastes that range from universally acclaimed classics to more obscure and even lowbrow fare. While his love of spaghetti Westerns and exploitation flicks has always been well-documented, Tarantino isnât afraid to publicly embrace the modern or mainstream. He proudly championed âTop Gun: Maverickâ in the summer of 2022, as did so many others. Not to mention, heâs a fan of rom-coms, particularly on long flights, and once dubbed Kate Hudson âthe queen of the skies.â The man just loves cinema, and if a film entertains him, heâs going to tell the world about it.
From âReservoir Dogsâ to âInglourious Basterds,â Tarantinoâs filmography draws directly from the movies he likes most. Heâs been inspired by blaxploitation (see elements of âJackie Brownâ) and samurai epics (as in the âKill Billâ duology). When heâs not paying tribute to film history in his directing, Tarantino keeps talking cinema in both the veins of criticism and geekery.
In 2022, the filmmaker and his âPulp Fictionâ co-writer Roger Avary launched the Video Archives Podcast, which sees the duo revisiting many of the films they used to watch on VHS when they worked at the iconic video store together. That has given Tarantino a new outlet to share his opinions about movies, and the world is richer for it. He set out to do something similar in his book âCinema Speculation,â which arrived on shelves that October.
Diving into Tarantinoâs favorite movies is a wild journey, but one that will undeniably leave you with a more well-rounded knowledge of cinema. At the very least, itâs a great place to go when youâre finished rewatching his old work and are once again twiddling your thumbs waiting for news of the auteurâs long fabled tenth film. Keep reading for a roundup of 40+ of Quentin Tarantinoâs favorite movies. Then, check out a list of films he doesnât recommend.
âRolling Thunderâ
âWhen I first saw âRolling Thunderâ with my mother and her boyfriend Marco in 1977 on the filmâs opening night in Los Angeles, on a double feature with âEnter the Dragon,â it blew my fucking mind!â Tarantino writes in âCinema Sepculation,â explaining how the John Flynn thriller shaped his critical voice.
He continued, âI loved âRolling Thunderâ so much that year before it became available on Vestron Home Video â for a period of ten years â I followed it all over Los Angeles, whenever and wherever it played⊠What I used to claim about âRolling Thunderâ was it was the best combination of character study and action film ever made. And it still is.â
âMatadorâ
In âCinema Speculation,â Tarantino describes how his approach to onscreen violence was shaped by Pedro AlmodĂłvarâs âMatadorâ: a 1986 erotic thriller starring Antonio Banderas.
âI remember when I worked at my Manhattan Beach video store, Video Archives, and talked to the other employees about the types of movies I wanted to make, and the things I wanted to do inside of those movies. And I would use the example of the opening of Almodovarâs âMatador,ââ Tarantino wrote. âAnd their response would be, âQuentin, they wonât let you do that.â To which I replied back, âWho the fuck are âtheyâ to stop me? âTheyâ can go fuck themselves.ââ
âAt the right age (mid-twenties), and at the right time (the fucking eighties), the fearlessness demonstrated by Pedro AlmodĂłvar led by example,â he continued. âAs I watched my heroes, the American film mavericks of the seventies, knuckle under to a new way of doing business just to stay employed, Pedroâs fearlessness made a mockery of their calculated compromises. My dreams of movies always included a comic reaction to unpleasantness, similar to the connection that Almodovarâs films made between the unpleasant and the sensual.â
âThe Great Silenceâ
Tarantino has never tried to hide his admiration for legendary Spaghetti Western director Sergio Corbucci. For âDjango Unchained,â he borrowed the name of Corbucciâs most famous protagonist, Django, and when it was time to make his second Western, he took another page out of the Corbucci playbook and set it in the snow.
Before âThe Hateful Eightâ came out, the most famous winter-set Western movie was Sergio Corbucciâs âThe Great Silence.â Tarantino explained that his admiration for the film goes far beyond its creative setting.
