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Inglourious Basterds (2009) Certificate 18

Inglourious Basterds
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Rated 4.0 stars
Average rating
(79%)
 
Starring: Brad Pitt | Diane Kruger | Melanie Laurent | Christoph Waltz | Daniel Brühl | Eli Roth | Samuel L. Jackson | Mike Myers | Michael Fassbender | Julie Dreyfus
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Studio: UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK
Run time: 147 mins
Genres: Action/Adventure | Drama
Languages: English
Released: (unknown)

Inglourious Basterds begins in German-occupied France, where Shoshanna Dreyfus (Mélanie Laurent) witnesses the execution of her family at the hand of Nazi Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz). Shosanna narrowly escapes and flees to Paris, where she forges a new identity as the owner and operator of a cinema.

Elsewhere in Europe, Lieutenant Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) organizes a group of Jewish soldiers to engage in targeted acts of retribution. Known to their enemy as "The Basterds," Raine's squad joins German actress and undercover agent Bridget Von Hammersmark (Diane Kruger) on a mission to take down the leaders of The Third Reich. Fates converge under a cinema marquee, where Shosanna is poised to carry out a revenge plan of her own...

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Rating of 2 stars out of 5
Time Out

Youve got to admire the sheer, infectious force of Quentin Tarantinos personality. Is there any other popular...

Highest rated reviews

231 out of 276 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
looking good

gdLBVFWDYGNO from , 28th April, 2009

this looks like a very good film and i can see it doing very well. it is a war film and its well worthe watching the traler it is shaping up to be better than saving privat ryan(worth watching).

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68 out of 72 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Yes, I have seen it.

masgeo from , 24th July, 2009

(No spoilers - don't worry.) By some fortunate twist of fate, I won two tickets to the London Premiere of Inglorious Basterds. Here's what it was like: Sitting snugly in my seat in London's Leicester Square Odeon, a buzz fills the room as people are ushered into their seats and away from the Red Carpet and Paparazzi outside. Popcorn and Doritos are sold at nearly six dollars a bag but nobody is counting the pennies as they eagerly await Quentin Tarantino's new offering to the world of cinema. In stylishly late fashion he takes to the stage, confidently wielding the microphone like any good stand up comic. 'Are you ready to see some Basterds!' He yells. And in true panto tradition, the audience scream 'Yeah!' 'ARE YOU READY TO SEE SOME BASTERDS!' He yells again. 'YEAH!' 'Say what!?' Quentin calls out. 'YEAH!!!' We cheer. 'HELL YEAH!' He calls back. 'HELL YEAH!' We reply. 'THEN LET'S GET THIS MOTHER ****** STARTED!!' He screams. The audience erupt in cheers, and with everybody psyched up and ready, Quentin throws the mike to the floor with a bang, the lights go down and he exits stage as the curtains part and the movie begins. So, my review: Lawrence Bender (Tarantino's Producer since Reservoir Dogs) in an interview about Inglorious Basterds said that it had the layers of Pulp Fiction but with more maturity, because, in fairness, Quentin's had 15 years to grow, learn and develop, although his last two outings of Death Proof and Kill Bill showed little sign of the writer/Director maturing, merely stamping his mark on genres that weren't in the spotlight, and in some ways, recreating them. So, did Inglorious Basterds live up to this claim of the new and matured Quentin Tarantino? Well, yes and no. Tarantino's staple dialogue, when not pushing a story, is often crude. That, for once, is not the case with Inglorious Basterds, so perhaps that can be taken as a sign of maturity. The dialogue is excellent, as expected, but at times without the poetic rhythm that his first three pictures had in abundance. The only drawback of this is that on rare occasions you'll find that you've zoned out for a moment, but, with a Tarantino film, you can be pretty damn sure that you'll be seeing it a few times anyway and you'll be able to catch up on missed dialogue. It is dialogue heavy, which today's audience seem to shy away from, but for me personally, I love to see a film driven by its script rather than its special effects. The story is layered in true Tarantino fashion. I do feel that the Basterds themselves could have been developed more, since there are many and we get to know so few, however this isn't a small film like Reservoir Dogs, revolving around a group of Basterds as the trailer makes out, and there are plenty of wonderful characters to compensate for it. Also, as we've come to expect, the film is violent, which I didn't think would bother me, but it's the only thing that left a slightly bitter taste in my mouth. I'm pretty desensitized to violence on screen and have been for many years, but I expected the violence of Inglourious Basterds to be understandable under the topic of War. I also expected a few points to emphasize the cruelty and senseless of war, but I found that in many ways this was a glorification of war and Quentin has used it as a playing field for his imagination without considering the consequences. As Uncle Ben taught us in Spiderman, 'With great power comes great responsibility', and when I was going into Inglourious Basterds, I felt that the uneducated audience who love Tarantino might leave this film having learned a few things. Sadly, I don't feel that is the case, and for me that is its only downfall. It's becoming more and more obvious that Quentin Tarantino makes the films that Quentin Tarantino wants to see, and while that is precisely why they're so good, I do find that if he was a little less self indulgent he could make something just as hip, funky, violent and entertaining, but with more depth. However, as a crafted piece of work, in script, style and care, it fires on all cylinders. I do not believe that a Tarantino film will ever not live up to the standards we've come to expect and I honestly feel that he is the most reliable director in the world today, but I can't help feeling that while people are calling this a more mature piece of work, the reality is that his first two ventures on the big screen were in fact more mature and with less glorified violence than what he is making now. Be that as it may, he is one of the few Director's who I feel is really worthy of the title 'Artist', and if somebody is an Artist then they should be free to make what they want. Tarantino is fortunate enough to be able to make what he wants without being hampered by producers, and I suppose in the end, I wouldn't want it any other way. So check it out when you can and see what you think. Peace.

