BY TODD GARBARINI
During
the years that I spent in elementary school, watching movies on television was
an exciting prospect. Considering that for me there was no other way to see
films other than theatrically, viewing movies on television was something that
I looked forward to regardless of the film being shown. In 1979, my best friend
at the time was one of only a handful of people I knew who had cable
television, in his case HBO. He told me about a great many films that I was not
even aware of: Don Coscarelli’s Kenny & Company (1976), Frank
Simon’s The Chicken Chronicles (1977), Sidney J. Furie’s The Boys in
Company C (1978), and Enzo G. Castellari’s The Inglorious Bastards
(1978). I always hoped that some of these films would make their way to
television. Some did, some did not. His recollection and explanation to me of
what he saw in these films made me regard him as quite the raconteur. These
films seemed to make a big impression on him and listening to his enthusiasm
for them made a big impression on me.
The Inglorious Bastards
also made an impression on film director Quentin Tarantino, who worked at Video
Archives in Manhattan Beach, CA for a number of years while in his twenties
during the VHS and Beta home video viewing boom. He saw the film on television
several times while living in Los Angeles and later the film, to my surprise,
was released on home video under the titles of Deadly Mission and,
unbelievably, G.I. Bro. He was hired by the video store’s owner as he
was already a scholar of cinema and could discuss and recommend movies to the
paying customers. His enthusiasm for this film led him to adopt the title to
his 2009 film Inglourious Basterds, a two-and-a-half-hour World War II
film that he spent at least six years thinking about and writing. It’s his sixth
film as a director and he is still in command of his powers.
Inglourious Basterds,
a brilliantly entertaining revisionist view of how we wish the war in Europe
ended, is separated into five chapters. Chapter One, subtitled “Once Upon a
Time in Nazi-occupied Franceâ€, is one of the most intense sequences that I have
ever seen in a film. At just over 20 minutes, it is a lesson in bravura
filmmaking. In 1941, a farmer, Perrier La Padite (Denis Menochet), is cutting
wood and his wife is hanging up the family clothing when her mood changes – she
hears the distant sound of a motorcycle. She knows that it can only be Germans.
As the family prepares for the inevitable interrogation, we know from their
body language that something is amiss. Although several German soldiers arrive only
one of them, Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz, in an Oscar-winning performance), approaches. He is complimentary
and ingratiating towards Perrier and plays a verbal game with him to ascertain
if his family is hiding Jews, an assumption that he already knows to be true.
How the director handles this scene cinematically illustrates why he is one of
cinema’s best filmmakers. The tension that he builds and the measured sentences
that Landa uses to get the information that he wants is first-rate dialog. When
the massacre of the hidden Jews in the floorboards occurs, one girl, Shosanna Dreyfus
(Melanie Laurent), survives and runs off under Landa’s laughter and admiration.
Chapter Two, “The Inglourious
Basterdsâ€, takes place in 1944 and concerns Lieutenant Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt,
and his name is a play on actor Aldo Ray, who appeared in many war films) who oversees
a group of men who capture and scalp Nazis. Sergeant Donny Donowitz (Eli Roth),
aka “The Bear Jewâ€, is part of this group designed to turn the tables and
instill fear in the Germans. This sequence is a joy to watch as it gives the
Nazis a taste of their own medicine.
In Chapter Three, “A German Night in
Parisâ€, we are reacquainted with Shosanna under the assumed name of Emmanuelle
Mimieux. She now owns a cinema and is harassed by Fredrick Zoller (Daniel
Bruhl) who is smitten with her and, like other Germans, won’t take no for an
answer. Later, Zoller attempts to interest Mimieux and is again rebuffed. At a
restaurant gathering with Joseph Goebbels, Mimieux is strong-armed to permit a
Nazi propaganda film, Nation’s Pride, to be shown with all head Nazis in
attendance including, amazingly, Adolf Hitler. Sure enough, Landa comes into
the picture, and Mimieux does her best to answer his persistent questions about
her theatre, trying to gauge if Landa knows her real identity. This sequence,
like Chapter One, is extraordinary as the dialog is constantly masking what is
going on beneath the surface, and the audience is never sure what might happen
next. Unpredictability is just one of Mr. Tarantino’s many talents.
Chapter Four, “Operation Kinoâ€, is
similar to Chapters One and Three in that much is going on, however the
probability of things going very badly is always imminent. A mixture of
undercover agents and Germans ends the scene in a bloodbath that sets the stage
for the film’s finale.
