Right well I thought it was time that I robbed another post from my "other" blog, and this one is one of my favourite films, which is Quentin Tarantino's masterpiece, Kill Bill (Vol 1 and 2). So I will without any further interruptions get to it.
So onto the plot, which
starts with the blood spattered "bride" (Uma Thurman) who lies on the
floor of a church in El Paso Texas, after her groom to be and her
friends have been ruthlessly gunned down, by her former lover Bill
(David Carradine) and his team of assassins, the Deadly Viper squad
(Lucy Lui, Vivica A. Fox, Michael Madsen and Daryl Hannah). Just before
Bill puts a bullet in his bride's head, she tells him that she is
pregnant with his baby. The bride however miraculously survives the
bullet, as she lies in a coma for four years in a hospital where one
night just after that, she finds a big redneck trucker straddling her.
The bride instantly kills the trucker and then kills the hospital worker
"Buck" who has been pimping her out during her comatose state to people
he knows for money. The bride then travels to Okinawa to find the
legendary swordsmith Hattori Hanzo (Sonny Chiba) and she asks that he
make her a sword, which he eventually does after she drops Bill's name.
After a month or so, Hanzo finishes the sword and the bride leaves with
it, to start her bloody revenge against the Deadly Viper squad,
starting with O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Liu) who is by now the leader of the
Tokyo yakuza. What ensues is a very bloody (not to mention very
spurty!) fight sequence as the bride takes on O-Ren's bodyguards, her
crazed 17 year associate Gogo Yubari (Chiaki Kuriyama) and also the
"crazy 88" who are O-Ren's hit squad, and ultimately O-Ren herself. So
cue part two....
And the bride carries on in the
second part of the film in her journey to kill bill, where she seeks out
Bill's brother, Budd (Michael Madsen), who shoots her full of rock salt
and buries her alive in a coffin. But of course with the luck of a
handy straight razor tucked away in her boot, and her incredible
punching skills she learned from her former master Pai Mei (Gordon Liu),
the bride manages to break free of her coffin and crawl her way up out
of the earth back up to the surface, ready for more revenge. After this
Budd calls up one of his ex-viper squad members Elle Driver (Daryl
Hannah, complete with cool eye patch) and asks if she would want to
trade the bride's Hanzo sword for a million dollars. Elle comes along
to Budd's cabin the next day and secretly stashes a black mamba snake in
the suitcase of money, which kills of Budd. Then the bride, who by
now, Elle has given away her real name as Beatrix Kiddo, confronts Elle
in an intense fight, which Beatrix eventually wins by plucking out
Elle's only remaining eye (the other one was plucked out by Pai Mei
during her instruction). This now only leaves Bill and well you can
imagine what goes on there........
For me Kill Bill has
to be Quentin Tarantino's best film, as it is such a brilliant
combination of different styles of film, from action to thriller, to
western, to eastern to anime and so on. And at the centre of it is a
terrific performance from its lead actress Uma Thurman, who plays the
part of the Bride (or Beatrix) so brilliantly. In fact one of the
interesting aspects of the film is how the character of the bride
develops, as in the first volume, we see her as a remorseless killing
machine, who is purely on a mission of revenge, but in the second film,
we get to see her become more human as a person. And in a way if I had
to pick a favourite part it would be volume 2, simply because it is more
character driven, and it helps to humanise Beatrix as well as
rationalise Bill as a person too (well perhaps not rationalise but we do
get where he was coming from in his actions). But both volumes add up
to the same film and overall it is some achievement from Quentin
Tarantino.
On a technical level I don't think Tarantino
has made a better film either, as his mix of skilfull camera work, and
brilliant use of Japanese anime, and superb photography from Robert
Richardson all add up to a visual treat for the viewer as well. And
without a doubt, his choice of soundtrack is as ever terrific,
especially in volume 1 where it opens up with Nancy Sinatra's "Bang
Bang", the cheesy but highly effective use of the theme from "Quincy",
and in volume 2 his effective use of Ennio Morricone's western music,
and "About Her" by Malcolm McLaren which is used to great effect also. I
also can't forget to mention the infuriatingly catchy 5, 6, 7, 8's
"Woo-hoo" which is annoying but at the same time you can't help but
listen to it. In general Tarantino has a like for 1970s funk music, and
plenty of it permeates throughout the whole film, abd he uses it very
well, especially tracks like Ray Fan Ray by Isaac Hayes in the anime
scene with O-Ren killing one of her targets as an assassin. I also love
the way Tarantino particularly in the scene where Beatrix receives the
cruel instruction from her kung-fu master Pai Mei, how uses the typical
camera zoom-ins like you get in the old martial arts films. Its a great
touch.