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29 out of 30 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1.0 stars
A Glorious Mess

philcave from , 24th August, 2009

I’m mad as hell! After sitting grimly through the moronic pile of misogynistic crap that was Deathproof, I had sworn never to go near a Tarantino movie again... but after reading decent reviews of Inglourious Basterds, that spoke of a ‘return to form,’ I decided to cast caution to the wind and check it out. Well, that’s another seven quid down the drain. I mean, I didn’t expect historical accuracy, but neither did I expect something that comes across like an episode of ‘Allo, ‘Allo, with added bloodshed. Sure, there were occasional good bits, but they were woefully few and far between – Tarantino’s talky mess of a screenplay couldn’t help repeatedly spelling things out for us, Mike Myer’s stiff-upper-lip British officer was frankly insulting and the plot was so risible that I didn’t know whether to laugh or weep. Yet you'll still here people referring to Tarantino as 'an artist', somebody who operates in a refined place where we mere mortals aren't fit to breathe the same air. The Emperor's New Clothes is a story that springs to mind. Here's an inescapable fact. Tarantino has only made two decent movies in his entire career, and since Pulp Fiction he’s been on a slippery slide downwards into a place where he is the most dedicated member of his own fan club. Inglourious Basterds isn’t ‘wild and quirky,’ it isn’t ‘brave and unique,’ it’s quite simply unadulterated crap and the public deserves to be told the truth. Philip Caveney

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28 out of 28 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 0.0 stars
Unavailable for rental

A Customer from Cheltenham, 16th January, 2010

Why is this title unavailable for rental? Thats a bit of a joke isn't it. How many other new titles will be unavailable for rental?

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Most recent reviews

Rated 4.0 stars
Why not available to rent?

A Customer from Sutton In Ashfield, 17th March, 2010

Why not available to rent? Other rental companies rent this title out. Will this soon be available for us?

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Rated 3.0 stars
A kind of Carry on Schindlers List

Oldbloke from from Sidmouth, 13th March, 2010

The surviving daughter of a murdered jewish family and a group of renegade Nazi killers both hatch plots to blow up the German High Command. History is bunk in this wacky multi-stranded tale that shifts as uneasily in tone as you will in your seat. Well written and acted yes, but completely daft and of course gratuitously violent. Worth seeing if only for Christoph Waltz's fabulously malevolent turn as the 'Jew Hunter'.

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Rated 3.0 stars
Not my kinda film

olliemyers from , 28th February, 2010

Really wasn't my kinda film. Gory as all Tarantino films are. Brad Pitt is good in it and the main german sniffing out the jews but was a bit zaney. Worth a watch and well produced but won't buy it

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