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The comeback King of supercharged splattercore, it is hard to overstate Tarantino’s revitalising influence on the last decade of cinema. Combining hilariously deadpan dialogue, comic-book savagery and offbeat arthouse technique with all the pumped-up energy of a rock’n’roll Jean-Luc Godard, the Kentucky-born B-movie aficionado has brought hyperbolically violent glamour back to mainstream Hollywood with a vengeance. But he has also re-energised indie cinema, using his notoriety to boost the best of his cultish left-field peers from all across America, Asia and Europe. He even succeeded in making John Travolta hip again.

Even when he is not writing, directing and acting, Tarantino grabs headlines. He exchanged harsh words and occasionally fisticuffs with fellow mouthy mavericks like Spike Lee, Oliver Stone and producer
Don Murphy. He launched his own record label and action-video line. And he invented his own music-driven Pop Art grammar of philosophical hit men, heroic-chic vamps, foul-mouthed gangsters and visceral violence that has spilled off the big screen and colonised rock videos, stage plays, TV shows, computer games and beyond.

Love him or loathe him, no director in recent years has matched Tarantino’s first decade of splashy, flashy, deceptively smart blockbuster hits for stylistic audacity and cultural impact. However gimmicky his Brechtian tricks, however overblown his irony-fried caricatures of hipster street cool, his canon is already packed with enough cinematic in-jokes to keep generations of Film Studies graduates busy for decades.

After a long sabbatical which began at the end of the ‘90s, last year’s Kill Bill duet also restored QT’s reputation for world-class carnage with its roaring rampage of references to sicko-pulp martial arts movies, spaghetti westerns and samurai revenge epics. "Sure, Kill Bill's a violent movie,” he said. “But it's a Tarantino movie. You don't go to see Metallica and ask the fuckers to turn the music down.”
Key Works
RESERVOIR DOGS
1992

Tarantino’s powerhouse debut borrows from Hong Kong director Ringo Lam’s 1987 thriller City on Fire, about an undercover cop who infiltrates a gang of jewel thieves and ends up joining a badly botched heist. With its ripe monologues and notorious ear-slicing scene, it remains the American maverick’s purest and least self-conscious statement.

TRUE ROMANCE
1993

Working from an early Tarantino script, director Tony Scott’s pumped-up chase thriller applies mainstream Hollywood muscle to a wish-fulfilment yarn about comics geeks, hookers and dangerous hauls of stolen cocaine. Christian Slater, Patricia Arquette and Dennis Hopper headline an all-star orgy of trashy energy and wild over-acting.

PULP FICTION
1994

A decade before making Kill Bill together, Tarantino and Uma Thurman first collaborated on this landmark Oscar-winner. An episodic black comedy about hit men, junkies, boxers, gangsters and their molls, Pulp Fiction is also a brilliantly orchestrated riot of cinematic in-jokes, vibrant dialogue and sheer violence.

JACKIE BROWN
1997

QT defied hyperbolic career expectations with this soulful relocation of Elmore Leonard's novel Rum Punch from Miami to LA. Giving former blaxploitation queen Grier her best role in decades, Jackie Brown is an elegant blend of caper movie and character study that favours warm subtlety over post-modern carnage.

KILL BILL
2003

A sustained starburst of adrenalised energy after six years of silence, QT’s globe-trotting double-Bill pays explosive homage to everything from Manga animation to spaghetti westerns. Uma Thurman rocks Bruce Lee’s yellow catsuit as The Bride, a tooled-up angel of vengeance leaving a body count in the hundreds. Pure Tarantino, 100 per cent proof.

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