Inglourious Basterds Movie Review
Inglourious Basterds Review

"Inglourious Basterds" Overview

Rating: 18
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Quentin TarantinoProducer : Lawrence Bender
Screenwiter : Quentin Tarantino
Starring : Brad Pitt,Christoph Waltz,Melanie Laurent,Diane Kruger,Michael Fassbender,Daniel Bruhl,Eli Roth,Til Schweiger,Martin Wittke,Sylvester Groth,Mike Myers,Rod Taylor
Finally turning his hand to the war-movie genre, Tarantino unsurprisingly pays
homage to classic B-movies. And even though it's long and indulgent, this is a
deeply entertaining romp, crafted to perfection by Tarantino and his amazing
cast.
German Col Landa (Waltz) is notorious in Nazi-occupied France as a "Jew
hunter", but the young Shosanna (Laurent) has slipped through his fingers.
Years later, she's running a Paris cinema and planning outrageous revenge
against the Nazi high command who will be attending a premiere starring a famed
war hero (Bruhl). Meanwhile, American Lt Aldo Raine (Pitt) has challenged his
team of Jewish commandos to bring home 100 Nazi scalps each. And their
operation is about to converge on Shosanna's cinema, thanks to a German actress
double-agent (Kruger) and a British spy (Fassbender).
Tarantino directs with a wonderfully sure hand, as each scene oozes filmmaking
confidence. It's skilfully written and performed down to the tiniest details.
Scenes are allowed to play out in their own time; some feel a bit meandering as
a result, but the snappy dialog allows for big surprises as each situation
progresses, building tension to almost unbearable levels before the next
shocking turn of events. Each scene gets bigger and better, right to the
astonishing finale, which keeps us gasping right into the credits.
Performances are terrific across the board. Pitt is a bit cartoonish with all
that Southern bluster, but his Italian disguise is priceless. And all of his
"basterd" cohorts have vivid personalities of their own; Schweiger is the
standout as the twitchy Hugo. There are also are terrific female roles for
Laurent and Kruger, both of which go places we could never predict. And Wittke
and Groth are gleeful scene-stealers as Hitler and Goebbels.
But none of these actors can even begin to compete with the amazing Waltz, who
gets the film's most complex and unnerving role as a laughing monster. Or maybe
he's a monstrous clown? Either way, he holds the film together with an electric
performance. Through all of this, Tarantino combines sharp inventiveness with
knowing nods at film history. Through the appalling grisliness and hilarious
irony, we are drawn to characters who feel fully formed. And even if some of
their dialog wanders off-topic, it's so enjoyable that we don't mind at all.
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Review by Rich Cline
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