Chapter Five, “Revenge of the Giant
Faceâ€, is an extraordinary ending to the Nazi’s evil and their ultimate
comeuppance as the cinema is packed with Hitler, Goebbels, Heydrich and many of
the architects of the Final Solution to the Jewish Question. The Giant Face
alluded to belongs to Shosanna who, along with her lover and theater co-worker
Marcel, carry out the plan to kill the Nazis by locking the escape routes and
igniting a pile of combustible nitrate film stock located behind the screen.
The cinema comes crashing down in a conflagration that causes deaths of the
Nazis. The Basterds get their machine gun kicks by shooting as many enemies as
possible. The ending is surprising, but ultimately satisfying.
Mr. Tarantino burst onto the film scene
in 1992 with his debut film Reservoir Dogs. I saw it in New York, and I
knew that I was in the hands of a truly gifted storyteller. His follow-up, Pulp
Fiction, took the 1994 Cannes Film Festival by storm and won the Palme
D’Or, and he snagged an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay (and again in 2013
for Django Unchained). His subsequent films have not disappointed, and the
dialog is often just a vehicle for something more tension-filled or sinister. Other
times, it’s completely innocuous. The back-and-forth storytelling, jumping
ahead at times, makes the action at hand that much more interesting. Inglourious
Basterds is a linear narrative and despite there being a myriad of
characters, the three major ones are Raine, Landa, and Dreyfus/Mimieux and the
film pretty much revolves around them and their motives: Raine wants to kill
Nazis, Landa wants to be evil, and Dreyfus/Mimieux wants to be invisible. His
salute to war movies and cinema in general is everywhere – just setting a good
portion of the action in a theatre is a labor of love. Eli Roth’s character is
named Antonio Margheriti, named after the late filmmaker from Italy. So, the
references are everywhere. At 2½ hours, the film is fascinating and flies by.
He even throws in the obligatory “Wilhelm Scream†for good measure.
The film is now available in a new Universal
2-disc release which comes with a standard 1080p Blu-ray, a 4K Ultra High
Definition Blu-ray, and a digital copy. If you have a 4K player and 4K TV, that
is the one to go for as the picture is glorious, no pun intended. The extras
are plentiful, though I would have loved a commentary track, and they include:
Extended & Alternate Scenes
(HD, 11:31) – This section has three scenes: Lunch with Goebbels,
extended version in one take; La Louisiane Card Game, extended version,
and Nation’s Pride Begins, alternate version.
Roundtable Discussion with Quentin
Tarantino, Brad Pitt and Film Critic Elvis Mitchell
(HD, 30:45) – This is a funny and informative interview, with the surprising
revelation that Brad Pitt received the script and shot the film six weeks
later.
The
New York Times Talks (HD,
1:08:07) – This is a just-shy-of 70-minute dialog between the director and New
York Times Magazine Editor-at-Large Lynn Hirschberg. As usual, the director is
enthusiastic about all-things cinema and speaks with a great deal of energy
about the film and his desire to make films without regard to the morality of
his characters.
Nation’s Pride:
Full Feature (HD, 6:10) – This is the film that the Nazi’s watch in the cinema,
and The Making of Nation’s Pride (HD, 4:00) is self-explanatory. It’s
very cool to see Bo Svenson appear in Nation’s Pride since he was in the 1978
version of The Inglorious Bastards. It would have been great if a
restored version of that film had been included as well!
The
Original Inglorious Bastards (HD,
7:38) – This is a look at the director of the original film, Enzo G.
Castellari, and his cameo in the Tarantino film.
A Conversation with Rod Taylor
(HD, 6:43) and Rod Taylor On Victoria Bitter (HD, 3:19) – The late actor
Rod Taylor, whom many will recall from the The Time Machine (1960) and The
Birds (1963), is virtually unrecognizable in these mini interviews. He
talks about the director’s enthusiasm for film, and a funny story about
Victoria Bitter, the Australian beer.
Quentin Tarantino’s Camera Angel
(HD, 2:41) – This is a humorous collection of slate shots and the funny on-set
comments in between takes.
Hi Sallys
(HD, 2:09) – This is a bittersweet piece as it pays homage to Mr. Tarantino’s longtime
editor, Sally Menke, who tragically passed away at the age of 56 in 2010 due to
dehydration while hiking in hot weather conditions.
Film Poster Gallery Tour with Elvis
Mitchell (HD, 10:59) – This is very interesting as Mr. Mitchell talks
about the history and meaning behind the beautiful posters that can been seen
in the cinema in the film.
Inglorious Basterds Poster Gallery
(HD)
Trailers
(HD, 7:34) – Teaser, Domestic, International, and Japanese trailers for the
film.
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