ââIl Grande Silenzioâ has one of the most nihilistic endings of any western. Trintignant goes out to face the bad guys â and gets killed. The bad guys win, they murder everybody else in the town, they ride away and thatâs the end of the movie. Itâs shocking to this day,â he wrote. ââSilenzioâ takes place in the snow â I liked the action in the snow so much, âDjango Unchainedâ has a big snow section in the middle of the movie.â
âThe Thingâ
Tarantino and the late night host discussed their mutual appreciation for John W. Campbellâs âWho Goes There?â: the 1938 sci-fi novella that inspired âThe Thing.â Their conversation quickly took them to 1951âs âThe Thing from Another Worldâ (a classic Tarantino also loves) and, of course, the legendary 1982 John Carpenter flick starring Kurt Russell.
âRob Bottinâs effects in that movie are some of the greatest practical special effects ever put on a movie theater screen,â Tarantino began. âItâs one of the greatest horror movies ever made, if not one the greatest movies ever made.â
He continued: âOne of the reasons that âThe Thingâ holds a special place in my heart is that I love horror movies â Iâm a big horror movie fan â but I donât get scared in horror movies. I respond to suspense. I respond to that. âOh, whatâs going to happen next?â I can jump by a boo scare. But thatâs not really terror⊠âThe Thingâ I got scared in.â
âThe Texas Chainsaw Massacreâ
Tarantino was asked about his definition of a perfect film. During an appearance on âJimmy Kimmel Live,â Kimmel specifically inquired about âThe Texas Chainsaw Massacreâ: a film the talk show host said he was surprised to learn qualified for the directorâs short list of flawless cinema. Tarantino didnât expand on his love for âTexas Chainsawâ (though itâs easy to guess why heâd champion the Tobe Hooper classic and presumably he explores that in the book), but he did offer: âThereâs not many [perfect movies] and that just bemoans the fact that the film art form is hardâŠA perfect movie kind of crosses all aesthetics: might not be your cup of tea, but thereâs nothing you can say to bring it down.â
âThe Wild Bunchâ
Another recommendation pulled from Tarantinoâs â where the filmmaker described Sam Peckinpahâs revisionist Western âThe Wild Bunchâ as ânot perfect,â before explaining: âIts imperfections are part of its glory.â
âTop Gun: Maverickâ
Quentin Tarantino rarely speaks about the work of other contemporary filmmakers, preferring to focus on drawing attention to classic films. But sometimes, a movie is so good that he just canât help himself. âTop Gun: Maverickâ was one of those movies. Tarantino praised the way Joseph Kosinski captured the magic of his âTrue Romanceâ director Tony Scottâs original film. âThere was just this lovely, lovely aspect because I love both Tony Scottâs cinema so much, and I love Tony so much that thatâs as close as weâre ever going to get to seeing one more Tony Scott movie,â Tarantino said. â[Kosinski] did a great job. The respect and the love of Tony was in every frame. It was almost in every decision. It was consciously right there, but in this really cool way that was really respectful.â
âRio Bravo”
Even the most casual cinephile could watch Howard Hawksâ âRio Bravoâ and instantly understand why Tarantino likes it so much. Itâs essentially a long hangout movie about three guys shooting the shit in the Old West, until it suddenly ends with a gloriously violent shootout. The film, which stars John Wayne as a sheriff who holds a dangerous outlaw in custody with the help of a drunk and a talented yet arrogant young gunfighter, is one of the biggest influences on Tarantinoâs filmography. The film is so essential to the directorâs identity that he famously said, âWhenever Iâm getting serious with a girl, I show her âRio Bravo,â and she better fucking like it.â
âBlow Outâ
Every time you watch the dancing scene from âPulp Fiction,â you should thank âBlow Outâ for making it happen. Tarantino loved John Travoltaâs performance in this Brian De Palma thriller â about a sound editor who accidentally records a murder â so much that he set out to write the perfect role to save the actorâs career. Most cinephiles would agree that he did just that. But Tarantinoâs love for âBlow Outâ extends far beyond Travoltaâs performance. He famously called the movie âsome of Brian De Palmaâs finest film,â adding that it âmeans itâs one of the greatest films ever made because as we all know Brian De Palma is one of the finest directors of his generation.â
âWest Side Storyâ (2021)
Quentin Tarantino may not strike the average observer as a big musical guy, but his knowledge of and passion for film history is unparalleled. That likely led to his appreciation for Steven Spielbergâs 2021 remake of âWest Side Story,â a film that he said brought an old school sense of spectacle back to the multiplexes. â[âTop Gun: Maverickâ] and Spielbergâs âWest Side Story.â Both provided a true cinematic spectacle, the kind that Iâd almost thought that I wasnât going to see anymore. It was fantastic.
