
Spelling may not be Quentin Tarantino's forte, but his grasp of
language (both verbal and visual) is peerless. Though the
writer-director was once widely imitated, he has now settled into an
idiosyncratic groove that puts off more people than it attracts, and
it's doubtful Inglourious Basterds will redress the
imbalance. Detractors and proponents alike will see what they want to
see in this two-and-a-half-hour World War II fable, which hits all the
beats of a retribution-laden genre piece without ever entirely
satiating character or audience bloodlust.
Tarantino's
violence, however, has gained resonance and horror. That's evident from
the slow-burn opening sequence, in which Nazi colonel Hans Landa
(Waltz) uses snake-oil floridness to make a farmer (Denis Menochet)
confess that he's hiding a Jewish family under his floorboards. Waltz
has the showier role, but Tarantino makes sure to juxtapose the SS
agent's verbose charms with close-ups of Menochet's gradually crumbling
features. It's devastating in ways that only movies allow, and also
lays down the tonally twisted groundwork for the film's apocalyptic
finale, which rewrites history with ambiguous aplomb.
Brad Pitt goes Burn After Reading broad, with Southern twang instead of frosted tips, as the leader of the eponymous American mercenaries. Meanwhile, the great Michael Fassbender plays his cultivated opposite: a British secret-service agent who knows his Riefenstahl better than his regional accents. But it's a stand-alone moment during Basterds' hellfire climax that lingers most in the mind. That would be the fleetingly projected face of the vengeful Shosanna Dreyfus (Laurent), floating and cackling in smoky space - an evanescent image gloating in what is revealed to be a fruitless comeuppance. Keith Uhlich
Length: 152 minutes
Country of origin: USA/Germany
Year of production: 2009
Classification: MA15+ - Under 15s must be accompanied by parent
Date 20 Aug 2009-24 Oct 2009
Opens
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Melanie Laurent, Eli Roth, Diane Kruger
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