![]() ![]() She makes a list, formulates a plan and gets to work. Cut to four years later: The Bride awakens, thirsting for revenge. But the Bride doesn't die, and Bill calls off a second assassination attempt at her hospital bedside, where she lies comatose. All answer to Bill (David Carradine), who personally delivers the coup de grace - a bullet to the bloody bride's head. Fox) and O-Ren Ishii, aka Cottonmouth (Lucy Liu), aided by ex-viper Budd (Michael Madsen). The killers are the Bride's sisters in slaughter, fellow members of DiVAS (the Deadly Viper Assassins Squad - any resemblance to PULP FICTION's "Fox Force Five" is no doubt intentional): Elle Driver, aka California Mountain Snake (Daryl Hannah), Vernita Green, aka Copperhead (Vivica A. 1, a hugely pregnant professional assassin, code-named Black Mamba (Uma Thurman), is attacked and left for dead on her wedding day her wedding guests and sundry bystanders are all murdered. If your sensibilities are in line with Tarantino's, the result is sheer sleaze Nirvana. Not a slapdash party tape with a bunch of popular stuff strung carelessly together, but a loving compendium of Proustian images and melodies, the more obscure the better, meticulously juxtaposed and segued into each other so they evoke an integrated memory of endless pulp highs savored in the smoky haze of grindhouses and darkened basements. It explores territory many others haven't, is loaded with memorable scenes and characters, and a piece of cinematic paradise in terms of the showdown between The Bride and the Crazy 88's.Quentin Tarantino's feverish homage to the cherished exploitation experiences of his youth may be the world's first movie-as-mix tape. Kill Bill is at it's root, a revenge flick, but at the same time so much more than just that term. And finally, Bill, who has very little screen time in this first volume, but is masterfully portrayed by David Carradine who seems to be just as good as his half-brother at portraying a maniacal but composed deadly killer. Fox all play fellow members of the Deadly Vipers and succeed in establishing that O-Ren Ishii, Elle Driver and Vernita Green are all worthy of the "badass mofo" informal title which comes with being a former Deadly Viper. ![]() Quentin's casting choices for Kill Bill don't drop the bar either - Uma Thurman returns to the "Tarantinoverse" as The Bride, after previously playing Mia Wallace in Pulp Fiction, as does Michael Madsen after previously appearing in Reservoir Dogs as the sociopathic Mr Blonde. Quentin doesn't just want to make films seriously, he also knows that he can also have fun during the process which is something that a few directors twice his age at the time of Kill Bill have yet to understand or even grasp at it's base sense. Likewise, Tarantino as always adds fantastic dialogue which especially helps the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad during the backstory segmints of the movie. It's a revenge flick with a lot of different elements, but it doesn't try to be something else, or pass itself off as a grand odyssey. The brilliance that lies in Kill Bill is that it doesn't overreach itself. The colours and look of the film are all very exaggerated and oversampled, i'm not going to lie, but with such a masterfully woven story, the two go together like Eggs and Bacon, although I doubt highly that Samurai swords are edible. Here was have Tarantino at his flashiest but supplemented with a reservoir of substance which endures throughout the film. The entirety of Volume 1 is very much a build up that never fully stops, which is unique even to revenge flicks as they usually ebb and flow with a lot of changes to the pace. ![]() 1 is by far the stronger half of the duo. We had it with Reservoir Dogs, a heist film where we never see the heist, and with both Pulp Fiction and Inglorious Basterds - two more films which take what is typical and throw it aside.Īfter multiple views, I still say that Kill Bill Vol. If there's one thing we've learned about Quentin Tarantino as a screenwriter and director is that one should never expect a typical movie that fits the stereotypes of the genre exactly - or even remotely.
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