âUnfaithfully Yoursâ
Tarantino has made no secret of his love for legendary comedy filmmaker Preston Sturges. He once remarked that he calms himself down after disappointing Oscar losses by remembering that âPreston Sturges is maybe a better writer than all the guys who have ever won before, and he didnât win shit.â While Sturges wrote plenty of comedy classics including âSullivanâs Travelsâ and âThe Palm Beach Story,â Tarantinoâs favorite is the 1948 screwball comedy âUnfaithfully Yours,â which he once declared was the ninth greatest film of all time.
âThe Good, the Bad and the Uglyâ
Quentin Tarantinoâs favorite cut in movie history arrives two hours and 45 minutes into Sergio Leoneâs 1966 Spaghetti Western âThe Good, the Bad and the Ugly.â Three gunslingers have been competing to find buried Confederate gold and their search climaxes in a Mexican standoff inside a bullring at Sad Hill Cemetery. Ennio Morriconeâs score sets the tension as Blondie, Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef), and Tuco (Eli Wallach) get into formation and prepare to draw their guns. When the music peaks, Leone cuts to a wide shot of the Mexican standoff in full view.
âThatâs easy,â Tarantino told Empire magazine when asked about his favorite shot in the film. âDuring the three-way bullring showdown at the end, the music builds to the giant orchestra crescendo, and when it gets to the first big explosion of the theme thereâs a wide shot of the bullring. After youâve seen all the little shots of the guys getting into position, you suddenly see the whole wideness of the bullring and all the graves around them. Itâs my favorite shot in the movie, but Iâll even say itâs my favorite cut in the history of movies.â
âAbbott and Costello Meet Frankensteinâ
ââAbbott and Costello Meet Frankensteinâ was probably my favorite movie when I was really, really, really young,â Tarantino once told SiriusXM. âAnd the thing about why I think it was so influential was that I remember at that time period my two favorite movies in the world were monster movies, the Universal monster movies from the 1930s, and physical comedies. When I watched this movie, it bended my mind that my two favorite genres, even though I didnât know what genre meant, could be put into one movie. I didnât know you could do that! I was a little boy at seven or eight making genre distinctions, and Iâve been trying to mash them up for the rest of my career.â
âDunkirkâ
Tarantino revealed on The Ringerâs âRewatchablesâ podcast that Christopher Nolanâs World War II survival thriller âDunkirkâ was his second favorite movie of the 2010s. âDunkirkâ had been in the number seven position for quite some time but rose to the second slot after Tarantino watched the feature for a third time.