The film also has several harrowing scenes
which stick in the mind also, and while the over the top bloody scenes
in Volume 1 are never disturbing, in fact they are quite silly if
nothing else, its the scenes where we see Beatrix suffer so much
herself. A couple of scenes in particular are firstly the one where she
wakes up from her coma, she looks down at her stomach at a wound where
presumably her aborted child was taken from, and she screams and sobs
uncontrollably. Its a great moment in Uma's performance, and for that
brief moment she has to deal with her grief all at once, before she is
interrupted, by the scumbag hospital worker, who has used her inert body
for sex. Which I have to say is one of the film's more disturbing
aspects is the misogyny that it occassionally displays particularly in
this scene, it reminds me of the scene from Pulp Fiction where Marcellus
Wallace is being raped in a basement by hillbillies. Its almost like
Quentin is going for the shock effect once again, just by making you
think of the unthinkable. Another harrowing moment is when the bride,
after she has been put in a coffin by Budd, we see her reaction from the
inside as her coffin is trundled into the grave, and we hear the heavy
sound of the dirt crash against the outer side of the coffin itself,
with Beatrix panicking and crying each time she hears the dirt being
shovelled on top. Its probably the film's most potent and distressing
sequence, and it definitely captures that sense of intense
claustrophobia too. One of Uma's best scenes though is when she enters
Bill's house near the end of Volume 2, armed with a gun and she finds
Bill, much to her amazement with their daughter, she almost falls to her
knees, with shock, its a great moment in her performance.
But
that's not to say that Kill Bill doesn't have any fun moments in it, of
course it does, its a Tarantino film! The action sequences in
particular a spectacular to watch, especially the bloody showdown at
O-Ren's House of the dead leaves, with Beatrix/The Bride slicing and
dicing her way through her enemies, and her fight with Elle in the
second film is a particular highlight also. Another favourite for me is
Beatrix's training under the cruel old Kung-fu master, Pai Mei, as he
rides her hard in instructing her on the ways of kung-fu. There are
some amusing characters along the way and plenty of enjoyable and crude
dialogue, one of me favourite lines from the Bride is "As I sat in the
back of Buck's truck, trying to will my limbs out of entrophy I could
see the faces of cunts that did this to me and the dicks responsible!".
Performance
wise there are plenty of good ones, David Carradine is especially good
as Bill, the man himself, who has a world weary charm but also shows
that he's a killer and a vicious bastard through and through. Michael
Madsen puts in a decent performance also as Bill's younger brother Budd,
who once a high paid assassin, is now subjected to working in a third
rate strip bar as a bouncer. And Daryl Hannah also is very good as the
evil and sly Elle Driver, and after seeing Daryl give some pretty so-so
performances in films from the 1980s such as Roxanne, and Wall Street,
what she does do really well in this film is ham it up, and shows that
she is a capable actress. Lucy Liu is also great as the deadly and foxy
O-Ren Ishii, and her best scene is where she stampedes down the table
in her conference room and beheads one of her impertinent associates
(complete with blood fountain spurting!) and calmly tells her people
that if you have problem with her, tell her so, before she shouts "so if
any of you sonsabitches has anything else to say NOW'S THE FUCKING
TIME!!!". Sonny Chiba's cameo appearance is also very entertaining as
Hattori Hanzo, once a great swordswith, who vowed never to make another
sword again, and now spends his time as a Sushi chef, arguing with his
suborindate employee ("lazy bastard, get your ass out here!").
Perhaps
though the only poor scene in Kill Bill is the end credits with Robert
Rodriguez's fairly annoying Mexican music playing in the background, and
how it shows all the character's over the music and his final caption
for Beatrix's charcater that says "Beatrix Kiddo, aka Black maba, aka
the bride, aka Mommy". Its just a bit cheesy. But its just one scene
out of the film, the rest is grand.
However Kill Bill
is definitely one of my favourite films and one of the best films in
recent times of modern cinema. Tarantino has definitely contributed a
great deal to American cinema over the years and here he gave it his
masterpiece.
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