Tarantino's film is actually a front for Antifa Super Soldiers.is how they pay for antifa
What do you think the prospects are that he'd film at the Manson Ranch? It was a film set once upon a time. It's pure speculation of course but still.
Tarantino's film is actually a front for Antifa Super Soldiers.is how they pay for antifa
Oh....Well, that's unnecessarily tasteless.Ribs wrote:Sony has dated the movie to the 50th anniversary of the Tate murder, August 9, 2019.
My thoughts exactly.BigMack3000 wrote:Oh....Well, that's unnecessarily tasteless.Ribs wrote:Sony has dated the movie to the 50th anniversary of the Tate murder, August 9, 2019.
Maybe if you don't include the sheer volume of literature, movies, news coverage, cultural references et al??? Why would you even try to argue this?hearthesilence wrote:Calling it culturally gigantic is a bit overblown, and it frames those murders in a misleading way. It was never a '60s milestone that was dissected and looked over the way so many others are, much less one I recall many people discussing in-depth with each anniversary. Honestly, i don't know a single person who's ever really talked about that event the way they would about any number of '60s events, good and bad. At most they mention it as a grisly footnote when talking about "Helter Skelter," Dennis Wilson or Polanski. As a small but terrible event reflecting the end of the '60s, even the Stones's Altamont concert gets far more mention (partly because it can be played off of Woodstock I suppose).
They were making movies about Pearl Harbor less than 25 years after the fact. There were TWO major 9/11 movies only FIVE years after the fact.DeprongMori wrote:I take your point, but it’s not *so* long ago. After all, Charles Manson died just last week.
The first two important Holocaust-themed features came out in 1948 (The Last Stop) and 1949 (Distant Journey).Monterey Jack wrote:They were making movies about Pearl Harbor less than 25 years after the fact. There were TWO major 9/11 movies only FIVE years after the fact.
not to mention Orson Welles' The Stranger (1946) which featured real holocaust footageMichaelB wrote:The first two important Holocaust-themed features came out in 1948 (The Last Stop) and 1949 (Distant Journey).
Deadline wrote:What he plays, more specifically, is an actor who had his own Western show, Bounty Law, that ran on the air from 1958 to 1963. His attempt to transition to movies didn’t work out and in 1969 — the film is set at the height of hippy Hollywood movement– he’s guesting on other people’s shows while contemplating going to Italy which has become a hotbed for low-budget Westerns.
Given his propensity to adhere to the outlandishness of his influences I don't think it will matter much but I see what you're saying.Ribs wrote:I know it's by 1960s TV western standards, but the idea of Brad Pitt being at all the right type to play a stunt double for Leonardo DiCaprio seems a bit off to me.