âI had an interesting experience with it the first couple of times,â Tarantino said of the film. âThe first time I saw it, I donât know what I was thinking the first time. I just dealt with the spectacle of it all. I couldnât deal with anything else but the spectacle of it all. I liked the movie, but the spectacle almost numbed me to the experience. I donât think I felt anything emotional. I was awed by it. But I didnât know what I was awed by. It wasnât until the third time that I could see past the spectacle and into the people the story is about. I finally could see through the trees a little bit.â
The filmmaker continued, âOftentimes, you see a film where the style is about the adrenaline of it. The style is an immersive experience, but by the third or fourth viewing you get past the style and you realize the magicianâs tricks. In the case of âDunkirk,â it rewards Nolanâs efforts to see it more. Thereâs a point, by mid movie, he canât do it wrong. Itâs a symphony. Nothing doesnât work.â
âBlack Sabbathâ
Quentin Tarantino said in a video interview with SiriusXM that Mario Bavaâs 1964 horror movie âBlack Sabbathâ was one of the top three most influential movies on his directing style. âBava is one of the first directors I got to know by name because I saw âBlack Sabbathâ on late night television and would get excited to see it pop up again, and it has this cool operatic quality about it,â Tarantino said. âSergio Leone and Mario Bava got me thinking in terms of shotsâŠI recognized a cinematic style, signature, and quality to the movies that went beyond the movie just being good or not. Even when I saw a Bava movie I didnât like, I still recognized that same operatic quality.â
âDeep Redâ
Dario Argentoâs 1975 giallo classic âDeep Redâ is one of the seminal horror films that left its mark on Tarantino as a teenager. The director saw the film when he was around 15 years old, and it rattled him to the bone. âI went to a theater on my own to see it, and that was before I knew who Dario Argento was,â Tarantino said last year on Eli Rothâs AMC horror docu-series. âI didnât even know it was an Italian movie. I go and see it and itâs these horrendous murders and horrendous kills one after another with just complete sadism. Not only just a tremendous amount of blood but also the loudest soundtrack Iâd ever heard in a movie just pounding at you. A woman scalded to death! That was like, âWow this movie is really tough stuff,â but it was thrilling. It was absolutely thrilling.â
âThe Social Networkâ
If âDunkirkâ was Quentin Tarantinoâs second favorite movie of the 2010s, then what was his first? The answer is David Fincherâs âThe Social Network.â According to Tarantino, Fincherâs 2010 Facebook drama was always out in front and it was never a close race for the âbest of the decadeâ title. The filmmaker told Premiere magazine, âItâs âThe Social Network,â hands down. It is number one because itâs the best, thatâs all! It crushes all the competition.â Tarantino went on to call screenwriter Aaron Sorkin âthe greatest active dialogist.â
âThe Social Networkâ ranked #16 on on the best films of the 2010s. âThere are timely films, and then thereâs âThe Social Network,â which was good enough back in 2010 to notch eight Oscar noms and somehow seems as fierce and prescient and essential now, nearly a decade later,â
âEasy Rider”
Dennis Hopperâs 1969 counterculture landmark âEasy Riderâ was one of Tarantinoâs picks for moviegoers to watch before seeing his âOnce Upon a Time in Hollywood.â The director told TCM, âItâs the single greatest example of 1960s cinema in every way: the culture it projects, the aesthetic it projects, and even the idea that finally a movie and the counterculture hooked up with each other in a way where the people of that culture accepted that. Itâs one of the most specific movies ever released by a Hollywood studio that is specific to its era. It captures the 1960s in a way thatâs tangible. Almost in a way, if youâre trying to describe to someone the 1960s in movies you could show them âEasy Riderâ and never have to show them anything else.â
âApocalypse Nowâ
Tarantino named Francis Ford Coppolaâs Vietnam war epic âApocalypse Nowâ one of the best movies ever made on his Sight & Sound Top 10 list. The Palme dâOr winner is Tarantinoâs favorite Coppola movie, even above âThe Godfatherâ movies. Tarantino loves âApocalypse Nowâ so much that he worked a reference to the film into the screenplay of 1993âs âTrue Romance.â When Christian Slaterâs character attempts to flatter the producer of a fictional war movie, he canât help but say, âAfter âApocalypse Now,â I think itâs the best Vietnam movie ever.â
âAuditionâ
Takashi Miikeâs 1999 horror movie âAuditionâ is often cited as one of the most disturbing and brutal films ever made. Tarantino called the movie one of his favorites since heâs been a director, referring to it as a âtrue masterpieceâ in a 2009 interview. The film stars Ryo Ishibashi as a widower who stages an audition to find a potential new wife. Eihi Shiina plays the woman who catches the widowerâs eye, although Shiinaâs character has a dark past that affects their relationship in unpredictable ways.
