ska invita
back on the other side
this is the thing - as much as Tarantino is a director, he is perhaps above all a screenwriter, but unlike most screenwriters you really hear his own voice coming loud and clear through the actors - the reason for that is partly because rather than writing really character-specific dialogue, often the characters are really quite 2d, and are more conduits for clever Tarantino lines.how about in Pulp Fiction? It's clear that he gets off on saying it
In Hateful Eight there was a scene with Milly where she learns to say Oui, and has her saying "ask me if my ass is fat" which felt really inappropriate for her, even though the character had only been on screen a minute - what it felt like was Tarantino making some kind of a gag (which to me was on the offensive spectrum somewhere!).
Eight films in its clear that Tarantino is really interested in having african-american characters in his films, and in the last two specifically getting into some historic US race politics. These are big issues. I just dont think he's mature enough to deal with them, which means you end up with big issues raised, and then dealt with in what to me feels like a clumsy/b-movie/pantomime way. Some scenes work. Many others don't. Likewise his use of the word nigger - at times its appropriate and effective - but other times its comes over as a thrill for him, and awkward for the audience. Often the dialogue in his films feels like him showing off, rather than writing character-specific dialogue.