CINEMA SPECULATION By Quentin Tarantino

My favorite chapter in Quentin Tarantino’s Cinema Speculation is “The Outfit” (1973). Tarantino writes about how his obsession with movies began as a 6-year-old kid when his mother used to take him to see films on a weekly basis in “Little Q Watching Big Movies.”

The Outfit, based on a “Richard Stark” (aka, Donald E. Westlake) caper novel, follows the professional thief who takes on criminal syndicate. John Flynn directed The Outfit, starring Robert DuVall as Macklin (aka, “Parker”), Karen Black as Bett, and Joe Don Baker as Cody.

Tarantino prefaces his review of The Outfit with an analysis of the Parker series of caper novels and the movies based on them. Tarantino disagrees that Lee Marvin is the quintessential Parker in Point Blank. He doesn’t like the Mel Gibson remake, either.

Tarantino considers the best movie Parker as Robert De Niro as “Neil McCauley” in Michael Mann’s Heat. But, he doesn’t like the conclusion of Heat.

Whether you like Quentin Tarantino and/or his movies or not, reading Tarantino’s opinions on many classic movies provides insights and acute observations. If you’re a movie fan, there’s plenty here to delight you! I hope Tarantino is working on a sequel. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Little Q watching big movies — 1

Bullitt (1968) –31

Dirty Harry (1971) — 47

Deliverance (1972) — 69

)The Getaway (1972) — 89

The Outfit (1973) — 117

Second-String Samurai: an appreciation of Kevin Thomas — 137

New Hollywood in the seventies: the post-sixties anti-establishment auteurs vs. the movie brats — 159

Sisters (1973) — 177

Daisy Miller (1974) — 199

Taxi Driver (1976) — 211

Cinema speculation: What if Brian De Palma directed Taxi Driver instead of Martin Scorsese? — 235

Rolling Thunder (1977) — 247

Paradise Alley (1978) — 273

Escape from Alcatraz (1979) –299

Hardcore (1979) — 313

The Funhouse (1981) — 331

*Floyd Footnote — 351

INDEX — 373

18 thoughts on “CINEMA SPECULATION By Quentin Tarantino

  1. Steve A Oerkfitz

    I read this a couple of months ago. I love his passion for film. I tend to agree with him more often than not. He likes Paradise Alley which I thought was awful. I like his thoughts about Bullitt, Dirty Harry , Deliverance, The Getaway, Escape From Alcatraz, The Outfit especially.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Steve, I agree with you: Tarantino’s takes on BULLITT, DIRTY HARRY, DELIVERANCE, ESCAPE FROM ALCATRAZ, and especially THE OUTFIT really hit the mark!

      Reply
  2. Todd Mason

    Well, as a director and scriptwriter, Tarantino is highly self-indulgent…I won’t gainsay his fandom, his love of the medium. I suspect I’d approach this one they way I’d approach the Bob Dylan songwriting book.

    Reply
      1. george Post author

        Todd, I wan’t confirm or deny your guess about “What if De Palma directed TAXI DRIVER instead.” But…you’re warm!

  3. Michael Padgett

    I love QT’s movies and I loved this book, which I read over a period of 3-4 weeks last year while revisiting many of the sixties and seventies movies covered. I’d seen most of them when they were originally released and saw several others I’d missed. Of the ones I’d seen years ago I thought DELIVERANCE held up best even though I was never a Burt Reynolds fan. And while I wouldn’t want to discourage anyone who hasn’t seen it, there’s not much to BULLITT except for the great car chase and McQueen’s indomitable cool. THE OUTFIT holds up well too, and John Flynn’s later effort, ROLLING THUNDER, is also a must. And I still have several others I want to get to. Anyone who loves this book as much as I do will finally understand why they’re paying for so many streaming services.

    Reply
    1. Todd Mason

      I have to disagree about BULLITT, despite some goofiness at certain points (not least his name). Love the opening (or is that opining) credits design and the music throughout, like that Jacqueline Bissett is a civil engineer and also a kinetic sculptor, like even the entended non-auto chase sequences and utter villainy of Vaughan and Fell. The cast is pretty uniformly used well…Simon Oakland as a no-bullshit police captain is unsurprisingly a standout, particularly given how less than perfect some of his other most visible roles were in their writing.

      Reply
      1. george Post author

        Todd, Tarantino loved Vaughan’s performance in BULLITT. From THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. to BULLITT, Good Guy to Bad Guy.

    2. george Post author

      Michael, I have the same reaction to CINEMA SPECULATION that you did: I want to watch all of these movies…again! Especially THE OUTFIT.

      Reply
  4. Jerry House

    Ah, BULLITT. Fond memories of Kitty’s only expression of violence in all the years I’ve knew her. We were watching it in a theater when it first came out and (naturally) holding hands. Then came an unexpected and violent shoot-out scene that startled her so much she damned near broke my thumb. It was sore for weeks — about the same length of time that she kept apologizing to me. Because it was based on a Robert L. Fish novel, I foolishly expected a completely different type of film. But McQueen was pretty cool driving that car.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jerry, BULLITT was a far cry from Robert L. Fish’s MUTE WITNESS. I really enjoyed Tarantino’s analysis of Steve McQueen’s “cool.”

      Reply
  5. Jeff Meyerson

    Agree with Steve about PARADISE ALLEY – it sucked. I haven’t read this but might. I like some of Tarantino’s films – ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD was pretty good – but Todd is right about the self-indulgence always there. But since I like a lot of the movies he covers, maybe.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jeff, you might not always agree with what Tarantino has to say about these movies in CINEMA SPECULATION, but he makes you reflect on these films…and want to see them again!

      Reply
  6. maggie mason

    I’m hit or miss with tarantino. Agree with his passion for movies, but think he indulges himself a bit too much. He does make movies I’ve enjoyed.

    Hope everyone is surviving all the varied weather problems over the country, and world. We’ve had a lot of much needed rain, but yesterdays paper said after this storm that it might be mostly done. Wish we could syphon snow from the north and east. A pipeline for good.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Maggie, California weather has been the lead story on the evening news for weeks! I hope this rain helps with your draught…but I’m seeing a lot of flooding happening! Stay safe!

      Reply

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