âJoint Security Areaâ
In the same 2009 video interview in which Tarantino suggested âAudition,â he recommended Chan-wook Parkâs 2000 film âJoint Security Areaâ: an edge-of-your-seat thriller set against the border between North and South Korea.
âThe Insiderâ
Following âJoint Security Areaâ (listed at number 11), Tarantino plugged Michael Mannâs âInsiderâ in the same 2009 video interview. The 1999 mutliple Academy Award nominee stars Al Pacino and Russell Crowe.
âLost in Translationâ
After âAudition,â âJoint Security Area,â and âInsider,â Tarantino listed Sophia Coppolaâs âLost in Translationâ â a heartbreaking existential two-hander, starring Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson â among his favorite films in a 2009 interview.
âThe Bad News Bearsâ
âThe Bad News Bearsâ is perhaps the most surprising entry on Tarantinoâs Sight & Sound poll naming the best movies ever made. Michael Ritchieâs 1976 comedy famously stars Walter Matthau as an alcoholic former baseball player who evades a lawsuit by agreeing to coach a group of non-athletic little leaguers. Cast member Tatum OâNeal revealed to The Hollywood Reporter that Tarantino was such a fan of the movie that he wrote her a letter: âThe film had such an impact on boys. Guys my age are always saying, âYou were my first love.â Quentin Tarantino told me I was the first fan letter heâd ever written. I was flattered. I think my grandmother threw it away.â
âBattle Royaleâ
Tarantino called Kinji Fukasakuâs 2000 dystopian thriller âBattle Royaleâ his favorite movie to come out in the last 17 years. âIf there is any movie that has been made since Iâve been making movies that I wish I had made, itâs that one,â he said.
âBoogie Nightsâ
Tarantino has referred to Paul Thomas Anderson as a âfriendly competitorâ over the years, but thereâs no doubt the former is one of the latterâs biggest admirers. Tarantino picked Andersonâs breakout porn industry drama âBoogie Nightsâ as one of the best movies released after 1992, the year Tarantino started making movies. Although thatâs not to say the film is without flaws. Tarantinoâs one issue with âBoogie Nightsâ involves Burt Reynoldsâ character.
âI think Burt Reynolds is fantastic in the movie,â Tarantino said. âMe and Paul have talked about this, though. I actually think there is a slight flaw in âBoogie Nights,â and the flaw is the perception of the Burt Reynoldsâ character. Paul can say heâs not based on the director Gerard Damiano, who directed âDeep Throat,â but he obviously is. He looks exactly like him, and Damiano has a very unique look. Burt Reynolds doesnât look like that, so you actually have to go out of your way to make him look like Damiano. Thatâs not Burt Reynoldâs look, that is Gerard Damianoâs look.â
âCarrieâ
Brian De Palmaâs âCarrieâ is Tarantinoâs favorite horror movie ever and was the only horror title included on the directorâs 2012 list of the best films of all time for Sight & Sound. âCarrieâ is adapted from the book by Stephen King and made a huge star out of Sissy Spacek. âCarrieâ shaped the way Tarantino approaches violence in his movies, with the director telling De Palma himself in an interview, âAs a filmmaker, when you deal in violence, youâre actually penalized for doing a good job.â De Palma responded, âAbsolutely.â
âDazed and Confusedâ
Richard Linklaterâs beloved stoner coming-of-age classic âDazed and Confusedâ was listed by Tarantino as one of the 10 best films of all time. The film, which Tarantino calls âthe greatest hangout movie ever made,â was a breakout platform for young actors Matthew McConaughey, Milla Jovovich, Parker Posey, and Ben Affleck.
âDogvilleâ
Tarantino says Lars von Trierâs âDogvilleâ features âmaybe one of the greatest scripts ever written for film.â The drama stars Nicole Kidman and was shot on a stage as if it were a play. Tarantino argues that had von Trier made âDogvilleâ a theatrical production he would have won the Pulitzer Prize.
