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What's it about?
Lieutenant Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) leads a group of Jewish-American soldiers deep behind enemy lines in Nazi-occupied Germany. Their aim, to kill as many Nazis as possible and spread terror through the enemy ranks. When an opportunity arrives to kill several of the Nazi high command at a movie première, Raine and his boys must hatch a plan of destruction.
Is it any good?
Quentin Tarantino's fantasy take on World War Two is his best movie since 'Jackie Brown'. It's a hugely entertaining and violent romp through the forests and villages of France.
As writer and director, Tarantino has discovered some of his old form, with certain scenes in the film finding the director at his dialogue-writing best, in particular the gripping opening act.
Let's get this straight, 'Inglourious' isn’t going to win any prizes for historical accuracy, nor is it trying to.
Many will argue that a film set during such a brutal and harrowing time in our history should not be so flippant about the conflict.
Such arguments would misjudge the film however, although at times Tarantino seems to glorify the extreme violence, which can leave a bad taste, the film has an almost comic-book feel about it. The audience in no doubt that this is pastiche filmmaking.
The ensemble performances are strong throughout, with amusing turns from Mike Myers and Michael Fassbender as General Ed Fenech and Lt. Archie Hicox.
Brad Pitt, although not registering a lot of screen time, hams it up as gurning lieutenant, Aldo Raine.
However it is Christoph Waltz who steals the film as Chief SS Jew hunter Col. Hans Landa, balancing twisted humour with terrifying menace.
Verdict
Although Tarantino may not have discovered the form of 'Reservoir Dogs' and 'Pulp Fiction' just yet, 'Inglourious' hints that the director is returning to his best. A thoroughly entertaining and violent romp, if you get the joke, it's an absorbing watch.
- Tim Burnett
Copyright © 2009.
Set in occupied France during the waning days of World War II, Inglourious Basterds jumps back and forth between different storylines over the course of several chapters before bringing them together for one intense, utterly preposterous climax.
The "Basterds" of the film's title refers to an elite group of Jewish-American soldiers assembled by Lt. Aldo Raine, a no-nonsense descendent of Southern moonshiners whose assignment for his troops is simple: Each of them is tasked with gathering the scalps of 100 dead Nazi soldiers before the war is over. With each shocking act of retribution the Basterds perform, word spreads of their savagery, and by the time they arrive in occupied France their reputation is known to every enemy soldier.
Meanwhile, Shosanna Dreyfus, a French Jew who narrowly escaped the Gestapo death squad that murdered her immediate family, has relocated to Paris and established a new identity as the owner of a local cinema. As Nazi patrols blanket the city, she toils quietly under an assumed name, awaiting the day when her own chance at retribution will come.
The destinies of Shosanna and the Basterds converge when Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels decides to hold the premiere of his latest propaganda film, Nation's Pride, at Shosanna's theater. With the aid of Bridget von Hammersmark, a German film star secretly working as a double agent, the Allies learn that no less than the entire Nazi High Command, including Hitler, will be in attendance. Confronted with the opportunity to deliver their unique brand of justice to the Fuhrer himself and end the war in one fell swoop, the Basterds concoct a bold scheme to infiltrate the premiere, rig the theater with dynamite and incinerate its inhabitants with one massive explosion.
Always known for his unconventional approach to casting, Inglourious Basterds director Quentin Tarantino assembled a characteristically eclectic group of actors for his latest effort, mixing veterans with newcomers, Americans with Europeans and superstars with virtual unknowns. Sporting a ridiculous mustache and an even more ridiculous Southern accent, Brad Pitt leads the pack in the role of Aldo Raine, while horror director Eli Roth (Hostel I and II) makes his acting debut as Raine's sadistic right-hand man, Sgt. Donny Donowitz. Other notable Basterds include B.J. Novak (The Office), Samm Levine (Freaks and Geeks), Paul Rust (I Love You, Beth Cooper) and Omar Doom (Grindhouse).
It's the cast's European players who really distinguish Inglourious Basterds. German-born National Treasure star Diane Kruger makes the perfect 1940s matinee idol as the turncoat von Hammersmark, while Irish-bred Michael Fassbender (Jonah Hex) oozes with old-school English haughtiness as her charming British co-conspirator, Lt. Archie Hicox. Making an impressive English-language debut in Basterds as the quietly seething Shosanna is the luminous French star Melanie Laurent.
Rising above all of them with a truly Oscar-worthy performance is Austrian actor Christoph Waltz. Waltz is a revelation (to American audiences, at least) as Col. Hans Landa, the highly eccentric and brutally efficient leader of Nazi security efforts in France. Alternately hilarious and terrifying, Waltz's Landa is easily the most compelling big-screen villain since Heath Ledger's Joker in The Dark Knight. Lest we forget, Ledger won a posthumous Oscar for his performance. (Waltz, for his part, already snagged the best-actor prize at Cannes earlier this year.)
Nobody executes dramatic shifts in tone more effectively and powerfully than Tarantino, and Inglourious Basterds transitions breathlessly between moments of high tension and high comedy, brutal carnage and lighthearted whimsy all of which are peppered with the director's distinctive dialogue and trademark wit. The film is easily his best work since 1994's Pulp Fiction.
At over two-and-a-half hours, there are moments when the pacing of Inglourious Basterds seriously drags. Tarantino is above all else an actor's director, and there are times that he becomes so enamored with a performance that he'll allow a scene to extend well beyond the point that its resolution has become a foregone conclusion. How such an obviously ADD-addled guy like Tarantino can exhibit such disdain for brevity is beyond my comprehension.
WHERE ARE THE BASTERDS?
Contrary to the film's ad campaign, the Basterds are actually minor players in the storyline. Only Pitt and Roth are given a substantial amount of dialogue; Novak and the others have only a line or two if they speak at all.
I won't give anything away, but suffice it to say that Inglourious Basterds' storyline features a decidedly revisionist take on the events of World War II. Obviously, historical accuracy wasn't a priority for Tarantino and it probably shouldn't be for the viewer, either.
Hollywood.com rated this film 3 1/2 stars.
Copyright © CinemaSource 2009.
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