âCinema Speculationâ with Quentin Tarantino
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Thereâs a darkness on the edge of town â and on the edge of my weekend. You know itâs coming. I know itâs coming. What can you do ... except maybe run out and enjoy a sunset before it starts getting dark absurdly early on Sunday.
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Iâm Glenn Whipp, columnist for the Los Angeles Times, host of the Envelopeâs Friday newsletter and the guy whoâs pretending thatâs it not really beginning to look a lot like Christmas, despite the fact that my local Trader Joeâs was playing holiday music the day after Halloween.
Letâs see whoâs been naughty and nice this week. (Sorry. Peer pressure.)
âCinema Speculationâ with Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino is brewing some coffee and it is, as Samuel L. Jacksonâs âPulp Fictionâ hit man would enthuse, âsome serious gourmet sâ,â served up in a mug bearing the logo of his podcast âVideo Archives,â named after the famed Manhattan Beach video store where Tarantino worked in his early 20s before becoming a filmmaker.
Weâre settling into the library of Tarantinoâs Hollywood Hills home, though pretty much any room in this spacious, multilevel mansion could technically qualify as a library. There are piles of film books and magazines in nearly every corner and on every surface, rows of vinyl record albums snaking across the carpeted and tiled floors, metal carts overflowing with VHS tapes just off the kitchen, revolving racks of comic books clamoring for attention. And we havenât even ventured into the guest house, where Tarantino stores a vast collection of magazine and newspaper clippings. Itâs not âHoardersâ â thereâs too much floor space â but, safe to say, the man will never want for entertainment.
Itâs Halloween, and Tarantinoâs wife, Daniella, and their two children are home in Tel Aviv, where the family splits its time during the year. Left to his own devices, Tarantino has been going through his horror movie collection, making a little stack to watch later that evening. These are films he hasnât viewed since they came out, like the 1977 supernatural thriller âThe Sentinel,â and others he has never seen at all (âperhaps for good reason,â he says, laughing) like âManâs Best Friend,â which has Ally Sheedy unwittingly adopting a genetically altered dog.
Neither of these movies is mentioned in Tarantinoâs new book, âCinema Speculation,â though the volume, the first work of nonfiction from the 59-year-old filmmaker, is full of references and reveries to other genre movies (Tobe Hooperâs slasher flick âThe Funhouse,â the vigilante thriller âRolling Thunderâ) as well as musings on those more generally accepted as classics, including âBullittâ and âDirty Harry.â Thereâs a chapter pondering what âTaxi Driverâ might have looked like had Brian De Palma directed it instead of Martin Scorsese. (De Palma was the first to read Paul Schraderâs screenplay.) Thereâs even an appreciation of longtime Los Angeles Times film critic Kevin Thomas, whose enthusiastic reviews of exploitation movies captivated Tarantino as a young reader.
Tarantino and I spoke earlier this week. Whenever we talk for an interview, I go in thinking, âOK ... I gotta keep him focused because heâll go off on tangents.â Looking back, I was the one who needed to stay focused, because I led him down a number of side paths (Elvis movies, the best way to read his book, where he sees films these days) that were interesting enough but didnât make it into the story.
I did ask him about a line in the book about how âsolving the problems, both large and small of your actors â lead actors especially â is the job of a film director.â He gave me an example from his own career ... another anecdote that didnât make the story, but Iâll share it here.
âWe were making âJackie Brownâ and Pam [Grier] had a big scene, but then she just heard that one of her beloved dogs back home in Colorado might not make it through the weekend,â Tarantino remembers. âSheâs not going to be able to say goodbye to it. Thereâs nothing I can do about that other than commiserate with her and give that situation the respect it deserves ... but also get her to the spot where we can still do the work, if thatâs possible. Just be as sensitive as I can. She was heartbroken ... but we did get there with time.â
AFI Fest returns: What you need to see
The AFI Fest is currently up and running in Hollywood. And while it isnât quite back to pre-pandemic proportions â itâs just five days instead of eight â it remains, in the words of Times film critic Justin Chang, âLos Angelesâ flagship film festival, a well-curated and wide-ranging international roundup of some of the yearâs strongest movies, held in a city that often takes such events â and the pictures themselves â for granted.â
Justin offered a great lineup of AFI Fest highlights for those looking to see a good movie this weekend. Head to fest.afi.com for tickets and the schedule.
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How Hollywood turned a blind eye to Emmett Till
With âTillâ in wide release right now, my pal Greg Braxton took a thoughtful look at why it took so long to bring the story of the brutal killing of 14-year-old Emmett Till â a pivotal event in the civil rights movement, thanks to his motherâs relentless pursuit of justice â to the screen.
Tillâs mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, long pushed for a movie that would dramatize the troubling events surrounding her sonâs death. âThe biggest thing that Mother Mobley ever wanted was to bring Emmettâs story to the big screen,â said Keith Beauchamp, director of the documentary âThe Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till.â âShe would say, âKeith, you must continuously tell Emmettâs story until manâs consciousness is risen, because only then will there be justice for him.ââ
âAttempts by Till-Mobley and others to develop projects about the killing ran into roadblocks for close to seven decades,â Greg writes. âHollywood favored civil-rights-themed projects about the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and films like 1988âs âMississippi Burningâ in which the dominant characters were white.â
Till-Mobley died nearly two decades ago, much too late for her to see her dream come true. But that doesnât mean you canât.
Feedback?
Iâd love to hear from you. Email me at [email protected].
Canât get enough about awards season? Follow me at @glennwhipp on Twitter.
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whippâs must-read analysis.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.