âEnter the Voidâ
Gaspar NoĂ©âs psychedelic melodrama âEnter the Voidâ was included on Tarantinoâs best movies of 2010 list. The director wrote the film has âhands down the best credit scene of the year, maybe best credit scene of the decade. One of the greatest in cinema history.â
âFight Clubâ
David Fincherâs âFight Clubâ was included on Tarantinoâs list of the best movies released from 1992 to 2009. âFight Clubâ star Brad Pitt would go on to be one of Tarantinoâs most starry featured actors, leading the directorâs âInglourious Basterdsâ and âOnce Upon a Time in Hollywood.â
âFrances Haâ
Tarantino named Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwigâs âFrancis Haâ one of the 10 best movies of 2013 along with Richard Linklaterâs âBefore Midnight,â Jill Solowayâs âAfternoon Delight,â Joe Swanbergâs âDrinking Buddies,â and James Wanâs âThe Conjuring.â In a 2015 interview with Vulture, Tarantino named Baumbach one of the younger directors he was most excited about, saying, âThereâs a Paul Mazursky quality to his films.â
âThe Great Escapeâ
John Sturgesâ 1963 POW drama âThe Great Escapeâ stars Steve McQueen in one of his most iconic roles and was named one of the 10 best movies ever made by Tarantino. The filmâs central motorcycle chase is often regarded as one of cinemaâs best action scenes and has been used as inspiration for Tarantino films like âDeath Proof.â
âThe Hostâ
Tarantino said Bong Joon-hoâs 2006 monster film left him âblown awayâ when he saw it for the first time. The movie was a giant hit in South Korea, becoming the highest grossing domestic release at the time with over 13 million tickets sold. Tarantino calls the film âabsolutely wonderful.â When Boon Joon Ho won the Oscar for Best Director, he gave Tarantino a shot out for always championing his Korean-language movies in the U.S. when they were released.
âHis Girl Fridayâ
Howard Hawksâ 1940 screwball comedy-romance âHis Girl Fridayâ features the iconic pairing of Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell. Tarantino included the film on his list of the 10 best movies ever made, and itâs unsurprising a master of dialogue would have a soft spot for a screwball classic.
âJawsâ
Tarantinoâs 2012 Sight & Sound poll naming the best films ever made included Steven Spielbergâs shark thriller âJaws.â The film is widely credited as changing the landscape of Hollywood moviemaking and introducing the industry to its very first summer blockbuster event picture. Tarantino has famously compared the movie to a rubber band that a filmmaker stretches for as far as itâll hold.
âMad Max: Fury Roadâ
Tarantino named George Millerâs âMad Max: Fury Roadâ the best movie of 2015. The director said, âI got a print of âMad Maxâ on 35mm and I watched it in my house, and I had it all weekend and I ended up watching it three different times.
âThe Matrixâ
Tarantino is not a fan of the two âMatrixâ sequels (âThey ruined the mythology for me,â he said in a video interview), but he holds the original 1999 movie in high regard. The director named the Wachowski siblingâs breakout blockbuster one of the best titles released since heâs been directing.
âMemories of Murderâ
Bong Joon-hoâs 2003 murder mystery and police procedural âMemories of Murderâ has been called âone of the most interesting and complex moviesâ of the 21st century by Tarantino. Bong is easily one of Tarantinoâs most beloved directors working today.
âPolice Story 3: Super Copâ
Stanley Tongâs 1992 action comedy âPolice Story 3: Super Copâ stars Jackie Chan and Michelle Yeoh and features âthe greatest stunts filmed in any movie, and that includes Buster Keaton,â says Tarantino.
âShaun Of The Deadâ
âItâs my favorite British movie that has come out since Iâve been making movies,â Tarantino said of Edgar Wrightâs zombie comedy âDawn of the Dead,â starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. Tarantino and Wright formed a movie club during the pandemic and found themselves getting suggestions from the likes of Martin Scorsese, who sent over a list of over 30 British hidden gems.
âThe Skin I Live Inâ
Pedro AlmodĂłvarâs psychological horror film âThe Skin I Live Inâ was named one of the best movies of 2011 by Tarantino. The film, about a disturbed plastic surgeon holding a young woman hostage to be his test subject, marked the directorâs first project with Antonio Banderas in over two decades.
âSorcerer”
Just because Tarantino prefers âCarrieâ over âThe Exorcistâ doesnât mean he lacks an affinity for âExorcistâ director William Friedkin. âSorcerer,â Friedkinâs 1977 thriller starring Roy Scheider, was included on Tarantinoâs Sight & Sound poll naming the 10 best films of all time. )
âSpeedâ
âIt might be easy to take Speed for granted now,â Tarantino said in an interview of Jan de Bontâs thriller with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, âbut if you remember when âSpeedâ came out and what it was like to sit in the movie theater as that bus was going down the road, there really has been few exhilaration movies like it.â
âTaxi Driverâ
Tarantino has called Martin Scroseseâs âTaxi Driverâ âunarguably one of the greatest movies ever madeâ and âthe greatest first-person character-study ever committed to film.â The director is also a fan of Scorseseâs âHugo,â which landed on his best films of 2011 list.
Trey Parker and Matt Stoneâs war on terror satire âTeam America: World Policeâ is one of Tarantinoâs favorite movies since 1992. The puppet comedy didnât make the kind of impact that Parker and Stoneâs âSouth Parkâ or âBook of Mormonâ did, but itâs become a cult classic nonetheless.
âThere Will Be Bloodâ
Paul Thomas Andersonâs Oscar winner âThere Will Be Bloodâ is considered by many to be one of the best movies of the 21st century, and Tarantino is among them. Speaking to Brit Sky Movies in 2009, the director referred to the film as âone of the best movies made in this decade.â One of the things Tarantino told Anderson after he watched the film was how great the movie was despite there being no prolonged cinematic set pieces. âThen I saw the film again and I was completely wrong,â Tarantino said in an interview. âPutting out the oil fire is a brilliant cinematic set pieceâŠand the score is one of the great modern original soundtracks to be done.â
âToy Story 3
Topping Tarantinoâs best movies list in 2010 was Disney and Pixarâs âToy Story 3,â which earned over $1 billion at the worldwide box office during the summer and won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature. The film was also nominated at the Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay, among other categories.
âUnbreakable
Speaking about M. Night Shyamalanâs âUnbreakable,â Tarantino says âit not only has Bruce Willisâ best performance on film that heâs ever given, but it also is a brilliant retelling of the superman mythology.â The movie was named one of Tarantinoâs favorites since 1992
âGhosts of Girlfriends Pastâ
Tarantino has a theory about people on planes. Speaking with Stephen Colbert in 2015, the filmmaker described romantic comedies as a guilty pleasure of his, âespecially on airplanes.â
âThereâs something about watching a rom-com on an airplane flight⊠I think thereâs something to the fact that you become more emotional when youâre three miles in the air. I have found myself crying, literally weeping, at embarassing confession movies.â
He went on to describe a scene from 2009âs (not especially well-liked) âGhosts of Girlfriends Past,â in which Jennifer Garnerâs character gives Matthew McConaugheyâs character a camera for his birthday. The scene reminded Tarantino of a camera he was given as a child and he âstarted crying.â
âYouâve Got Mail
During the same conversation in which Tarantino revealed his âembarassingâ reaction to âGhosts of Girlfriends Past,â the director spoke about his sincere enjoyment of Nora Ephronâs âYouâve Got Mail.â
âI actually once had [a conversation] with these really serious film critics who were just poo-pooing âYouâve Got Mail,’â he said. âBecause I really thought the film had some real verisimilitude. Even beyond the whole Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks thing. I thought that movie actually did a really great job of describing how big chain stores kill the little stores. And I thought it was one of the only Hollywood movies to deal with that subject in a serious way.â
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